Mark 5:21-43 · A Dead Girl and A Sick Woman
Living By Faith And Trust
Mark 5:21-43
Sermon
by Leonard H. Budd
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Jairus' little daughter was the sweetest child in the whole village. Everyone said so. She was slight in build and shy in behavior. And she was kind, more kind than any of the other children. Everyone said that, too. So when she fell ill and could not even venture beyond the framing of the front door of her house everyone in the town was greatly concerned. Her parents were well-respected, for her father was one of the 10 men in town who ruled the synagogue. He had lived within the bounds of the town all his life. If anyone had a problem - any sort of problem - they sought out Jairus. He was kindly, like his daughter, and fair and he knew the holy writings. Many times he had given the advice to pray to Almighty God. "The Lord God will attend to your prayer," he would say. And he believed it.

Now, with his tiny daughter lying motionless upon the pallet in the corner of his house, Jairus was confounded that his prayers did not seem to matter. He, along with the whole town, was in great turmoil of spirit. So, when the word reached him that Jesus was nearby he ran to him, pleading for any help that Jesus might offer. "My little daughter is at the point of death." What father would not be anguished to utter such a sentence?

But amid the anguish that he and his town shared, there was the spirit-flame of hope that still gave some light. "If you touch her, she will be made well!" In that faith Jairus moved with Jesus toward the house, walking through the crowds of women who had already begun the death wails. At the end of their journey, the little 12-year-old daughter walked with them. The faith of Jairus held true.

Let us talk of faith. There was another little girl. She was about eight years of age. She had lived all those years within the loving embrace of the Christian church. Her whole family was involved: mother, father, sister and herself. Within that church family she became acquainted with a lady who lived on her street. They were good friends. The lady was always at the church when the little girl was there. Every Sunday morning they met at church. But the lady's husband was not at church. He was never there. The little girl knew the husband, for she had visited in their home. But she never saw that husband in the church with his wife. One day, in quiet innocence, that little girl asked her lady friend, "Where does your husband go to church?" All the people that little girl knew went to church someplace. The reply was unexpected! "Sweetie," the lady friend replied, "he doesn't go to church anyplace." Then there was a great silence. Finally the little girl, having grasped this new and unexplained information, asked, "Does he cuss?"

That is a true story. I know the little girl. And it is not really a word about the husband who does not attend church. It is an interchange about those of us who do go to church. Expressed in thought and words of an eight-year-old child is a statement about those who do frequent churches. It is a story about the image of a Christian ... the definition of a Christian faith put into everyday action. I invite us all to follow up on that this morning. What is it that makes Christians different? How might we frame a definition?

There are some folks who think that a simple affirmation is all that is necessary. "Do you believe in Jesus?" "Yes, I do!" "Fine, you're a Christian!" With the words, "I believe," or "Jesus is Lord," or "Jesus saves me," then all that is needed has somehow been done. The achievement has been made. Heaven is assured. The lifestyle, the attitudes, the behavior beyond that affirmation do not matter essentially, for the "acceptance of Christ" has assured all that really matters - so some people say. Back in the Middle Ages it played out as a game. The words of faith were spoken from the deathbed, but not a moment sooner. It made for the best of both worlds, so thought the angler of those Middle Ages. And the Protestant Reformation was born, in part, in response to this simplistic thought that one's religiousness is structured only by an affirmation, a formula of words spoken. Unfortunately, there remains some of that simplistic sentiment today. Religious "code words" do not a Christian make.

Whereas there are some people who think that only a repetition of words is necessary, so there are other folks who think that Jesus' ethical example is the sole key. All that is needed to make the Christian is to be a "little Jesus" in word and action. Do as Jesus did! This, too, falls far short. If we earnestly seek to duplicate Jesus' earthly behavior we will inevitably meet with failure. The most earnest of saints in past ages have tried this, only to be engulfed in frustration and despair at failure. The Methodist story of John Wesley's search to do better in good deeds, even sailing the Atlantic to convert the American Indians, is the story of this futility. A working Christian faith does not come to birth in trying to mimic Jesus' life.

