I Suspect…, Proper 18 (B) – 2006
September 10, 2006
I suspect that “pushy” women do an enormous amount of the work that keeps the world going. One very popular pushy woman is Baroness Thatcher of Grantham, the first woman to serve as Britainâs Prime Minister. In the late 1980s, Mrs. Thatcher was often criticized for being âschool-marmishâ and âhectoring.â But if she were a man, wouldnât they admire her for being decisive and forceful?
Todayâs gospel reading is about a woman most of us would probably characterize as pushy, and perhaps aggressive and obnoxious, too. Mark tells us that Jesus âwent away to the region of Tyre.â Tyre was in or near present-day Lebanon, an area occupied mostly by Gentiles. Although he tried to keep his visit there a secret, word somehow got out, and a woman of the region came to Jesus seeking help for her daughter who was possessed by a demon. Mark clearly identifies her as âa Gentile of Syrophoenician origin.â Mark does not tell us how often she came to Jesus with her request or what she said initially, but Matthew tells us that she cried out, âHave mercy on me, O Lord, Son of David.â Matthew also implies that she came to Jesus at least twice and to his disciples at least once.
Sermons on this text generally spend most of their time trying to justify Jesusâ grossly insulting rebuke to this nameless woman: âLet the children first be fed, for it is not right to take the children’s bread and throw it to the dogs.â
Letâs consider two things about this comment. First, Jesus does not need us to defend him, and second, even if we wanted to defend Jesus, thereâs no way to do it. However, itâs worth noting that God became incarnate not only in a person but also in a culture, and here Jesus gives voice to two of the most fundamental prejudices of his culture: Jewish men did not speak to or allow themselves to be spoken to by women in public, and observant Jews tried to minimize their contact with Gentiles. First Corinthians 14:34 expresses the standard attitude of Jewish men toward women in public places: they are to be âsilent.â
By far the most interesting person in this story is the nameless Gentile woman who didnât mind being pushy and who cleverly turned Jesusâ insult to her own advantage. There are two ways to look at her. First, letâs try to see her as Jesus and the disciples must have seen her: unpleasant, annoying, and impossible to get rid of. She wouldnât take ânoâ for an answer. âDonât call us; weâll call youâ would not have satisfied her. If you put her on hold and hoped she would eventually hang up, you would have been disappointed.
Now, letâs try to see her more objectively. Sometimes being pushy, aggressive, and annoying is the only way to get things done. Sometimes in hindsight we can see that âpushy,â âaggressive,â and âannoyingâ were just other words for âcourage,â âpersistence,â and âdetermination,â and that is we ought to see the woman in todayâs Gospel reading. She defied social conventions. In Jesusâ world, women were expected to be more or less invisible and silent, but in spite of any number of spoken and unspoken cultural assumptions, the Syrophoenician woman would not be silent and persisted in seeking healing for her daughter.
Another famous âpushyâ woman was the late Rosa Parks. On her way home from work in Montgomery, Alabama, in December of 1955, Rosa Parks boarded a bus and sat in the last seat reserved for âcolored people.â When a white passenger boarded at the next stop, the bus driver demanded that Ms. Parks yield her seat to the white passenger. Parks refused and was arrested. But the simple act of refusing to give up her seat had a profound effect on history. It launched a boycott that brought Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., to international prominence, and it was the beginning of the civil rights movement that did so much to secure basic human rights that had long been denied to African Americans.
Rosa Parksâ refusal to give up her seat may have had influence far beyond her time and country. In the waning days of the Soviet Union, reactionaries sought to reverse the process of democratization by overthrowing the Soviet leader, Gorbachev. During the tense days of the attempted coup the world watched as Moscowâs mayor, Boris Yeltsin, literally stood up to tanks attempting to disperse the Soviet parliament. When asked what inspired him to face down tanks, Yeltsin said that he was inspired by Lech Walesa and the Solidarity movement in Poland. When Walesa was asked what inspired him, he said that he had long admired Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.âs, civil rights campaigns. When Dr. King was asked what inspired him, he said that he admired Rosa Parksâ refusal to give up her seat. Is it possible that Rosa Parksâ defiance of injustice helped bring down the Soviet Union?
Itâs tempting to shout âhoorayâ for pushy women, but being pushy is not enough. You also need to know whom to push. The Syrophoenician woman went to the one person who could command the demonic spirit to leave her daughter and restore the girl to soundness of mind: Jesus.
This story shows Jesus in the worst possible light, so why did Mark include it? Maybe itâs in the Gospel to encourage us. Like the Syrophoenician woman, we often come to Jesus with desperate needs: weâre out of work and need a job, or someone we love is dying, or someone has just shattered our heart. Like the nameless woman, we may pray to God day and night but find no relief. But more than likely, we pray about something once or twice and then forget about it. Itâs difficult to explain why God hears and answers some prayers and seems to leave others unanswered. But God seems to expect us to be persistent in our prayers (maybe even a little pushy) and come back again and again.
The final thing we should notice about the Syrophoenician woman is the nature of her request. Begging Jesus to free her daughter from demonic power was no idle, off-hand petition. The woman was not asking for a trip to Cancun or a new car: she was seeking justice.
Thank goodness for pushy women and sometimes pushy men. Thank goodness for people who defy social conventions in their quest to right wrong. But above all, thank goodness for those who kneel at Jesusâ feet day and night and pray without ceasing. Thank goodness for women and men who seek justice and will not accept ânoâ for an answer â even when the ânoâ seems to come from God.
¡No olvide suscribirse al podcast Sermons That Work para escuchar este sermón y más en su aplicación de podcasting favorita! Las grabaciones se publican el jueves antes de cada fecha litúrgica.