@Mr 7:1-23. DISCOURSE ON CEREMONIAL POLLUTION. ( = @Mt 15:1-20).
See on Mt 15:1-20.
@Mr 7:24-37. THE SYROPHOENICIAN WOMAN AND HER DAUGHTER--A DEAF AND DUMB MAN HEALED. ( = @Mt 15:21-31).
The Syrophoenician Woman and Her Daughter (@Mr 7:24-30).
The first words of this narrative show that the incident followed, in point of time, immediately on what precedes it.
24. And from thence he arose, and went into the borders--or "unto
the borders."
of Tyre and Sidon--the two great Phoenician seaports, but here
denoting the territory generally, to the frontiers of which Jesus now
came. But did Jesus actually enter this heathen territory? The whole
narrative, we think, proceeds upon the supposition that He did. His
immediate object seems to have been to avoid the wrath of the Pharisees
at the withering exposure He had just made of their traditional
religion.
and entered into an house, and would have no man know it--because He
had not come there to minister to heathens. But though not "sent but
to the lost sheep of the house of Israel" (@Mt 15:24), He hindered
not the lost sheep of the vast Gentile world from coming to Him, nor put
them away when they did come--as this incident was designed to show.
but he could not be hid--Christ's fame had early spread from Galilee
to this very region (@Mr 3:8 Lu 6:17).
25. For a certain woman, whose young daughter had an unclean spirit--or, as in Matthew (@Mt 15:22), "was badly demonized."
heard of him--One wonders how; but distress is quick of hearing.
26. The woman was a Greek--that is, "a Gentile," as in the Margin.
a Syrophoenician by nation--so called as inhabiting the Phoenician
tract of Syria. JUVENAL uses the same term, as was remarked by
JUSTIN
MARTYR and
TERTULLIAN. Matthew (@Mt 15:22) calls her "a woman
of Canaan"--a more intelligible description to his Jewish readers
(compare @Jud 1:30,32,33).
and she besought him that he would east forth the devil out of her
daughter--"She cried unto Him, saying, Have mercy on me, O Lord, Son
of David: my daughter is grievously vexed with a devil" (@Mt 15:22).
Thus, though no Israelite herself, she salutes Him as Israel's promised
Messiah. Here we must go to @Mt 15:23-25 for some important links
in the dialogue omitted by our Evangelist.
@Mt 15:23:
But he answered her not a word--The design of this was first, perhaps, to show that He was not sent to such as she. He had said expressly to the Twelve, "Go not into the way of the Gentiles" (@Mt 10:5); and being now among them Himself, He would, for consistency's sake, let it be seen that He had not gone thither for missionary purposes. Therefore He not only kept silence, but had actually left the house, and--as will presently appear--was proceeding on His way back, when this woman accosted Him. But another reason for keeping silence plainly was to try and whet her faith, patience, and perseverance. And it had the desired effect: "She cried after them," which shows that He was already on His way from the place.
And His disciples came and besought Him, saying, Send her away; for she crieth after us--They thought her troublesome with her importunate cries, just as they did the people who brought young children to be blessed of Him, and they ask their Lord to "send her away," that is, to grant her request and be rid of her; for we gather from His reply that they meant to solicit favor for her, though not for her sake so much as their own.@Mt 15:24:
But He answered and said, I am not sent but unto the lost sheep of the house of Israel--a speech evidently intended for the disciples themselves, to satisfy them that, though the grace He was about to show to this Gentile believer was beyond His strict commission, He had not gone spontaneously to dispense it. Yet did even this speech open a gleam of hope, could she have discerned it. For thus might she have spoken: "I am not SENT, did He say? Truth, Lord, Thou comest not hither in quest of us, but I come in quest of Thee; and must I go empty away? So did not the woman of Samaria, whom when Thou foundest her on Thy way to Galilee, Thou sentest away to make many rich! But this our poor Syrophoenician could not attain to. What, then, can she answer to such a speech? Nothing. She has reached her lowest depth, her darkest moment: she will just utter her last cry:@Mt 15:25:
Then came she and worshipped Him, saying, Lord, help me!--This appeal, so artless, wrung from the depths of a believing heart, and reminding us of the publican's "God be merciful to me a sinner," moved the Redeemer at last to break silence--but in what style? Here we return to our own Evangelist.
27. But Jesus said unto her, Let the children first be filled--"Is
there hope for me here? . . . Filled FIRST?" "Then my turn, it seems,
is coming! "--but then, "The CHILDREN first? . . . Ah! when, on that
rule, shall my turn ever come!" But ere she has time for these
ponderings of His word, another word comes to supplement it.
for it is not meet to take the children's bread, and to cast it unto
the dogs--Is this the death of her hopes? Nay, rather it is life from
the dead. Out of the eater shall come forth meat (@Jud 14:14). "At
evening-time, it shall be light" (@Zec 14:7). "Ah! I have it now.
Had He kept silence, what could I have done but go unblest? but He hath
spoken, and the victory is mine."
28. And she answered and said unto him, Yes, Lord--or, as the same
word is rendered in @Mt 15:27. "Truth, Lord."
yet the dogs eat of the children's crumbs--which fall from their
master's table" (@Mt 15:27). "I thank Thee, O blessed One, for that
word! That's my whole case. Not of the children? True. A dog? True
also: Yet the dogs under the table are allowed to eat of the children's
crumbs--the droppings from their master's full table: Give me that, and
I am content: One crumb of power and grace from Thy table shall cast the
devil out of my daughter." Oh, what lightning quickness, what reach of
instinctive ingenuity, do we behold in this heathen woman!
