REFLECTIONS TODAY
The fame of Jesus’ healing and exorcism spreads fast and wide. A quick glance at the map of territories mentioned in the Gospel shows us the diversity of peoples flocking to Jesus. Galilee and Judea, including the city of Jerusalem, are Israelite territories.
Idumea, south of Israel, is the country of the descendants of Esau, the brother of Jacob/Israel. The countries beyond the Jordan include Moab, Ammon, Edom, and Nabatean Arabia. And in the north are Tyre and Sidon, cities of the Phoenicians.
Jesus’ audience are a mixture of Jews and pagans. The Jews worship the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. Other peoples have their own national patrondeities as well as family gods. Their foremost motivation: they seek Jesus to listen to a “prophet in Israel.” They bring their sick with them for Jesus to heal them of their infirmities. Jesus teaches by the sea to have space for the great crowd. He stays in a boat and is being secured by his disciples (apostles) lest the pressing crowd crush him.
The wind carries his voice to the crowd. What a sight it must have been, especially when Jesus embarks and touches the sick to heal them. Their voices of thanks and praise to the God of Jesus easily mingle with the shrieks of demons as they are driven out of those possessed by them. Indeed, Jesus came to announce the “year of favor from the Lord”—a year of Jubilee, a year of healing and jubilation as Isaiah prophesied (61:1-2). Do you feel this spirit of Jubilee at this moment?
First Reading • Heb 7:25—8:6
Jesus is always able to save those who approach God through him, since he lives forever to make intercession for them. It was fitting that we should have such a high priest: holy, innocent, undefiled, separated from sinners, higher than the heavens. He has no need, as did the high priests, to offer sacrifice day after day, first for his own sins and then for those of the people; he did that once for all when he offered himself. For the law appoints men subject to weakness to be high priests, but the word of the oath, which was taken after the law, appoints a son, who has been made perfect forever.
The main point of what has been said is this: we have such a high priest, who has taken his seat at the right hand of the throne of the Majesty in heaven, a minister of the sanctuary and of the true tabernacle that the Lord, not man, set up. Now every high priest is appointed to offer gifts and sacrifices; thus the necessity for this one also to have something to offer. If then he were on earth, he would not be a priest, since there are those who offer gifts according to the law.
They worship in a copy and shadow of the heavenly sanctuary, as Moses was warned when he was about to erect the tabernacle. For he says, “See that you make everything according to the pattern shown you on the mountain.” Now he has obtained so much more excellent a ministry as he is mediator of a better covenant, enacted on better promises.
Gospel • Mark 3:7-12
Jesus withdrew toward the sea with his disciples.
A large number of people followed from Galilee and from Judea. Hearing what he was doing, a large number of people came to him also from Jerusalem, from Idumea, from beyond the Jordan, and from the neighborhood of Tyre and Sidon.
He told his disciples to have a boat ready for him because of the crowd, so that they would not crush him. He had cured many and, as a result, those who had diseases were pressing upon him to touch him.
And whenever unclean spirits saw him they would fall down before him and shout, “You are the Son of God.” He warned them sternly not to make him known.
Source: “365 Days with the Lord 2025,” St. Paul’s, 7708 St. Paul Rd., SAV, Makati City (Phils.); Tel.: 632-895-9701; E-mail: [email protected]; Website: http://www.stpauls.ph.