
Trinity 5
At the time of Jesus people were considered dirty or 'unclean' if they had contact with certain foods, diseases, body fluids, or dead things. Being unclean was the opposite of being holy, and therefore you couldn't come to the holy temple to worship the holy God. Unclean people were cut off from God and other people and so in our story today we see a little girl who is dead and a woman who is like the living dead! They have things in common, both utterly desperate, they both come to Jesus as their last and only hope.
When Jesus calls the woman who touched him "daughter," he established a relationship with one with whom he should not have a relationship. Her illness made her unclean; he should not allow her to touch him. Jesus would have made himself unclean by the contact with the woman and the little girl, but instead Jesus mixes everything up. Jesus doesn't become unclean by contact with the unclean people. They don't bring him down to their level, instead Jesus' holiness transforms their uncleanness and makes them well. The flow of blood is stopped, the woman is healed. The corpse comes back to life. The young girl gets out of bed. Jesus has a healing touch, his holiness transforms the people's uncleanness. Jesus raises them up to his level. Jesus makes them worthy to be in the presence of God. Sometimes our lives may seem bad and we may think that we are terrible, rotten, unclean people. Jesus doesn't think so and he can make us well inside and out.
Opening Verse of Scripture 2 Corinthians 8
For you know the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, that though he was rich, yet for your sakes he became poor, so that you through his poverty might become rich.
Collect Prayer for the Day—Before we read we pray
Almighty and everlasting God, by whose Spirit the whole body of the Church is governed and sanctified: hear our prayer which we offer for all your faithful people, that in their vocation and ministry they may serve you in holiness and truth to the glory of your name; through our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, who is alive and reigns with you, in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever.
Almighty God, send down upon your Church the riches of your Spirit, and kindle in all who minister the gospel your countless gifts of grace;
through Jesus Christ our Lord.
First Bible Reading Wisdom of Solomon 1.13–15; 2.23, 24
because God did not make death, and he does not delight in the death of the living. For he created all things so that they might exist; the generative forces of the world are wholesome, and there is no destructive poison in them, and the dominion of Hades is not on earth. For righteousness is immortal. for God created us for incorruption, and made us in the image of his own eternity, but through the devil’s envy death entered the world, and those who belong to his company experience it.
Second Reading 2 Corinthians 8.7–15
Now as you excel in everything—in faith, in speech, in knowledge, in utmost eagerness, and in our love for you—so we want you to excel also in this generous undertaking. I do not say this as a command, but I am testing the genuineness of your love against the earnestness of others. For you know the generous act of our Lord Jesus Christ, that though he was rich, yet for your sakes he became poor, so that by his poverty you might become rich. And in this matter I am giving my advice: it is appropriate for you who began last year not only to do something but even to desire to do something— now finish doing it, so that your eagerness may be matched by completing it according to your means. For if the eagerness is there, the gift is acceptable according to what one has—not according to what one does not have. I do not mean that there should be relief for others and pressure on you, but it is a question of a fair balance between your present abundance and their need, so that their abundance may be for your need, in order that there may be a fair balance. As it is written, ‘The one who had much did not have too much, and the one who had little did not have too little.’
