Text: Mark 1:29-39
During this series, we’ve been
looking at the various themes of Epiphany, the miracles and signs that reveal
Jesus in his glory as the Son of God.
Tonight we will take a look at last Sunday’s gospel, which never got a
proper sermon, poor thing, on account of my absence sick, and we will talk
about healing as one of the signs of who Jesus is and what he has been sent
for.
Last Saturday we looked at a
kind of healing, when Jesus in Capernaum frees the man of the unclean spirit
(Mk 1:21-28). That was an act of healing in that the man was made whole again,
but as I said last Saturday, that healing needs to be seen as a kind of cosmic
confrontation, as Jesus routing the evil powers that occupy the world and
frustrate his Father’s good purposes.
As we continue with Mark’s
gospel, the healing of Simon Peter’s mother-in-law doesn’t have any cosmic
overtones. It’s not an exorcism, there
is no evil spirit, just a woman with a fever.
There’s a few things we can say about this story of healing.
First, it’s intimate and
domestic, whereas the healing of man with the spirit in the synagogue was very
public, in the synagogue. This story should
comfort us in that Jesus comes into a home, bringing love and healing with
him. It shows Jesus’ interest in us and
love for us, wherever we are, especially for those of us who think that we can
only find God in a church.
Likewise there is something
comforting in the intimacy of touch and contact in this story. Jesus taking the woman by the hand and
raising her up reminds us of how Jesus raises Jairus’ daughter from the dead
later in Mark’s gospel (41He took her by the hand and said to her, ‘Talitha cum’, which
means, ‘Little girl, get up!’ 42And immediately the girl got up and began to walk
about (she was twelve years of age).”
That Jesus should bother with this physical, comforting gestures, rather
than airily waving his hand, says something profound about the incarnation and
about a God who cares to be with us in the midst of our lives. Anyone who has felt sick and frail can I
think relate to this idea of Jesus’ healing touch and proximity.
There’s two more important
things we can say about this healing miracle.
The first is that, like the other Epiphany signs, it functions as a
revelation of the glory and power that the Father has given to the Son. People throng the streets to see Jesus in
hopes that he will heal them and their loved ones. If the turning of the water to wine at the
Wedding of Cana was a miracle of creation, then the healings are miracles of
restoration, showing Jesus sharing in the creative power of the God, restoring
people to wholeness.
The second thing we can say
about this miracle is that it shows us that at it’s heart, the Kingdom of God
is about service. Healed of her fever,
Simon’s mother in law can return to her vocation of hospitality to her
guests. We might think it sexist of Mark to give her a name, and to think
that her only role is to make sandwiches, but in Mark the word “serve” is
vitally important. The Greek word, diakaneo, is the origin of
word “deacon”, one of the three holy orders with a specific focus on ministry
to others. It’s the same word that Mark uses to describe how
the angels wait on Jesus after his time with the devil in the wilderness.
Jesus himself uses the word
diakeno to describe his mission: “For the Son of Man came not to be served but
to serve, and to give his life a ransom for many” (Mk
10.45). In our culture, the words “serve” and “service” can
often have a menial connotation – think of how little prestige we attach to
jobs in the “service industry” – but for Jesus, the kingdom of God is about
service as a vocation, about a purpose in life. Healed,
Simon’s mother can resume her proper vocation which includes offering hospitality
to her guests. Hospitality and service are what makes
community and communion with others possible. Likewise, in
your food ministries, you the people of All Saints rightly see service to
others as vocation. Service is an action
that unites heaven and earth, service binds the kingdom of God together.
Jesus in Mark is thus revealed
as someone who wields so much power that demons fear him, and yet he used that
power to heal and restore. Jesus’ message is that we see the
kingdom of God most fully when we are in community and communion, with God and
with one another. In this communion that we find our healing,
and our saved from the forces that would refocus us selfishly on our needs and
our desires, a kind of possession that can only lead us to the despair of our
inadequacies. Epiphany is about the glory
of God revealed in Christ, as we see tomorrow with the Transfiguration, but amidst
all this bright glory is the simplicity of service that restores us all to
wholeness.
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