Whose Property is Always to Have Mercy – Br. James Koester
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I love this story of the healing of the Syrophoenician woman’s daughter from the Gospel of Mark! I love it in part, because I get to say the word Syrophoenician! Just throw that into the conversation and see how impressed people are with your erudition! I love it because of the breathlessness with which Mark tells the story. You can hear the urgency, as in just six verses Mark tells us an awful lot, that is profoundly significant. I love it, because it harkens back to my childhood growing up at St. Mary’s, Regina. It is from this passage, among other sources, that Cranmer created, what some of you will remember, as the Prayer of Humble Access, or the Zoom Prayer, as a friend calls it:
We do not presume to come to this thy Table, O merciful Lord, Trusting in our own righteousness, But in thy manifold and great mercies. We are not worthy So much as to gather up the crumbs under thy Table. But thou art the same Lord, whose property is always to have mercy: Grant us therefore, gracious Lord, so to eat the Flesh of thy dear Son Jesus Christ, and to drink his Blood, That our sinful bodies may be made clean by his Body, and our souls washed through his most precious Blood, and that we may evermore dwell in him, And he in us. Amen.[1]
Mostly I love this story because it shouldn’t have happened! There is a hint of the forbidden. We see Jesus acting out of the box. He shouldn’t be where we find him, doing what he shouldn’t be doing. And that’s just the point.
Imagine for a moment a map of the Middle East. Now on your map, locate the northern border of modern Israel, along the Mediterranean coast. Once you have found that, move your attention toward the north ever so slightly and about 20 miles north of the border, right on the coast, stick a pin into your map. That’s Tyre. Now do that again, moving north about 20 miles, and stick another pin into your map. That’s Sidon.
Both Tyre and Sidon are important, large cities, and their importance stretches back thousands of years. They are some of the oldest, inhabited cities in the world. They are mentioned several times in Scripture, and not always favourably! And that is important for us to remember. Located outside Israel, Tyre and Sidon were regarded by the Jews of Jesus’ day, not simply as foreign, but as pagan, as Gentile, as unclean. They were considered outside the covenant of Israel, and not among the Chosen Ones of God. This marked them, at least for the Israelites, as the enemies of God’s people, enemies of God, as even beyond God’s reach. Yet today, that is exactly where we find Jesus. … [Jesus] set out and went away to the region of Tyre.[2]
We are not told why Jesus went to Tyre. We are told that [he] entered a house and did not want anyone to know he was there.[3] That’s the line that intrigues me: He entered a house and did not want anyone to know he was there. There are all sorts of reasons that Jesus might not have wanted people to know he was there. Perhaps he was looking for some privacy. Perhaps he came for some solitude. We know from the earlier chapters of Mark that Jesus comes to Trye having had a busy and challenging time. He has been preaching, and teaching and healing, and has had several encounters with the Pharisees, and slowly but surely the dividing line between those who accept his teaching, and those who don’t, are becoming clear. He is exhausted, so he slips out of town as it were, to a place where no one will know him, for a break, a rest. What is significant is that he goes where he shouldn’t, and does what he mustn’t: [Jesus] set out and went away to the region of Tyre. He entered a house and did not want anyone to know he was there. And that’s why I love this passage.
We honour and acknowledge Jesus for many things: as teacher, preacher, healer, Messiah, Lord, Son of God. And here we see him, even if at first reluctantly, as breaker of rules. Jesus goes where he shouldn’t, and does what he mustn’t, and shows us that God can be found even where we think God isn’t, can’t, or won’t possibly be. And that’s why I love this passage.
[A] woman whose little daughter had an unclean spirit immediately heard about him, and she came and bowed down at his feet. Now the woman was a Gentile, of Syrophoenician origin. She begged him to cast the demon out of her daughter.[4]
It is this encounter with the Syrophoenician woman that gives us one of the most riveting, and indeed offensive, images in all the gospels. Mark tells us something of the desperation of the woman who comes and bows at Jesus’ feet and begs him to heal her daughter. Matthew’s language is ever starker: Just then a Canaanite woman from that region came out and started shouting, ‘Have mercy on me, Lord, Son of David; my daughter is tormented by a demon.’[5] But rather than responding with compassion, Jesus responds with disdain. He said to her, ‘Let the children be fed first, for it is not fair to take the children’s food and throw it to the dogs.’ [6]
We know something about calling people, especially women, dogs. It is incredibly offensive. The difference is that in today’s gospel, the woman turns the tables on Jesus: But she answered him, ‘Sir,even the dogs under the table eat the children’s crumbs.’[7] In doing so the Syrophoenician woman yanks open the doors of God’s mercy, and suddenly in the very place where God wasn’t supposed to be, wasn’t supposed to act, wasn’t supposed to be known, we know and see God’s merciful, saving, and healing presence. Then Jesus answered her, ‘Woman, great is your faith! Let it be done for you as you wish.’ And her daughter was healed instantly.[8]
We all have places, secret places, private places, lonely places where we presume no one can find us. We go there sometimes simply to escape, but sometimes we go there to hide, hide from others, hide from ourselves, hide from God. We go there to hide from embarrassment, from shame, from guilt, and we think that no one, even God, will find us in our hiding place. Yet even there, God reaches forth and touches, heals, forgives, and restores us.