Gospel Reading Mark 5.21–43
When Jesus had crossed again in the boat to the other side, a great crowd gathered round him; and he was by the lake. Then one of the leaders of the synagogue named Jairus came and, when he saw him, fell at his feet and begged him repeatedly, ‘My little daughter is at the point of death. Come and lay your hands on her, so that she may be made well, and live.’ So he went with him. And a large crowd followed him and pressed in on him. Now there was a woman who had been suffering from haemorrhages for twelve years. She had endured much under many physicians, and had spent all that she had; and she was no better, but rather grew worse. She had heard about Jesus, and came up behind him in the crowd and touched his cloak, for she said, ‘If I but touch his clothes, I will be made well.’ Immediately her haemorrhage stopped; and she felt in her body that she was healed of her disease. Immediately aware that power had gone forth from him, Jesus turned about in the crowd and said, ‘Who touched my clothes?’ And his disciples said to him, ‘You see the crowd pressing in on you; how can you say, “Who touched me?” ’ He looked all round to see who had done it. But the woman, knowing what had happened to her, came in fear and trembling, fell down before him, and told him the whole truth. He said to her, ‘Daughter, your faith has made you well; go in peace, and be healed of your disease.’ While he was still speaking, some people came from the leader’s house to say, ‘Your daughter is dead. Why trouble the teacher any further?’ But overhearing what they said, Jesus said to the leader of the synagogue, ‘Do not fear, only believe.’ He allowed no one to follow him except Peter, James, and John, the brother of James. When they came to the house of the leader of the synagogue, he saw a commotion, people weeping and wailing loudly. When he had entered, he said to them, ‘Why do you make a commotion and weep? The child is not dead but sleeping.’ And they laughed at him. Then he put them all outside, and took the child’s father and mother and those who were with him, and went in where the child was. He took her by the hand and said to her, ‘Talitha cum’, which means, ‘Little girl, get up!’ And immediately the girl got up and began to walk about (she was twelve years of age). At this they were overcome with amazement. He strictly ordered them that no one should know this, and told them to give her something to eat.
Post Communion Prayer
Grant, O Lord, we beseech you, that the course of this world may be so peaceably ordered by your governance, that your Church may joyfully serve you in all godly quietness; through Jesus Christ our Lord.
Commentary
The gospel story is deeply symbolic for Mark, but it also shows a deeply compassionate Jesus who cares for everyone, no matter what their circumstances. We don’t know many facts about the woman who was bleeding, or about Jairus’ daughter but one thing we do know about them is that the woman had been bleeding for 12 year and the little girl was 12 years old. In the bible, the number 12 often signifies wholeness of the completion of God’s purpose. The woman, who had been bleeding for 12 years had spent all she had. All the people she had seen and spent money with over the years were not able to heal her and make her well. No one, it would seem, could restore her to the way in which God had intended her to be. The best of human means and resources had not been able cure her symptoms. It’s as if she symbolises the age which was about to be superseded, the very language which is used in this part of the passage seems to symbolise this. We read that in all her anguish and desperation she reaches out to Jesus, despite all her shame and embarrassment, pushing through the crowd to touch the hem of Jesus’ robe. And amazingly, amid all the hustle and bustle and the jostling and the crowds, Jesus knows what’s happening. Not only does He know, He understands and responds in love and compassion, as He always does.
Similarly, just like the woman, the old order of doing things needed restoration and wholeness, it was passing away and it too needed to reach out and touch God in Jesus so it too could be made whole and complete. The words and works of humans had failed in the Old Covenant and it needed intervention by God so that His purpose could be made complete. But Jesus came into the world not just to restore and redeem the old, to refresh the old ways of the Jewish system of belief, He came to bring something new, the old was restored but the new was coming and it was going to be very different.
We see the old way of doing things coming to Jesus in Jairus. Jairus was an important man in the hierarchy of the Synagogue, probably one of the most important and influential members of those in authority. It was those associated with the Synagogue and the Jewish ruling party which had been so questioning of Jesus and everything He did. Now here was one of their elders coming to Jesus, falling at His feet and pleading with Him to save his daughter. When Jairus comes to Jesus he risks the disapproval of his community, and almost certainly questioning and disapproval from his colleagues and his friends and family to fall before Jesus. Jairus himself probably still had doubts and uncertainties about who Jesus was and what He was doing. But he is prepared to risk everything to save his daughter. Perhaps like the woman, Jairus didn’t know what Jesus might do, but he turned to Him as a last resort, in desperation, as someone who might have an answer. Both were at their wits end, but no matter what else they may fear as a result of coming to Him, it palled into insignificance if there is even the slightest hope that in coming to Jesus things might change. And they do. Jairus’ 12 year old daughter, who at first had been ill but was now dead, was brought to life, new life, by the touch of Jesus. The completion of God’s purpose came in bringing completely new life to everyone. Jesus reaches out to Jairus’ daughter and she is brought to life from the sleep of the dead. As He was in the house of the ruler of the Synagogue, a Jew, we might have expected Jesus to speak in Hebrew (or Greek perhaps) but He speaks in Aramaic, the common language. But this new relationship with God which Jesus brought about was open to all, not just the Hebrew speaking Jews, and inclusive of men and women. And the language that’s used in this part of the story is different, it symbolises the present, the new and the ongoing. In the story, Jesus not only heals and restores the old, but brings about life and vitality to the new. Looking to the past and looking to the future. What has been and what is yet to come. The old has gone, not destroyed or thrown away as worthless, but renewed and restored.
