The Welcome Valley Reader

A
Father's Faith
It
wasn’t a doctor the anxious father sought in the Galilean village. Had he tried
the physicians--and he might have already done so--he’d have found them
ineffective. The doctors of 2,000 years ago didn’t have a very wide array of
medicines. They’d never heard of germs. They were limited.
It
wasn’t the faithful praying people of his synagogue that the father sought out
that sad day either. Likely, they’d already prayed for his daughter. After all,
he was a leader among them. He—and they--must have prayed long and hard already.
He would have prayed as one of the chosen people of God. He would have prayed as
a religious man. He’d have done his best, but it wasn’t good enough.
And
yet, he couldn’t just shake his head and mutter something about the will of God.
He had too much at stake. He had one child, a twelve-year-old girl. She was his
only one, and she was ill, deathly ill. Religious man or not, it is neither
natural nor right to walk away from a dying child and assume that her death is
the will of God. So today, this man went to seek a religious figure from outside
the local organization.
The
father in question was named Jairus. We don’t know exactly what he’d heard about
Jesus of Nazareth, but Jairus knew He healed the sick. In ancient Palestine, if
you knew anything about Jesus, it would have been that he healed the sick.
Today, the name Jesus has a distinct meaning. To some of us, He is God. To
others, he represents a great ethical teacher. Others hate him. It is doubtful
if the average person often stops to think that He always has been and always
will be a healer. Healing is a major part of what the name Jesus
has meant ever since a carpenter by that name began preaching.
In
any event, Jairus went looking for Jesus of Nazareth. Finding Jesus wouldn’t
have been difficult. It would have merely meant walking until he saw the crowd
that always surrounded Him. They packed the narrow streets of the ancient
villages. If He entered a house, they filled it and hung around outside when
there was no more room. They listened to His teachings, yes, but they also came
for the miracles. The number of people with significant illnesses who found
complete healing at His hand was too great to record. Domination by evil spirits
was also fairly common in a world that practiced idolatry. There were rituals to
exorcise these demons, but Jesus didn’t bother with ritual. He told the demons
to leave, and they left. He occasionally did something dramatic like putting mud
in the eyes of a blind man and letting him wash away the mud to discover that he
could see. Such demonstrations were the exception. By and large, the miracles of
Jesus Christ were done with a calm authority. He healed as He taught, as One
with a direct link to Heaven.
The
idea that He had such a connection with Heaven sometimes rankled the religious
establishment. The main problem was that their link wasn’t as strong as His, and
they were jealous. There were also professional clerics who were in it for what
they could get out of it and didn’t appreciate having someone who was real all
the way through showing them up. Others were unwilling to accept the possibility
that Jesus was more than an ordinary mortal. The Bible doesn’t say exactly which
synagogue Jairus served, but it wasn’t far from the synagogue whose people had
tried to kill Jesus. In fact, Jairus might have been there on the eventful
Sabbath when Jesus barely escaped. Looking to this itinerant evangelist for help
was a step away from the direction taken by many spiritual leaders. We aren’t
told if Jairus was a bit embarrassed to be going outside of official channels,
but that is possible. We aren’t told if he came with a trace of skepticism as to
why God would hear a carpenter when the prayers of an official had failed. We
only know that he made his way through a crowd of people and asked Jesus of
Nazareth for help.
The
request was fairly straightforward. It went something like this: "My little
daughter is lying sick, at the point of death. Will you please come to my house
and heal her?" In an era before modern medicine, Jairus was asking the
impossible. But then, Jesus had a reputation for fixing the impossible.
And,
true to His character, Jesus agreed to come. It is interesting. On another
occasion, a foreign soldier asked Him to heal an ailing servant from a distance,
and Jesus praised his faith. Jairus, spiritual leader though he was, seems to
have lacked the faith for a distant healing. He wanted Jesus physically present.
Jesus recognized the faith that had brought Jairus to Him without criticizing
the inadequacies of that faith. Jesus, Jairus, and the crowd headed down the
street toward Jairus’ dying daughter.
Then,
Jesus stopped. As if the dying girl weren’t an urgent priority, he asked, "Who
touched me?"
The
twelve regular followers of Jesus, the disciples or apostles as we call them,
protested. They were surrounded by people. How could Jesus have noticed one more
elbow or one more bump from a nameless member of the crowd?
But
Jesus was adamant. Someone had touched Him. They’d touched, and He had felt
power going out from Him. The crowd, eager for miracles and parables, had to
wait. Jairus, likely almost frantic to get Jesus to his daughter’s bedside
before it was to late, had to wait. Jesus stood there and demanded. "Who touched
me?"
Finally
a woman came forward. She was frightened and trembling. She’d meant no harm.
She’d had a problem with bleeding for twelve years. Her illness had led her to
suffer many things at the hands of the primitive medical people. Not one doctor
had been able to cure her. On top of it all, they’d taken her money. She’d spent
herself poor trying to get well and was getting worse. She, too, had heard of
the healing power of this Prophet from Nazareth. She’d heard and believed.
Unlike Jairus, she hadn’t wanted to ask. She’d reasoned that if she could just
get close, she could touch the edge of his jacket. (Your Bible likely says
garment, but the garment was the long outer jacket or himation commonly
worn in Bible times.) She figured that one touch of His jacket would heal her.
