Jesus Goes About Healing Everyone
As told in Matthew 8
Jesus walked around the Sea of Galilee
with his disciples preaching and healing as He went. He became instantly famous and thousands of
people left their homes and followed after Him!
Word spread all over Israel ,
Syria
and other countries, that Jesus was healing every sick person who came to Him
and the crowds went wild! This had never
happened before! No man could do the
things Jesus was doing! He must be the
Messiah that the prophets of old had promised God would send! Everyone wanted to see Him for themselves!
After Jesus finished preaching the sermon on the mount a
leper came out of the crowd and fell down and worshipped Him saying: “Lord, if
You are willing You can make me clean.”
(Matthew 8:2) Then Jesus put out
His hand and touched the leper saying, “I am willing: be cleansed.” And immediately his leprosy was
cleansed!” (Matthew 8:3)
Next a Roman centurion came to Jesus. (A centurion is a soldier who is in charge of
100 soldiers.) This centurion told
Jesus: “Lord, my servant is lying at home paralyzed, dreadfully tormented.” So Jesus said: “I will go to your home and
heal him.”(Matthew 8:5-14)
But the centurion told Jesus that he was not worthy for
Jesus to come under his roof and he didn’t want Jesus to go to all of that trouble. It was probably a days’ journey or more back
to his house. The centurion believed
that Jesus had the authority over disease and that all He needed to do was to
say the word and his servant’s disease would be healed. He told Jesus that as a centurion he had
authority over 100 soldiers and could call out the order and his men would do
whatever he ordered. And he believed
that Jesus had this kind of authority over disease and He could speak and the
disease would be gone. So this Roman soldier asked Jesus to speak the word. He trusted that Jesus could heal his servant
(from a long way off) by just saying the word.
The centurion got that one right. As Son of God Jesus does have power and authority
over disease! Jesus was thrilled that the
Roman centurion, a non-Jew, had so much faith in Him! At that time Israel was the only nation that had
the Word of God. Also they had the rich
tradition of a long line of prophets (sent from God) who taught the Jewish people
Gods’ ways
. So faith in God was expected of the Jewish people since
God had been protecting and leading them from the days of the patriarchs,
Abraham, Isaac and Jacob. 2,000 years
earlier. Every Jewish child had been taught that God would send the Messiah who
would save them. Now their Messiah had
come and they didn’t recognize Him.
All of the other countries were thought to be “heathen” by
the Jewish people and indeed most of Israel ’s neighbors worshipped and
sacrificed their children before idols.
But here was a Roman soldier from a heathen land who did not
have the advantage of being brought up in a God fearing nation. And yet this Roman soldier had more faith in
Jesus than many of the Jews did! Jesus
announces that his Messianic kingdom would be enjoyed by many who are not Jews.
(The Jews did not like to hear Jesus say
that! They believed that the “unclean”
Gentiles could never get into the kingdom of heaven!)
Jesus smiled at the Roman centurion as the crowds were watching
and said: “I have not found such great
faith, not even in Israel ! Many will come from the east and west
(non-Jews) and sit down with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob in the kingdom of heaven. But the sons of the kingdom will be cast out
into outer darkness…” (Matthew 8:10b-12a)
The figure of a
banquet is often used to describe the Kingdom of heaven. (Isa.25:6: Luke 14:15) When Jesus said: “The sons of the kingdom
will be cast into outer darkness,” I think He was referring to the unbelieving
Jews. I think that the Jewish people who
rejected Jesus are being told here that without faith, just being Jewish is not
enough. I believe this “outer darkness”
Jesus spoke about might mean the darkness outside the lighted banquet hall. They miss out on the banquet, the fellowship
and all that was meant for them to enjoy because of their rejection of the One
who made it all possible.
Jesus turned to the Roman centurion and said: “Go your way:
and as you have believed, so let it be done for you.” (Matthew 8:13) When the centurion got to his house he found
that his servant had been healed at the same time that Jesus had spoken the
word.