It is only a part of the new that is here now. In the story we see that Jesus is there when people reach out, as did the woman who had been bleeding. For others He is there, and comes to meet them where they are, reaching out to them whatever their circumstances, perhaps after just the faintest understanding or glimpse of who He is. There are bits of both situations in all of us. There are times when perhaps we need to reach out to God for things that may have happened in the past, perhaps which we are embarrassed or ashamed about and ask that He would restore and renew so that we can move on. Perhaps all we do is whisper a silent and seemingly confused prayer as we reach out to touch the hem of His role, asking that the old may be transformed and renewed. We don’t necessarily know everything about Him, who does? We might not know exactly what to ask, but He is there whenever we reach out. There are times too, perhaps in time of need, where we just need to allow the risen Jesus to reach out to us and to touch us. To make something new out of what looks a hopeless situation. He is there then too. Times when perhaps we are too fearful even to whisper to him or to speak and all we are able to do is come before God in our silence.
As they come to Jesus, neither Jairus nor the woman who came to touch Him seem to make any great expression or statement of faith. But for both there is a profound hope that Jesus could change things, and that coming before Him in their own desperate ways could make a difference to their circumstances. We see that it does, perhaps not in the way or even with the timing we or they might expect, but lives are transformed as a result of the contact with Christ. The new life and transformation that Jesus offers is open to all who come. It’s not exclusive, Jesus reaches out to everyone, whatever their situation or background, with the offer to touch and transform lives that are not completely as God intended them to be, that all can know His eternal peace, healing and wholeness. Sam Cappleman
Meditation
In the local community in which the gospel reading takes place there could not have been a bigger difference in status between the two key people in the story. Jairus was the synagogue ruler, the lay person in charge of the local synagogue. He was a senior and elected official of high standing and many would be keenly aware of his standing and status. For him to come to Jesus, the very person who was speaking out and challenging the organised religion he represented, was a significant event which would have been noted by many people. The woman on the other hand, would be very much a second-class citizen, a female, permanently ritually unclean according to the law of Leviticus and isolated from the community because of this, virtually an outcast. It is noticeable she came from the back of the crowd, a place where we must assume she would have been used to being. Both come to Jesus and are transformed by coming into contact with Him. Jesus loves them the way he finds them, but loves them enough not to leave them the way he has found them. Jesus does not care what our background or status is, or has been, but is constantly waiting for us to reach out and touch Him so that we too can be transformed. Sam Cappleman
Hymns
- Praise to the Lord
- When I feel the touch
- Jubilate everybody
- O for a thousand tongues
- Christ, whose glory fills the skies
- Praise my soul the King of Heaven
- We praise, we worship thee, O God (Tune: Church triumphant,
- Safe in the shadow of the Lord
- There’s a wideness in God’s mercy
- Forth in thy name (Tune: Angel’s Song)
Prayers for Sunday and the week ahead
Kindle in our hearts, O God, the flame of that love which never ceases, that it may burn in us, giving light to others. May we shine forever in
Thy holy temple. Set on fire with Thy eternal light, even Thy son, Jesus Christ, Our Savior and Redeemer.
