The Leper
6th Sunday after Epiphany, 15th February, 2015, Mark 1:40-45
The Gospel of Mark doesn’t shilly-shally. It’s short and to the
point. It starts in the middle of the action, and it moves fast, wasting
no words. In the first chapter, just a page and half in a typical
bible, this is what we get:
John the Baptist preaches in the desert;
John baptises Jesus;
The Spirit of God descends upon Jesus;
Jesus announces that the Kingdom of Heaven is at hand;
Jesus calls four disciples to follow him;
Jesus teaches in the synagogue at Capernaum;
Jesus casts out an unclean spirit from a sick man;
Jesus heals Simon’s mother-in-law;
Jesus heals many other people;
Jesus goes into the desert to pray;
Jesus preaches in other synagogues in Galilee;
Jesus heals a leper;
Jesus withdraws into the desert to escape the crowds.
That’s quite a list. Mark doesn’t give us much in the way of dates
and times; he wasn’t writing an essay for a history course. But it’s
clear that this first chapter covers a lot of ground and time, many
miles, and many days if not weeks.
Mark also doesn’t give us much in the way of help about how to
understand the stories of Jesus’s ministry that he has chosen to tell
us. He simply tells us what happened, sometimes saying it was the next
day, sometimes not. For example, he mentions in passing that John was
put in prison. We are left to infer that some time must have passed
between Jesus’s baptism and this event.
Then there’s Mark’s narrative method. In some places he uses
dialogue to move the story along, for example when Jesus tells Simon and
Andrew he will make them fishers of men. In other places, he uses
dialogue to slow down the story, so that we will dwell on that event a
little longer, as in the healing of the leper. And many things are
merely mentioned, such as the teaching and preaching in the synagogues.
Jesus did that, but Mark doesn’t tell us what Jesus said. In many ways,
Mark’s Gospel is more of a chronicle than a history. History deals not
only with what happened, but with why, with people’s motives and desires
and goals, how they achieved their goals, or not. And so on.
Mark usually just tells us “This happened, then this happened, then that happened.”
So we have to pick up every hint of meaning that we can. There are
two here that I noticed among many. First, in the second half of this
chapter, Jesus’s ministry consists of preaching and healing. Second,
there are references to his growing fame. People were talking. People
were talking a lot. And Jesus wasn’t exactly happy about that.
What are the lessons can we draw from this first chapter of Mark?
Let’s start with the leper. Leprosy is a nasty disease. It can be
cured with antibiotics these days, but it can still cause disfigurement.
In Jesus’s time, its causes weren’t understood, and there was no cure.
Lepers were outcasts, they were homeless. They were allowed to beg by
the roadside, but they were not allowed to live in town. No one touched
them, no one even handed food to them. They had to leave their bowls by
the side of the road, then go away while someone came by to bring food.
Imagine being told you have to leave home because of your illness.
Imagine people being afraid of you because of your illness. Imagine
people not even looking at you when they give you a coin.
Jesus heals the leper, and he tells him, “Don’t talk to anybody;
but show yourself to the priest, and perform the sacrifices according to
the law.”
So the leper dances off. Well, I think of him as dancing off, I
mean wouldn’t you dance if you’d just been healed of a horrible disease
that made you an outcast? He dances off, shows himself to the priest,
and starts talking to everybody whose ears are close enough about this
wonderful thing that’s happened to him, and who did it. So much so, that
Jesus was recognised everywhere he went, and had to go to less
populated places. Yet still people came to see and hear him.
By curing him, Jesus gave the leper his life back. He could once
again be a part of his family and community. No wonder he told everybody
about the wonderful thing Jesus had done. Wouldn’t you?
Why then did Jesus tell the leper to keep it quiet? Jesus had no
qualms about preaching and teaching in the synagogues. He didn’t object
when people admired his insights into the Torah and the Commentaries.
