5 March 2023
Text: Matt 15:21-28
(Gen 32:22-32)
In the name of +
Jesus. Amen.
God told Jacob to do something very difficult. He had cheated his twin brother many years before,
and ran away from home. He made a good
life for himself. But now, God told him
to bring his family and all his riches, and go face his brother Esau – who had
vowed that he would kill his brother.
Jacob was afraid of Esau, but he was more afraid of
God. He made the long journey home,
expecting that there was a good chance that God was leading him back to be
killed as punishment for his sins.
And then, to top it all off, while he was alone at
night, he got mugged. “A man wrestled
with him until the breaking of the day.”
And the mugger had an extraordinary fighting technique. “He touched his hip socket, and Jacob’s hip
was put out of joint.” But Jacob did not
give up. When the sun rose, the mugger
asked Jacob to let him go. Jacob said
something very strange, dear friends, “I will not let you go until you bless
me.” For Jacob realized that this was a
supernatural encounter. This was not a
mugger. Rather, this was God in human
form. And God took flesh to teach him
something. And in fact, God changed Jacob’s
name to Israel, meaning, “He wrestles with God.”
Jacob remembered this wrestling with God – and he
even had a limp to remind him. His faith
in God was strengthened as he went back to face his brother. Jacob said, “I have seen God face to face,
and yet my life has been delivered.” In
spite of his sin and unworthiness, God took mercy on him and saved him through
his fears and struggles.
This mugger, wrestler, and teacher – who is God in
human form – had more people to mug, wrestle with, and teach – as well as to
give faith and to save. The incident
with Jacob was a preview of what was to come later.
In fact, the descendants of Jacob became God’s
chosen people, the Israelites. And the
mugger, wrestler, teacher, and Savior, God in human form, would be born an Israelite:
a descendant of the same Jacob nearly two thousand years later. And, in fact, He would be called “Teacher,”
and He would gather to Himself students, called “disciples.”
And one day, this Teacher and His disciples encountered
a Canaanite woman (not an Israelite) who had heard of the Teacher’s
supernatural powers. And she knew who Jesus
was as she revealed His title as the King of Israel, calling Him: “Son of David.” For Jesus didn’t surprise her in the form of
a mugger in the middle of the night, rather this woman is the one who initiated
this confrontation.
“Have mercy on me, O Lord, Son of David.” She prays for mercy right before asking our Lord
for something specific – just as we do to this day in our liturgy: “Lord, have
mercy upon us” – right before we prayed: “O God, You see that of ourselves we
have no strength. By Your mighty power
defend us from all adversities that may happen to the body and from all evil
thoughts that may assault and hurt the soul.”
Her prayer, knowing that of herself, she has no strength, is for Jesus
to defend her daughter from all adversities, and from evil to body and soul. She says: “My daughter is severely oppressed
by a demon.”
Jesus is the Savior. She has come to the right place. But Jesus is still the Teacher. And in His capacity as Teacher, he is also
the wrestler. In order to teach this
woman to have Jacob’s faith in facing her own fears, Jesus wrestles with her by
remaining silent, “He did not answer her a word.”
Our Lord’s disciples, in one of their less than
stellar moments, show no compassion, but ask Jesus to “send her away.” Our Lord tries to throw off this Gentile
woman who has essentially mugged Him by saying, “I was sent only to the lost
sheep of the house of Israel.” But like Jacob,
who refused to let Jesus go without a blessing, the Canaanite woman holds on
for dear life. She will not be dissuaded
in her prayers. “She knelt before Him
saying, ‘Lord, help me.’”
Once again, Jesus pushes her away by appealing to God’s
promise to His chosen people, the Israelites, descendants of Jacob. He rebuffs her saying, “It is not right to
take the children’s bread and throw it to the dogs.” But once more, the Canaanite woman, praying
to Jesus on behalf of her daughter, refuses to let go without receiving a
blessing. “Yes, Lord,” she says. This is a confession of humility and
unworthiness. And this unworthiness is
why we pray with her, “Lord, have mercy,” and why we are bold to pray. “Yes, Lord,” she says, “yet even the dogs eat
the crumbs that fall from their masters’ table.” For this Canaanite woman had faith. Somehow, she had learned of the promise in Scripture
that the Savior would not only rescue the children of Israel, but would also be
a blessing to her people. Somehow and
somewhere, she heard the prophecy of Isaiah: “It is too light a thing that you
should be my servant to raise up the tribes of Jacob and to bring back the
preserved of Israel; I will make you as a light for the nations, that my
salvation may reach to the end of the earth.”
She held on to this promise that was for her and for her daughter – and for
all the people of earth.
She knew that the Teacher and Savior had come for
her too, and she wrestled with God until the daybreak of His mercy came to
her. She said, “Yes, Lord,” not only to our
Lord telling her that He came for the children of Israel, but she also said, “Yes,
Lord” to the prophecy of Isaiah. She
said, “Yes, Lord,” because she believed.
And she refused to let go until He gave her a blessing.
Her faith was not in vain, dear friends. Jesus said, “O woman, great is your faith! Be it done for you as you desire.” And “her daughter was healed instantly.”
For our Savior is indeed a teacher. We are His students. He teaches us about the kingdom. He teaches us through His Word and through His
actions in this world that not only save us, but also teach us who He is and
how His kingdom works. He teaches us
through the Scriptures and through the saving and healing sacraments. And these means of the Lord’s mercy work
through faith.
Scripture teaches us that Jesus has come not to condemn,
but to save. And the Lord’s Supper
teaches us that we are forgiven and made worthy of God Himself to visit us and
to dine with us, to be both the host and the guest – and we believe, we ask for
mercy, and we pray, praise, and give thanks.
For Jesus has mugged us, in a way, dear friends. We did not go looking for Him, but somehow He
found us. He makes us wrestle with His Word. He tests our faith. He teaches us. And He saves us.
He hears our prayers. He frees us from the power of the devil. He welcomes us into the kingdom regardless of
our ancestry, whether we are Israelite or Canaanite. And even when nobody else will listen – and even
when we think He is not listening – He listens, He hears, and He saves.
He teaches us with His Word – with these two
incidents that happened nearly two thousand years apart. He teaches us where we stand nearly two
thousand years after the verbal wrestling match with the Canaanite woman. He teaches us that we are to hear the
promises of God and believe them. And
based on those promises, we can live our lives in confidence, in faith. And we pray with boldness, knowing that
whatever the outcome, He hears us and He gives us the outcome according to His
will.
And as the teacher of our Catechism instructs us: “The
good and gracious will of God is done even without our prayer, but we pray in
this petition that it may be done among us also.”
It is God’s will to free us from bondage to the
devil, and to lead us to trust Him, to pray for His mercy, and to refuse to let
go of Him until He has blessed us with forgiveness, life, and salvation.
“Have mercy on me, O Lord, Son of David.”
Amen.
In
the name of the Father and of the + Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.