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Lesson 39 |
Lesson Subject: Two Mission Stories
Lesson Plan
The Story of the Syrophenician Woman (Mk. 7:24-30)
The Story of the Roman Centurion and His Servant (Matt. 8:5-13)
Lesson Setting
Time: The story of the Syrophenician woman occurred in the summer of A.D. 29, a
few weeks after our last lesson. The healing of the Centurions servant was about a
year earlier, in the summer of A.D. 28.
Place: The Syrophenician woman lived in the region of Tyre and Sidon. The
Centurions residence was at Capernaum.
Place in the Life of Christ: In the movement and progress of His work, it was its
extension beyond the Jewish race. The earlier story of the healing of the Roman
Centurions servant, is joined in our study with the other, because they both refer
to this extension of His work.
Why Jesus went out of Galilee, after His words in Matt. 10:5,6 Syrophencian by
race.
Why did Jesus test her faith so severely?
Tyre and Sidon.
The Roman Centurion at Capernaum.
The Palsy.
How he showed his faith.
When Jesus was preaching the Gospel in Palestine three classes of people were within reach of His influence.
Likewise, today there has come into every nation dwellers from other parts of the world, and one serious problem today is how to reach them with the Gospel. Christs example in this relation is shown by the story of the Roman Centurion.
v 24 ... And from thence, Capernaum and its vicinity, where He had met the opposition of the Pharisees in our last lesson.
v 24 ... He arose, and went, out of Galilee. His reason for leaving Capernaum arose from the increasing opposition of the Pharisees, as described in the earlier part of this chapter, and in John 6:41-66.
The Crisis
It seems evident that this journey marks practically the close of our Lords ministry
in Central Galilee and the dispute with the Pharisees about clean and unclean
marks a crisis in His life. For from this He moves chiefly in the outlying districts, and
His instructions are largely restricted to the disciples, to prepare them for lay before
them in the near future.
v 24 ... Into the borders. The country around Tyre and Sidon. Not into the great and splendid cities themselves. There were two flourishing seaports and capitals of Phenicia, a narrow, level district along the shores of the Mediterranean. Sidon was twenty miles north of Tyre. The journey was not long, as Tyre is only about thirty-five miles, and Sidon fifty-five miles, from the Sea of Galilee. Though unbelievers, they were an active, commercial, and manufacturing people: wealthy, luxurious, and dissolute.
v 24 ... And entered into an house, and would have no man know it. Because He had gone there both for safety and repose. He must not give Himself to His usual work of healing, for so much was to be done for the future work of His disciples.
v 24 ... But he could not be hid anymore than sweet perfumes in the hand.
v 25 ... For a certain woman. She was a woman of Canaan,
v 26 ... a Greek, a Syrophenician by nation, or race. She was a Gentile as to religion, probably Greek-speaking, under the influence of Greek manners and customs; but descended from the old stock of the Phenicians of Syria, who belonged to the Canaanites of the Old Testament (Dr. Frank Pack). Thus she represented the descendants of Shem and Ham by descent, and of Japheth by language and civilization, and thus was a representative of the vast multitude of pagans. This description is given to show how thoroughly Gentile she was, as far as possible from the Jewish nation in her bringing up, but it is quite probable that she had heard of the wonderful cures Jesus had wrought.
v 25 ... Whose young daughter had an unclean spirit. Matthew says she was grievously vexed with a devil, or rather a demon. It was called an unclean spirit because it produced uncleanness of body and soul.
This Disease
The torment of this disease may be learned from the description of similar cases. One
such, a boy, is described as often falling into the fire and often into the water (Matt. 17:15,18). The spirit makes him
dumb, and wheresoever he taketh him, he teareth him, and he foameth, and gnasheth
with his teeth, and pineth away (Mk.
9:17,18). The Gadarene demoniac was wild and fierce, crying and cutting himself
with stones.
v 26 ... She besought him. She cried unto him, saying, Have mercy on me, O Lord, thou Son of David. Lord, help me and fell down at His feet.
Conversation of Jesus with the Syrophenician Woman (arranged from Matthew and Mark):
The woman comes to the house where Jesus is in retirement; or meets Him and His disciples by the way.
The woman: Have mercy on me, O Lord thou Son of David, my daughter is grievously vexed with a devil.
Jesus is silent, He answered her not a word.
The disciples: Send her away; for she crieth after us.
