Two stories, two females and not surprising for Luke to
have them in his gospel because his greatest example of
the most special and faithful of all people is also a
woman, Mary the mother of Jesus. And notice how he ties
these two miracle stories together. Jairus has a
daughter who is deathly ill and Jesus calls the woman
with the hemorrhage "daughter." They are both daughters
of Israel, one older, one younger.
What is the key element in each of these healing
stories? You might say, "well, healing!" and that would
be a good answer but a better answer is that they are
stories of faith, and slightly unusual stories of faith.
The woman with the hemorrhage certainly had a tremendous
faith. In her story, notice it is not the usual case of
someone coming to Jesus and asking for a cure for
themselves or someone else. That's almost always how
such miracles take place. But not this time. It's as
though the woman's faith has a life of its own as it
pushes her into the crowd which is bustling all around
Jesus, her faith pushing her with its power and yet at
the same time with great humility. She needs no meeting,
no words of healing; she won't even stop Him on the
street. She'll just touch the tassels on His cloak.
That's all she needs. Astounding faith
Now if it had been me, I think I might have acted a bit
differently, such as screaming at the top of my lungs,
"Help me, help me, please cure me, Jesus!" I would have
to be satisfied that I caught His attention so that He
might heal me, so that He would stop and say something
or do something that would cure me. But for this woman
no such dramatic and direct efforts are needed; just a
touch of fringe. Now isn't that strange?
Then you have the young girl who has died. We don't
hear of any words of faith coming from her
parents, but we are to presume that they did have faith,
because Jesus says, "Do not be afraid; just have faith
and she will be saved."
Two stories of the power of faith—and I think it's
rather natural or easy to think along the lines of,
well, if you have enough faith you can be healed or even
come back from death's door. It might almost seem as
though faith is like a magic tool that can be used to
bring about amazing results. We may know those who have
said that they prayed and prayed, and they believed that
God could heal or help them or their loved one, but
nothing happened. And maybe they even lost their faith,
or ended up with less faith than they had before.
That's what can happen if we see faith as a tool to help
us get what we want. Faith is not a tool; it is a way of
life. It allows us to see and live and act in this world
not according to what we are able to perceive and
understand on our own, but to see this world, live in it
and act in it as the Lord tells us, to put our trust not
in ourselves, nor in other people, nor in material goods
but in God alone. To understand that this natural,
physical life is not the only life we have, and that the
greatest freedom we can achieve is not the freedom from
fear or suffering, but the freedom to love God with our
whole heart and our whole soul and our neighbor as
ourselves. To live in faith is to be constantly, even if
gradually, becoming more and more aware of the great
love of Jesus Christ for us, not because He does what we
want Him to do for us, but because even in our great
unworthiness, He still wants us. Faith calls us to
reform our ways of thinking and living and turning
ourselves over to a greater belief in the Gospel of our
Lord. It sounds so simple to say that we just need to
put our trust in God Who is All-Powerful and the Creator
of all. It seems crazy to believe that we know better
than he does, that we can get through life more easily
by following our own path, that when all is said and
done, it's better to trust in your own instincts and
abilities if you want to have a good life. It seems
crazy to say stuff like that. That's why we don't say
it. But does that mean we are not constantly tempted to
live like crazy people?
To live in faith is to be constantly and acutely,
actively aware that there is so much more than what we
can see, and hear and touch, and that even miracles are
possible, and death is not the end of us. To live in
faith is to trust in infinite power, not limited
physical force, to invest in a life of charity instead
of a life of self-centeredness, and live as though there
really is a God Who loves us and desires that we share
in His divine life forever. To live in faith is not just
to say we believe that bread and wine become the body
and blood of Christ, but it is also to receive Him, talk
to Him, listen to Him and beg His help so that we may
more completely turn our lives over to Him and trust in
His way of truth and life. We have so much more than His
tassel to touch, and if we let Him grab us by the hand,
He lifts us up into a greater life now and forever and
ever.