Mark 6:53-56
After making the crossing, they came to land at
Gennesaret and tied up there. As they were leaving
the boat, people immediately recognized him. They scurried about
the surrounding country and began to bring in the sick
on mats to wherever they heard he was. Whatever
villages or towns or countryside he entered, they laid
the sick in the marketplaces and begged him that they
might touch only the tassel on his cloak; and
as many as touched it were healed.
Introductory
Prayer: I believe in your power of healing grace,
in your capacity to heal both physically and spiritually. I
come to you in spiritual illness and weakness, confident
in your desire to heal and strengthen me. I
humbly offer you my soul, wounded and aching from the
spiritual cancer of self-love, pride and self-sufficiency. I abandon
myself to your loving mercy. Thank you, Lord, for
watching over me and loving me unconditionally.
Petition:
Lord, heal my heart and soul, and help me to
do what I must do to maintain my spiritual
health.
1. “People recognized him, and started hurrying all
through the countryside.” For the most part, the people
in this Gospel were not “hurrying throughout the countryside”
to invite others to come and seek forgiveness and spiritual
healing from Jesus. They were in haste, yes, but
in haste to bring the sick so that the
Lord would heal them from their physically infirmities. How blind
is the human heart that often fears physical illness
more than spiritual infirmities and falling out of God’s
grace! The gravest ills we can suffer are those
that come from within us: “For from the heart come
evil thoughts, murder, adultery, unchastity, theft, false witness, blasphemy.
These are what defile a person” (Matthew 15:19-20).
2.
“They laid down the sick in the open spaces, begging
him to let them touch even the fringe of
his cloak.” Holy men and women throughout the centuries
have firmly believed that “touching” Christ through receiving the
sacraments brings about spiritual healing and redemption. “My heart
has been wounded by many sins,” St. Ambrose used to
pray before he celebrated Mass, “my mind and tongue
carelessly left unguarded. Lord of kindness and power, in
my lowliness and need I am turning to you, the
fountain of mercy; I am hurrying to you to
be healed; I am taking refuge under your protection.
I am longing to meet you, not as my Judge
but as my Savior. Lord, I am not ashamed
to show you my wounds. Only you know how many
and how serious my sins are, and though they
could make me fear for my salvation, I am putting
my hope in your mercies, which are beyond count.
Look on me with mercy, then, Lord Jesus Christ,
eternal King, God and man, crucified for our sake. I
am putting my trust in you, the fountain that
will never stop flowing with merciful love: hear me
and forgive my sins and weaknesses.”
3. “All those who
touched him were cured.” All those who touched Jesus
Christ with the touch of faith were cured: the Canaanite
woman, the blind man, the ten lepers, the man
with a withered hand, the paralytic, Jairus’ daughter, the
woman with the hemorrhage, the boy with a demon,
the Gerasene demoniac, the deaf man. All these people in
the Gospel had something in common: it was their
faith that allowed the Lord to heal them. The
phrase used in the case of the woman with the
hemorrhage is telling: “power had gone out from him”
(Mark 5:30). Faith is one of the most powerful acts
of the human person, since God himself chooses to
be moved by it. How strong is my faith
in the power of our Lord Jesus Christ? Do I
reach out and touch him in faith every day?
Do I allow him to act in my life through
faith? What am I waiting for?
Conversation
with Christ: Lord, you are all powerful and the
source of my salvation and spiritual healing. In this
prayer I am reaching out to touch you in
faith, even though I am unworthy and my faith is
weak. Heal me, Lord. Give me the strength to
resist the power of evil in my life and to
adhere to your grace and goodness. Lord, I believe;
increase my faith.
Resolution: I will offer up
short acts of faith in the Lord throughout the