Good Morning All,
Matthew 15: 26-27: “And he
answered, “It is not right to take the children’s bread and throw it to
the dogs.” She
said, “Yes, Lord, yet even the dogs eat the crumbs that fall from their
masters’ table.”
This is a portion of the story of the
Canaanite woman and her faith. She came
to Jesus looking for a miracle for her daughter and the disciples tried to send
her away. It appears that Jesus is as
well as He tells her He came for the lost sheep of Israel, and she was not one
of them. She continues to pray and plead
with Jesus until He relents. Then Jesus
praises her faith and heals her daughter.
To many this seems to be a story about how
nagging will win the day. If you just
keep pestering God long enough, He will give in and give you what you
want. But that is not what is going on
here. This is a better case of playing
“who am I in the parable?” Whenever we
play this game, we always want to be the good guy. We always want to be the Good Samaritan when
we read that story; we want to be the example of goodness and right faith. But if we are honest; are we the good guys or
are we the foolish guys?
In
this story we want to be the Canaanite woman who, even though seemingly
rejected by Jesus, continues to plead, and beg our Lord for His mercy. Is that really us? Do we continue to pray and pray until God
answers our prayer? Or do we give up and
begin to play the Schleprock card and say, “woe is me I never win at anything;
I never get what I need, I am always the loser; my life is so rough.”
The unfortunate truth is that we are usually
more like the disciples were in this story.
Eating a feast at the table with Jesus; spilling and wasting enough food
that a poor outsider saw it as enough to live off of. Isn’t that really how we are? We receive such an abundance of blessings
from God that we fail to see how great they are and then we begrudge someone
else who seeks just a scrap of the blessings that we have. Most have multiple TVs, cell phones, and
other luxuries. We have multiple vehicles and spend a lot of money on
entertainment. We spend thousands of
dollars on health care because we are overweight while a huge chunk of the
world slowly starves to death.
Does this mean we are bad people because we
have wealth? Not necessarily, wealth is
a gift from God, but do we give thanks for that wealth like we should, or have
we reached a point where we feel entitled to this prosperity? We need to be thankful to God for all that He
has given to us, and we need to pray that we do not become so hung up on what
we have that wealth becomes our God. We
need to see God’s hand at work in our lives and give thanks to the Lord. Then we need to look for ways to share God’s
love and blessings with those around us both near and far.
Dear Heavenly Father,
too often we sit at your table and feast and do not see the great and wonderful
blessings that we have. We confess that
all too often we are like the disciples who assume blessings and dismiss those
who are in need. We ask for your divine
mercy. Give us strength to follow you
and to be your hands here on earth and that we show mercy to those who are in
need. In Jesus’ precious name we pray,
Amen!
God’s Peace,
Pastor Bret
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