Chapter 43
Barriers Broken Down
[This chapter is based on Matt. 15:21-28; Mark
7:24-30.]
After the encounter with the Pharisees, Jesus withdrew from
Capernaum, and crossing Galilee, repaired to the hill country on the
borders of Phoenicia. Looking westward, He could see, spread out upon
the plain below, the ancient cities of Tyre and Sidon, with their
heathen temples, their magnificent palaces and marts of trade, and the
harbors filled with shipping. Beyond was the blue expanse of the
Mediterranean, over which the messengers of the gospel were to bear its
glad tidings to the centers of the world's great empire. But the time
was not yet. The work before Him now was to prepare His disciples for
their mission. In coming to this region He hoped to find the retirement
He had failed to secure at Bethsaida. Yet this was not His only purpose
in taking this journey.
"Behold, a Canaanitish woman came out from those borders, and
cried, saying, Have mercy on me, O Lord, Thou Son of David; my daughter
is grievously vexed with a devil." Matt. 15:22, R. V. The people of
this district were of the old Canaanite race. They were idolaters, and
were despised and hated by the Jews. To this class belonged the woman
who now came to Jesus. She was a heathen, and was therefore excluded
from the advantages which the Jews daily enjoyed. There were many Jews
living among the Phoenicians, and the tidings of Christ's work had
penetrated to this region. Some of the people had listened to His words
and had witnessed His wonderful works. This woman had heard of the
prophet, who, it was reported, healed all manner of diseases. As she
heard of His power, hope sprang up in her heart. Inspired by a mother's
love, she determined to present her daughter's case to Him. It was her
resolute purpose to bring her affliction to Jesus. He must heal her
child. She had sought help from the heathen gods, but had obtained no
relief. And at times she was tempted to think, What can this Jewish
teacher do for me? But the word had come, He heals all manner of
diseases, whether those who come to Him for help are rich or poor. She
determined not to lose her only hope.
Christ knew this woman's situation. He knew that she was longing to
see Him, and He placed Himself in her path. By ministering to her
sorrow, He could give a living representation of the lesson He designed
to teach. For this He had brought His disciples into this region. He
desired them to see the ignorance existing in cities and villages close
to the land of Israel. The people who had been given every opportunity
to understand the truth were without a knowledge of the needs of those
around them. No effort was made to help souls in darkness. The partition
wall which Jewish pride had erected, shut even the disciples from
sympathy with the heathen world. But these barriers were to be broken
down.
Christ did not immediately reply to the woman's request. He received
this representative of a despised race as the Jews would have done. In
this He designed that His disciples should be impressed with the cold
and heartless manner in which the Jews would treat such a case, as
evinced by His reception of the woman, and the compassionate manner in
which He would have them deal with such distress, as manifested by His
subsequent granting of her petition.
But although Jesus did not reply, the woman did not lose faith. As He
passed on, as if not hearing her, she followed Him, continuing her
supplications. Annoyed by her importunities, the disciples asked Jesus
to send her away. They saw that their Master treated her with
indifference, and they therefore supposed that the prejudice of the Jews
against the Canaanites was pleasing to Him. But it was a pitying Saviour
to whom the woman made her plea, and in answer to the request of the
disciples, Jesus said, "I am not sent but unto the lost sheep of
the house of Israel." Although this answer appeared to be in
accordance with the prejudice of the Jews, it was an implied rebuke to
the disciples, which they afterward understood as reminding them of what
He had often told them,--that He came to the world to save all who would
accept Him.
The woman urged her case with increased earnestness, bowing at
Christ's feet, and crying, "Lord, help me." Jesus, still
apparently rejecting her entreaties, according to the unfeeling
prejudice of the Jews, answered, "It is not meet to take the
children's bread, and to cast it to dogs." This was virtually
asserting that it was not just to lavish the blessings brought to the
favored people of God upon strangers and aliens from Israel. This answer
would have utterly discouraged a less earnest seeker. But the woman saw
that her opportunity had come. Beneath the apparent refusal of Jesus,
she saw a compassion that He could not hide. "Truth, Lord,"
she answered, "yet the dogs eat of the crumbs which fall from their
masters' table." While the children of the household eat at the
father's table, even the dogs are not left unfed. They have a right to
the crumbs that fall from the table abundantly supplied. So while there
were many blessings given to Israel, was there not also a blessing for
her? She was looked upon as a dog, and had she not then a dog's claim to
a crumb from His bounty?
Jesus had just departed from His field of labor because the scribes
and Pharisees were seeking to take His life. They murmured and
complained. They manifested unbelief and bitterness, and refused the
salvation so freely offered them. Here Christ meets one of an
unfortunate and despised race, that has not been favored with the light
of God's word; yet she yields at once to the divine influence of Christ,
and has implicit faith in His ability to grant the favor she asks. She
begs for the crumbs that fall from the Master's table. If she may have
the privilege of a dog, she is willing to be regarded as a dog. She has
no national or religious prejudice or pride to influence her course, and
she immediately acknowledges Jesus as the Redeemer, and as being able to
do all that she asks of Him.