God the Father, your will for all people is health and salvation. God the Son, you came that we might have life, and have it more abundantly. God the Holy Spirit, you make our bodies the temple of your presence. Holy Trinity, one God, in you we live and move and have our being. Lord, grant your healing grace to all who are sick, injured or disabled, that they may be made whole. Grant to all who are lonely, anxious or depressed a knowledge of your will and an awareness of your presence. Grant to all who minister to those who are suffering wisdom and skill, sympathy and patience. Mend broken relationships, and restore to those in distress soundness of mind and serenity of spirit.
Sustain and support those who seek your guidance and lift up all who are brought low by the trials of this life. Grant to the dying peace and a holy death, and uphold by the grace and consolation of your Holy Spirit those who are bereaved. Restore to wholeness whatever is broken by human sin, in our lives, in our nation, and in the world.
Blessed are you, sovereign God, gentle and merciful, creator of heaven and earth. Your Word brought light out of darkness, and daily your Spirit renews the face of the earth. When we turned away from you in sin, your anointed Son took our nature and entered our suffering to bring your healing to those in weakness and distress. He broke the power of evil and set us free from sin and death that we might become partakers of his glory. The God of peace, who brought again from the dead our Lord Jesus, that great Shepherd of the sheep, make you perfect in every good work to do His will; and the blessing of God Almighty, the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit be among you and remain with you always. Amen
Additional Material
Commentary
The ancient Hebrews felt certain animals, foods, diseases, body fluids, and dead things made people dirty, and so they were afraid to touch them. Such things were ‘unclean’ or ‘impure’ and if you touched them you too became unclean. If you had certain diseases, you were unclean and anything or anyone that you touched became unclean. Being unclean was the opposite of being holy, and therefore you couldn't come to the holy temple to worship the holy God. Anything unclean was unfit or unworthy to be in the presence of the holy God. If you were unclean, you had to go through a rite of purification or cleansing in order to be welcomed back into society and into the presence of God. Unclean things and people were estranged from God and each other and they weren't supposed to touch each other. Uncleanness, especially the three big ones -- leprosy, bodily discharge, or corpse touching -- were about relationships. They put people outside of the community. (Lev. 5:3; Num. 5:2-4). And these rules were enforced with discipline. A whole religious culture was built up which tried to keep everything in its place, maintaining the old prejudices and exclusive systems. And so in our story today we see a little girl who is dead and a woman who is like the living dead! They have things in common, both utterly desperate, they both come to Jesus as their last and only hope.
When Jesus calls the woman who touched him "daughter," he established a relationship with one with whom he should not have a relationship. Her illness made her unclean; he should not allow her to touch him. In some ways their view of unclean things is like our saying, "One bad apple spoils the whole bunch." Contact with one of these unclean things made you an unclean person. Jesus should have made himself unclean by the contact with the woman and the little girl, but instead Jesus mixes everything up. Jesus doesn't become unclean by contact with the unclean people. They don't bring him down to their level. Jesus' holiness transforms their uncleanness. The flow of blood is stopped. The woman is healed. The corpse comes back to life. The young girl gets out of bed.
Jesus has a healing touch, his holiness transforms the people's uncleanness. Jesus raises them up to his level. Jesus makes them worthy to be in the presence of God. Jesus, as the one good, holy apple, can make all the bad apples become good. Sometimes our lives may seem bad and we may think that we are terrible, rotten, unclean people. Jesus doesn't think so. To him, there are no such things as unclean people, just people who need his healing touch. Whoever he touches becomes clean and holy and beautiful. The woman's faith in Jesus' ability to heal her is so great that she is convinced she need only reach out and touch the hem of his garment in order to experience his healing power. The story tells us that this is true, with faith in Jesus, even death's grip is broken.