After that Jesus moved on and healed Peter’s
mother-in-law. The lame and the blind
and the desperately sick were all brought to Jesus and He healed them all. Scripture says: “They brought to Him many who were
demon-possessed and He cast out the spirits with a word, and healed all who
were sick.” (Matthew 8:16) Isaiah prophesied 700 years earlier that the
Messiah would be a healer. He said: “He
Himself took our infirmities and bore our sicknesses.” (Isaiah 53:4-5)
While Jesus is walking with the crowd He comes across two
demon-possessed men coming out of a graveyard.
These men are fierce and possibly dangerous and none of the crowd can
pass by safely. Jesus has compassion on
the two men and He orders the demons to come out of the men and go into a
nearby herd of pigs. And when the demons
are sent into the pigs it caused the pigs to run into the nearby sea (Galilee ) and drown.
The people who took care of the pigs run back to the nearby
town to report what has happened. And
soon everyone from town rushes out to find Jesus. Amazingly the folks from town beg Jesus to
leave! Jesus has healed two men from
this town! These men are probably
fathers, husbands, and sons of families in this town. Aren’t those families overjoyed to receive
their loved ones back into their lives?
Wouldn’t the townspeople be grateful to Jesus for saving these two? But then there was the issue of the herd of
pigs that had run into the sea and drowned.
The owner of the pigs was expecting to make money off of those pigs and now
that won’t happen. Was an economic
profit more important to these townspeople than the welfare of two of their citizens? Is that why they all rejected Jesus and
begged Him to leave? Do others reject
Jesus for economic reasons too?
While Jesus was in the crowd healing and teaching, a scribe
came to Him and asked if he could be one of Jesus’ followers. And Jesus answered him, “Foxes have holes and
birds of the air have nests, but the Son of Man has nowhere to lay His
head.” (Matthew 8:20)
What is Jesus saying here?
I think Jesus is reminding this man that he needs to know what he is
getting into before he follows Jesus. He
needs to count the cost. That the
demands of following Jesus are costly!
Jesus is telling this man that He often does not have any place to sleep
at night- a place to lay his head. And
his followers may have to suffer deprivation too. To follow Jesus is to take up your cross and
deny yourself. Give up control. You cannot run the race set before you if you
are weighed down with lots of stuff.
Jesus takes his followers outside their comfort zone.
And then one of
Jesus’ followers tells Jesus that before he can follow him he must first go and
bury his father. And Jesus replies:
“Follow Me, and let the dead bury their own dead.” (Matthew 8:22) Again Jesus is saying that following Him is
not easy! Jesus expects his followers to
love Him first and give Him first place. Discipleship means forsaking all selfish
personal ambition. Followers must repent
of their sin– turn around and change directions. To follow Jesus is to leave your ego
behind. To leave everything behind.
Jesus gets into a boat with his disciples to cross the Sea of Galilee . But
soon dark clouds fill the sky and a powerful storm blows in over the troubled
waters. High waves begin crashing into
the boat and the terrified disciples wake up a sleeping Jesus and say: “Lord,
save us! We are perishing!” (Matt.8:25)
Jesus tells his disciples not to be afraid and He stands up and rebukes
the winds and the sea. And immediately
the storm is gone and there is a great calm! It’s a miracle! Word spreads and everybody hears about this
and marvels. “Who can this Jesus be?”
they exclaim. “Even the winds and the
sea obey Him!” (Matthew 8:27) Yes, Jesus is the Son of God and He has
authority over nature.
We have just read through the eighth chapter of Matthew and
we read here about how Jesus went about healing sick people. But eventually those people He healed became
sick again and died. In this world
because of sin we all die! “The wages of
sin is death, but the gift of God is eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord.” (Romans 6:23)
Jesus not only has authority to heal physical diseases but
He has the authority to forgive sins (1 John 1:9) (Matt. 9:6) and the power to
take them away from us, if we want Him to.
He not only walked with the crowds in Galilee
two thousand years ago, but He walks with us today. He can take care of us in this world and in
the next! That is because He is the Son
of God.
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