Mark tells us that he went all over Galilee preaching and casting out
devils, and healing people of diverse diseases.
To understand Jesus’s unwillingness to have the leper talk about
his healing we have to look further. Jesus makes the same request of
some other people he healed. And most significantly, he complains that
people want him to perform signs and wonders. He doesn’t want people to
believe his message just because they see him doing miracles. He wants
them to understand his message and apply it to their own lives. Miracles
can be a distraction.
If we consider the miracles that Jesus did, we can see a pattern, a
pattern that reinforces Jesus’s message to us. The miracles weren’t
merely tricks that demonstrated his power. They weren’t designed to
amaze us. They weren’t even proofs that he was the Son of God. The
disciples performed miracles, too. So did Elijah. Magicians do things
that seem impossible. In both Jesus’s day and ours, most magicians made a
living entertaining people, and some made a living deceiving people.
Why would Jesus want to compete with them?
Well, he didn’t. All of Jesus’s miracles helped people. He cured
their diseases. He filled their bellies. He calmed their fears. In his
very first miracle he turned water into wine at a wedding. He turned
what could have been a failed celebration into a better feast than the
groom had planned. His miracles all remove pain, the pain of illness,
the pangs of hunger, the anguish of fear, the misery of social disgrace.
In short, Jesus’s miracles made life better for people. That’s the first lesson for today.
The second lesson comes from an earlier part of this first chapter
of Mark: The kingdom of God is at hand, says Jesus. That’s the
framework, the context, the purpose of Jesus’s ministry. Repent, and
believe the good news, he says. The good news is that he’s come to make
our lives better in every way, physically, socially, spiritually. And
Mark’s focus throughout his account is on how Jesus does just that. This
first chapter sets up two major themes of Mark’s Gospel: That the
Kingdom of God is at hand, and that Jesus heals us.
The healing of the leper touches on both of these themes. It
touches on healing directly, and on the presence of the Kingdom of God
indirectly. The healing of the leper is the healing of an outcast. We
aren’t likely to get leprosy these days, and we no longer have rules and
regulations that would make us homeless if we do get it. But there are
many ways in which we can be outcasts, or feel like one.
It’s terrible to feel outcast, to be an outsider because other
people don’t want you. In my first draft of this meditation, I had a
long passage about mental illness and homelessness, and the helplessness
we feel when someone we love suffers from an illness, any illness at
all. It was quite a downer, so I’ve decide to focus on how today’s
Gospel story reassures us.
It reassures us that Jesus will heal us, that he will be there when
healing is needed. The leper faced a lifetime of slowly increasing pain
and ugliness, and of being shunned by his people. His future looked
dark, and looked to be getting darker. Jesus changed that. He changed
that because the leper asked him for healing. Make me clean, he said, I know you can do it. And Jesus did it.
When we are so far down that we think there’s no way up, we too can
ask Jesus to heal us. And one way or another, Jesus will do that. He
may help us change the way we see ourselves and our situation so that we
can see a way out. He may help us trust friends and family to support
us as the body and the mind heal. He may give us the confidence to hang
in there until things get better. He may lead us to a healer, a spirit
guide, a doctor, who will use their gifts to bring us out of the
darkness. He may grant us a vision of himself that will energise us so
that we can move on and up, away from depths that threaten to drown us.
For you see the story of the leper is also a story about the power
of prayer. If you pray with faith, your prayer will be answered. Prayer
is not a magic spell. Prayer is a way of connecting with the Spirit, and
that Spirit will enable us to recognise what has been there all along,
the healing power of faith and trust in the One who embodied love.
Accept that love when it’s offered.
Offer that love when it’s needed.
Let us pray.
Lord God, who made us, saved us, and keeps us, grant us so to
trust you that we will pray for your healing power. Give use the
humility to recognise that healing when it is offered, and the
confidence to offer that healing when we see the need. We ask this in
the name of the One who healed us all by his death on the Cross. Amen.
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