He was the Mother
Theresa of his day. Just as Mother Theresa brought the plight of the poor in
Calcutta to the world’s attention, so this saint showed the world the suffering
of those living with leprosy on the island of Molokai.
His name was Saint
Damien of Molokai.
Born in Belgium in
1840, he joined the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts with his brother. Though
his brother was originally supposed to go to Hawaii, he became sick and Damien
would have to go in his place.
Upon arriving in
Molokai and witnessing the inhumane conditions the lepers were forced to live
under, his heart went out to them. In fact, the conditions were so difficult
that missionaries were only sent to live there three months at a time and then
were sent back home to rest. However, Damien asked to stay past the usual three
months, so much did he desire to bring comfort to them. Through his efforts, he
was able to build permanent housing and bring medical care to the colony.
After working so
closely with the lepers of Molokai, he eventually contracted the disease
himself. Rather than make him bitter and resentful, it drove him to give even
more of himself in service to those most desperate of people. As he wrote in a
letter to his brother, “I make myself a leper with the lepers to gain all to
Christ.” The disease finally took his
life in 1889, but his efforts inspired a generation of Christians to seek out
and share their lives with those who suffer from disease and poverty.
Jesus touched many
people during his brief life. None were more desperate than lepers. They were
true outcasts. As they journeyed about they were forced to cry out, “Unclean!
Unclean!” to warn people that they were nearby. Imagine what it would be like
to have people run away from you whenever they saw you. What a lonely, painful
life it must have been!
Not only were they
ostracized because of the ugly sores the disease produced on their skin, they
were also considered the worst of sinners. It was believed that it must have
been because of some terrible sin they committed that they would be punished
with such a painful illness. So not only did lepers feel rejected by the
community, they also felt abandoned by God.
So imagine what it
would have been like to have Jesus not run away from them, but actually reach
out and touch them. Imagine being looked at with love for the first time in
years. Imagine hearing Jesus say to you, “I do will it. Be healed.” Imagine the
hope of being finally reunited with your family, finally able to embrace your
wife and children, finally being told that you are welcome back home. It must
have been an exhilarating experience to finally have hope again, to finally
have a life worth living.
Thankfully, diseases
like leprosy are not as widespread and as untreatable as they were in the past.
And thankfully we understand how illness works and do not consider it a
punishment from God. However, there are still many people who are physically
healthy but in their spirits suffer the same torments as lepers. They feel
unloved, alone in their struggles and abandoned by God. They are teenagers who
need so desperately to belong but are
unable to relate to their parents or to their peers. They are the
elderly who have lost so many of their loved ones and have no one to share
their memories with or to visit them. They are the divorced who live with deep
feelings of rejection and failure. They are each one of us who struggle with
sin and our own weaknesses, who feel so often like hypocrites because we
believe the words of Jesus but can find them so difficult to live out. All of
us need hope. All of us need to know that we are loved despite our warts and
bruises. All of us need to know that someone cares and that we are not alone.
That is what Jesus
came to bring. Hope for the hopeless. There is no one outside of the circle of
God’s faithful, unconditional love. There is no wound He cannot heal, no
obstacle He cannot overcome and no sin that He cannot forgive. The more
desperate our situation appears, the closer Jesus is to us. Jesus never rejects
or abandons anyone. He died so that all of us could find forgiveness, healing
and salvation. In fact, when Jesus appeared to the great mystic, Saint
Faustina, He told her, “The greater the sinner, the more right he has to my
mercy.” Jesus came for sinners. He came for you and me. We can go before Him
with confidence for He knows what we need and He desires to heal us.
Where can we go to
find this healing that Jesus offers us? Where do we experience the depth and
power of His mercy? The best first step on the road to healing and recovery is
the Sacrament of Reconciliation. Confession is one of the great healing
sacraments. There we honestly reveal our wounds to Jesus, and He reaches out to
touch us and help us understand that we are loved. Jesus is really present to
us in this great sacrament through the ministry of the priest. We are telling
our sins directly to Jesus and we are being forgiven directly by him. Many
people avoid going to confession out of fear or out of a bad experience they
may have had in the past. That is understandable. But why carry that burden of
shame and fear any longer when we can know real healing and forgiveness by a
simple act of honestly confessing our sins? Why continue to feel alone in our
grief and anguish when we can lay them at the foot of the cross and know joy
again? All this is offered to us through this great sacrament of healing, the
Sacrament of Reconciliation.
Jesus came to teach
us how to live a full and joyful life. He wants us to know real, lasting peace
and freedom. We can go to Him as we are, with our weakness, bruises and warts
and be confident that He will love us no matter what. All He asks in return is
that we show the same love and forgiveness to one another in return. Like Saint
Damien did, we are to reach out to the lonely, the sick and the imprisoned to
bring them the hope we have discovered in the love of God revealed in Jesus.
Who in our lives
could use a little love and compassion? Let us bring those people to Jesus in
prayer as we continue this liturgy and ask for the courage to show them the
loving face of Christ.
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