The important thing about this woman was that she did not ‘just’ have faith, she had the courage to act on it. She believed it so strongly that she risked breaking all the ritual and societal rules about cleanness to follow what she believed to be true. She had a belief that Jesus would accept her and even though she was afraid and trembling, she came to him. She told him the whole truth -- thus incriminating herself. Then as a result of her faith in action, she was accepted as a daughter. She was praised for her faith. The woman believed, but more importantly her belief prompted her to do something. We must all ask ourselves how things around us become different because we believe.
Charles Royden
Commentary
The gospel reading ends with the words, ‘…He gave strict orders not to let anyone know about this…’. Well somebody obviously disobeyed orders or we wouldn’t know about the story today. We’re not sure why Jesus asked that people kept the story quiet. Perhaps it was to avoid getting caught up in hoards of people who just wanted Him to heal them and would therefore deflect Jesus from His overall mission and work, of which healing was just a part; perhaps it was to avoid difficulties for Jairus or his daughter; perhaps it was to avoid direct confrontation with the authorities, we don’t know. The story also appears in Matthew and Luke, although Luke, the doctor, not surprisingly misses out the phrase about the woman ‘having suffered a great deal under the care of many doctors and spent all she had’ and Matthew, the good Jew, refers to the tassels on Jesus’ garment.
In whichever gospel it appears, the story certainly could have been difficult and embarrassing for Jairus. The Jewish authorities were already beginning to have doubts about Jesus and His mission. It was far from clear to them who He was or what the impact of His presence and teaching would be. The safe option for Jairus would have been to steer well clear of Jesus, keep his nose clean and let Jesus pass by at a safe distance, hopefully without Him creating too much fuss in Jairus’ back yard. But no, rather then giving Jesus a wide berth, He seeks Him out, falls at Jesus’ feet and begs Him to come to Him to come and touch His daughter to heal her so that she will live. Jairus is desperate and desperate times call for desperate measures. Jairus comes to Jesus. And, probably expecting a something spectacular to happen whether the trip was a success or not, a large crowd follow Jesus when He agrees to go with Jairus. Will He be able to pull this one off, no doubt they wonder.
On His way there He is approached from behind by a woman who has suffered constant bleeding for many years. In normal circumstances this would have caused Jairus great consternation. The woman is ritually unclean and therefore makes Jesus ritually unclean for the rest of the day by her touch. How can he now be in contact with Jesus? Interestingly Jairus doesn’t even appear to notice, he is focused on more important things, like his daughters life. And through the sick woman who touched Jesus, Jairus was to see that there is no need to move God to another place, take him on a journey, or attract him by a physical presence. He is present in the whole of His being, always and everywhere, and that He can do all things effortlessly by a simple command.
And He heals the woman who has merely touched the fringes of His garment, believing that is she did so she would be healed. And indeed, Jesus restores her to health and frees her from her suffering. Shortly after doing so the news comes to Jairus’ that his daughter has died and that there is no need to bother Jesus anymore. In the first century, 60% of live births usually died by their mid-teens so the scene presented here of a parent being presented with the death of a child would be a very common one. Unperturbed Jesus presses on to take control of the situation and encourages Jairus to maintain his belief. He takes the girl by the hand and gently speaks to her in Aramaic, inviting her to get up. With Jesus, as the world was to discover, the normal rules don’t apply.
Why are the two stories appear together? Perhaps it’s to show how Jesus saves not just from physical death but also spiritual death. The woman is delivered from her illness and from the permanent state of impurity caused by her flow of blood: she can now rejoin society and the worshiping community. She is saved from Spiritual death. Jairus is delivered from fear and loss, and his daughter is saved from physical death. Both needed belief in Jesus and His ability to transform seemingly hopeless situations into situations of life and peace.
In the one story it is the woman who reaches out to Jesus, in the other it is Jesus Himself who reaches out. Both demonstrated faith in action. Whether we reach out to Jesus or He reaches out to us, He is ready to respond to our every need. Sometimes in ways we don’t expect, or even when it looks like He’s showing up too late, His healing presence is with us always. So tangible, by faith, it can be touched. Sam Cappleman
Commentary
Two stories or one?
