Monday, September 2, 2013

6th August Trinity 2012, Mind Deaf, Heart Sick, Soul Mute

Mark 7, 31-37
6th Trinity August

As he was again leaving the region around Tyre [tir], he went through the country around Sidon [si’don] to the Sea of Galilee in the middle of the region of the ten cities of the Decapolis. They brought to him one who was deaf and who spoke with difficulty, and asked him to lay his hands on him. And he led him apart from the crowds by himself, laid his finger in his ears, and moistening his finger with saliva, touched his tongue, and looking up to the heavens, sighed deeply and said to him, “Ephphata, be opened.” His hearing was opened and the impediment of his tongue was removed and he could speak properly. And he commanded them not to say anything to anyone. But the more he forbade it, the more they widely they proclaimed it. And the people were deeply moved by this event, and said, “He has changed all to the good: the deaf he makes to hear and the speechless to speak.


6th August Trinity
August 26, 2012
Mark 7: 31-37


The ear is formed in a spiral. Sounds whirl in ever tightening circles through the inner organ of hearing. This movement is an incarnational one; it generates words; it generates thought and meaning, which can then spiral outward again as creative speech.

The deaf mute is someone who is hindered in this process. He can neither take in words and their meaning, nor create them. Such a hindrance also cuts one off from one’s community. It tends to generate fears and suspicions in the soul. It hinders the exercising of our highest human function: objective thought, creative speech. Even without an organic problem, we can be mind deaf, heart sick, soul mute.

Christ’s healing consists of an intimate quality of touch. With His fiery words, ‘Be opened’, he opens the man’s ears, loosens his tongue, opens his soul. He restores to him his full human capacities—open senses, open heart and mind, open speech. He goes from being imprisoned within himself to being able to spiral outward again. He is healed of his illness.

We too suffer from “the sickness of sin”, the sickness of the human condition. But even this illness is there to create new capacities. In the words of John O’Donohue,

When the reverberations of shock subside in you,
May grace come to restore you to balance.
May it shape a new space in your heart
To embrace this illness as a teacher
Who has come to open your life to new worlds.

May you use this illness
As a lantern to illuminate
The new qualities that will emerge in you.[1]

www.thechristiancommunity.org




[1] John O'Donohue, "A Blessing for a Friend on the Arrival of Illness", In To Bless the Space between Us, p. 60

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