Chapter 36
The Touch of Faith
RETURNING from Gergesa to the western
shore, Jesus found a multitude gathered to receive Him, and they greeted Him with joy. He
remained by the seaside for a time, teaching and healing, and then repaired to the house
of Levi-Matthew to meet the publicans at the feast. Here Jairus, the ruler of the
synagogue, found Him.
This elder of the Jews came
to Jesus in great distress, and cast himself at His feet, exclaiming, "My little
daughter lieth at the point of death: I pray Thee, come and lay Thy hands on her, that she
may be healed; and she shall live."
Jesus set out at once with
the ruler for his home. Though the disciples had seen so many of His works of mercy, they
were surprised at His compliance with the entreaty of the haughty rabbi; yet they
accompanied their Master, and the people followed, eager and expectant.
The ruler's house was not far
distant, but Jesus and His companions advanced slowly, for the crowd pressed Him on every
side. The anxious father was impatient of delay; but Jesus, pitying the people, stopped
now and then to relieve some suffering one, or to comfort a troubled heart.
While they were still on the
way, a messenger pressed through the crowd, bearing to Jairus the news that his daughter
was dead, and it was useless to trouble the Master further. The word caught the ear of
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Jesus. "Fear not," He said; "believe only, and she shall be made
whole."
Jairus pressed closer to the
Saviour, and together they hurried to the ruler's home. Already the hired mourners and
flute players were there, filling the air with their clamor. The presence of the crowd,
and the tumult jarred upon the spirit of Jesus. He tried to silence them, saying,
"Why make ye this ado, and weep? the damsel is not dead, but sleepeth." They
were indignant at the words of the Stranger. They had seen the child in the embrace of
death, and they laughed Him to scorn. Requiring them all to leave the house, Jesus took
with Him the father and mother of the maiden, and the three disciples, Peter, James, and
John, and together they entered the chamber of death.
Jesus approached the bedside,
and, taking the child's hand in His own, He pronounced softly, in the familiar language of
her home, the words, "Damsel, I say unto thee, arise."
Instantly a tremor passed
through the unconscious form. The pulses of life beat again. The lips unclosed with a
smile. The eyes opened widely as if from sleep, and the maiden gazed with wonder on the
group beside her. She arose, and her parents clasped her in their arms, and wept for joy.
On the way to the ruler's
house, Jesus had met, in the crowd, a poor woman who for twelve years had suffered from a
disease that made her life a burden. She had spent all her means upon physicians and
remedies, only to be pronounced incurable. But her hopes revived when she heard of the
cures that Christ performed. She felt assured that if she could only go to Him she would
be healed. In weakness and suffering she came to the seaside where He was teaching, and
tried to press through the crowd, but in vain. Again she followed Him from the house of
Levi-Matthew, but was still unable to reach Him. She had begun to despair, when, in making
His way through the multitude, He came near where she was.
The golden opportunity had
come. She was in the presence of the Great Physician! But amid the confusion she could not
speak to Him, nor catch more than a passing glimpse of His figure. Fearful of losing her
one chance of relief, she pressed forward, saying to herself, "If I may but touch His
garment, I shall be whole." As He was passing, she reached forward, and succeeded in
barely touching the border of His garment. But in that moment she knew that she was
healed. In that one touch she was concentrated the faith of her life, and instantly her
pain and feebleness gave place to the vigor of perfect health.
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With a grateful heart she
then tried to withdraw from the crowd; but suddenly Jesus stopped, and the people halted
with Him. He turned, and looking about asked in a voice distinctly heard above the
confusion of the multitude, "Who touched Me?" The people answered this query
with a look of amazement. Jostled upon all sides, and rudely pressed hither and thither,
as He was, it seemed a strange inquiry.
Peter, ever ready to speak,
said, "Master, the multitude throng Thee and press Thee, and sayest Thou, Who touched
Me?" Jesus answered, "Somebody hath touched Me: for I perceive that virtue is
gone out of Me." The Saviour could distinguish the touch of faith from the casual
contact of the careless throng. Such trust should not be passed without comment. He would
speak to the humble woman words of comfort that would be to her a wellspring of
joy,--words that would be a blessing to His followers to the close of time.