29. And he said unto her--"O woman, great is thy faith"
(@Mt 15:28). As
BENGEL beautifully remarks, Jesus "marvelled" only
at two things--faith and unbelief (see @Lu 7:9).
For this saying go thy way; the devil is gone out of thy daughter--That moment the deed was done.
30. And when she was come to her house, she found the devil gone out, and her daughter laid upon the bed--But Matthew (@Mt 15:28) is more specific; "And her daughter was made whole from that very hour." The wonderfulness of this case in all its features has been felt in every age of the Church, and the balm it has administered, and will yet administer, to millions will be known only in that day that shall reveal the secrets of all hearts.
Deaf and Dumb Man Healed (@Mr 7:31-37).
31. And again, departing from the coasts of Tyre and Sidon, he came
unto the Sea of Galilee--or, according to what has very strong claims
to be regarded as the true text here, "And again, departing from the
coasts of Tyre, He came through Sidon to the Sea of Galilee." The
manuscripts in favor of this reading, though not the most numerous, are
weighty, while the versions agreeing with it are among the most ancient;
and all the best critical editors and commentators adopt it. In this
case we must understand that our Lord, having once gone out of the Holy
Land the length of Tyre, proceeded as far north as Sidon, though without
ministering, so far as appears, in those parts, and then bent His steps
in a southeasterly direction. There is certainly a difficulty in the
supposition of so long a detour without any missionary object: and
some may think this sufficient to cast the balance in favor of the
received reading. Be this as it may, on returning from these coasts of
Tyre, He passed
through the midst of the coasts--frontiers.
of Decapolis--crossing the Jordan, therefore, and approaching the
lake on its east side. Here Matthew, who omits the details of the cure
of this deaf and dumb man, introduces some particulars, from which we
learn that it was only one of a great number. "And Jesus," says that
Evangelist (@Mt 15:29-31), "departed from thence, and came nigh unto
the Sea of Galilee, and went up into a mountain"--the mountain range
bounding the lake on the northeast, in Decapolis: "And great multitudes
came unto Him, having with them lame, blind, dumb, maimed"--not
"mutilated," which is but a secondary sense of the word, but
"deformed"--"and many others, and cast them down at Jesus' feet; and He
healed them: insomuch that the multitude [multitudes] wondered, when
they saw the dumb to speak, the maimed to be whole, the lame to walk,
and the blind to see; and they glorified the God of Israel"--who after
so long and dreary an absence of visible manifestation, had returned to
bless His people as of old (compare @Lu 7:16). Beyond this it is
not clear from the Evangelist's language that the people saw into the
claims of Jesus. Well, of these cases Mark here singles out one, whose
cure had something peculiar in it.
32. And they bring unto him one that was deaf . . . and they beseech him to put his hand upon him--In their eagerness they appear to have been somewhat too officious. Though usually doing as here suggested, He will deal with this case in His own way.
33. And he took him aside from the multitude--As in another case He
"took the blind man by the hand and led him out of the town"
(@Mr 8:23), probably to fix his undistracted attention on Himself,
and, by means of certain actions He was about to do, to awaken and
direct his attention to the proper source of relief.
and put his fingers into his ears--As his indistinct articulation
arose from his deafness, our Lord addresses Himself to this first. To
the impotent man He said, "Wilt thou be made whole?" to the blind men,
"What will ye that I shall do unto you?" and "Believe ye that I am able
to do this?" (@Joh 5:6 Mt 20:32 9:28). But as this patient could
hear nothing, our Lord substitutes symbolical actions upon each of
the organs affected.
and he spit and touched his tongue--moistening the man's parched
tongue with saliva from His own mouth, as if to lubricate the organ or
facilitate its free motion; thus indicating the source of the healing
virtue to be His own person. (For similar actions, see
@Mr 8:23 Joh 9:6).
34. And looking up to heaven--ever acknowledging His Father, even
while the healing was seen to flow from Himself
(see on Joh 5:19).
he sighed--"over the wreck," says
TRENCH, "which sin had brought
about, and the malice of the devil in deforming the fair features of
God's original creation." But, we take it, there was a yet more painful
impression of that "evil thing and bitter" whence all our ills have
sprung, and which, when "Himself took our infirmities and bare our
sicknesses" (@Mt 8:17), became mysteriously His own.
"In thought of these his brows benign,
Not even in healing, cloudless shine." KEBLE |
35. And straightway his ears were opened--This is mentioned first as
the source of the other derangement.
and the string of his tongue was loosed, and he spake plain--The cure
was thus alike instantaneous and perfect.
36. And he charged them that they should tell no man--Into this very
region He had sent the man out of whom had been cast the legion of
devils, to proclaim "what the Lord had done for him" (@Mr 5:19). Now
He will have them "tell no man." But in the former case there was no
danger of obstructing His ministry by "blazing the matter" (@Mr 1:45),
as He Himself had left the region; whereas now He was sojourning in it.
but the more he charged them, so much the more a great deal they
published it--They could not be restrained; nay, the prohibition
seemed only to whet their determination to publish His fame.
37. And were beyond measure astonished, saying, He hath done all things
well--reminding us, says TRENCH, Of the words of the first creation
(@Ge 1:31, Septuagint), upon which we are thus not unsuitably
thrown back, for Christ's work is in the truest sense "a new creation,"
he maketh both the deaf to hear and the dumb to speak--"and they
glorified the God of Israel" (@Mt 15:31).
See on Mr 7:31.