In the Name of the Father, the Son and the Holy Ghost.
How tragic today's story of the life of Christ is. A man had been
paralysed for years. He had lain at a short distance from healing, but
he himself had no strength to merge into the waters of ablution. And no
one — no one in the course of all these years — had had compassion on
him.
The ones rushed to be the first in order to be healed. Others who were
attached to them by love, by friendship, helped them to be healed. But
no one cast a glance at this man, who for years had longed for healing
and was not in himself able to find strength to become whole.
If only one person had been there, if only one heart had responded with
compassion, this man might have been whole years and years earlier. As
no one, not one person had compassion on him, all that was left to him —
and I say «all that was left to him» with a sense of horror — was the
direct intervention of God.
We are surrounded by people who are in need. It is not only people who
are physically paralysed who need help. There are so many people who are
paralysed in themselves, and need to meet someone who would help them.
Paralysed in themselves are those who are terrified of life, because
life has been an object of terror for them since they were born:
insensitive parents, heartless, brutal surroundings. How many are those
who hoped, when they were still small, that there would be something for
them in life. But no. There wasn't. There was no compassion. There was
no friendliness. There was nothing. And when they tried to
receive comfort and support, they did not receive it. Whenever they
thought they could do something they were told, 'Don't try. Don't you
understand that you are incapable of this?' And they felt lower and
lower.
How many were unable to fulfil their lives because they were physically
ill, and not sufficiently strong… But did they find someone to give them
a supporting hand? Did they find anyone who felt so deeply for them and
about them that they went out of their way to help? And how many those
who are terrified of life, lived in circumstances of fear, of violence,
of brutality… But all this could not have taken them if there had been
someone who have stood by them and not abandoned them.
So we are surrounded, all of us, by people who are in the situation of
this paralytic man. If we think of ourselves we will see that many of us
are paralysed, incapable of fulfilling all their aspirations;
incapable of being what they longed for, incapable of serving others the
way their heart speaks; incapable of doing anything they longed for
because fear, brokenness has come into them.
And all of us, all of us were responsible for each of them. We
are responsible, mutually, for one another; because when we look right
and left at the people who stand by us, what do we know about them? Do
we know how broken they are? How much pain there is in their hearts? How
much agony there has been in their lives? How many broken hopes, how
much fear and rejection and contempt that has made them contemptuous of
themselves and unable even to respect themselves — not to speak of
having the courage of making a move towards wholeness, that wholeness of
which the Gospel speaks in this passage and in so many other places?
Let us reflect on this. Let us look at each other and ask ourselves,
'How much frailty is there in him or her? How much pain has accumulated
in his or her heart? How much fear of life — but life expressed by my
neighbour, the people whom I should be able to count for life — has come
in to my existence?
Let us look at one another with understanding, with attention. Christ is
there. He can heal; yes. But we will be answerable for each other,
because there are so many ways in which we should be the eyes of Christ
who sees the needs, the ears of Christ who hears the cry, the hands of
Christ who supports and heals or makes it possible for the person to be
healed.
Let us look at this parable of the paralytic with new eyes; not thinking
of this poor man two thousand years ago who was so lucky that Christ
happened to be near him and in the end did what every neighbour should
have done. Let us look at each other and have compassion, active
compassion; insight; love if we can. And then this parable will not have
been spoken or this event will not have been related to us in vain.
Amen. |