
As Jesus went on from there, he saw a man named Matthew sitting at the tax collector’s booth. “Follow me,” he told him, and Matthew got up and followed him.
While Jesus was having dinner at Matthew’s house, many tax collectors and sinners came and ate with him and his disciples. When the Pharisees saw this, they asked his disciples, “Why does your teacher eat with tax collectors and sinners?”
On hearing this, Jesus said, “It is not the healthy who need a doctor, but the sick. But go and learn what this means: ‘I desire mercy, not sacrifice.’ For I have not come to call the righteous, but sinners….”
While he was saying this, a synagogue leader came and knelt before him and said, “My daughter has just died. But come and put your hand on her, and she will live.” Jesus got up and went with him, and so did his disciples.
Just then a woman who had been subject to bleeding for twelve years came up behind him and touched the edge of his cloak. She said to herself, “If I only touch his cloak, I will be healed.”
Jesus turned and saw her. “Take heart, daughter,” he said, “your faith has healed you.” And the woman was healed at that moment.
When Jesus entered the synagogue leader’s house and saw the noisy crowd and people playing pipes, he said, “Go away. The girl is not dead but asleep.” But they laughed at him. After the crowd had been put outside, he went in and took the girl by the hand, and she got up. News of this spread through all that region. (New International Version)
The late Abigail Van Buren, better known as the newspaper columnist, “Dear Abby,” was the person who made famous the phrase: “The church is a hospital for sinners, not a museum of saints.” That quote is an accurate reflection of what Jesus was doing and saying. We occasionally need words like Dear Abby’s to remind and reorient us toward why the church exists.
The church of the Lord Jesus does not remain on this earth solely for our benefit, any more than a hospital exists for the benefit of the doctors or insurance companies! Rather, the church lives to extend the mission of Jesus through proclamation of good news with the restorative touch of grace. The church’s calling is not to find others who can help them with their giving and attendance. Instead, the church is the community of the redeemed, the temple of the Holy Spirit, gathered and sent to be the continuing presence of Jesus on this earth.
Some of us are not healthy. Some are sick – sick with guilt and shame, heart-sick, or just plain sick-and-tired of being sick-and-tired. Jesus came neither to condemn nor heap a pile of unrealistic expectations on us. Rather, Christ points us to the source of healing and restoration; and invites us to admit our need and come to him.
The question I want us to grapple with is this: Why did Jesus come to this earth? The answer to that question is to also answer the question of our own purpose and existence as followers of Christ.
Jesus came to forgive sin and transform sinners.Forgiveness, healing, and restoration are the three activities which bring about true spiritual and physical healing. There are two healings In today’s Gospel lesson: one is a spiritual healing; and the other a physical healing.
The Calling and Healing of Matthew
At the heart of the human condition is spiritual brokenness. And Jesus is all about taking away guilt and shame, creating a new person and a new community. It’s a radical vision which seeks to encompass and embrace all persons – which means Jesus touched many people overlooked by others.
Jesus came to call the despised people of society, the “sinners.” He called Matthew, a tax collector. Tax collectors were hated. They were corrupt characters who extorted money from innocent people just trying to make ends meet. Jesus not only called the despised Matthew, but he also had dinner with him and all his unsavory buddies. This kind of behavior by Jesus was deeply offensive to the upstanding citizens and religious leaders of the time.
Yet, Jesus did not back down. He responded by saying that it is not the healthy who need a doctor, but those who are sick. And he backed up his social actions with Scripture by encouraging offended folks to meditate on what this biblical phrase means: “I desire mercy, not sacrifice.” (Hosea 6:6)
It is possible to engage in outward rituals of worship, do all the right things, fulfill our duties, yet still miss the heart of God wants for humanity. Mercy is what God wants. Jesus knew this. So, Christ entangled himself with sinners to bring spiritual healing and restoration.
