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Friday, September 20, 2024

Friday Gospel Recharge: A Reflection on the Gospel of Luke 8: 1-3

 

Friday Gospel Recharge Series

Friday Gospel Recharge

A reflection on Luke 8: 1-3 

(24th Friday of Ordinary Time, Year B of the Liturgical Calendar, 2024)

Unfadingly merciful: through all time and circumstances 


Since my time at the hospital as a chaplain in palliative care, I have found the work highly challenging. Breaking the ice with the dying and their loved ones is often difficult. The phrase “I’m sorry” is the first thing that comes to mind when I attempt to offer words of comfort, though I recognise that it is insufficient and often ill-timed. On one occasion, I mistakenly offered condolences to the family of a dying patient who, in fact, was still alive. Despite these struggles, I have been told that palliative care is a significant and important ministry.

 

More recently, I encountered a woman nearing the end of her life, with whom I had journeyed from the beginning of her time in care. This experience was different. My supervisor encouraged me to visit her, given that many of my previous attempts had often felt like missed connections rather than encounters. This particular patient experienced profound anxiety about death and took comfort in anyone’s presence. She was a gentle woman, and I found a quiet joy in simply sitting with her. While my presence may have provided her comfort, it was she who offered me a valuable opportunity for growth. I learned that enduring silence with the dying is a vital aspect of end-of-life-care, a lesson that shaped my understanding of this ministry. 

 

Through these sessions with her, I learned fragments of her life. She lacked the energy to speak much, yet she shared enough to reveal the source of her anxiety about her nearing death. She had been christened as an evangelical and attended church services that taught it was a sin to breathe sideways. When an irrational fear is instilled from the pulpit throughout one’s life, it is no surprise that she would carry that anxiety with her toward the end of life.

 

Like all of us, she was a sinner, though I did not know the specifics of her past. Whatever her sins may have been, we are all culpable when we sin. In today’s Gospel, Luke tells us that Jesus cured many women who were tormented by demons, one of whom had seven demons cast out. The significance of this number should not be overlooked, particularly for those who fear death, which, in truth, includes all of us. Luke emphasises that Mary Magdalene was a great sinner, so much so that her life was vulnerable to demonic possession. Her many sins left her bound by the devil.

 

What Luke the Evangelists seeks to convey is that the gravity or the number of our sins does not matter to God, as He always remains ready to forgive us. He has shown us this through the person of Mary Magdalene. We need not fear death if we approach God as sorrowful sinners. Death cannot separate us from God if we have the conviction to turn from sin and the courage to seek forgiveness. Even in our final moments, Jesus stands ready to forgive. A spec of His mercy is more powerful than all our sins combined. Our task, therefore, is to follow Him in the sacrament and to live as repentant sinners. In doing so, He will free us from the bondage of sin, the very sin that allows the devil to enter in our lives and make us spiritually sick. 

 

We are often shaped by what we seek. If we desire to be with God, where peace and prosperity reigns, our hearts must be conformed to His will. A key part of His will is His desire to forgive us and liberate us from sin. Let us turn to God in prayer, asking for His mercy, so that the temptations of the devil may no longer hold power over us.

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Friday Gospel Recharge: A Reflection on the Gospel of Luke 8: 1-3

  Friday Gospel Recharge Series Friday Gospel Recharge A reflection on Luke 8: 1-3  (24th Friday of Ordinary Time, Year B of the Liturgical ...