First Reading: (Romans 8:12–17)
Responsorial Psalm: (Psalm 68)
Response: Our God is a God who saves.
ALLELUIA: Alleluia, alleluia.
Your word, O Lord, is truth; sanctify us in your truth.
Alleluia.
Gospel: (Luke 13:10–17)
Reflection:
As a clinician, I love all things healing in the Bible. In this profession, our sole mission is always to heal the sick. Unfortunately, sometimes we fall short of that mission to heal. In a greedy market based economy where everything is tied to spreadsheets and profits, to heal completley could mean that someone could be put out of business, so we would rather manage symptoms and be getting perpetually paid.
Today Gospel then presents a powerful lesson where Jesus healed that woman. Those leaders perhaps wanted to uphold their laws more than they wanted to see that woman healed. It is not hard to picture that in the world we live in today. Jesus heals a woman who had suffered for eighteen long years. Instead of rejoicing, the synagogue leaders are offended, not because the healing was evil, but because it broke their interpretation of the law.
Their hearts, hardened by pride, jealousy, and legalism, became blind to compassion. The law, given to serve humanity, had become more important to them than the human person standing before their eyes, burdened by man made rules. During COVID, people were not allowed to go outside for sunlight. The sun, the greatest disinfectant compatible with all living things for billions of years, was prohibited by man made laws to, in their words, “flatten the curve of the covid spread.” Man can be wicked in his belief systems.
Anyway, this blindness to humanity still happens today all around us like stated above. We can become so attached to rules, positions, pride, or our own anger and prejudice that we fail to see the suffering, dignity, and value of another human being. The rulers of the synagogue could not rejoice with their own sister in faith, who had carried pain, shame, and burden for eighteen lomg years. They did not share her tears, so they could not share her joy. Some people where actually unhappy covid didn't kill more people than it did.
But Jesus reveals the heart of God:
When a human life, human dignity, or human suffering is before us, love must speak louder than law. Mercy must stand above ritual. Compassion must outweigh pride. When life and dignity are at stake, every other law falls silent. The only law that remains is the law of love.
Recently at work, I had an exchange with a staff member in another department. My clinical judgment superseded hers. She wanted to uphold the rules, and I would not. I did what was necessary, and she questioned it, showing a great deal of displeasure.
Let us examine our hearts. Have we allowed jealousy, anger, prejudice, or rigid legalism to make us cold toward others? Have we forgotten that those we judge or mistreat are human beings, children of God, whose blood, like ours, flows with pain and hope?
Today, Jesus calls us to recover our humanity. To put the human person first. To let love be the highest law. To heal, to lift, to rejoice with others. For there is no law greater than love.
Have a wonderful week and God bless you.
Pal Ronnie