GOSPEL THOUGHTS
*Ordinary Season: Fourth Week : Tuesday*
*Gospel : Mark 5:21-43*
*First Reading : 2 Sam 18:9-10, 14, 24-30; 19:3*
*Responsorial Psalm : 86:1-6*
*Woman Who suffered from a chronic hemorrhage for twelve years*
*1) Jewish Law & the Sickness*
According to Jewish law (Leviticus 15), her condition made her ritually unclean:
She was socially isolated
Excluded from worship
Unable to touch others without making them unclean
She had tried every available medical option, but nothing helped.
In desperation mixed with faith, she believed: “If I just touch his garment, I will be healed.”
She touches Jesus secretly, is instantly healed, and Jesus publicly affirms her faith.
This is not just a healing story—it is a story of restoration: physical, social, emotional, and spiritual.
*2) Spiritual Significance*
*A) Faith beyond Visibility*
Her faith was quiet, hidden, and risky.
She did not speak aloud, yet Jesus recognized her faith.
True faith does not need attention; it needs trust.
*B) From Ritual Impurity to Personal Dignity*
Instead of Jesus becoming “unclean” by her touch, holiness flows outward from Him and heals her.
This shows that grace is stronger than shame, and mercy overcomes exclusion.
*C) Jesus Seeks Relationship, Not Just Healing*
Jesus stops and asks, “Who touched me?”
Not to shame her—but to restore her publicly.
Healing is not complete until the wounded person is seen, named, and affirmed.
*D) “Daughter” – A Word of Belonging*
Jesus calls her “Daughter”—the only time He uses this title in the Gospels.
Her identity is restored: Not “unclean woman,” not “sick person,” but family.
*3) Why Twelve Years Matters*
Twelve symbolizes completeness (12 tribes, 12 apostles)
Her long suffering reflects waiting without answers
It reminds us that delay is not denial
God may allow long seasons of pain, but they are not meaningless.
*4) Relevance in the Present-Day Context*
*A) People Still Suffer Silently*
Today, many suffer for years with: Chronic illness, Mental health struggles, Trauma, Misdiagnosis or ineffective treatment
This story speaks directly to those who feel forgotten, exhausted, and unheard.
*B) Limits of Human Systems*
The physicians tried, but failed—not because medicine is wrong, but because human solutions have limits.
Faith does not reject science—but reminds us not to replace hope with systems alone.
*C) Faith in a Distracted World*
The woman had to reach Jesus in a crowd.
Even today, faith often requires intentional effort amid noise, skepticism, and distractions.
*D) Restoring the Marginalized*
The woman represents: The voiceless, The excluded, The “invisible” in society
Jesus still stops for those others overlook.
*5) Points to Ponder*
What long struggle have I accepted as “normal”?
Do I believe God notices silent faith?
Am I reaching out in hope—or withdrawing in shame?
Do I stop, like Jesus, to truly see wounded people?
Am I open to being healed in ways that restore identity, not just comfort?
*Think about it*
*God bless you and your family. Praying for you and your dear ones*
*Fr Maxim DSouza*
*Jeppu Seminary*
*Mangalore*