Reflection: Human flourishing is inclusive
As I read through the Gospel of Mark, I am struck by how much time Jesus spent outside Israel! It is not the way I pictured his ‘ministry’. Tyre was a city that was never captured by Israel and was seen as a source of idolatry and wickedness.
Jesus is again trying to escape the crowds, but he is accosted by a woman, and Mark goes to great lengths to emphasise that she is Gentile. She is in Tyre, and she is Greek, born in Syrian Phoenicia. And she is in need: her daughter is spiritually possessed, and she is begging Jesus for help.
Jesus’ response sounds really harsh. It is almost as if Jesus is channelling his inner Pharisee. Yet in all his responses, his questions are always direct and lead to the heart. Jesus tells her that he has come for the Jews first, and then what is left will be available to the Gentiles.
Her reply is in the same tone as Jesus, and clever: she knows that he is King of the Jews, but she recognises that he is also King of the World. Jesus commends her, and her child is healed.
We see here that the kingdom of God is inclusive, much more than the religious leaders imagined. She was a woman and a Gentile, two groups of people that were not respected or valued by Jewish males, and yet she experienced flourishing for her daughter.
Who do you think is in or out of the kingdom of God? What can we do to help others experience the kingdom, and to belong?
Prayer: Dear God, thank you for this confident mother, and the way she advocated for her daughter. Thank you that Jesus responded to her with compassion, and healed her daughter. Help me to focus much more on including—rather than excluding—people from our gatherings. Amen.