Homily: March 4, 2024 Monday of the third week in Lent (Thy will be done).
“My father," they said, "if the prophet had told you to do something extraordinary, would you not have done it?"
Naaman was expecting to be healed in dramatic ways, in his opinion, that would make his travel all the way to Israel worth it. He probably thought he didn’t travel all the way to go through simple tricks. But finally, the simple instructions did the job perfectly. Not what Naaman was expecting but a miracle indeed.
There was a period in my childhood when I was terribly afraid of injections. I was terrified of the needles. Once, I had a fever. There was a primary health center just a few yards from my home. I went to the doctor, who was a good friend of my family. I told him confidently, "I have a fever, not a high fever, so I only need paracetamol, no injections needed." The doctor laughed at me, he was very amused and knew very well what I was afraid of. I wanted the doctor to heal me but, in my way, in my terms, so I thought I could advise him how to do it.
I lived in a farming village so during the dry season, my parents and our entire parish would pray for rain, as we needed rain to get good harvests. But I was secretly praying that God would send rain only at night because I wanted to play cricket with my friends in the day on those summer holidays! I expected God to deliver His blessings in my way, in my terms.
Do you also pray like that?
Do you also direct God to do bless you in your way, in your terms?
God wanted to heal Naaman, but He also wanted to save Naaman. His soul was more precious to God than his skin. And God impressed Naaman through the simplest way, showing him that He is powerful and could perform a miracle in the simplest way, but He also wanted Naaman to be cooperative, to break away from his own arrogant expectations to be humble enough to follow what looked like a simplistic approach.
Do we also tend to think we know better, and God doesn’t?
God's ways are mysterious, beyond the comprehension of our limited intelligence. He so powerful and mighty such that He can perform the impossible in the simplest way. As He wills.
Jesus teaches us to pray, "Thy will be done” because He knows that this is the most powerful prayer. It is a prayer which requires us to align our will with God’s will, to be cooperative with what He plans, to surrender and trust.
So, did it rain in the nights? Yes, some nights. Did it rain in the day? Oh yes it did! And did I get an injection? For that episode, no injection was needed. When I grew up, I had lots but I was no longer afraid.
God wants to and will accomplish greater things through us, if we let Him. God knows best. Thy will be done. Amen.
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