In a Cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) class years ago we
were told about an unfortunate incident where a woman was raped on the street
in front of her house. Most of her
neighbors were home and they did not help or call the police. Afterwards they sent her cards of apology for
their inaction stating that they didn’t believe that they could help in any way
and they felt helpless. The point of our
instructor telling us the story was to have us understand that we truly needed
to believe that we could help, otherwise we needed to walk away and call for
help from someone else: To help someone we needed to have faith because in administering
CPR once it is begun you aren’t supposed to stop unless someone, like an
emergency medical technician, is there to take over for you.
In direct contrast in today’s Gospel reading we hear about
the friends who came to the aid of their paralytic friend and even when they
couldn’t get their friend into the house where Jesus was preaching and healing,
they found another way and they gently lowered him. They had faith. They believed that Jesus could heal. They believed that they could help make this
a reality for their friend. We know that
Jesus healed him because he was able to pick-up his stretcher and leave, but
Jesus also forgave him his sins.
Jesus never had to say that he was God. He showed it through his actions and
words. The scribes and Pharisees are the
ones who tell us, “Who but God alone can forgive sins?” Jesus responds to them and asks, “Which is
easier to say, ‘Your sins are forgiven,’ or to say ‘Rise and walk’?” There is a phrase ‘Putting a band-aide on a
problem.’ For this man to have only been
physically healed would have been this sort of superficial solution. God heals hearts when he forgives. At healing masses there is sometimes a concern
that those receiving the Sacrament of Anointing may faint because of the Spirit
that moves through the profound belief of the recipients. May we all give glory and praise to God in
his mercy to “forgive us our sins…and deliver us from all evil.” Amen.
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