9As Jesus was walking along, he saw a man called Matthew sitting at the tax
booth; and he said to him, "Follow me." And he got up and followed him.
10And as he sat at dinner in the house, many tax collectors and sinners
came and were sitting with him and his disciples. 11When the Pharisees saw
this, they said to his disciples, "Why does your teacher eat with tax
collectors and sinners?" 12But when he heard this, he said, "Those who are
well have no need of a physician, but those who are sick. 13Go and learn
what this means, 'I desire mercy, not sacrifice.' For I have come to call
not the righteous but sinners." 18While he was saying these things to
them, suddenly a leader of the synagogue came in and knelt before him,
saying, "My daughter has just died; but come and lay your hand on her, and
she will live." 19And Jesus got up and followed him, with his disciples.
20Then suddenly a woman who had been suffering from hemorrhages for twelve
years came up behind him and touched the fringe of his cloak, 21for she
said to herself, "If I only touch his cloak, I will be made well." 22Jesus
turned, and seeing her he said, "Take heart, daughter; your faith has made
you well." And instantly the woman was well. 23When Jesus came to the
leader's house and saw the flute players and the crowd making a commotion,
24he said, "Go away; for the girl is not dead but sleeping." And they
laughed at him. 25But when the crowd had been put outside, he went in and
took her by the hand, and the girl got up. 26And the report of this spread
throughout that district.
Step 1-Initial Diagnosis: Sick in living together
These gospel narratives are for people who have limited choices -- people
who would like to be able to give direction to their lives, but who aren't
sure how or whether they actually can. It's also a story for people who
have been pigeon-holed by their society, and not in the best light. These
are the people who occupy a major role in this reading -- the tax collector
Matthew, the "sinners" who didn't observe the Torah, an unclean woman, and
a dying girl. The representatives of the religious community participate in
this segregation, unaware of how their own being is poisoned by the
separation.
Step 2-Advanced Diagnosis: Sick at heart
The elite and downtrodden do share one thing in common. Both are sick.
Jesus' explanation of his reason for sitting with tax collectors and
sinners ("those who are sick") does not provide an immediate cure for the
illness of either grouping. It points to the depth of the problem whenever
there is such a separation of human beings from one another -- that the
heart is unable to love. Instead, victims are blinded to the possibility
of anything new breaking into their lives to change them for the better.
They believe they are unacceptable. The elite, in their smugness, cannot
see the depth of their illness either (this may also be the case for the
leader of the synagogue, who may think this healing is all for him, v. 18).
This is not an occasion where Jesus is simply pitting one group against
another. He is pointing to a deep malady -- sin-sick souls are running
rampant.
Step 3-Final Diagnosis: The Sickened relationship with God
The truth of the sickness is even scarier. Being unacceptable and sick at
heart is not the whole problem. Their relationship with God is so
sickened, that one and all are finally forsaken in their sickness, without
any hope for healing. There are no shepherds caring for their people. The
final result is that our forsakenness not only dashes our hopes and
imagination about ourselves and the world, but it also crushes our desire
to know and be known by God. For we have become convinced that God is
either neglecting or ignoring us -- or maybe worse, visiting us with his
neglecting.
Step 4-Initial Prognosis: A House Call
But what if God were not as distant as our imagination and experience and
culture would lead us to believe? What if, in fact, God were the kind of
God who knows our forsakenness so intimately himself that he refuses to
leave us forsaken, and instead shows up on our door-step ready to treat
what ails us? And what if God, like a physician, makes house calls? For
that is exactly what God does in Jesus. In Jesus, God shows us that he is
ready to face our forsakenness with us, put an end to it, and by his
companionship make us acceptable, whole people. For Matthew, and his
fellow sinner-friends, Jesus makes this move (of making them acceptable) by
sitting at the table with them -- unclean souls that they are. For the
woman with the hemorrhage, Jesus undoes her forsakenness by acknowledging
her presence, healing her, and lifting up her faith in him. And for the
little girl he does it by refusing to accept the judgment that she is dead;
instead, he makes his house call as planned, and gives her new life. And
even for his smug onlookers, even ourselves, he makes us acceptable by
taking our guilt, shame, and deadness to the cross, while handing us new
life. Jesus shows himself to be the physician and healer of the
unacceptable, sick, and dead.
Step 5-Advanced Prognosis: Faith that heals
But that is not all. As they are healed, Jesus lets those newly healed
ones know that they themselves have something beating deep within their
hearts that "makes them well" -- i.e., their faith. With faith we are able
to rise above the illness of a relationship with God that would have left
us for dead. By our trusting that Jesus can heal the depths of our being,
the depths of our soul, we get all that and more in the bargain of his
healing presence, and get to live a renewed life in wholeness.
Step 6-Final Prognosis: Following the Leader
What's more, Jesus invites us to "follow him" as his people made well, and
participate in his mission of making house calls on the world. Keeping
company with Jesus frees the accepted and healed person to pay attention to
other outcasts and forsaken people who need Jesus the Christ's healing
touch in their lives. Jesus' healing opens our eyes to the healing that
we've receive; it reminds us of the gift which others still need. Being in
the company of Jesus changes our outlook about God and our neighbor. In
effect, those who have been healed by Jesus, give up the God-forsaken ways
of the world, and follow Jesus' lead instead. In fact, whenever we see the
forsaken before us, we remember the love of Jesus the Physician for us, and
(in both relief and gratitude) we offer others the healing which we have
received already.