Sunday, September 18th, 2022 – 15th After Pentecost
Philip’s Reflection: “The Balm in Gilead” (Jeremiah 8:22)
Just two weeks ago today, on Sunday 4th September, details began to emerge of one of
the worst mass killings in Canada’s recent history, in the James Smith Cree Nation and
the nearby town of Weldon in Saskatchewan. Ten innocent people were killed and
almost 20 others severely injured.
Grieving and numbness are understandable first reactions. But to honour the memory of those whose lives were lost, or changed forever by these events, we must also turn to
those in positions of power or influence and urge them to examine and address the
underlying causes of these horrific acts. I think this is what the Apostle Paul was getting
at in his instructions concerning prayer in the letter to Timothy that we heard read this
morning – he urges that prayers and intercessions “be made for everyone, for kings and
all who are in high positions, so that we may lead a quiet and peaceable life in all
godliness and dignity” (1 Tim 2:1-2). In our context, it means that we cannot all expect
to live a “quiet and peaceable” life unless, as a society, we address the related issues of
discrimination and intergenerational trauma that may give rise to acts of violence, such
as those witnessed recently in Saskatchewan. As Dr. Martin Luther King Jr said in 1967:
“There can be no justice without peace, and there can be no peace without justice.” And
as we pray for peace today, and on the International Day for Peace this Wednesday, we
shall remember these words and commit ourselves to working for both peace and
justice – each dependent on the other, between or within nations, including Canada.
The great Jewish prophet Jeremiah also expresses shock and grief and loss, on an
even larger scale, as he laments the destruction of Jerusalem, referred to as Zion, “the
daughter of my people” towards the beginning of the sixth century BCE. “My joy is gone;
[he cries] grief is upon me; my heart is sick” (Jer 8:18) – And in our reading, we hear of
the back and forth between Jeremiah and God and the people of Israel “Is the Lord not
in Zion?”, [ask the people] “Why have they provoked me to anger with their images, with
their foreign idols?” [asks God]; and the prophet laments “... for the brokenness of the
daughter of my people, I am broken, I mourn, and horror has seized me.”
And then we have Jeremiah’s famous question, “Is there no balm in Gilead? Is there no
physician there?” It’s a rhetorical question and we think we already know the answer -
of course there’s enough “balm in Gilead” – the medicinal perfume produced in the
region of Gilead that would heal the pain of the people of Israel. Well, thunders the
prophet, “Why then has the health of the daughter of my people not been restored?”
And the question is left hanging in the air, unanswered. Why indeed? Who or where is
the physician? Instead, our reading ends literally in floods of tears – “O that my head were a spring of water, and my eyes a fountain of tears, so that I might weep day and night for the slain
daughter of my people”, so that I might weep ceaselessly for Jerusalem now occupied
by the Babylonian army, and its people exiled, and we’re left wondering how to move
beyond the anguish and the grief to healing and restoration? Isn’t that what we want to
know this morning too?
We find an answer in the reading from Paul’s letter to Timothy that we heard a few
moments ago – Paul writes: “For there is one God, there is also one mediator between
God and humankind, Christ Jesus, himself human, who gave himself as a ransom for
all.” For Christian believers, we read the Hebrew Bible, the Old Testament, through the
lens of the life, death and resurrection of Jesus. And when we hear Jeremiah’s
anguished cry “Is there no balm in Gilead? Is there no physician there?” the answer
jumps out at us – for surely Jesus is the physician; and the Holy Spirit is the balm, the
healing medicine – or as the choir just sang – “There is a balm in Gilead to make the
wounded whole; there is a balm in Gilead to heal the sin-sick soul”.
Friends, the Good News of the Gospel is that there is a balm in Gilead, there is a balm
to heal a grieving soul, and the balm is the love of God, freely given and freely to be
received in Jesus Christ, who comforts those who mourn, who gives rest to all who are
weary and heavy laden, who binds the wounds of all who suffer and experience loss,
through the power of the Holy Spirit. Many of us are still experiencing shock and grief in
our different ways and for different reasons, whether from the events in the James
Smith Cree Nation and Weldon; whether from the passing of the beloved Queen
Elizabeth; whether from the discovery of the mass burial sites in Izium, in Eastern
Ukraine, following the retreat of Russian occupying forces, that remind us most visibly of
the horrors of war and the tragic consequences of violence of any kind.
And, as we shall hear in the memorial service for our friend Tom DeLong this Friday,
“For everything there is a season, and a time for every matter under heaven.... A time
to weep, and a time to laugh; a time to mourn, and a time to dance.” (Eccl 3:4) This,
now, is a time for weeping and mourning. We weep for the victims of violence and war;
and we mourn the passing of our monarch, who showed us, in her long and dutiful life,
how to channel power and privilege into the service of others. It is right that we should
mourn these losses. But let us also pray for the healing powers of the balm of Gilead,
the mediator between God and humankind, that our lives may be restored, that there
will be peace and justice on earth, and that we may draw comfort and strength through
the power of the Holy Spirit; that, with this healing, there will again be a time for
laughing and dancing. Jesus tells us that “for God, all things are possible.” (Mt. 19:26).
We pray that it may be so.
Amen.