Jesus (to the woman): I was not sent but unto the lost sheep of the house of Israel.
The woman (bowing before Him in worship): Lord help me.
Jesus: Let the children first be filled: for it is not meet to take the childrens bread, and to cast it unto the dogs.
The woman: Yes, Lord: yet the dogs under the table eat of the childrens crumbs.
Jesus: O woman, great is thy faith; for this saying go thy way; the devil is gone out of thy daughter.
And her daughter was healed from that hour.
Notes
v 27 ... It is not meet to take the childrens bread, the care and service which was due to the Jews to whom He was sent ...
v 27 ... and cast it unto the dogs. The Jews in general, and the Pharisees with especial scorn, used to speak of all Gentiles as dogs, and dog in the East is the one expression which conveys the deepest contempt and hatred (Farrar).
But this was not Jesus own attitude or feeling. He stated the difficulty, and expressed the feeling which she knew the Jews had. But Jesus used another word than the accustomed word, not dogs, but pet house-dogs. The picture is of a family meal, with the pet house-dogs running round the table (Farrar).
There is a touch of infinite beauty and graciousness in the expression, which it is easy for us to miss. The word He uses for dogs is not the word which was used for the wild creatures which go about in troops in Eastern cities, and which were regarded by the Jews with great disgust. It is the word for little dogs, living in the house and with the family, and lying under the table at meal time.
Her womans wit was sharp that day, and she seized the one advantage Jesus had afforded her.
v 28 ... Yes, Lord: yet the dogs under the table eat of the childrens crumbs. They are not outside; they too have a place in the family. It mattered not how humble a place she had, if only her child could be saved.
Then Jesus answered, met her state of mind, and said unto her, O woman, great is thy faith;
v 29 ... for this saying go thy way; the devil is gone out of thy daughter. It is impossible for us to realize the tone in which Jesus uttered these words, nor the love which beamed in full glory from His eye. Nothing ever drew from our Lord such commendation as the exercise of a supreme faith.
The Blessing
Great was the blessing brought to this mother by her faith in Jesus and in God. Her home
was transformed from perpetual gloom and the shadow of death into love, friendship, hope
and life. Her daughter was no longer furious in passion, worn with hysteria,
helpless in epilepsy, raving in blasphemy and invective; but was a sweet, pure healthy
maiden, the hope and joy of her mother (Dr. J.P. Sanders). But also in the mother
herself was one of the victories of faith, she was brought near to Jesus and to God, she
had a new transforming spiritual life, with new visions, new ideals, new hopes, new
usefulness.
The cry of Unbelieving Womanhood
It was an idolatrous woman that cried to the Son of David for help. Even in her
darkness she believed that the power and love of Christ were great enough to scatter His
blessings to all mankind.
The cry of the distressed unbelieving women and children still goes up for a share in the blessings scattered by Christ. The cry is not always voiced, and does not always recognize the deity of Him who can bring relief, but the call comes with clarion notes and pathetic wails from the sufferers who are grievously vexed with demons. Can you hear the cry? Can you hear the cry of the daughters of China? Where the women are srudges of the household, where the feet of the ladies have been crushed and crippled to make them small and give them social standing, where hundreds are so ill-treated that they commit suicide and thousands are still sold into slavery every year.
Can you hear the cry of the women of India? Many millions are widows, and of that number many are child widows, doomed to curses and cruelty at the hands of all whom they meet, because of no sin of their own.
The Saviour Hears the Cry of These Women
Though sometimes His disciples have not let them hear His invitation. Have you opposed?
Have you thought that all the money given to foreign mission work was wasted and should be
spent at home where there is so much need? Shall the childrens bread be given to
dogs, to those who dont ask for it?
Recently, in a popular religious magazine appeared an article in which the denominational preacher stated, It is not part of Chinas business to give us her religion; and it is not our business to give China our religion.
What do you think? Do you think such a statement is selfish? Do you think it unworthy? The Gospel of Christ does good for any civilization. It makes life more worth living. It makes life better. It brings mankind closer together in love and understanding. And it gives mankind hope for eternity! Salvation from sin! Actually if we practiced the spirit of that preacher we would soon have no religion in this country.
