"My son Absalom! My son, my son Absalom!
If only I had died instead of you,
Absalom, my son, my son!"
The world seemed to be broken in ways that could never be fully redeemed. Struggle, even among family members like David and Absalom, was a reality that did not seem likely to somehow conduce to some greater good. Then the finality of death seemed to negate all remaining possibilities of deriving some good from all of the evil. By the time the messiah arrived on the seen it seemed like it was probably too late for the world. How could he, even he, possibly make good on all the suffering, sin, and death, that marked human history?
My daughter is at the point of death.
Please, come lay your hands on her
that she may get well and live.
The implication from Jairus that if Jesus didn't come soon it would be too late. There were some things in this world that could be overcome. Sometimes sickness could be cured, or disability healed. But death, it was thought, had an absolute finality that could not be challenged. Jairus's hope was that Jesus would come to save his daughter before she died. In his mind every minute, every second counted.
Jesus, aware at once that power had gone out from him,
turned around in the crowd and asked, "Who has touched my clothes?"
Jesus, however, was not flustered by the apparent time constraints placed on him by others. It wasn't that had wanted to see Jairus squirm, so much as it was that he wanted him to witness something greater and so understand something deeper and more life changing. With him, there was no such thing as too late. With him, there was no problem so permanent that he could not resolve it.
The lady with the flow of blood had been afflicted for twelve years and no doctor could help her. This too seemed like an unsolvable problem. But one faith filled touch of the hem of Jesus's garment and she was healed.
The threshold of 'too late' is when we think we have to give up because there is nothing that can be done. We think a disease, or death, or some other problem is permanent. Seeing something for so long in one condition, like the many dead who don't arise, or a lengthy illness spanning the course of many years, makes us think that it will always be in that condition. We believe that if it were a fixable problem it would have already been fixed. We are suspicious of a God that doesn't give us what we want when we want it. But Jesus constantly reveals that his timing is better than our own. It's difficult to quantify in a utilitarian calculus. It's easy to argue that it would have been better for the little girl not to die in the first place. But then that household could not have learned of the power of the resurrection. So too could God have sent someone to heal the woman sooner. But then she would not have had the opportunity to have her faith in Jesus confirmed. The suspicious part of us wonders if these are really greater goods than a life of uninterrupted comfort. And, we confess, we'd probably choose comfort given the choice. But at the same time we suspect that the faith that resulted from the timing of Jesus was more than worth it for the people involved. There is a mystery, yes. But there is no denying the way these individuals were changed.






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