Monday, March 25, 2013

Healing Stories 15 & 16


Daughter of the Canaanite Woman #15 

At first read, this story seems to be about persistence, about a Gentile woman who came and knelt before Jesus saying “Lord, help me!”  Her daughter was possessed by and evil spirit.   Initially, Jesus refused to help saying he was “sent only to the lost sheep of Israel,” but I suspect he could have been saying this for the sake of the disciples, who often wanted to restrict the kingdom of the Gospel to only Jews.  Maybe Jesus knew she had the fortitude to argue with him and make his point for the disciples, that God’s healing was for everyone.  

Interesting that the daughter (who is possessed) plays no part in the healing, it is all about the faith and courage of the mother, who comes on behalf of her daughter, and asks.  A good reminder for those of us who’s children are far from the LORD, that we can still –in faith—ask for God’s healing in their lives. 

Finally, the healing, as in other stories is done from a distance.  “She went home and found her child lying on the bed, and the demon gone.”  A reminder that God’s healing power knows no distance. 

Deaf man with speech impediment #16

We’ve seen this before, where Jesus heals the blind man and then says “See that you tell no one.”  In this story he touches the man’s ears and tongue, which opens the man’s ears and loosens his tongue, and then he says to “not to tell anyone,” which would not have been a problem five minutes ago.   

Again we read about the faith of friends fueling the healing power of Jesus, who ask on behalf of their friend.   When Jesus healed this man he healed his hearing, and loosened his tongue, but I suspect that had to do more with healing the speech centers of his mind.  This story contains a big and little miracle.  The little miracle is the healing of the ears, the much larger one how Jesus healed his mind and he could “speak plainly”. 


1 comment:

  1. Hmmm...I guess this means that Jesus knows that I have the "fortitude" to argue with him, as well, because I often do! Is it his will for me to argue my case, so to speak, or am I to meekly submit?

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