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Mark 7:24-37 A Messiah For The Nations

Last week, we explored Mark 7 as the religious leaders challenged Jesus about their traditions of ritual washing. To the religious leaders, being clean before God was about outward actions and religious rituals. Jesus called them hypocrites, referencing Isaiah 29 to describe their outward religion but hearts that are far from God. Jesus then explained that what defiles a person before God is a fallen heart, and only Jesus can transform our hearts to make us right with God.

In the rest of Chapter 7, Jesus demonstrates that the clean/unclean distinction also applies to the nations. He travels outside of Israel and gives the same preview of covenant blessings to Gentiles. In Tyre and Sidon, Gentile regions considered impure by the Pharisees, a Syrophoenician woman (referred to as a Canaanite woman in Matthew’s account) pleads with Jesus to cast out the unclean spirit that afflicts her daughter. Jesus’s immediate response to her request is unexpected. Instead of granting her request, Jesus says it is not yet time for the "dogs" to be fed. First, the children (the Jews) must be fed. However, despite her status as an outsider, her humble and persistent faith leads Jesus to fulfill her request. (Matthew 15 highlights her faith.) Furthermore, this unclean Gentile woman is the first in Mark’s gospel to recognize Jesus’ kingdom ministry and mission. (In Matthew’s account, she even calls Him the Son of David.) Her heart is laid bare before us that we might see her humble and persistent faith, which leads her to see clearer than the disciples and the Jewish religious leaders. 

Then, in the Gentile region of Decapolis, Jesus heals a deaf-mute man by touching his ears and tongue—acts that would have horrified the Pharisees. His touch and word bring healing, which is also a preview of the kingdom where the effects of sin will be abolished. The Gentiles who witness this miracle say, "He even makes the deaf hear and the mute speak" (v. 37). Isaiah 35:5-6 foretells that this is exactly what the Messiah will do when he comes to His people. And here He is—doing so among the Gentiles. These two Gentile healings follow Jesus’ teaching about what constitutes clean and unclean before God. Previously, Jesus taught that the heart is humanity’s problem; now, we see how that problem is solved for both Jew and Gentile. By grace through faith, sinners enter the kingdom of God and are heirs to the promise of Abraham. (See Gal. 3:7-9; 29).

The woman and the deaf-mute man show us that Jesus’ grace is for all nations, no matter how unworthy we feel. By grace, all may come to Him in humble faith and be adopted into God’s family. Regardless of our sins or past, Jesus "has done (has made) all things well."

Setting v. 24

I. The Persistent Faith Of A Gentile Woman (v. 25-30)

II. Jesus’ Powerful Touch Of Grace (v. 31-35)

III. The Proclamation Of God’s Messiah (v. 36-37)