Get
          to Know Jesus
Rev. Jack Peterson
Reprinted by permission of "The Arlington Catholic Herald"
Home Page
        To Sunday Gospel Reflections
          Index
Mark wrote to explain
          Christ
          to the new Gentile converts.
 
I invite you
        to pick up your Bible and slowly page through one of the four
        Gospels, reading the titles of the small sections.  Take notice of how
        much time Jesus spends with those who are hurting and
        struggling, whether physically, emotionally or spiritually.  It is truly remarkable
        how much time and attention Jesus devotes to those who are
        broken and suffering.
In today’s Gospel, people
        bring to Our Lord a deaf man who has a speech impediment. Once
        again, Our Lord demonstrates that he has a special place in his
        Sacred Heart for those carrying heavy burdens.  Jesus cares for us
        more than we can imagine.  We
        weeps with those who weep. His heart is moved with pity for the
        crowds who are like sheep without a shepherd. He cries at the
        death of his friend,  Lazarus.  He calls the blind man
        Bartimaeus to his side when his disciples try to send him away.  Jesus came to manifest
        to the world the great love of God.  He came to heal, to
        encourage, to reveal earth-shattering truths and to grant hope
        to every hurting person. 
In today’s passage from
        Mark’s Gospel, Jesus takes the deaf man off by himself away from
        the crowd.  Perhaps,
        Jesus knew that this person, because of his two serious
        disabilities, would find it very hard to accept Jesus’
        compassion and receive healing at the hands of Christ in the
        presence of a large crowd. 
        On the other hand, perhaps Jesus simply wanted to be
        alone with this man and grant him the grace of a very personal
        encounter with the Son of the Living God.  In the Gospels, Jesus
        was constantly setting up opportunities for such personal
        encounters.  He did
        so with many, including the Samaritan woman at the well. Matthew
        the tax collector and the Apostle Nathaniel.
Do you realize that Jesus is
        pursuing you?  He is
        trying to set up opportunities for the who of you to be alone,
        for you to get to know him intimately and experience the
        merciful, healing, and life-giving grace that results from an
        encounter with Jesus of Nazareth. 
        Are you open to such encounters?  Are you turning your
        back on the Lord? Are you making genuine efforts to create space
        in your life for such encounters?
It is quite interesting that
        Jesus says to the deaf man, “Ephphatha,” which means “Be
        opened.”  Practically
        speaking, it addresses the physical need to repair the defect or
        injury that caused his deafness. 
        Jesus “opens” his ears that he might hear again.  Imagine what a gift it
        was to this man.  What
        a gift -to hear the voice of your spouse, the laughter of a
        child, the song of a bird or the trickling of a brook.
However, Jesus greatly
        desired that this man’s whole being “be opened” to the great
        truths of our faith.  Jesus
        wanted him to know even more about the love of God, the beauty o
        the Holy Trinity, the depths of God’s mercy and the Gospel way
        of life that led to life in abundance.
I encourage you to go for a
        walk with Christ this week. 
        Allow him, in prayer, to take you by the hand and led you
        on this walk.  What
        might Jesus say to you to encourage your change you?  What would you like to
        say to Jesus?  What
        kind of healing do you need at this moment in your life?  Do you believe that
        Jesus wants to heal you?  “Be
        opened.”
Please consider a tax deductible gift to support this web site.
 Top
       Home
          Page
        To Sunday Gospel Reflections
          Index