Pages

Tuesday, October 08, 2013

Getting it wrong


Does God really care about anyone?

This Sunday October 13th 2013 is the 21st Sunday After Pentecost and we can use some or all of the readings below: 
Jeremiah 29:1, 4-7 and Psalm 66:1-12 [or 2 Kings 5:1-3, 7-15c and Psalm 111 ]
We like it when it is pictures of 'proper' doctors and nurses
of scouts and hospital orderlies

Leprosy has a sort of romantic attraction for many Christians
and indeed, we find it more 'comfortable'
if God is healing people who are outcast
but who we would want to like (if they weren't so awful)
but in reality that romanticism is ill-placed!
Leprosy is as romantic as AIDS in the modern context
and as socially stigmatising as skin cancer
or any disease which has disfigurement associated with it.
The story (Luke 17:11-19) has not only some interesting reflections to make about seeking healing from God
...Do we for example live out of the thankfulness of answered prayer?
Or do we quickly forget that God desires healing for us all?
This story reflects that 9 out of 10 people
forget to give thanks to God.
and my estimation would be that that is about right!
But the story also tells us that God's healing is not confined by religion,
it isn't just confined
to who we think
God should be disposed towards.
God's concern is towards humanity and not just to Jews or Christians,
white or black.
It is not just to be nice to children
or those who say their prayers
God's concern is for the whole of humanity.
God's grace, the free gift of eternal life,
is without bounds
and is offered to all.

It is a reminder to us that we should be no less open.
That our compassion needs to be challenged beyond the bounds of niceness.
We are to be open to be compasssionate
beyond the bounds of our own social caste or religion.
The world is not like this.
9 out of 10 people get this wrong.

Prejudice
We witness prejudice in all manner of ways.
I once sat with someone in hospital and listened while his wife told me
that the staff were fabulous

except for the Indians

who you just couldn't understand.
I found myself thinking of the many many Indian doctors and nurses
who have served us well in this country
and just shuddered.

This week
Can you reflect on where you make judgments
based on prejudice rather than compassion and mercy?
Invite the Holy Spirit to let you do better than this and to show you how?




God who is truth and love

grant to us your people

the wisdom and compassion

to act justly and with mercy
in the name of the guiltless Jesus

who died that all people might know the love of God.

Amen

No comments: