Reflection: Human flourishing involves a willingness to be interrupted
In the passage today Jesus is interrupted twice. He’s travelled across Lake Galilee, and large crowds have gathered. Maybe they are hungry for more teaching, or more miracles. One of the synagogue leaders, Jairus, interrupts him, pleading with him to come to his place to heal his daughter, and Jesus goes. They are on the way and pushing through crowds, when suddenly Jesus feels himself being touched, and power going out of him. A woman has touched his cloak and is healed.
Once again, Jesus is willing to stop and be interrupted. I wonder what Jairus felt about this interruption? After all, he was a leader, used to being obeyed and respected.
By contrast, the woman who touched Jesus was ritually unclean and had been for 12 years. Jairus would have instinctively avoided her. There could not have been a bigger gap between them: the man and the woman, the leader and the beggar, the clean and the unclean.
She has been healed, and Jesus could have continued on his way; but he wants a personal encounter, not just a transaction. In so doing, he heals not just her body, but completes the healing: spiritually, emotionally, and socially. Jesus declares her clean and free to engage with normal society again.
Jairus’ daughter will also receive healing, quite spectacularly; but I wonder how Jairus reflected on this encounter, and whether in his leadership into the future he would allow himself to be interrupted, and to seek relationship and restoration?
How do you view interruptions: as annoyances, or opportunities? Do you focus on task or people? How are you challenged by Jesus?
Prayer: Forgive me, God, when I am so overwhelmed by my agenda, that I ignore or miss the important people you bring before me. Help me to allow myself to be interrupted so that I can be part of the flourishing of others. Amen.