Sunday, June 16, 2013

From the heart of forgiveness

Anoint one another’s feet
This weekend, we celebrate Fathers’ Day.  This is the day set aside for children of all ages to say thank you in some special way to their fathers.  Today is not only about celebrating our birth fathers, but also our grandfathers, our uncles, our godfathers, even our brothers - all the men of faith that we know.  Today gives us a chance to say thank you to all those men who teach us by word and example, the lessons of life, of faith and of love.

As we think of our earthly fathers, and the men who walk the path of our lives with us, we also think today with gratitude to God for the gift of faith that has been shared with us.  God is the one who has first loved us and invited us to enter into a relationship of friendship, trust and confidence with him.  The gospel passage we heard today gives us a glimpse at the ways in which our God is willing to reach out to us, to meet us where we are and to model for us the forgiveness that is necessary in order to fully appreciate the gift of love.

Jesus, the Son of God, accepted an invitation to share a meal with one of the Pharisees – the keepers of the law.  The Pharisees were known to keep the laws of Judaism strictly, but when we keep laws too strictly, sometimes we get more preoccupied with the observance of the law, and forget to concentrate on the reasons for the laws.  Saint Luke tells us that a woman … who was a sinner came into the house and found Jesus.  Whereas the Pharisee who owned the house might have been more concerned about how she managed to get through the door, Jesus was more concerned with allowing her to tell her story.  How often do we make ourselves vulnerable enough to allow others to share their stories with us?  By reaching out to the woman in this way, Jesus teaches us that we must be willing at times to put aside our own egoism, and instead make room for others to tell their stories.


Jesus had every right to tell the woman to leave.  Her reputation was well known, and her mere presence would have been enough according to Jewish law to defile him, to make him impure – but Jesus endeared himself by the mere fact that he never allowed the law to limit his ability to demonstrate mercy and forgiveness.  He said nothing as the woman wept, as she washed his feet with her tears, presumably pleading even without words to be forgiven, and even as she dried his feet with her hair – perhaps the only material she had at her disposition.  He said nothing as she covered his feet with kisses, a sign of her belief that this man was indeed holy, and that he had it within his power to see her not as an object but as a person.  He watched silently, and allowed her to anoint his feet with very expensive ointment, without questioning where she had gotten so precious a substance.  Many times in the gospel, Jesus encountered people, in all kinds of situations, and he always accepted them, rarely judged them, but challenged them to change their ways.  This was no exception.  Has Jesus ever encountered us in situations which we know are imperfect?  He is always gentle and caring, especially when we have been wounded, but he always invites us to return to wholeness.


In order to return to wholeness, we must first recognize the error of our ways, and trust that we can be forgiven.  The great King David experienced the Lord’s forgiveness.  Saint Paul spoke eloquently about the power of faith in his life, and how he had come to believe in the love of Christ for him because he too had experienced forgiveness.  Jesus taught a valuable lesson to the Pharisee and to the others who had been invited to dinner that night by modeling the power of forgiveness.  When they challenged his choice to allow the woman to get so close to him, he used that moment in order to teach them that God’s capacity for forgiveness is infinite.  We too must pray for one another, that each day we might outdo one another in our willingness to forgive, but more than this, we must not be afraid to admit our wrong-doings, especially when they have harmed another.  We must be willing to wash one another’s feet, bathing them with compassion if not with our tears, and we must be willing to dry them tenderly with our willingness to restore peace, especially in situations where to do otherwise would cause or perpetuate harm.  Because they had experienced the merciful heart of Jesus, Mary Magdalene, Herod’s steward Chuza and Suzanna, and many others chose to follow Jesus.  How have we experienced the mercy of God?  Let us give thanks today for men and women of faith who have been examples of compassion and forgiveness for us, and having known Christ’s forgiveness, let us also choose to follow in his footsteps.

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