If heaven were mine, with only me in heaven, few hells could be more hard for me to live in.
v 5 ... And when Jesus was entered into Capernaum, His home city during His Galiean ministry. It was on His return from preaching the Sermon on the Mount.
v 5 ... There came unto him a centurion. According to Luke (7:1) he did not come in person, but he came by a delegation of leading Jews, his friends, probably imagining that they would have more influence with Jesus.
v 5 ... A centurion, a Roman military officer, captain of a hundred soldiers, probably the garrison of Capernaum which was on the great commercial route between Assyria and Egypt, and a place for collecting the revenue.
Character Sketch
v 6 ... My servant, probably an under officer. He was dear unto him (Luke), or as in R.V. margin, precious to him, or honorable with him.
Note
How delightful the relation of master and servant, employer and employee, can be, when
both are of the right character and filled with the right spirit.
v 6 ... Sick of the palsy. The term palsy, Greek, paralysis, was used by the ancient physicians in a much wider sense than by our modern men of science. It included not only what we call paralysis, which is rarely very painful, but also catalepsy and tetanus, i.e., cramps and lockjaw. Dr. Hastings (Bib.Dic.) thinks the disease of the centurions servant may have possibly been an acute case of spinal meningitis.
v 6 ... Grievously tormented. The underlying Greek word means a touchstone, by which gold and silver are tested, hence trials by fire and torture. The cramps, in Oriental countries, is a fearful malady, and by no means infrequent. One case of such torment was described by a minister of the Gospel in Ireland, who wrote, I helped take care of a young man who was afflicted most terribly with the tetanus, or cramp. This man would have frequent spasms of cramp, so severe as to dislocate his arms, his shoulders, and sometimes even his neck, so far, at least, that it took two of us with all our strength to get his head in place after the spasm was over. During the spasms he could not be touched, for a touch then hurt him like the blow of a hammer upon a well person. During the intervals he was not only clear in his mind, but cheerful, and even brilliant in conversation.
When Jesus had come near the house ...
v 8 ... the centurion answered and said through a delegation of friends (Lk. 15:19) as at first.
v 8 ... I am not worthy that thou shouldst come under my roof. He did not wish to trouble Jesus to come to him. He was conscious of his weakness in comparison with one who could do such marvelous works as Jesus had been doing. He may have caught the idea from some of the disciples that Jesus was to be the Messiah, the great Deliverer.
v 9 ... For I also am a man under authority, etc. He means: I also, though a very humble person in the army, under the authority of more important officers, still have a command over a body of men who do implicitly as I bid them. The centurion thinks Jesus can order about disease as he orders his soldiers --- say to fever, palsy, leprosy, go, and it will go (Expositors Greek Testament).
Under authority
v 10 ... Jesus ... marveled. Only twice do we read in the Gospel that the Savior marveled: once at the unbelief of His fellow-citizens at Nazareth (Mk. 6:6), once at the faith of this man.
In the fact of this Gentile centurions faith, Jesus found a great assurance of the success of His work. The Jews might reject Him, but the Gentiles were coming. The Gospel Feast would not be without guests. The Kingdom of heaven was represented as a great festival feast, supplying every desire and hunger of the soul and body, without cloying, but with ever increasing power of enjoyment and use, i.e., enough for each, enough for all, enough forevermore; the feast of reason and the flow of soul, where they eat and drink, and in communion sweet guaff immortality and joy.
v 11 ... And I say unto you, That many shall come from the east and west, from all parts of the world ...
v 11 ... and shall sit down with Abraham, etc., those first invited, those who had lived as members of the kingdom.
v 12 ... But the children of the kingdom, who had been especially trained and taught and invited ...
v 12 ... shall be cast out into outer darkness. The banqueting-house is lighted up; within is joy and festivity, but without is darkness. The streets are narrow and filthy, and unillumined by any light whatever. They are cast out because they would not come in, because they would not believe in Jesus, who showed them the only way by which they could enter, through living the principles which make the kingdom of heaven what it is.
The sadness of their fate is shown by the words ...
v 12 ... weeping and gnashing of teeth.
v 13 ... As thou hast believed, so be it done unto thee. Note the kind of faith through which the blessing came.
Most people who visit Paris desire to see the Eiffel Tower, rising nearly a thousand feet. Upon seeing it, one feels the elevator trip to the top is a perilous journey. But when told how they had been tested, how that many millions of people have been carried up and down in them without accident, one goes to the top as calmly as going upstairs in a house.
It is what Jesus has done and is doing that increases our faith in Him.
I live ... For the Cause that lacks assistance. For the Wrong that needs resistance, For the Future in the distance, And the good that I can do. Frances E. Tyner
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