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The Old Testament, Epistle, and Gospel readings today all give reminders of the hardships endured by God’s prophets. We’ll focus on the second reading from Paul’s Second Letter to the Corinthians.
Immediately before this passage, Paul has been writing to the church community in Corinth about all that he has endured for the sake of spreading the Good News. Five times he was whipped, three times he was beaten with rods, and once he was stoned. He was shipwrecked three times, survived a day and night on the sea, and in his travels he endured “many sleepless nights, in hunger and thirst and with frequent fasts, in both cold and nakedness” (2 Cor 11:24-28).
Now he has another challenge: “a thorn in the flesh.” He never tells us what the thorn in the flesh is. Is it a physical sickness or handicap? Could it refer to a person, someone he finds almost intolerable? We will never know, but we can probably relate to a challenging or painful situation that we wish we didn’t have to experience.
St. Paul begged for his thorn to be removed, but the response he heard from the Lord was “My grace is sufficient for you for power is made perfect in weakness.” Like so many of Jesus’ sayings in the Gospels, this response is a surprise and it challenges our understanding of how God works. Paul manages to accept this and make a shift to humility, accepting his thorn, so that God can work with and through him, despite his imperfections. Ultimately he allows God to be in control, rather than himself.
Questions of the week . . .
Have you had an experience of living with a thorn in your side? If so, what did it teach you over the course of time?
Have you had an experience of living with weakness that paradoxically allowed God’s strength to show forth?