When Corrie Ten Boom sought to bring deliverance of the Jews from the Nazis during World War II, she had to entangle herself with Jewish refugees. When Christian missionaries seek to be the light of Jesus to people, they must entangle themselves with the people’s culture. If we want to see God deliver people from their situations, we must entangle ourselves with them, into complicated lives that are not pretty, with persons who have been tainted by sin.
Lots of people are in awful predicaments. Christians, like their Lord, will need to get their hands dirty and their feet wet to extend Christ’s ministry of mercy and forgiveness. The gospel was never intended to be proclaimed from afar, but up close and personal through entanglement in people’s lives. If the merciful mission of Jesus is to occur, it requires the following three levels of intimacy with others:
- Intimacy with Jesus. Engaging in the spiritual disciplines of prayer, giving, fasting, reading, and meditating on Scripture are the activities which help us to know Christ better and know and how to respond with mercy.
- Intimacy with fellow believers. We are hard-wired by God for community. Superficial relationships can only provide superficial community. Christians need to help one another with spiritual growth. They must hold one another accountable for the mission of Christ.
- Intimacy with “sinners.” This world is filled with sick, needy, hurt, and lonely, people who are locked in unhealthy patterns of living. They need a merciful change of life that comes from the merciful Jesus acting through merciful Christians.
Mercy, not judgment, is at the heart of all change. If we desire others to be different, we will need to be acquainted with the mercy of God.
The Approach of a Grieving Father and Bleeding Woman for Healing
The dead girl being raised to life and the bleeding woman experiencing healing are, perhaps at the surface, unrelated. Yet, Matthew’s Gospel presents them together in a sandwich story. The dead girl’s father approaches Jesus, and in the middle of the story, while Jesus and the father are on the way to the deceased girl, a woman who had been hemorrhaging for twelve years approaches Jesus without saying a word.
In both cases, the father and the woman exhibited confident faith that their heartfelt desires would be met with Jesus. And, in both situations, two people were restored, not only to health, but to fully functioning members of the community.
And this is where the two of them are related to Matthew. With all three persons, the healings involved a restoration to society. When Jesus heals a person, that person is completely healed – both body and soul – and healed not only of traumatic physical ailments (even death!) but also healed of disordered or demented minds, of deep emotional wounds, and of spiritual neglect and/or abuse.
In the woman’s case, she had to contend with being separated from the community because of her bleeding. She was ritually unclean and could not participate like the others in worship and communal life. And in the case of the father and synagogue ruler with a dead daughter, he would have to put up with not only the severe grief of a lost daughter, but also the misguided cultural beliefs of an untimely death being the result of either the girl’s personal sin, or the sin of the father. Oy.
So, when Jesus heals, Jesus heals completely! It always involves forgiveness (if needed) and a restoration of the individual (and sometimes whole families) back into arms of the society which everyone is dependent upon for each other’s welfare.
And, also like Matthew, Jesus was willing to cut through any cultural barriers and existing societal norms in order to accomplish God’s will and purpose of restoring lost people. I want us to observe that Jesus asks us to follow him because he himself is also willing to do so.
A woman with a bloody discharge and a dead girl’s body were touched by Jesus, who reached across Israel’s purity laws in doing so. Two people who were ritually unclean and not to be touched were given a new lease on life through Christ’s willingness to follow God’s will. Notice that Jesus did not initiate the contact, but followed them in their requests and desires.
Sometimes the church needs to learn the art of following by observing how Christ followed.
Many churches today, including yours and mine, wonder how to draw people in rather than how to engage human beings where they live. Instead of waiting for people to come in, or trying to attract through marketing efforts, perhaps the church should follow our neighbors out into the world, responding to their needs as they emerge.
Maybe, just maybe, we might explore how to participate in what is already going on in the community and follow the leading of the Spirit, who is the continuing presence of Jesus on this earth. Maybe we could put our focus on how to show mercy, not sacrifice.
Lord Jesus Christ, you stretched out your arms of love on the hard wood of the cross so that everyone might come within the reach of your saving embrace. Clothe us in your Spirit so that we, reaching forth our hands in love, may bring those who do not know you to the knowledge of your love, for the glory of your Name. Amen.

