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Tuesday, September 30, 2014

HEMS & HEALING

Matthew 9, Mark 5, and Luke 8.

So it was, when Jesus returned, that the multitude welcomed Him, for they were all waiting for Him. (Luke 8: 40)

Let me contemporize that. 

Jesus shows up and the crowd goes wild!

They thronged Jesus.  They wept.  They stretched their hands to the Lord and shouted,
“Jesus, Jesus, Jesus.
Jesus, Jesus, Jesus.
Jesus, Jesus, Jesus.
Jesus. Jesus. Jesus.” 

What praise!  What worship!  They were having a Holy Ghost good time.

But one sister at the meeting was not getting her shout on, cause she had issues, one issue in particular.   

She’d had this issue since her baby started elementary school, and the child had graduated.  She had this when she started college; but a bachelor’s, 2 master’s, and a ph.d. later her issue was still unresolved. 

For 12 years she had suffered many things from many physicians. She had spent all that she had and was no better, but rather grew worse. (Mark 5: 26)

She heard that Jesus was healer, so she came to a seaside service.  But the logistics of the worship experience excluded her.

The multitude---some true believers, some more like fans of the hot new Prophet from Nazareth---- were really into the program.  But the sister with issues just was quiet.

The inner circle of associate pastors and armor-bearers known as the Disciples were doing their thing.  They stood close to the main Man and formed a secret-service style buffer escorting Jesus to his next engagement.

Visiting clergy and dignitaries from Bishop Jairus’ church were ushered through the crowd straight to Jesus.

But the sister with issues didn’t have those kind of connections. She didn’t have the ecclesiastical muscle to push her way through the press.  She didn’t have the money to “sow a seed” for her blessing.  She was broke and broken on the edges of the worship moment, and she didn’t think she was worthy even of eye contact from Jesus. 

Some then must have wondered silently what I’ve heard preachers today ask openly, “If you got no money, no testimony, and no praise, why are you even here?”

All she had was issues…. and faith.

She said to herself, “If only I may touch His garment, I shall be made well.” (Matthew 9: 21)

She eased up behind Jesus and touched the edge of His robe. ((Matthew 9: 20: Mark 5: 27; Luke 8: 44 )

Remember that the church is the body of Jesus Christ.   Religion is the robe that the church wraps around its body. 

This sister reached for the robe.

We don’t know which hem---sleeve, or bottom or maybe a piece of the collar.  But we do know that from the fringes of the worship experience, from the back of the church she reached out believing that it would be enough if she could just  touch the edges of the trappings surrounding the body of Christ.

Sitting quietly on the back pew, the sister with issues participated in the religious exercise, ritual, and/or tradition of the church because that was all the Jesus she thought she could reach.

Her religiosity was an expression of genuine FAITH.

Everybody in the multitude wanted Jesus to answer their prayers, but the quiet one in the back, the silent one at the edge of the church’s property line was the one Jesus stopped the program to look for.

“Who touched Me?”

From way in the back of the sanctuary her FAITH had cried out to Jesus louder than the Hallelujah’s all day.  Her FAITH was more impressive than the credentials of the visiting ministers.   Her FAITH was more precious than the crowd’s combined tithing potential.

Her FAITH got Jesus’ attention and endowed her with a testimony.

Now when the woman saw that she was not hidden, she came trembling; and falling down before Him, she declared to Him in the presence of all the people the reason she had touched Him and how she was healed immediately. (Mark 5: 33)

The disciples didn’t get it.  From their vantage point in and around the pulpit it was just one big crowd all yelling for Jesus at the same time.

But Jesus got it.  Faith had awakened His power.  Faith had sparked an subconscious response in His virtue. Everybody else wanted a touch from Jesus.  But now Jesus had been touched. 

 And He said to her, “Daughter, be of good cheer; your faith has made you well. Go in peace.” (Mark 5: 48)

Jesus recognized her faith even though it was active on the fringes of the worship experience. 

Do we?

It’s good to shout. It’s good to be exuberant when we crowd together in the name of Jesus.

But is that all we can see?

Can’t we discern the sincerity of the faith of the ones who sit in the back?

God is not like Baal, the pagan god whose followers had to shout because he might be sleeping. (1 Kings 9)

We are not like the heathens, thinking God will hear us because we make a lot of noise.  (Matthew 6: 7)

We’re not, are we?

Surely we know that if the Holy Ghost  is moving in the sanctuary, He's moving even in the back at the height of a seated person. 

Surely there’s as much issue resolving power at the fringes of the church experience as down in the center of it all.

Or “Maybe,” as my friend Rev. Freeman McKindra said, "the hem of His garment and the edge of our property lines differ in power.   But I thought we were the body of Christ?!"   

The protocols, procedures, and preferences that make up our religion are just the robes around the body of Christ.

Our religious adornment is often exclusionary.  Religion can strangle the spiritual life from a community or a bind the hands of a saint who wants to serve.  But religion can also be the thread that brings a sister with issues into contact with the living Jesus.

That dry, boring old religion can be the cord through which the power of God is conducted into the real lives of people at the spiritual edges of church proper.

It’s easy for the preacher in charge to give attention to the Holy Ghost high brother at the altar crip-walking to the piano riff.   But we also have to acknowledge and disciple those who have nothing to show, nothing to offer, nothing except faith and issues.

They may not yet know Jesus as their personal savior.  All they know is that this religion is supposed to get them to God.  All they reach for is the hem of His garment.

Let’s love them, too.  Let’s not require them to act like the rest of the multitude.  Let’s take them as they are.   

Everybody’s not going to praise like everybody else praises.

Don’t make people pretend.  Let them do their religious thing if that’s how they touch Jesus.

Let them touch the hem if that’s how they’ll get their healing.

That’s what the robe/ religion is for.

---Anderson T. Graves II   is a writer, community organizer and consultant for education, ministry, and rural leadership development.

Rev. Anderson T. Graves II is pastor of Miles Chapel CME Church in Fairfield, Alabama;  executive director of the Substance Abuse Youth Networking Organization (SAYNO);  and director of rural leadership development for the National Institute for Human Development (NIHD).

Subscribe to my personal blog  www.andersontgraves.blogspot.com .

Email atgravestwo2@aol.com

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Fairfield, Al 35064

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