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Liturgical day
: Tuesday 4th in Ordinary Time |
Today's Gospel (Mk 5:21-43): Jesus crossed to the other side of
the lake and while He was still on the shore, a large crowd gathered
around him. Jairus, an official of the synagogue, came up and seeing
Jesus, threw himself at his feet and asked him earnestly, «My
little daughter is at the point of death. Come and lay your hands on
her so that she may get well and live».
Jesus
went with him and many people followed, pressing from every side.
Among the crowd was a woman who had suffered from bleeding for twelve
years. She had suffered a lot at the hands of many doctors and had
spent everything she had, but instead of getting better, she was
worse. Since she had heard about Jesus, this woman came up behind him
and touched his cloak thinking, «If I just touch his clothing,
I shall get well». Her flow of blood dried up at once, and she
felt in her body that she was healed of her complaint. But Jesus was
conscious that healing power had gone out from him, so he turned
around in the crowd and asked, «Who touched my clothes?».
His disciples answered, «You see how the people are crowding
around you. Why do you ask who touched you?». But he kept
looking around to see who had done it. Then the woman, aware of what
had happened, came forward trembling and afraid. She knelt before him
and told him the whole truth. Then Jesus said to her, «Daughter,
your faith has saved you; go in peace and be free of this illness».
While
Jesus was still speaking, some people arrived from the official's
house to inform him, «Your daughter is dead. Why trouble the
Master any further?». But Jesus ignored what they said and told
the official, «Do not fear, just believe». And He allowed
no one to follow him except Peter, James and John, the brother of
James.
When
they arrived at the house, Jesus saw a great commotion with people
weeping and wailing loudly. Jesus entered and said to them, «Why
all this commotion and weeping? The child is not dead but asleep».
They laughed at him. But Jesus sent them outside and went with the
child's father and mother and his companions into the room where the
child lay. Taking her by the hand, he said to her, «Talitha
kumi!» which means: “Little girl, get up!”. The
girl got up at once and began to walk around. (She was twelve years
old.) The parents were astonished, greatly astonished. Jesus strictly
ordered them not to let anyone know about it, and told them to give
her something to eat.
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Commentary: Fr. Francesc Perarnau i Cañellas (Girona,
Catalonia)
«Daughter,
your faith has saved you; go in peace and be free of this illness»
Today,
the Gospel presents us with two of Jesus' miracles that speak of the
great faith of two entirely different persons. Whether Jairus —an
official of the synagogue— or that poor ailing woman, both
displayed much faith: Jairus is certain Jesus can cure his daughter,
while that good old woman knows that just touching Jesus' robe will
be more than enough to deliver her from her very serious bleeding.
And, Jesus, because both are persons with a strong faith, grants them
what they wanted.
The
woman who thought she was unworthy of Jesus' attention, who did not
dare to bother neither the Master nor those influential Jews, was the
first one. Noiselessly, she came up behind him and, softly touching
Jesus' cloak, she “draws out” her cure, and she can feel
how her body is completely healed. Jesus, who knows what has
happened, does not want to let her go without saying to her:
«Daughter, your faith has saved you; go in peace and be
free of this illness» (Mk
5:34).
To
Jairus, Jesus is asking an even stronger faith. As God did with
Abraham in the Old Testament, Jesus will ask Jairus to have faith
against hope, a faith in impossible things. Jairus had been told the
terrible news his little daughter had just died. We can easily
imagine the deep anguish and horrible pain he must have felt in that
very moment, and perhaps the temptation to despair. But Jesus, who
had also heard the news, tells him: «Do not fear, just
believe» (Mk 5:36). And, like
those ancient patriarchs, hopelessly believing, he could see how his
beloved little girl was resurrected by Jesus.
Two
great lessons in faith for us. Jairus and the woman suffering a
serious bleeding, along with so many others, from the Gospel pages,
speak to us of the need to have an unmovable faith. We can make ours
that beautiful evangelic exclamation: «O Lord, I
believe; help my unbelief» (Mk 9:24).
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