Our
portrayal of the people Jesus healed, served and taught as being lovely, quaint
and dear people is a disservice to our ministry and the kingdom. In our mind’s eye we have depicted the people
with whom Jesus interacted in an almost universally positive light. Only Judas, the high priest, and the Romans
are imagined as not being nice. I think
this causes us to have a false narrative about the folks we will deal with as
we follow Christ.
In
Luke 13:10-21, we see Jesus in a synagogue for the last time in Luke's gospel. On this occasion Jesus meets a woman who as
result of the work of the demonic has for 18 years been crippled. Jesus
heals her. It is Jesus's default setting to have mercy. We might recall the ancient prayer that reads,
“But Thou art the same Lord, whose property is always to have mercy”. We might assume that in some way this
woman had opened herself up to the power of the demonic. At some point in her life she had, perhaps,
given herself over to the powers of evil and the demon took control, twisted her
and held her. Jesus simply heals her without any expectation for her to clean
up her life, reform her ways or realign herself spiritually. She may have been
a mess, but Jesus didn't care. He simply healed her. She, and others Jesus
healed, are presenting in our art and imagination as lovable people. The pictures
I've seen depicting this occasion portray her as a grandmother who might be on
her way to bake cookies.
But
maybe she wasn’t like that. Maybe she
was like a lady I met this week. She
lives in a shabby, run-down trailer in a swampy part of Florida. She came to the door with a broom, with which
she beat at her dog, but if she had mounted it and flown off it would have fit
Hollywood central casting. When she
opened the door the smell of body odor and dog feces was overwhelming. Her conversation was laced with profanity;
she seemed to live with a low-grade anger that boiled over into fury quickly
and easily. She disliked people of color
and “other foreigners”; she hated the cars on the road and even the trees
beside the road. Her hair was greasy and
needed washing, (apparently she burned her bra in a 1960’s protest and never
replaced it), she wore a thin, dirty “wife beater”. Her face was marked by anger and facial hair. Maybe
this is what the woman in the synagogue was like. And Jesus saw the need beyond the symptoms
and His default setting of mercy moved Him to act.
The
glory of Christ is manifested in His acts of power. But it is also manifested in that He expressed
His mercy to the most undeserving people, all of us, including those who never
respond to that love and mercy. We have
no evidence that this healed woman became a disciple of Jesus. Perhaps this woman held onto that which
enabled the demon to dominate her and she never responded to Christ’s
love. Christ, far too kind to impose
Himself, accepts that His love is at times unrequited. The objects of His love can be most
objectionable.
As
a disciple of Jesus, if I really want to be like Him, I must understand that no
one should be outside of my heart’s reach.
This must include the awkward teen that strives for attention to the
point of annoyance, the arrogant elitist so convinced of his superiority that
they would be a racist but for the fact they consider everyone their lesser, the
social and relational leech that demands and demands and then demands more,
never lifting a finger to help themselves or offering a word of thanks, or the
unhygienic old woman living in filth of a home and perhaps a heart.
But
I only want to deal with people that are nice and responsive and grateful and
interesting. This is not about walking
in someone else’s shoes to try to understand them. That can degenerate into so much psychobabble
and lead to patronizing condescension.
No, what I must do is by the power of the Holy Spirit have my default
setting reordered so that my first response is to have mercy. I can’t do it by myself; this must be the
gift of grace. It will only come as I die
to self and live for and in Christ. What
I can do is make that choice and ask for forgiveness for my past attitudes and seek
the Holy Spirit’s judgment and help.
"Blessed are the merciful ...." When we feel everything but mercy is when the Holy Spirit is desiring us to step into the mercy of God and be merciful. It is not in our power, but in releasing ourselves to the work of God. Thanks for posting!
ReplyDeleteWell said Steven, Thank you!
ReplyDelete