“I have sinned grievously in what I have done. But now, LORD, forgive the guilt of your servant, for I have been very foolish.” At a dinner, a very proud and loving father sat next to his future daughter-in-law, who was sitting across from her future husband, the man’s amazing son. After dessert and before presenting her with his Christmas gift, he turned to her and gently said, “All I want for you to remember today is that I have been praying for you even before I met you. That means I have been loving you all this time.” What he did for her and his son, and by extension, all of us, is to give a poignant example of pure love that extends all the way into Heaven. It means that trust, love, and responsibility go hand in hand in developing a powerful and lasting relationship with God and with all who believe that love is the answer, which always means asking for forgiveness, forgiving, and always practicing mercy.
In the Gospel passage, however, it looks like the Lord couldn’t count on His own people to put trust in the power of God: “And they took offense at him. Jesus said to them, ‘A prophet is not without honor except in his native place and among his own kin and in his own house.’ So he was not able to perform any mighty deed there, apart from curing a few sick people by laying his hands on them. He was amazed at their lack of faith.”
The result was disastrous. No faith, no miracles, no healing. The lesson seems clear enough: when we overstep our own relationship with the Lord, either by trying to “play God” or reduce faith by arrogant grabs for wisdom and insight, nobody wins. Thank God we have a God who loves us and is always ready to forgive. Let us pray for faith that is built on trust in the One who never stopped loving us, even while we were in the womb.
You’d never know. There are people who pray for you without your presence and without your knowledge. Perhaps those prayers save you many times in your life. You’d never know. Stay humble.