It
is interesting that 2500 years ago when the first reading from Job
(7:1-4, 6-7) was written, they were asking the same questions that we
still ask today? ‘Why do we have to work so hard? What is the point
of it all? Why is our life often so difficult? Why is it that good
people often suffer so much for no apparent reason?’ Throughout the
centuries you’ll find that people continually ask the same
questions. Sometimes it takes a dramatic event like a tsunami or an
earthquake where thousands are killed in an instant, to make people
ask themselves these questions. One minute all those people were just
getting on with their daily lives, the next minute the tsunami struck
and they were gone. If we can suddenly be snatched away like that,
then what is the purpose of our being here? Is there any
purpose, or is it all chance? The Lord teaches us that there most
certainly is a purpose to our being here.
During
his life on earth Jesus continually worked extraordinary
miracles—just as we read in today’s Gospel—and as a result
thousands of people were drawn to him looking for healing, just like
we do today when we hear of someone who has been given a gift of
healing, but this was not the main purpose of Jesus’ being here. Of
course he was happy to heal people because he had extraordinary
compassion for people, but primarily he wanted to teach people, to
teach us about God and about the reason why we are here. When you
think about it all the people he healed and even brought back to life
from the dead, they all eventually got sick again and died. So he
wanted to teach us that we are loved by God and we are not here by
accident; that our life has a purpose and is going somewhere; that it
is worth keeping going even when we are suffering, and above all the
mission of his life was to die for us so that we could get to heaven
when we die.
When
the disciples found him alone praying the first thing they told him
was that everyone was looking for him. There was so much work to do,
so many people to heal. But look how he responded: ‘Let us go
elsewhere, to the neighbouring country towns, so that I can preach
there too, because that is why I came.’ That is why I came: to
preach and teach. But why is it so important to teach us?
Wouldn’t it be much better just to heal us? Physical healing is
important and Jesus knew that, but he also knew that if we have
meaning, if we have purpose, that is much more valuable to us.
What
is also interesting is the way that he taught. He mostly used
parables. The reason why that is different is that a parable does not
give you a definite answer; it points you in a particular direction,
but you must go on searching for the truth if you are to discover the
meaning. Why is that important? Because it engages us in the work of
searching for and discovering the truth. It makes us think and also
use our imagination. In other words, he didn’t just shove a set of
teachings down our throat and say ‘that’s it.’
When
I began my ministry as a priest I worked as a hospital chaplain, I
remember meeting a man who had been suffering for most of his life.
He had had operation after operation and he was in pain most of the
time. But when I met him he was smiling and he said, ‘Father I have
so much to be grateful for.’ It was very humbling to hear this. Why
was he grateful? Because he had faith and he had purpose. He
understood that his life had meaning and that it was going somewhere.
He believed that this life was not everything and that it was worth
persevering. Having that purpose is what makes all the difference.
And that is what our faith gives us. It doesn’t take away the pain,
but it helps to make sense for us of why we are here. It reminds us
that God does want us to be happy, that that is what He created us
for. It also reminds us that it is worth putting up with the various
struggles we have to go through because they are often what make us
into better people. The suffering will not last forever. Sooner or
later we will cross over to the next world where our happiness will
be complete. Having that hope is what makes all the difference and
that is why Jesus kept moving around and teaching people, so that
they would have the strength to keep going especially when times were
more difficult.
Meanwhile
we will continue to pray and look for healing and it is right that we
do, but it is also good to remember that the hope we have in God is
actually worth more than the physical healing, because that is what
will keep us going. Remember the words of Jesus: ‘Do not let
your hearts be troubled. Trust in God still and trust in me.’ God
knows what He is doing.
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