God will surprise us every time. He
will always set the record straight. Every time we think we know him or his
plan of salvation he shows us we are thinking too narrow or too small. Every time we want to limit him by our own
limitations. When we want to own him, define him, or box him up.
Every time we forget the expansiveness
of his kingdom and the universality of the Children of God.
We do not know the reason Jesus travels
towards Phoenician territory.But, we do know that a Canaanite woman
(of that territory) comes out to meet Jesus. We know she is a desperate mother who
must have tried everything to help her daughter, who we are told, was tormented
by demons.
Having run out of reasonable options the
mother now turned to the unreasonable, an itinerant Jewish rabbi. As a Canaanite what could she possibly know of Jesus? Had the stories of Jesus’
wondrous healing travelled that far? Did she know he was coming? Whatever the reason, this
mother hoped that Jesus could help her daughter.
The question that must of haunted her though
was - would he?
Jewish messiah, the true but hidden king of Israel who, in the words of the prophet - Who would
bind up the injured and heal the sick. This is what she hoped Jesus to do for her daughter.
But, despite her distress and sincerity
Jesus is silent and his disciples ask Him to send this Gentile woman away for
she is bothering them.
Think of it, Jesus, at that time, has a
limited vision of his father’s sovereignty and even his own mission. Because,
Jesus was still growing into perfect understanding of his father and his own son-ship.
The desperate mother, (and what mother
would not be desperate to save her child from torment) does not take no for an
answer and she falls to the ground and does Jesus homage crying out, as if a
prayer, “Lord, help me”. Jesus, unsettled by her boldness, again
ties to explain.
“It is not right to take the food of
the children and throw it to the dogs”
Now, the persistent mother teaches the
teacher saying, Please Lord, even dogs eat the scraps
that fall from the master’s table. This catches Jesus by surprise. It was one of those ah-ha moments when
in an instant vision changes and the horizon expands.
When Jesus least expects it; because he
is not in solitary prayer or teaching in the synagogue, but rather on a dusty
road, face to face with a rather persistent gentile woman, he realizes that
everything everywhere, is possible for God.
In this moment of encounter with the
other, Jesus grasps the radical scope of his father’s sovereignty and his own
expanded mission of proclaiming the Good News. Mercy, Forgiveness and Salvation is not
just for the lost sheep of Israel, but for all the lost sheep of every nation.
Every person matters to God.
Yes, the children are fed first, but it
does not mean that the dogs do not eat at all. God, nor the Word of God, is not the
exclusive property of a few, but the loving sovereign of all of creation. And
His kingdom is not walled off, but wide open. His banquet table can sit the
world.
And it was done. Healing love was prompted
by unthinkable and persistent faith.
This unacceptable, pagan woman, showed
Jesus, and us, how radical God and his saving plan is.
It is grander that we can every
imagine.
So we must resist limiting God by our
own limitations.
We must resist thinking that our image
of God is God.
And must remember (even when we least
want to) just how expansive and inclusive God’s kingdom is, how universal is
his forgiveness, mercy and love.
There are no boundaries nor borders
either for persistent faith or healing love.
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