A Sermon preached on Sunday 30 June (Pentecost VI) at Christ the King, Frankfurt
Lamentations 3.21-33, 2 Corinthians 8:7-15, Mark 5:21-43
After the service today, Monica has kindly invited us to a “sweet celebration” on the occasion of Ivana’s first birthday and baptism. We are promised cake and finger food. I don't know if there will be sandwiches, but no matter, as I have a sandwich to offer to you from today's gospel reading, a so-called a Markan sandwich. This is a term used to describe a technique Mark uses in his gospel of sandwiching one story between two halves of another. This morning it is the woman suffering from haemorrhages who is sandwiched between two parts of the story of Jairus’ daughter. Mark uses this method because he believes that the two stories inform and enrich one another, and that is certainly the case today.
Both stories involve women who desire/need healing. There are also some differences, one involves a grown woman, the other a child. The girl has someone to act for her, the woman has to act for herself. It is somewhat ironic that on a day when we will be naming Ivana at her baptism the two women in the story are not named, which sadly is far too often the case, and not just in the Bible. We are still rediscovering the contributions of some hidden women to art and science. And yet, by making two women the focus of this story, Mark is saying women count, women matter, women have agency, and women have faith – strong faith. Most of all, both stories are about faith: faith as a response to a need, faithful action, and Jesus’ own faithful response – his love in action.
Jairus fears for his daughter’s life, but he also has hope. He has faith in Jesus’ power to heal her: “Come and lay your hands on her, so that she may be made well, and live:” (Mark 5:23) His trust in Jesus and in Jesus’ power, as at least an agent of God, is not in vain. Even when she is supposed to have died Jesus first reassures him, “Do not fear, only believe,” (5:36) and then brings her back from the dead. Jairus’ great love for his daughter was rewarded by Jesus’ act of love.
The woman suffering from haemorrhages seems to have no one to care for her, no one who can come to Jesus and ask him to act. She acts on her own behalf but – like Jairus – still has hope and faith in Jesus’ power to heal her, even by just touching his clothes. And as we heard she is healed, immediately (one of Mark’s favourite words – 3 times in this passage alone). What does Jesus mean by “Daughter, your faith has made you well”? (5:34) It was Jesus’ power that healed her, but it was her faith in that power that brought her to that place and motivated her to touch his cloak. Without that faithful action, that physical movement towards Jesus, that coming into his presence, there would have been no healing for her, nor for Jairus’ daughter.
As you all know, we are celebrating a baptism today and in just a moment following this sermon we will renew our baptismal covenant. That covenant is also all about faith in action. First – in a series of calls and responses – we affirm our belief in the basic tenets of our Trinitarian faith. Then we promise to put that faith into action, to make it a guideline for how we live, beginning with the regular fellowship, worship, and prayer that sustains our faith.
More than ever, the world needs more true, genuinely faithful followers of Christ. The evil the baptismal covenant calls us to resist is real and present. We see it in terrorist attacks, in the ongoing wars, in antisemitism, racism, and all forms of discrimination. We need to set the proclamation by word and deed of the Good News of God in Christ up against those expressions of Christianity that have little to no basis in Scripture and in Christ’s life and teaching: those that preach Christian nationalism, teach hatred of the other, and proclaim selfishness, greed, and envy.
When a politician belonging to a party that calls itself “Christian” advocates sending people back to countries and places where they are in great danger, they are not loving their neighbour as their self. The Anglican Church of Canada has an extra question in their baptismal covenant, one that I wish we had in ours: “Will you strive to safeguard the integrity of God’s creation and respect, sustain, and renew the life of the earth?” Too often both politicians and people are only willing to take action against climate change and for the care of creation if and when it comes at no cost to us, and when no change in our lifestyle is required. Yet to help is always also to give of oneself. When the unnamed woman touches Jesus’ cloak and is healed, he is “immediately aware that power had gone forth from him.” (Mark 5) Later Jesus gives all of himself for us, on the Cross.
At the same time, while I’m a fan of our baptismal covenant and of the promises we make and reaffirm, we can also make ourselves too important! When we are confronted with a long list of things to do to save the world, we can easily get worried that we are not doing enough, or we feel that the world is not getting better, or we fear that we are too few to make a difference. That is why we need to strike a proper balance between our actions and God’s actions. In the end it does not depend on us, but on God who works in and through us, as well as directly in the world: “Do not fear, only believe,” Jesus says. We need to take that to heart.
In fact, sometimes the only faithful act possible is to place our needs and our fears in God’s hands. In that moment when we feel most lost or desperate or depressed our hope is our faith: Faith in God the Creator, faith in the God who heals, faith in the God of love, faith in the God who brings new life. The author of Lamentations, writing at one of the lowest points in Israel’s history, right after the fall and destruction of Jerusalem believed that God will make even this situation right again: “But this I call to mind, and therefore I have hope: The steadfast love of the Lord never ceases.” (Lamentations 3:21) And in both Gospel stories we heard this morning, both Jairus and the unnamed woman react to a desperate situation, a beloved child who was dying, a debilitating and isolating illness that could not be healed, by placing their greatest need in God’s hands. The words of the first verse of the hymn “Abide with me” summarise our hope:
When other helpers fail and comforts flee
Help of the helpless, oh, abide with me
Today’s Gospel, as well as the OT lesson, are about faith: faith as our response to a great need, our own faithful action, and most of all the faithful response of God in Jesus. In the end, only God’s unending and unlimited love and faithfulness count. Finishing with the refrain from another hymn that I love, “Great is Thy faithfulness,” a refrain that is a paraphrase of the first lines from today’s reading from Lamentations:
Morning by morning new mercies I see;
all I have needed Thy hand hath provided:
great is Thy faithfulness, Lord, unto me!
Amen.