Sunday, June 28, 2026
A Wide Circle
Saturday, June 27, 2026
Breaking Boundaries
Gospel: Matthew 8: 5-17
These first actions after the Sermon on the Mount are significant. In yesterday's Gospel portion Jesus heals an utter outcast and untouchable - a leper. Today Jesus has compassion on the slave of the hated Roman occupiers, a person with no status in society in the employ of one even more reviled and unclean than a leper in foreign oppressors. Yet, Jesus demonstrates that the love and mercy of God are for all people without distinction.
But then Jesus does something remarkable. He heals Peter's mother-in-law, and she becomes the first to serve the needs of others in the ministry of Jesus. For upon being healed, she gets up to serve others. The word used in the text is diakonia. Peter's mother-in-law in effect becomes the first deacon of the community of Jesus, demonstrating model discipleship: the healed - the ones who have received mercy - are then to heal and show mercy to others.
Meanwhile the modern church continues to create categories and criteria of worthiness in terms of who should be cared for, and who can serve in various ministerial roles. The limitations of our care for others stand in stark contrast to the unlimited mercy Jesus extended to others. The exclusivity of our ministry cliques clash with the boundlessness of Jesus in allowing everyone to serve. If the growth of the church is anemic, it is due to our lack of love and mercy, not in the availability of God's grace.
Friday, June 26, 2026
Showing the Way
Gospel: Matthew 8: 1-4
The Sermon on the Mount is completed. Jesus comes down from the mountain in order to put the Beatitudes into practice in the world. His first encounter is with a leper who approaches him begging to be healed. The crowd is disgusted and appalled. Lepers were the ultimate outcasts of society, the most unclean of the unclean. No one would have any contact or association with a leper, no mercy or quarter shown to them. Lepers were so due to sin in the eyes of the world at that time.
Yet this encounter is the perfect opportunity for Jesus to demonstrate to his audience the radical meaning of all he taught on the mountaintop. Jesus does not shrink from the encounter; he embraces it. He has compassion and empathy for the leper which leads to an act of mercy in healing the leper of his ailment. The Beatitudes are being applied right away, starting with the most marginalized member of society in ancient times.
Jesus invites the leper into the world of the Beatitudes in inviting him to practice meekness. Do not tell anyone about this healing. Go instead and show yourself to the priests so that you may be restored to a place in society. Offer a gift of thanksgiving to God for this great mercy. But tell no one about it. Go instead to have empathy for others, to extend mercy and loving kindness as it has been extended to you. That is the invitation we have all received - we the spiritual lepers that we are.