So she’d planned, and so she’d done. Now, she felt the effects of that touch. No
doctor had declared her healed yet, but she knew. Down inside, she could tell
the illness was gone. Trembling in fear, she stood before the miracle Man and
confessed.
The
truth was out. Her deed was known, and she found that she had nothing to fear.
There was no rebuke. Only those wonderful words, "thy faith hath made thee
whole; go in peace." (Luke 8: 48) Jesus didn’t posture and brag. He only pointed
out her own part--she had believed. That he’d done the rest was obvious. Her
willingness to trust Him had given her access to the greatest healing power the
world has ever known.
Just
at the close of this conversation, Jairus found himself facing the dreaded
messenger from home. The message was what he’d feared. "Your daughter is dead;
trouble not the Master" (Luke 8:49). He was a father. He loved his daughter.
He’d come to Jesus, the last resort, and he hadn’t gotten there in time. While
Jesus miraculously healed one hopeless person, his own girl had died. If only
Jesus had been there!
But
Jesus didn’t see things that way. He spoke to Jairus also. "Fear not: believe
only, and she shall be made whole."
Try
to place yourself in Jairus’ sandals. We aren’t told his thoughts, but how would
you feel? Fear not? The most horrible thing a father could imagine was
happening to him. He still had that long walk home. He still had a crowd of
grieving neighbors. He still had a wife to comfort. There was a body lying in
his house, a body that used to greet him and to eat at his table. The body of
one he had loved like his own life was waiting for him to come and bury it. He
was living an irreversible nightmare, and this traveling evangelist was telling
him not to fear.
Or
how would you have reacted to those two strange words, "believe only"? Believe?
He’d tried that. He’d come looking for this representative of Heaven, and his
daughter had died. Believe? Believe what? Every fact he’d ever believed in said
it was all over. What little science he had indicated that once death had
occurred, it was forever. His religion recognized the finality of death, at
least until the end of the world. Everything he’d known and seen said that death
was final. He had little choice but to believe what we all know.
But
Jesus’ demand that he believe went beyond everything he knew. It was as if Jesus
was saying, "I know it’s impossible. Medicine, history, religion, common sense,
everything says that it’s all over. Jairus, I want you to believe in me to the
exclusion of all else. Forget the lesser realities and come with me." Of course,
Jesus wasn’t that specific, he only challenged Jairus to believe, but that faith
was in One who claimed power over nature. Jairus could forget everything he’d
ever known and believe in Jesus, or he could thank Jesus for trying and go home
to bury his daughter.
We
aren’t told what thoughts drove Jairus as he and Jesus walked toward his home.
We don’t know if he believed at that point that Jesus would raise the dead. We
don’t know if he walked in a daze, barely aware that the prophet from Nazareth
was beside him. We don’t know how strong his faith was or wasn’t. We only know
that he walked beside Jesus as they went to the place of his personal disaster.
Strong faith or weak, Jairus stayed with the one who’d said, "believe
only."
You
wouldn’t have appreciated the scene that greeted the bereaved father as he
brought Jesus to his home. It wasn’t the quiet grief of a family shut away in
seclusion. A number of people stood around openly, audibly lamenting the
departed girl. Mourning was big in old Palestine. Some people even hired others
to come in and make a racket to help them hurt over the dead. Mourning was
emotional, and people from outside the family were weeping loudly as the sad
father and his Guest arrived.
Then,
Jesus did something else that may have seemed strange and unpredictable. There,
in the face of all those sorrowers, He declared, "Weep not; she is not dead, but
sleepeth." (Luke 8:52) It was the kind of statement that you might expect from
the One who’d just placed Himself over everything Jairus knew about death.
The
mourners hadn’t heard Jesus say, "Fear not: believe only". To them, the
situation was beyond fear. Besides, they didn’t believe. They broke from
their weeping long enough to laugh at Jesus. In fact, the Bible says, "And they
laughed him to scorn, knowing that she was dead." (Luke 8:53) They treated Him
like they would a fool. They let Jesus and everybody in earshot know just how
they felt about a man who’d declare a dead girl asleep. They laughed at Him.
They mocked Him. They dishonored Him. They ridiculed Him.
Jesus,
who had been patient with sinners, didn’t have time for a debate with scorners.
He ordered everyone except the girl’s parents and three of his disciples out of
the room. Then, alone with the corpse and her grieving parents, Jesus did what
He does best. He brought the power of God into the lives of the believing.
Reaching out, he touched a dead hand and said, "Damsel, I say unto thee, arise."
And the girl who was dead, not asleep, woke up. She woke up, and she was
completely well.
There
have been very few times in history when a truly dead person came back to life.
Oh, I know, modern medicine shocks stopped hearts into beating again. First aid
has taught us CPR and mouth-to-mouth respiration, but the truth is, that these
things only work on bodies that have enough life left to catch hold on their own
again. Only a handful of truly dead bodies have come into contact with a prophet
close enough to Heaven to do the impossible. Three of these occurrences are
described in the Old Testament. The rest were either done by Jesus Christ or in
His name. (Or to Jesus Christ, but His Resurrection is in a class and
category by itself.) It’s happened very rarely, and this great miracle was done,
not for publicity, but in response to a father’s faith.
Are
you a father? Do you have a father? The job has its discouraging and thankless
moments. Yet, no father ever need despair. The man who brings the needs of his
family to Jesus Christ keeps company with the greatest power the world has ever
known.
To learn about finding the power of Jesus for yourself click: How to Have a Relationship with God
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