
The Healing Touch of Jesus
By Bishop Paul S. Loverde
Special to the Herald
(From the issue of 7/1/04)
This homily was given by Arlington Bishop Paul S. Loverde during
the Mass celebrated at Marymount University in Arlington, on June 25, in
observance of the Feast of St. John the Baptist.
I propose for our reflection three scenes or, using the language of art,
a triptych.
The first of these scenes is depicted in the Gospel passage just
proclaimed in our hearing: Jesus healing the leper. See once more the leper,
approaching Jesus, trembling with fear and expectation! How he longs to be
healed! Doing Him homage, the leper says to Jesus, "Lord, if you wish, you
can make me clean." See too how Jesus immediately responds. "He stretched
out his hand, touched him," and said, "I will do it. Be made clean." Finally
see what happens. "His leprosy was cleansed immediately." In the face of
desperate need, Jesus responds with overwhelming and unfailing compassion
As we contemplate this first scene of our triptych, we so quickly
acknowledge and affirm the need for healing within each of us, within the
Church we love so dearly and within the society in which we live and move.
This brings us to the second scene of our triptych. Who indeed is the
source of this profound and far-reaching healing? Is it not Jesus Himself,
to Whom points our patron St. John the Baptist? Yes, in this second scene,
we see St. John the Baptist, steadfastly and unrelentingly pointing to Jesus
as the Lamb of God and the Savior of the world. Yesterday, we celebrated the
Solemnity of the Birth of St. John the Baptist and today, in this Holy
Sacrifice of the Mass, we recall our beloved patron and the timeless message
he proclaimed and still proclaims. "Look! There is the Lamb of God who takes
away the sin of the world!" (Jn 1:29). "He must increase while I must
decrease. … Whoever believes in the Son has life eternal. Whoever disobeys
the Son will not see life, but must endure the wrath of God" (Jn 3:30, 36).
Yes, our patron keeps pointing to Jesus, because Jesus is the Way, the Truth
and the Life (cf Jn 14:6), the only Savior of the world (cf Jn 3:17).
The third and final scene of our triptych is the Order of Malta, among
whom we find ourselves privileged to be members. You and I must do now what
our patron St. John the Baptist did in his day. We must point people towards
Jesus by the witness of our daily Christian living. We must say, more with
our lives than with our words; "There is Jesus, the Source of life, the very
One in whom you can put your total trust! There is the One who will bring
true and lasting healing to each of us, to our beloved Church and to our
society."
Fellow members of the Order of Malta, you and I are in need of inner
healing. We are scarred by our past sins, each one of us "in my thoughts and
in my words, in what I have done and in what I have failed to do" (cf
"Confiteor"). We need to approach Jesus in daily prayer, in the
celebration of His Eucharistic Sacrifice and in the Sacrament of Penance and
cry out with faith: "Lord, you can make me clean." If we truly approach Him
with faith and trust, He will indeed stretch out His merciful hand and touch
us, so that we will be made clean and whole and new!
Fellow members of the Order of Malta, how much our beloved Church needs
healing, so that the divisions within her, on the extreme left and on the
extreme right, will be overcome, so that we may be truly one with that unity
for which Christ prayed on the night before He died. How we need the healing
of refound and renewed unity, which is rooted in our following the guidance
of God the Holy Spirit and results in our being one in the essentials of our
Catholic faith as we continue to make our own the authentic agenda of the
Holy Father, who is the source and center of our unity in Christ! The
enemies of this unity include suspicion, fear, anger and a close mindedness
to Truth. Each day, do we not pray that we may overcome these enemies and
bring about healing? "Be it mine to practice and defend the Catholic, the
Apostolic, the Roman faith against the enemies of religion … "
Fellow members of the Order of Malta, the society in which we live and
move also needs much healing! So many of our sisters and brothers, around us
and beyond us, experience the exile of poverty and sickness. So often, their
poverty is found not in the material world but in the spiritual realm. So
often, their illness is not only in body but also in spirit, in the soul.
How they need the healing touch of Jesus to free them from their exile and
to make them clean in mind, body and soul! Again, each day, do we not pray
that such healing may be theirs? "In be it mine to practice charity towards
my neighbors, especially the poor and the sick."
Yes, the triptych projected before us deserves our careful reflection.
Our patron St. John the Baptist points to Jesus, the source of true and
lasting healing and urges us, as the Knights and Dames of Malta, to become
living instruments of Christ’s healing touch to one another, to the members
of the Church and to those who live in our society.
Of course, we cannot be instruments of Christ’s healing on our own. But,
through prayer and penance, we allow the Lord Himself to so convert us, to
so transform us that we become the visible and tangible expressions of His
compassion and love. The more He increases within us, the more will He be
present to all those with whom we come into contact. Through us, He will
reach out and heal — to the glory of the Trinity and for the salvation of
souls. Amen!
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