Blog
Dear Trailhead family,
To my knowledge, I have never met a famous person. It's also true that a famous person has never met me. So I guess we’re even.
Anyhew.
If I did ever meet a famous person, I’m not sure that it would make a big impact on either of us. I don’t expect a brief encounter to lead to dinner plans, vacations together, or random Friday night hangouts. We probably wouldn’t even exchange numbers.
And I get it. Famous people deal with crowds regularly and I’m not in the category of close friend or family. No hard feelings on my part.
But I did come across something curious recently. I was reading a short biography that detailed the life of a man from a small town called Nazareth, in the region of Galilee, northern Israel.
And this man, named Jesus, made a couple of audacious claims. Claim one was that he was the long-awaited Messiah or Christ, literally Anointed One, who would reign in the tradition of David and restore the kingdom of the people of God. That was a claim that could get you killed, but Jesus did not stop there. He also claimed to be the Son of God, God in a body. Not so incidentally, this claim could also get you killed.
The surprising part in all of this is not that Jesus made the claims (crazy people had done both before), but that he backed up his claims by demonstrating authority over nature, demons, sickness, and even death. And that just about covers everything of interest to humanity.
But we still haven’t touched on what struck me about Jesus recently.
It was a story.
Once upon a time, there was a woman who had lost everything. Due to a medical condition, she was not welcomed around her friends, family, or even strangers if they knew her secret. She had visited doctors, but not one of them had help her. But they did take all her money. And in a cruel twist, her condition made it impossible for her to have children and because she couldn’t provide a husband with children, no man would marry her. And even if she were married (and thus privy to some financial and social safety), her culture allowed men to divorce barren women.
And so once upon a time, there was a woman who had nothing.
But one day, this woman, who history didn't bother to learn or remember her name, heard about a traveling teacher who somehow, someway, was able to heal people. And this teacher was passing through her village.
Risking shame and embarrassment, she made her way near the teacher, but the crowds made it impossible to get his attention. Besides, getting his attention would also invite the attention of the crowds and that was the last thing she wanted. So she devised a plan: get close to the teacher and touch him. Wait, no! Too bold. Just touch his robe. He’d be ceremonially unclean because she had touched him but with any luck, he’d never know what had taken place.
And the plan worked! Well, it almost worked. She touched the teacher’s robe and she immediately knew that something had changed in her body. But somehow, someway, the teacher knew that someone had touched him needing healing and had been healed.
He looked around and asked, “Who touched me?” His followers found this funny. “Look at this crowd around you! Who hasn’t touched you?!” they hooted with laughter while no doubt poking him.
But the teacher was persistent and finally, the invisible woman made herself known. “I did,” she said, feeling a new kind of shame, bracing for a rebuke, a slap, a jeer. ‘I touched you.”
Not able to stand, she sank to her knees, trembling with fear.
The teacher spoke, but clearly not to her. “Daughter,” he said. Maybe her blunder was now a sermon illustration as he taught the crowds what not to do.
She looked up, bracing for more humiliation.
And it was then that a second healing spread over her. A salvation more powerful than her physical healing.
The invisible woman realized that it was she who had been addressed.
“Daughter” he had called her.
A name that wrapped her up in her first embrace in 12 years.
And that is what is so remarkable about Jesus. He, God, made her family. But not just her. Earlier in his ministry, the teacher had addressed a paralyzed man as “Son,” healing his body but also inviting him into relationship, into family. And Jesus once said, looking around at a small group of friends, “Whoever does the will of God is my brother and sister and mother.”
And that is the Good News of Jesus. It’s not so much “you are no longer guilty, you can go free,” but rather, “you are family, you can stay.” (Thank you to Jason Meyer for this language).
I take back what I said at the beginning; I have met a famous person and a famous person has met me.
Over 30 years ago, I met Jesus.
And He didn’t stop at forgiving my sins; He called me Son.
I am now family.
Grace and peace be upon you,
Grant