Today,
we find Jesus again in Cana of Galilee, where He had previously made
the well known miracle of changing the water into wine. Now, on this
occasion, He performs a new miracle: the recovery of a royal
official's son. In spite of how spectacular the first one was, this
second miracle is, undoubtedly, more valuable, for what Jesus solves
with this miracle is nothing material, but a human life.
What
is so remarkable in this case is that Jesus does not go to Capernaum
to directly heal there the sick one; He performs the miracle without
moving from Cana: «The official told him: ‘Sir, come down
before my child dies!’. And Jesus replied: ‘Go, your son
is living’» (Jn 4:49-50).
That
should remind us all that we can do a lot of good from a distance,
that is, without having to make us present wherever our generosity is
requested. We can, thus, help the Third World simply by collaborating
economically with our Missions or with catholic organizations that
may be working over there. Or let us help those in need in the
marginal suburbs of the big cities with our contributions to
institutions like Caritas International, without our having to
set foot there. Or, we can even make a lot of far away people happy
by means of just a telephone call, a letter or an e-mail.
Quite often we do not
perform a good deed by excusing ourselves because of our
impossibility to be physically present wherever there is an urgent
need for outside help. Jesus did not use that excuse. He was not at
Capernaum, but He simply performed the miracle.
If you want to be
generous, distance is no problem, for our generosity comes all the
way directly from our heart and it crosses all frontiers. As Saint
Augustine said: «He who is charitable at heart, always finds
something to give».