Pastor Rick’s Study Notes: Mark 5:21-24, 35-43

Pastor Rick’s Study Notes:

First Impressions:

The Jerusalem team of legal experts had passed judgment on Jesus. He was a threat to their traditions and their power. When power is threatened, power becomes an adversary. When traditions are threatened, traditions become the default. Either way, truth is drowned out.

Apparently, the verdict from the legal experts had not trickled down. But it’s amazing how our approach to faith and to the Father shifts when trouble or tragedy happens.

Amazing in that the synagogue ruler was certain that God would give him a gift through the healing Jesus brought.

Amazing, too, that he was not deterred in that Kairos moment when Jesus’ desire met his willingness to believe, in spite of:

  • The messengers’ news.
  • The crowd’s pressures (do you think perhaps that’s why Jesus only took a few into the moment.
  • The mourners’ wailing (some in the community were professional mourners who earned income bringing the show home when it comes to mourning.)

v. 21 Jesus came back across the Sea of Galilee to the area of Capernaum. He had just traveled with the express intention to save the Gadarene who was gripped by demons.

vv. 22 – 24 Jairus was one of a group of elders or rulers in the local synagogue. He couldn’t have helped but to know people who had earlier been healed by Jesus. Luke reminds us that this was not only his little girl, but his only daughter. The life was ebbing out of her so rapidly that it was as if she was already dead (Matthew’s perspective.) Luke probably got the verb best: she lay dying with no hope of recovery. Jesus was quick to respond with compassion and attend to the matter right then. In spite of the “thronging” – that’s the verb – of the crowd, Jesus moved forward.

v. 35 – 36 Don’t trouble the Master with a wearying journey, since the little girl had passed. Jesus overheard the news and assured him she would be okay. This narrative beautifully captures the potential ebb and flow of faith. Something bad; God encourages. Discouraging word; Jesus assures. People without faith scoff; the Father directs toward the Kairos moment.

v. 37 Jesus often chose a few within the Twelve or paired them up. We will look that this a couple of weeks in Mark 5:6ff. The pattern seems to be 2’s, 3’s, and 4’s. That’s a good pattern for disciple-making. In this case, in part, he wanted the crowd to thin out and Jesus left most of his followers behind on the road to Jairus’ home so they could proceed, and this spiritual leader could believe.

v. 38-40 But even with the thinning of the tumult of the street crowds pressing and calling out with every need possible, when Jesus with Peter, James, and John and Jairus, arrived the mourners had already set up in strategic places to make the most impact with their wailing. The English language isn’t the only one to use onomatopoeia (like scuttlebutt or murmur) – this Greek word sounds like it means: alaladzontas means wailing. Clearly not people of faith as they made their living off the need for congregant mourning; they not only discouraged faith but laughed in its face. They jeered at Jesus. And the voice of the enemy could be heard in this solemn moment with laughter and jeering when faith is needed. Since the poorest of Jewish families were expected to have at least two flute-players and one wailing woman, a synagogue ruler probably hit the motherlode of mourners!

What does he mean with he says she only sleeps? This is the same thing he said to Lazarus’ sisters. He puts what we consider as the finality into perspective of eternity. In the light of the eternity, our separation from our loved ones is miniscule. If we are and they are a part of the people Jesus is building into a Kingdom, there is only a moment between the departure and our reunion from heaven’s perspective.

They went “where the child was.” We, as people of the Kingdom, often have to go where the hurt is, where the person is grieving, or, in this case, the room where death was – and take faith and hope and compassion. Our typical desire is to keep our distance with an attitude “I can pray from the comfort of my whatever” – Jesus moves us to be where He wants to bring the Kingdom. We have to leave the comfort zone to enter the Kairos moment when the Father’s will, and the willingness and obedience of people, capture the miracle and the signs and wonders of heaven.

vv. 41-42 Talitha cumi. To korasion egiere. Little girl, you arise. Aramaic, to Greek, to English. (Affectionate and in the language and tone of a little child, Jesus takes her hand – sweetie, get up now.) This was the miraculous sign like Lazarus and the young boy on the funeral bier, that declared to the heavenlies: The Kingdom of God is come and the final sting is removed from the enemy’s weaponry. Her spirit connects with the command of the Savior, and she obeys and arises.

The word for “astonished” is a double word. They were greatly amazed (mega-amazed). They were riveted in their place. Eyes in the room turn from the little girl to the daddy and momma, then landed back to Jesus. Faith as small as a grain of mustard, in the right subject, and the right Kairos moment, can do “the impossible.”

v. 43 Food for strengthen and food to display she was no ghost or phantasm. Keep it quiet for now.

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