Looking toward the woman,
Jesus insisted on knowing who had touched Him. Finding concealment vain, she came forward
tremblingly,
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and cast herself at His feet. With grateful tears she told the story of her
suffering, and how she had found relief. Jesus gently said, "Daughter, be of good
comfort: thy faith hath made thee whole; go in peace." He gave no opportunity for
superstition to claim healing virtue for the mere act of touching His garments. It was not
through the outward contact with Him, but through the faith which took hold on His divine
power, that the cure was wrought.
The wondering crowd that
pressed close about Christ realized no accession of vital power. But when the suffering
woman put forth her hand to touch Him, believing that she would be made whole, she felt
the healing virtue. So in spiritual things. To talk of religion in a casual way, to pray
without soul hunger and living faith, avails nothing. A nominal faith in Christ, which
accepts Him merely as the Saviour of the world, can never bring healing to the soul. The
faith that is unto salvation is not a mere intellectual assent to the truth. He who waits
for entire knowledge before he will exercise faith, cannot receive blessing from God. It
is not enough to believe about Christ; we must believe in Him. The only faith that will
benefit us is that which embraces Him as a personal Saviour; which appropriates His merits
to ourselves. Many hold faith as an opinion. Saving faith is a transaction by which those
who receive Christ join themselves in covenant relation with God. Genuine faith is life. A
living faith means an increase of vigor, a confiding trust, by which the soul becomes a
conquering power.
After healing the woman,
Jesus desired her to acknowledge the blessing she had received. The gifts which the gospel
offers are not to be secured by stealth or enjoyed in secret. So the Lord calls upon us
for confession of His goodness. "Ye are My witnesses, saith the Lord, that I am
God." Isa. 43:12.
Our confession of His
faithfulness is Heaven's chosen agency for revealing Christ to the world. We are to
acknowledge His grace as made known through the holy men of old; but that which will be
most effectual is the testimony of our own experience. We are witnesses for God as we
reveal in ourselves the working of a power that is divine. Every individual has a life
distinct from all others, and an experience differing essentially from theirs. God desires
that our praise shall ascend to Him, marked by our own individuality. These precious
acknowledgments to the praise of the glory of His grace, when supported by a Christ-like
life, have an irresistible power that works for the salvation of souls.
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When the ten lepers came to
Jesus for healing, He bade them go and show themselves to the priest. On the way they were
cleansed, but only one of them returned to give Him glory. The others went their way,
forgetting Him who had made them whole. How many are still doing the same thing! The Lord
works continually to benefit mankind. He is ever imparting His bounties. He raises up the
sick from beds of languishing, He delivers men from peril which they do not see, He
commissions heavenly angels to save them from calamity, to guard them from "the
pestilence that walketh in darkness" and "the destruction that wasteth at
noonday" (Ps. 91:6); but their hearts are unimpressed. He has given all the riches of
heaven to redeem them, and yet they are unmindful of His great love. By their ingratitude
they close their hearts against the grace of God. Like the heath in the desert they know
not when good cometh, and their souls inhabit the parched places of the wilderness.
It is for our own benefit to
keep every gift of God fresh in our memory. Thus faith is strengthened to claim and to
receive more and more. There is greater encouragement for us in the least blessing we
ourselves receive from God than in all the accounts we can read of the faith and
experience of others. The soul that responds to the grace of God shall be like a watered
garden. His health shall spring forth speedily; his light shall rise in obscurity, and the
glory of the Lord shall be seen upon him. Let us then remember the loving-kindness of the
Lord, and the multitude of His tender mercies. Like the people of Israel, let us set up
our stones of witness, and inscribe upon them the precious story of what God has wrought
for us. And as we review His dealings with us in our pilgrimage, let us, out of hearts
melted with gratitude, declare, "What shall I render unto the Lord for all His
benefits toward me? I will take the cup of salvation, and call upon the name of the Lord.
I will pay my vows unto the Lord now in the presence of all His people." Ps.
116:12-14.
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