The Daily Word
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Jesus Wills It
Have you ever experienced being denied something even though you know the person whom you approached could have easily granted it to you? Perhaps it was because they really did not want to grant it to you or maybe they knew they had authority and power over you and they wanted to make sure you knew that. Or, they genuinely considered it and discerned it was not what was best for you. This can be the same in our spiritual lives.
“Moved with pity, he stretched out his hand,
touched him, and said to him,
‘I do will it. Be made clean.’”Mark 1:41
Have you ever experienced being denied something even though you know the person whom you approached could have easily granted it to you? Perhaps it was because they really did not want to grant it to you or maybe they knew they had authority and power over you and they wanted to make sure you knew that. Or, they genuinely considered it and discerned it was not what was best for you. This can be the same in our spiritual lives.
When a leper approached Jesus, he said to Him that if Jesus wills it, He could make him clean. The interesting thing is that the leper does not really ask Jesus to help him, but his nonverbals did. The leper knelt and begged. He risked being ridiculed to go among the people to reach Jesus. Most lepers were outcast and needed to stay away from people, but this one leper risked being punished or shunned even more just to approach Jesus because he knew He could do something that would change his life. Instead of asking, the leper made sort of a statement or confession of faith, “If you wish, you can make me clean.” The leper expressed his faith in Jesus and His power and authority. And Jesus did will it and He made the leper clean.
The Lord wishes to make us clean too, but do we believe that? Do we see the areas in our lives that need healing? What are the leprosies that eat away at us? Jesus wishes to shed light on those areas in our lives and bring healing, but we need to want it. In order to do that we need to have a relationship with Jesus. Only when we have a relationship with Him will we believe and know that He truly does will our healing and our good, and when our hearts know and believe that, like the leper, we can approach Jesus with all our problems and wounds without hesitation and trust that He will gaze upon us with love and compassion and say to us, “I do will it, be made clean.”
Click below to watch this week’s reflection.
Going to the Nearby Villages
When someone popular is in town, people tend to like to go out and try to get a glimpse of them. I remember one time a movie was being shot in Philadelphia and roads were blocked off but those who knew about it would stand behind the barricades to watch. Those celebrities were in town to do their job, but they really weren’t there to see and greet the people. Although sometimes they might stop and give an autograph here or there, but the majority of the time their intention was never to go and spend time with their fans, those who admire their work, those who made them a celebrity. In contrast, when Jesus goes into a town, He deliberately goes to see the people.
“‘Everyone is looking for you.’
He told them, ‘Let us go on to the nearby villages
that I may preach there also.
For this purpose have I come.’”Mark 1:37b-38
When someone popular is in town, people tend to like to go out and try to get a glimpse of them. I remember one time a movie was being shot in Philadelphia and roads were blocked off but those who knew about it would stand behind the barricades to watch. Those celebrities were in town to do their job, but they really weren’t there to see and greet the people. Although sometimes they might stop and give an autograph here or there, but the majority of the time their intention was never to go and spend time with their fans, those who admire their work, those who made them a celebrity. In contrast, when Jesus goes into a town, He deliberately goes to see the people.
While in Capernaum Jesus enters the house of Simon Peter, where his mother-in-law was sick. Jesus was told about this and He went to her, grasped her hand, and helped her up. She immediately got better and right after this she went and waited on them! This is one of many healings that Jesus performs there. But, this is something that we must think about more. Peter’s mother-in-law has been sick and has been lying in bed, and when Jesus held her hand and helped her up she was restored to health and resumed her life, playing hostess. The woman was sick just a moment ago, then the next moment she is entertaining! The power of Jesus’s touch restores life, not just treating the symptoms but curing and healing the person.
The next day Jesus wakes up early and goes to a quiet place to pray, communing with the Father. Then when Peter and the disciples find Him, they told Him that “everyone is looking for you!” So Jesus, gets up and goes to the “nearby villages” and preached, healed, and casted out demons. We are told He did this “throughout the whole of Galilee.” Jesus did not just heal His friends and their families, He healed whomever ask for it. Everyone was looking for Jesus, not just friends and not just Jews, but everyone. He went to the nearby villages, perhaps to places that are neglected and He brings healing. He did so because He said “for this purpose have I come.” This is our calling as Christians, too. We are called to go to the nearby villages and bring Jesus to them.
Where are the nearby villages to which we might be called? Our homes, our workplaces, our communities. Maybe to the streets where the homeless roam and try to make a home. Perhaps to the sick and those in nursing homes or those in prison. We are called to bring Christ to all, conduct ourselves so that when others see us and meet us they will be able to encounter Christ in us. How can we do this? By imitating Jesus. It was at the place of prayer and communing with the Father do the disciples find Jesus to tell Him people were looking for Him. Likewise, we must spend time in prayer, growing in our relationship with God, so that when we are approached by others, we might be Christ for them. Brothers and sisters, “everyone is looking for you.” Let us be on our way!
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Unchallengeable Authority
Prophets are the mouthpieces of God, speaking what God has commanded them to proclaim to the people for the salvation of their souls. The prophets we hear of in the Old Testament teach and preach under the authority of God; however, in the fullness of time, and according to His covenant and faithfulness, God raised up a prophet for the people who would save them from their sins once and for all, a prophet who would teach with His own authority, Someone with unchallengeable authority — the Son of God.
“A new teaching with authority.
He commands even the unclean spirits and they obey him.”Mark 1:27b
Prophets are the mouthpieces of God, speaking what God has commanded them to proclaim to the people for the salvation of their souls. The prophets we hear of in the Old Testament teach and preach under the authority of God; however, in the fullness of time, and according to His covenant and faithfulness, God raised up a prophet for the people who would save them from their sins once and for all, a prophet who would teach with His own authority, Someone with unchallengeable authority — the Son of God.
Some people think they have authority but in reality they do not. Others abuse the authority entrusted to them. Usually authority or power comes with “office” and not to the person holding that office. So, when we say the Pope has power and authority, he does as long as he holds the Office of the Bishop of Rome. All priests share in the ministerial priesthood of Christ, and so they share in the authority of Christ the Head as long as they carry out the will of God in accordance with their vocation. By virtue of our baptism Christians share in Christ’s threefold office of priest, prophet, and king. So in a very real way all the baptized are prophets in as far as we preach and teach what Jesus has taught and remain in communion with the universal Church. We preach and teach with the authority of Christ by virtue of our baptism, but Jesus teaches on His own authority.
When a man possessed with an evil spirit approaches Jesus, the evil spirit immediately recognized Jesus and they knew they had no chance whatsoever. The Lord does not dialogue with the spirit, He simply commands “Quiet! Come out of him!” and the spirit is gone. If the Pharisees or the other elders of the Law tried to do this with their own authority, it would not work because they have no authority apart from the Law. But now, the Law Himself was before them and they did not even know. Jesus is the Son of God and He is the New Covenant, the fullness of revelation, the Savior promised in the Garden of Eden (see Gen. 3:15).
Brothers and sisters, we must always remember to whom we belong. We belong to God. We belong to the One whom created all things and who commands all things. There is nothing that God cannot do. We live in this world but we do not belong to it. The enemy persuades that the authority of this world is what we ought to live under, but the truth is that apart from and out of conformity with the authority of God, the authority of this world is an illusion, a web of lies. Let us never find ourselves under the wrong authority. May love and mercy be our compass, guiding us towards the banner of the unchallengeable authority of Christ.
Watch this week’s reflection below.