Mark 5:21-­‐43 Jairus & the Woman – Stories of Faith in Action us, came, and en he saw us, he fell at his . He pleaded nestly with … o, al ver a ús, se arrojó a pies, licándole con stencia… Jesus – back on the Jewish side of the Lake Approached publically by Jairus – fell at his feet, pleading, abandoning his status and rank Clear request, “come and place you hands on her…so that she will live” A clear expression of belief that led to action ttle daughter is dying. se come and put your Jairus’ faith in Jesus – clear and public – ds on her so that she be healed and live.’ So “she will live” – confidence in what Jesus can do us went with him. A e crowd followed and Jesus’ response? – To go with him sed round him. Faith is not passive or a matter of affirming a set of beliefs – it is active and dynamic ijita se está muriendo. y pon tus manos sobre Compare: “Faith by itself, if it is not para que sane y viva. accompanied by action, is dead” (James ús se fue con él, y lo 2:17) uía una gran multitud, lo apretujaba. en she heard about us, she came up nd him in the crowd touched his cloak, ause she thought, ‘If I touch his clothes, I will ealed.’ ndo oyó hablar de ús, se le acercó por ás entre la gente y su manto. Pensaba: ogro tocar siquiera su , quedaré sana. Jesus and the woman The 2nd story an integral part of the 1st. For Jairus the delay is fatal, but for the woman life-giving The woman – almost the opposite of Jairus A faith that is hidden – no public acclamation Holds to her shameful status as unclean Does she know fully who Jesus is? (Apart from the fact that he can heal her) The fear of exposure “if I just touch…” Jesus kept looking nd to see who had e it. Then the man… came and fell s feet and, trembling fear, told him the e truth. o Jesús seguía ndo a su alrededor ver quién lo había ho. La mujer… se có temblando de do y, arrojándose a pies, le confesó toda erdad. Jesus’ response… To stop (imagine the impact on Jairus!) To question – who touched me? To publically draw out the woman To affirm the woman’s faith and her new status e Jesus was still aking, some people e from the house of us, the synagogue er. ‘Your daughter is d,’ they said. ‘Why er the teacher more?’ avía estaba hablando ús, cuando llegaron s hombres de la casa de o, jefe de la sinagoga, decirle: Tu hija ha rto. ¿Para qué sigues estando al Maestro? The messengers from his household Their view of Jesus – a teacher whose authority does not extend beyond death The crisis for Jairus and the affirmation of Jesus – hold to the confidence that brought you to me Abandoning the crowd, the selection of the 3 went in and said to m, “Why all this motion and ng? The child is dead but ep.” But they hed at him. ó y les dijo: Por qué tanto roto y llanto? La no está muerta dormida. onces empezaron rlarse de él, The professional mourners “The child is not dead but asleep” Words with double meanings - The perfect excuse? “Little girl, get up!” – a pointer to the future resurrection The power of Jesus to reach through and beyond death Say nothing – safeguarding his reputation n he saw Jesus, ell at his feet…. n she heard ut Jesus, she e up behind … er a Jesús, se jó a sus pies… ndo oyó hablar esús, se le rcó por detrás…. Some pointers from the story The dynamic of faith – active not passive The need to know everything? Healing becomes resurrection – Jesus’ power over death Sovereign acts of Jesus within the story He responds He delays He heals • Faith and Jesus re Del Mar urch, tober 2014 Call for a faith health check? Is faith a matter of believing the right facts? Or is our faith based in a living relationship that prompts us to action?