I love this passage, because it is so unexpected, and I need to hear its message over and over. But it’s hard to hear. It’s hard to hear Jesus refer to people, especially this woman, as a dog. It’s hard to hear Jesus respond to her desperate cry for help with disdain. It’s hard to hear, because I too have those places where I think Jesus should never go. I too have those places where I think God cannot possibly be. I too know those people who I think are beyond Jesus’ merciful, saving, and healing touch. I too have people who I think are not worthy of Jesus’ saving presence. And sometimes that place, that person, is me. Sometimes that place, that person, is you.
This is not an easy story to hear, but I so desperately need to hear it, both for myself, and for all those places where I think Jesus shouldn’t, mustn’t, can’t, won’t possibly act. This is not an easy story to hear, but we so desperately need to hear it. I need to hear this story, we need to hear this story, over and over in order to remind us that no one: not me, not you, not anyone, not even those whom we regard as dogs, is ever beyond Jesus’ merciful, saving, and healing touch. I need to hear this story, we need to hear this story, over and over, in order to remind ourselves that no place, within, or outside, is ever beyond Jesus’ merciful, saving, and healing touch.
We live in a world, and in an age, that tells us there are people, and places, where Jesus shouldn’t be, mustn’t be, can’t be, and won’t possibly act. And that’s simply not true. It’s a lie, and this story smashes that lie. I love this story because it smashes the lie that I am not worthy of Jesus’ love. I love this story because it smashes the lie that you are not worthy of Jesus’ love. I love this story because it smashes the lie that there are people and places far beyond the reach of Jesus’ love.
This is an incredible story, and I love it, because in just seven short verses Mark smashes the lie that there are people and places who are beyond Jesus’ love. This is an incredible story, and I love it, because in just short seven verses Mark proclaims the truth that everyone, and I mean everyone: you, and me, and the person across from you, and your neighbour across the street, and your neighbour across the world, is worthy of Jesus’ merciful, saving, and healing touch.
We live in a world, and in an age, and in a culture, that believes lies. One of those is that there are people who are beyond Jesus’ love. And this story smashes that lie. And I love it. We live in a world, and in an age, that needs to hear the truth. One of those truths is that all people are worthy of Jesus’ merciful, saving, and healing touch. And this story proclaims that truth. And I love it. I love this story because it reminds me that everyone, everyone is worthy of Jesus’ merciful, saving, and healing touch. And I love it! I love this story because it reminds us that there is no place, no place which is beyond the reach of Jesus’ merciful, saving, and healing touch. And I love it!
Year B, Proper 10
[1] Canada, Book of Common Prayer, 1962, page 83 – 84
[2] Mark 7: 24a
[3] Mark 7: 24b
[4] Mark 7: 25 – 26
[5] Matthew 15: 22
[6] Mark 7: 27
[7] Mark 7: 28
[8] Mark 7: 28
thank you for this…as i fumble through central sq…it’s oh so helpful..
Thanks be to God.
Αξιος! All are worthy of being surprised by joy. For me, living in a red state in the Bible Belt, this story is essential to remembering that the boundaries of condemnatory exclusion are a satanic illusion, if the words & actions of Jesus are anything to go by. Especially in these days of violence against the perceived “Syrophoenicians” among us, it’s necessary to understand that no one needs to be in Hell in order for us to be happy in Heaven. Whether Jesus’ exchange with the desperate woman was a putting up & tearing down of a condemnatory boundary or a clever match of wits & wisdom, compassion and the enthusiastic generosity of αγαπη won the day.
Thanks for the reminder.
And have a happy 65th!
I think this story should lay to rest any inkling of a lack of inclusivity in Jesus. Jesus came for ALL.
Beautiful!! Thank you for a message I needed to hear.
Could we not allow Jesus to have a twinkle in his eye when he says the word “dogs” and the woman rising to the occasion with her witty reply?
Wendy Le-Las