At first reading it looks like Mark has interspersed one story with another. As the reading opens we hear about a Synagogue ruler called Jairus (probably the President of the Synagogue), coming to Jesus with a request. Just as this story begins to unfold another story seems to break into the narrative, that of a woman who had been bleeding for 12 years. Is it two stories or is it just one? There are certainly common elements. Both Jairus and the woman with bleeding, who interestingly remains anonymous throughout the story, come to Jesus driven by a fear that overcomes all of their other fears. Albeit for different reasons, they are both at their wits end and utterly desperate. No matter what else they may fear as a result of coming to Jesus, it palls into insignificance if there is even the slightest hope that in coming to Jesus things might change.
Jairus was an important man in the hierarchy of the Synagogue, probably one of the most important and influential members of those in authority. It was those associated with the Synagogue and the Jewish ruling party which had been so questioning of Jesus and everything He did. Now here was one of their elders coming to Jesus, falling at His feet and pleading with Him to save his daughter. Jairus risks the disapproval of his community, almost certain questioning and disapproval from his colleagues, friends and family to fall before Jesus. Jairus himself probably still had doubts and uncertainties about who Jesus was and what He was doing. But he is prepared to risk everything to save his daughter.
For the woman who had been bleeding for so long, her fears were probably less about status but about never being well again and always being tired and an outcast, seen as unclean by the people she lived with. She fears embarrassment of being found out and discovery and rejection by the crowd. She is even too frightened to ask Jesus for anything but merely hopes by touching Him something might happen to change her life. She too is desperate.
Probably coming from different directions both Jairus and the woman push and elbow their way to the place in the crowd where they can encounter Jesus. Jesus agrees to go with Jairus and they set off towards his house, with the crowds in tow, all looking to be in on the action. It’s whilst they are on their way that the woman touches Jesus and the entourage comes to a halt. You can imagine the crowds almost willing Jesus on to Jairus’ house, they don’t want to get distracted by a woman who has just touched his clothes. You can imagine Jairus thinking, ‘Come on Jesus, we’re losing time here, what’s going on, don’t allow yourself to get distracted. If you get distracted now we’ll never get there and it will all be too late’.
For neither Jairus nor the woman there seems to be no great statement of faith, it might seem as if they are reaching out to Jesus as a last resort, thinking ‘I’ve tried everything else so I might as well see if this works.’ But it is more than that. Whilst there is no great expression of faith there is for both of them a profound belief that Jesus could heal. They seemed to have heard what was possible, and whilst perhaps not understanding it, they believed that meeting Jesus and asking him to intervene would make a difference to their circumstances. They knew it was possible, and that Jesus could make a difference, He could heal and perform many other wonders, the doubt in their minds was would He for them. We see from Jesus’ responses that He did. Even though He was held up going to meet Jairus’ daughter He had time for both and restored both to healing and health.
Underlying the story there is also great symbolism, linking back as far as Genesis. A symbolism we might more often associate with the Gospel of John. But we should not confuse this symbolism with the compassionate act of Jesus. Jesus may have wanted to make a point in the timing and manner in which these people were healed. Mark, the Gospel writer may have wanted to make a point in the way in which he retells the story and where he places it in His gospel. But central to the story are the compassionate acts of Jesus as He goes about His way, restoring creation to the way in which it was intended to be. This too is central to the theme of Mark. Mark shows Jesus in action, using the deeds of Jesus to emphasise who He is and why He has come into the world. He shows through these actions of Jesus that He is indeed God’s Son.