The Saviour is satisfied. He has tested her faith in Him. By His
dealings with her, He has shown that she who has been regarded as an
outcast from Israel is no longer an alien, but a child in God's
household. As a child it is her privilege to share in the Father's
gifts. Christ now grants her request, and finishes the lesson to the
disciples. Turning to her with a look of pity and love, He says, "O
woman, great is thy faith: be it unto thee even as thou wilt." From
that hour her daughter became whole. The demon troubled her no more. The
woman departed, acknowledging her Saviour, and happy in the granting of
her prayer.
This was the only miracle that Jesus wrought while on this journey.
It was for the performance of this act that He went to the borders of
Tyre and Sidon. He wished to relieve the afflicted woman, and at the
same time to leave an example in His work of mercy toward one of a
despised people for the benefit of His disciples when He should no
longer be with them. He wished to lead them from their Jewish
exclusiveness to be interested in working for others besides their own
people.
Jesus longed to unfold the deep mysteries of the truth which had been
hid for ages, that the Gentiles should be fellow heirs with the Jews,
and "partakers of His promise in Christ by the gospel." Eph.
3:6. This truth the disciples were slow to learn, and the divine Teacher
gave them lesson upon lesson. In rewarding the faith of the centurion at
Capernaum, and preaching the gospel to the inhabitants of Sychar, He had
already given evidence that He did not share the intolerance of the
Jews. But the Samaritans had some knowledge of God; and the centurion
had shown kindness to Israel. Now Jesus brought the disciples in contact
with a heathen, whom they regarded as having no reason above any of her
people, to expect favor from Him. He would give an example of how such a
one should be treated. The disciples had thought that He dispensed too
freely the gifts of His grace. He would show that His love was not to be
circumscribed to race or nation.
When He said, "I am not sent but unto the lost sheep of the
house of Israel," He stated the truth, and in His work for the
Canaanite woman He was fulfilling His commission. This woman was one of
the lost sheep that Israel should have rescued. It was their appointed
work, the work which they had neglected, that Christ was doing.
This act opened the minds of the disciples more fully to the labor
that lay before them among the Gentiles. They saw a wide field of
usefulness outside of Judea. They saw souls bearing sorrows unknown to
those more highly favored. Among those whom they had been taught to
despise were souls longing for help from the mighty Healer, hungering
for the light of truth, which had been so abundantly given to the Jews.
Afterward, when the Jews turned still more persistently from the
disciples, because they declared Jesus to be the Saviour of the world,
and when the partition wall between Jew and Gentile was broken down by
the death of Christ, this lesson, and similar ones which pointed to the
gospel work unrestricted by custom or nationality, had a powerful
influence upon the representatives of Christ, in directing their labors.
The Saviour's visit to Phoenicia and the miracle there performed had
a yet wider purpose. Not alone for the afflicted woman, nor even for His
disciples and those who received their labors, was the work
accomplished; but also "that ye might believe that Jesus is the
Christ, the Son of God; and that believing ye might have life through
His name." John 20:31. The same agencies that barred men away from
Christ eighteen hundred years ago are at work today. The spirit which
built up the partition wall between Jew and Gentile is still active.
Pride and prejudice have built strong walls of separation between
different classes of men. Christ and His mission have been
misrepresented, and multitudes feel that they are virtually shut away
from the ministry of the gospel. But let them not feel that they are
shut away from Christ. There are no barriers which man or Satan can
erect but that faith can penetrate.
In faith the woman of Phoenicia flung herself against the barriers
that had been piled up between Jew and Gentile. Against discouragement,
regardless of appearances that might have led her to doubt, she trusted
the Saviour's love. It is thus that Christ desires us to trust in Him.
The blessings of salvation are for every soul. Nothing but his own
choice can prevent any man from becoming a partaker of the promise in
Christ by the gospel.
Caste is hateful to God. He ignores everything of this character. In
His sight the souls of all men are of equal value. He "hath made of
one blood all nations of men for to dwell on all the face of the earth,
and hath determined the times before appointed, and the bounds of their
habitation; that they should seek the Lord, if haply they might feel
after Him, and find Him, though He be not far from every one of
us." Without distinction of age, or rank, or nationality, or
religious privilege, all are invited to come unto Him and live.
"Whosoever believeth on Him shall not be ashamed. For there is no
difference." "There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither
bond nor free." "The rich and poor meet together: the Lord is
the Maker of them all." "The same Lord over all is rich unto
all that call upon Him. For whosoever shall call upon the name of the
Lord shall be saved." Acts 17:26, 27; Gal. 3:28; Prov. 22:2; Rom.
10:11-13.
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