A young girl was terminally ill with cancer and close to
death. Her mother sat by her bedside crying and pleading with God to perform a
miracle and heal her daughter.
After several weeks, the cancer ran its course and the
young girl died.
The mother, in her grief, was angry at God for not
answering her prayer for her daughter. Eventually, she sought comfort by
talking to the deacon in her parish. She asked him, "Why didn't God heal
my daughter?" The deacon, at first, felt at a loss as to what answer to
give this woman who was in so much pain. As she cried, he put his head down and
said a silent prayer to the Holy Spirit to help him give her a word of comfort.
Finally, the deacon raised his head and said to the mother, "Your daughter
is healed now." At those words, the mother stopped crying and looked out
the window to think about what he had said. She thanked him and left with the
comforting thought that her daughter was now in God's hands safe from all harm.
Each of us at one time or another has been faced with a
desperate situation and have begged God for a miracle. It might have been for a
loved one who was sick or in trouble. It might have been for ourselves. But chances
are that the miracle we asked for didn't take place. We might have been left
wondering why God didn't seem to answer us. We probably thought that miracles
were just something that happened in Jesus' time and not in modern times. Or we
may have wondered if we had too little faith to ask so much of God. It could be
that most of us have given up on asking for or expecting miracles. And so
gospel stories like today's in which Jesus raises a little girl from the dead
sometimes hold little meaning for us.
It is true that Jesus did perform many miracles while he
walked the earth. He healed the sick, he drove out demons, he turned water into
wine, he walked on the water, and he raised the dead. They were all powerful
works demonstrating his mastery over nature, over sin and over death. Those
mighty deeds proved to all who witnessed them that Jesus was no ordinary
preacher but the Son of God. Nonetheless, no matter how marvelous his show of
power was, Jesus always told those who were healed by him that the miracle was
the easy part. What was truly amazing was not the healing, but the faith in the
heart of the person who asked for his help. What impressed Jesus more than
anything else was the simple faith he encountered in the people he met. And it
was because of it that he was moved to perform mighty acts of power and
compassion on their behalf.
It is important for us to remember that everyone whom
Jesus healed and raised from the dead eventually got sick again and died. The
healing was only temporary. What was permanent was the faith in the heart of
those who were touched by him. That faith leads to the ultimate healing -
everlasting life with God in heaven. We must never lose sight of the fact that
any answers to our prayers which we receive during our lives on earth are only
partial solutions. Problems and difficulties come and go. We probably don't
remember today what we were asking God for last week. What endures - what has
lasting value - is our relationship with God. And that relationship is based on
faith - the faith that God loves us, that he has power over whatever trials we
are facing, and that he can make all things work for our good and for our
salvation.
All this being said, we must never stop going to Jesus
for help whenever we are faced with problems. Those difficulties are an
opportunity for us to exercise our faith. By bringing our concerns to our
heavenly Father we grow in the trust that he does love and care for us. And our
eyes are opened to the way in which he is acting in our lives already making
our faith grow and perfecting the gifts of his grace within us. Faith is not
only about getting God to do something for us. It is also about being able to
recognize how God is answering our prayers in ways we could never imagine. And
that is the real miracle.
Miracles do continue to happen in our day. By the power
of faith, people experience healings that defy medical explanations. In those
cases, it served God's glory to show forth his power in a virtually undeniable
way so that others could be brought to faith in him. For most of us, however,
God will work in subtle and hidden ways. It will go unnoticed at first or seem
like a coincidence, but it will eventually be made clear to us that it was
Almighty God who was working to bring us the healing we needed. We should
witness to how God has worked in our lives in small ways with as much joy and
wonder as we would if he had worked in miraculous ways. What is most important
is not the mighty deed but the mighty faith alive in our hearts unlocking God's
power for the salvation of the world.
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