The two stories in today’s reading come immediately after Jesus has calmed the storm and the casting out of demons from the Gerasene man. Jesus has shown His power of over the forces of nature. Jesus has shown His power over dark and demonic forces. Jesus now shows His power over sickness and death, seen by some as the ultimate sickness. In so doing we see the two stories become one. Underpinning all of the stories is the sense of hopelessness. The disciples thought they were beyond hope and about to die in the boat, the demoniac was beyond hope, Jairus felt he was in a hopeless situation and the woman with bleeding felt she too was beyond all hope. Yet is all of these hopeless situations Jesus acts and brings peace and hope and restores creation to its rightful state. He still does. Sometimes though, we too like Jairus, have to wait until God’s good time. Sometimes we wonder why God does not appear to act in the way in which we would like or with the speed we would like. Sometimes it feels like we’re just left tapping our feet and God does not care.
Just after these stories Jesus goes to His home town of Nazareth where He is rejected and the people question where His wisdom and power came from. Jesus is amazed at their lack of faith and He appears to say and do little while He is there. For both Jairus and the woman, their faith and belief in Jesus appear to be probably very fragile and uncertain. But in contrast to the people of Nazareth both Jairus and the woman understand that Jesus is more than just a miracle worker. Both show a faith which understands that in some way God Himself was at work in and through Jesus. Sometimes are we more like the people of Nazareth, just wanting Jesus (or God) to perform miracles, rather than like Jairus or the woman with bleeding who saw Jesus as able to offer hope and healing to broken lives and a fallen creation because of who He was, not just because of what He did? Jesus shows in healing both the woman and Jairus’ daughter that He has healing power enough for all. His resources never run dry and He continues to want us to reach out to him in our need, even if we feel we only have the faintest glimmer of faith in Him and who He is. Sam Cappleman
Meditation
Jairus was a powerful man, the ruler of the synagogue. He was the one who made sure rules were kept, rules which said that people like the woman in the story today could not come to church. She has been bleeding for years, and rather than make her a person worthy of special care and attention, she was rather treated as unclean. She was somebody who would contaminate others because of her condition and so as a awoman and as a woman with bleeding she was not welcome.
In the local community in which the gospel reading takes place there could not have been a bigger difference in status between the two key people in the story. Jairus was the synagogue ruler, the lay person in charge of the local synagogue. In current parlance, the senior steward, the church warden, the senior leadership team member. He would be a devout Jew who would probably be a strict adherent to the Torah and its commands. It is interesting to see Jesus keep Jairus waiting, he would not have been a man who was used to that.
The woman on the other hand, would be very much a second class citizen, a female, permanently ritually unclean according to the law of Leviticus and isolated from the community because of this, virtually an outcast. Both come to Jesus and are transformed by coming into contact with Him. Jesus loves them the way he finds them, but loves them enough not to leave them the way he has found them. Jesus does not care what our background is, or has been, but is constantly waiting for us to reach out and touch Him so that we too can be transformed. Sam Cappleman
Prayers for Sunday
Almighty God, in whom are hidden all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge: open our eyes to your presence, and make us more responsive to your call, that we may grow in the wisdom and grace you offer us in Christ Jesus our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever.
We acknowledge, O God, the ease with we can be so overwhelmed by life that your presence becomes difficult to discern. So many voices bombard our lives that we fail to recognise your voice amongst them. But when we remember your past dealings with people, we recover our confidence to trust you in the present and the future. Your steadfast love resonates through the witness of lives touched by grace. Love and grace experienced by hearing your word clearly spoken by Jesus through the power of the Holy Spirit. We pray that our lives may be lived in worship which reflects our praise and thanksgiving for your blessings. In Jesus' name, we pray. Amen
Meditation
"I have a mission... "I am a link in a chain, a bond of connection between persons. God has not created me for naught... Therefore I will trust him. Whatever, wherever I am, I can never be thrown away. God does nothing in vain. "He knows what he is about." J. H. Newman
Today is new unlike any other day, for God makes each day different. Today God's everyday grace falls on my soul like abundant seed, though I may hardly see it. Today is one of those days Jesus promised to be with me, a companion on my journey, And my life today, if I trust him, has consequences unseen. My life has a purpose.