Friday, June 28, 2024

GOD COMFORTS THE SUFFEREING WHEN THEY REACH OUT IN FAITH

 “Praised be God, the Father of mercies, and the God of all consolation! He comforts us in all our afflictions and thus enables us to comfort those who are in trouble with the same consolation we have received from Him.”

                                                                                                                        (2 Cor. 1:3-4)

Jesus’ miracles of curing people with medical problems are considered not only wonderful, but as remarkable when one considers the lack of knowledge of diseases, illnesses and injuries and how to cure them during that time of history.

Medicine was about the collection of beliefs, experience and information based on these areas. Treatments involved incantations, invoking gods, magical herbs, amulets and charms. As for physicians, they were drug sellers, root cutters, midwives, gymnastic trainers, surgeons or anyone who was willing to offer medical services.

And, if that was not bad enough, people lived on the average to the age of thirty-five in Jesus’ time. In other words, it was offered to earn a living, whether the person lived or died. Jesus was present to them out of love with their only cost having faith in His ability to make them whole.

Pain and suffering are normative in all societies; no matter where you live. Statistics from 2022 in the United States tell us that 2.8 million died versus 3.7 million who were born that year. With two on-going wars in Ukraine and Israel, and daily shootings in the United States, the death rates may have increased since then.

When Covid became a pandemic in 2019, millions of people died throughout the world and there were not enough doctors and nurses to help people in need to help them survive. So terrible were the causes of death from Covid-19 that relatives and friends were prohibited from visiting those who were sick with the disease in the hospital. And even the hospital staff who treated those with the disease were susceptible to be infected and died from the dreaded pandemic.

So horrific was this that many believed God had sent a plague to destroy the earth because He no longer loved His creation. Many left their church out of fear of being infected and then stayed away even when the disease dissipated because they were angry with God due to their losses.

St. Mark’s Gospel today reminds us that Jesus focused on healing, not destruction. The lady dying from a blood disease realized that the earth did not offer her a cure or a way to salvage her life as she knew it. Jesus must have realized when the power he had drained from his body as she touched His  cloak, that she was reaching out in desperation with all her strength to receive His love and all His healing grace as a sign of faith that she believed His message of love and salvation.

As fully initiated and practicing Catholics, we are called by our Church through the Holy Spirit to be present to those who are suffering in their lives, no matter what the need. If we are not already doing so, let us reach out to our families, friends and anyone we know who is suffering physically, mentally, emotionally or in their faith. Not only will we be effective in their lives, but in ours as well.

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