Friday, February 12, 2021

Welcoming the Leper in Ourselves and Others


Dear Friends,

Today’s Scriptural readings are about lepers. In Leviticus, the leper was quarantined not for the individual’s sake but that the purity of the community be preserved at all costs, even at the cost of excluding the leper from the love and support of family and friends. We can contrast the legalism of Leviticus with the human drama of the Gospel. Jesus, whose reputation must have been far reaching and great, inspired the unclean person to come to him and say:

                                            If you will to do so, you can make me clean.

The leper knew what he himself could do and what he was not permitted to do. Yet he stepped out of his required role to approach Jesus. Jesus, we read, was touched – not superficially – but in his innermost parts. Jesus touched this man whom society declared untouchable. He offered inclusion and healing in contrast to the community that offered only exclusion and condemnation.

The importance of what Jesus did becomes clear to us at the end of the story, where Jesus, in effect, trades places with the leper. Jesus, because of his compassion, was not able to show himself in any town He was ostracized – unwelcome as any leper would be.

As in the Book of Leviticus, people in our times also divide the world into the clean and unclean, the pure and the impure, the included and the excluded. That’s the stuff of the insurrection at the Capitol on January 6; the stuff of family break-ups; of class struggles. Today’s lepers are any and all people who experience discrimination, alienation, prejudice and rejection.

Is there a leper in you and in me? Is there a part of ourselves we consider untouchable, unclean? A part of me that the rest of me avoids? Is there something in my heart that I don’t want to look at – fear, shame, humiliation, an unwillingness to forgive myself, painful or scarring memories?

How easy it is to slump down in some private dump and feel the situation is hopeless. We can brood over our inadequacies and failings, allow ourselves to fall before the demons of discouragement or we can allow Jesus to get close enough to the leper in me to say:

                                            Of course, I want to heal you.

The significant thing about the leper in the Gospel is that he dared to hope. Because of that hope, he got up and did something in pursuit of the seemingly impossible.

Wednesday, we begin Lent, and each of us has a decision to make. Will it be a season ignored or half-attended to or will it be a time to face the leper in us as individuals, group or nation?

If we try, Lent can be for us a time of courage – a time to come before Jesus and say:

                                            If you will to do so, you can make me clean.

Let him be our guide this Lent as we try to welcome the leper and others in ourselves. Then Easter can be unlike any other we have known.

~Sister Joan Sobala