A compassionate cartographer

A missionary in East Africa was approached by a young boy from one of the local tribes. He asked, “Was Jesus a white man or a black man?”

After thinking for a while, the missionary said that while he was on Earth, Jesus lived in a very warm climate. So, she told the boy, “Jesus wasn’t white or black but sort of in between the two. He was probably kind of brown.”

Sixth Sunday in Ordinary Time
Leviticus 13:1-2, 44-46
Psalm 32
1 Corinthians 10:31-11:1
Mark 1:40-45
Full text of the readings

“Oh,” said the little boy with delight, “then he belongs to both of us, doesn’t he?”

The missionary underscored one of the qualities of Jesus that is so clear in today’s Gospel: Jesus, who incarnated the love of God among us, was so invested in the human condition that he was all things to all people. He was approachable to all people, even lepers.

(Illustration by Mark Bartholomew)(Illustration by Mark Bartholomew)“A leper came to Jesus,” says Mark (first reading), despite the fact that leper had every reason to stay away. Lepers were called the “living dead.” The law forbade them to approach the rest of the community. The man who approached Jesus was putting himself in danger. Those present could become violent toward him in an effort to preserve their own health. Nevertheless, the appeal of Jesus was so great that the man disregarded every obstacle in order to come to him. Did he, like the young African boy, have a sense that Jesus somehow belonged to him, and he to Jesus? Perhaps he realized that in Jesus’ presence, the traditional boundaries that separated the various groups in his society were not valid. Jesus went to places (such as Samaria, or the homes of sinners) that were usually off-limits to the righteous. He associated with those known to be unclean or ritually impure -- sinners, the sick, foreigners. Not only did Jesus remain holy, clean and pure when associating with those whom others avoided, but his presence extended holiness and wholeness to them.

Sunday commentaries by Patricia Sánchez appear in full in Celebration, the worship and homiletic resource of the National Catholic Reporter. Learn more about Celebration.

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Jerome Neyrey has described Jesus’ all-inclusive missiology as his redrawing of the “maps of purity.” (The Social World of Luke-Acts, Hendrickson Pub., 1991). Previously, the map of holy places referred to the Temple; after Jesus’ appearance, he himself became the holy place and the new center of the map. Thereafter, all holiness would be measured in its proximity to Jesus. Similarly, in the traditional map of people, God’s chosen ones had been specially set apart. However, the new map of persons drawn by Jesus, the compassionate cartographer, was all-inclusive -- not just of every nation but especially of sinners, the poor, the blind, the lame, the marginalized and the forgotten. According to this new map, even a leper could approach him and find welcome and belonging.

Jesus also drew a new map of the body. According to the traditional map, purity or holiness was associated with certain ablutions, with circumcision and with specific dietary regulations. But with Jesus, purity and holiness were understood as an interior disposition brought about by grace and by the believer’s response to God. “Hear me, all of you,” Jesus said. “Nothing that enters a person from the outside can defile a person; but the things that come out from within are what defile. ... From within people, from their hearts, come evil thoughts, unchastity, theft, murder, adultery, greed, malice, deceit, etc. All these evils come from within, and they defile” (Mark 7:14, 20-22).

When Jesus looked at a leper or any other person who had no place on the traditional map of holiness, he did not see defilement. Rather, he saw a beloved brother or sister whose suffering offered an opportunity to show the depth and warmth of God’s healing love for all people. When people saw what Jesus did and what the church did in his name, after his resurrection, they complained, “These people have turned the world upside down!” (Acts 17:6).

Do our actions and our maps similarly disturb our contemporaries? Do we still represent a Jesus who belongs to everyone?

[Patricia Sánchez holds a master’s degree in literature and religion of the Bible from a joint degree program at Columbia University and Union Theological Seminary in New York.]

I had an assignment recently

I had an assignment recently for a homily class. Part of it was to write 3 sentences about what our church/parish needed. My first thought was that we're a good parish, but we're a bit complacent about that. Thank you for helping me put it in better words:

"Do our actions and our maps similarly disturb our contemporaries? Do we still represent a Jesus who belongs to everyone?"

Thank you for this beautiful

Thank you for this beautiful reminder of Jesus, the One whom believe to be our Saviour, the One who showed us our God and how to love one another.

Many years before I became

Many years before I became life professed, I learned about Hansen's Disease in my early training in diseases as a pharmacy student. I was struck with the gradual and subtle progression of the disease and how history had described manifestation of the overall pathology-not just a physical ailment but also observed as a spiritual defect somehow originating genetically. Francis struggled with the lepers in his day ultimately embracing them despite his own fears-ultimately identifying his own spiritual leprosy and those things within himself he despised but identified in others. I often wonder when Christ lovingly speaks to us to embrace our enemies, both internal as well as external, we listen only with our ears and not our hearts.

Dear Pat: Somehow or other I

Dear Pat:

Somehow or other I just started to notice these on my email. I have appreciated your insights and have shared them with the Sisters here:
Evelyn Eckhardt, Ann Gray, Agnes McColgan. It was so good to see your name.
Brought back many memories.
Hope all is well.
I am living in a small residence for 4 in Ozone Park just a few blocks from Gate. I am retired but am on two Province Wisdom Spirituality committees as well as still doing some work in finance.
Again, thanks for your articles.

Dorothy Reilly,DW88

Good lesson. Another tie-in

Good lesson.
Another tie-in is in Acts 10:15 and the revelation to Peter to extend the nascent church to all.
“What God has cleansed you must not call common”.

QUOTE: When Jesus looked at a

QUOTE: When Jesus looked at a leper or any other person who had no place on the traditional map of holiness, he did not see defilement. Rather, he saw a beloved brother or sister whose suffering offered an opportunity to show the depth and warmth of God’s healing love for all people. When people saw what Jesus did and what the church did in his name, after his resurrection, they complained, “These people have turned the world upside down!” (Acts 17:6).

Do our actions and our maps similarly disturb our contemporaries? Do we still represent a Jesus who belongs to everyone? UNQUOTE

I see the same type of response the lepers got 2000 years ago when people talk about gay marriage. How do you reconcile a Jesus who belongs to everyone, and the Church's insistence that marriage is only for one man, one woman? What about the homosexuals among us who need and want a mate, but one of the same sex. Is God's healing love only for heterosexual people?

For that matter, do homosexuals require healing? Is being gay a disorder and a disease to be cured like leprosy?

It's strange to live in a world where the US military is now more open to Jesus' inclusive love than the Catholic Church.

When someone joins the US

When someone joins the US military, isn't there an expectation for the enlistee to do the job of a soldier? I think we would agree that the soldier has work to do. When the Catholic Church representing God's call to sinners to come and receive your Heavenly Father's gift of life in Christ, we hear of Jesus shedding His blood for our sin (the separation we experience which prohibits communion with our Creator due to His Holiness and our defiled stain of sin inherited in Adam's rebellion). There is no work we can do, just believe and receive His gift of life everlasting. What a disservice the Catholic Church would do to say "anything goes" and forget about what God has defined as sin which separates us from being in fellowship with Him. We are all sinners in need of His death and resurrection. In Him we live and move and have our being.

Jesus is all to all. Nothing

Jesus is all to all. Nothing more, nothing less.

This article by Patricia

This article by Patricia serves as an eye opener to new realities of the gospel of Christ. I do appreciate the fact that my presence ought to draw a new map from that of the traditional map.
While our Lord Jesus is all to all, He is our all to transform our sinful lives and not to condone indulgence.
Thanks, Patricia, you've been a blessing to me today.

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