MOVED WITH PITY

FEW DISEASES were more feared or reviled than leprosy. Before man and God, it was presumed, a leper was the lowest of the low. His disease was proof he was less than nothing before God’s eternal, absolute and omnipotent majesty.

HOW REMARKABLE and touching that a distraught leper would kneel before Jesus—fully God and fully man—to give him permission to heal him. "If you will, you can make me clean,” he said. [Mk 1:40-45] Jesus was moved with pity. He reached out to the sick man as he would his own mother. He touched him, saying, I do will it. He healed him.

TO BE moved with pity is to permit the compassion of your heart to carry you into the experience of someone who suffers. To be moved means reaching out. It means speaking and touching. It brings healing, medicine for the spirit, and the renewal of relationships. Compassion makes possible the regeneration of human hope. It liberates the soul from the clench of the present moment and quiets its trembling.

THE COMPASSION of Jesus Christ is a stirring reminder that Christianity is more than the glimmer of old light or the nimbus of an ambiguous future. Christ is immediate. This immediacy has a name—the Holy Spirit—and he speaks what he hears. [cf. Jn 16:13] Become aware of your own poverty, now. Embrace the one who suffers, now. Open yourself to healing in this very moment.

PERHAPS YOU'LL speak freely about all this, spreading the news everywhere. The Mother of God counsels us that proof is vindicated by silence. Yet, we are not to worry. If a ruckus ensues in your heart or in your household, go quickly into the desert to pray with Jesus. There in solitude you will be little. Make yourself less than nothing before God. Give him permission to touch you and heal you.