OT VI [B]Lev
13:1-2, 44-46; 1 Cor 10:31 – 11:1; Mk 1:40-45
At one time
in his life, St. Francis of Assisi had a terrible fear of lepers. Then
one day when he was out for a ride, he heard the warning bell that lepers were
required to ring in the Middle Ages. When a leper emerged from a clump of
trees, Francis saw that he was horribly disfigured. Half of his nose had
been eaten away; his hands were stubs without fingers and his lips were oozing
white pus. Instead of giving in to his fears, Francis slid down from his
horse, ran forward, embraced the leper, and kissed him. Francis’ life was
never the same after that episode. He had found a new relationship with
God, a new sensitivity to others and a new energy for his ministry.
All three
readings of today contain the Christian teaching on the need for social acceptance
even when people are different from us. The first reading shows the ancient
Jewish attitude toward leprosy and the rules for quarantining lepers. This
provides a background for Jesus' healing of a leper. According to the
Mosaic Law leapers had to dress in torn clothes, keep their hair unkempt, and
their life became a life-long period of mourning and estrangement.
Mark simply
states "A leper came to him and pleaded on his knees." He saw that
Jesus was his only hope, so he dared to break the rule forbidding going close
to people. "Feeling sorry for him, Jesus stretched out his hand and
touched him."
The leper
had broken a rule; Jesus broke another. No Jew would have ever touched a leper.
The mere touch rendered him legally impure. Jesus ignored the law. Then Jesus
asked him to go to the priests to be instated into the society.
Man is not
meant to be alone; he needs a family, he needs friends, he needs to belong
to a community to be really happy. But when sin and selfishness enter
man's life, they estrange man from God, they estrange man from his society and
they estrange man from himself.
First of
all, sin separates us from God. When Adam ate the forbidden fruit and
disobeyed the command of God, he was overtaken by fear; and he fled from the
presence of God. He hid himself from the presence of God. When God called him,
he said that he was hiding from Him. When Cain killed his brother, Abel God
called him. Cain answered that he was hiding from God.
"In
1992, a Los Angeles County parking control officer came upon a brown El Dorado
Cadillac illegally parked next to the curb on street-sweeping day. The
officer dutifully wrote out a ticket. Ignoring the man seated at the driver's
wheel, the officer reached inside the open car window and placed the $30 citation
on the dashboard.
The driver
of the car made no excuses. No argument ensued-and with good reason. The driver
of the car had been shot in the head ten to twelve hours before but was sitting
up, stiff as a board, slumped slightly forward, with blood on his face. He was
dead. The officer, preoccupied with ticket-writing, was unaware of anything out
of the ordinary. He got back in his car and drove away.
Secondly,
sin separates us from our brothers. We read that when Cain slew his
brother Abel, he "went on from the presence of the Lord" (Gen. 4:16)
and he became a wandering nomad. Sin always drives a man out......out from his
friends.
We should
not let go any opportunity which will help to patch the strained
relations with our brothers. It may demand humility from our part,
just like the leper who declared, "If you want to, you can cure
me"; it may be a blow for our ego; it may be shedding the false accolades
that we have been claiming.
Thirdly sin
estranges us from ourselves.
'He that
covers his sin shall not prosper.' (Ps. 32:1; Prov. 28:13)
The
particular lesson that we should not miss from today's Gospel is that sin
brings loneliness to man, and with loneliness, utter misery.
Jesus calls
every one of us to demolish the walls that separate us from each other and
to welcome the outcasts and the untouchables of society. These
include homosexuals, AIDS victims, alcoholics, the imprisoned,
drug-addicts, and marginalized groups such as the divorced, the
unmarried, single mothers, migrant workers, and the mentally ill. God’s loving
hand must reach out to them through us. Jesus wants us to touch
their lives. Let us pass beyond the narrow circles of our friends and
peers and try to relate to those who may be outside the bounds of
propriety.
This week we
also begin Lenten season. During lent, we need to trust in the mercy of a
forgiving God who assures us that our sins are forgiven and that we are
clean of the leprosy of sin. No matter how many sins we have
committed or how badly we have behaved, we know God forgives us. The only
condition required of us is that we ask for forgiveness with a repentant
heart. We need only kneel before him and ask him, “Lord,
if you will, you can make me clean” We are sure to hear his words of
absolution, “Very well– your sins are forgiven, and you are clean” echoed
in the Sacrament of Reconciliation.
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