There must be something beyond the "Good Word Speakers" and the "Good Deed Doers." The one point of this sermon is that the keystone of Christian faith is a trust in God and in that life that God has given us through Christ Jesus! That is the mark, the clue. That is the ground from which the Christian life grows productive and contented and moral. That is the ground from which faith grows more deeply. This trust in God provides the beginnings for an assurance that the essentials of life do not end with earth's death. This trust in God opens eternity.

Jesus showed this! He lived with such faith and trust in God that nothing could defeat him. It was a faith and trust that prompted his good deeds, out of a shear gratitude to God for the gift of life. It was a faith and trust that carried him through trials and rejections. It was a faith and trust that opened to him the windows of eternity. In a moment of fear upon the heavy seas of Galilee, Jesus slept in the back of the boat. Later he quieted the fears of those distraught and sweating disciples. (Mark 4:35-41)

Jesus taught this! Standing on the edge of some Galilean field he said, "Consider the lilies of the field; they do not work, they do not spin, yet I tell you even Solomon in all his splendor was not attired like one of these ... But if that is how God clothes the grass of the fields ... will God not all the more clothe you? How little faith (trust) you have." (Matthew 5:28) How do you answer?

Is not this trust in God the root of Jesus' statement that each one of us must take on certain child-like qualities if we would inherit the good that God has provided for us? I read his teaching, "You must have the trust of a little child before God's kingdom can come to you." The text today is about a man who faced a great, great difficulty. It was a potential tragedy that few persons have to face - the death of his child. While Mark's gospel does not give us a clinical report on the illness or the recovery, what is very clear is that Jairus' faith in Jesus and the Lord God that Jesus proclaimed told him that his daughter would be made well. It was not a half-hearted faith. Scripture says that Jairus asked Jesus, "Come and lay your hands on her, so that she may be made well and live." (5:23) It was a strong expectation of Jesus' power. It was the same faith held by that nameless woman who interrupted their journey to the little girl. She was a woman who believed that with just one touch of Jesus' garment she would be healed. And, it happened! Jesus responded, "Woman, your faith, your trust has cured you." (5:34)

It was this sort of faith and trust in God's care that empowered Jesus' first disciples. Paul would soon write: "We are troubled on every side, yet not distressed. We are perplexed, but not in despair; persecuted, but not forsaken; cast down, but not destroyed." (2 Corinthians 4:08) Is that your faith ... your trust?

The early writing of the church gave some formal definitions: "Faith gives substances to our hopes. Makes us certain of realities that we do not see." (Hebrews 11:01) And, in the next chapter of Hebrews, the writing directs that we must "throw off every encumbrance, weight; and run with resolution the race set for us." (Hebrews 12:0 1) Encumbrances diminish faith. Fear diminishes faith. Hate, too, is a weight upon us, as is worry and distrust. And so the message comes at us from many directions: Have faith in God's care. Trust God and the life God has given in Christ Jesus.

Yet, there are some folks, some we know, who have little or no trust, whose lives are filled with complaint and bitterness. Even the American Medical Association says that will kill you!

An old southern evangelist was preaching up a storm and ended his long sermon by asking the people to come to the front of the church and give testimony to what God had done for them. People responded, speaking their strong and positive testimony, but not enough of them to the liking of the evangelist. So, he began to call upon them by name. "Brother Smith, what has God done for you?" Finally he got down to Uncle Harry, an old man, sitting to the side, crippled up with all sorts of ailments, blind in one eye, hard of hearing. "Uncle Harry," he shouted, "what has the Lord done for you?" Uncle Harry laboriously raised himself with the help of his cane and the pew in front, looked up at the evangelist, and shouted back, "Well, he's just about done me in!" There are some folks, far less troubled than Uncle Harry, who claim to be Christian yet concentrate on that same done-in condition. But that is not the message of faith from the Bible, even when spoken by Uncle Harry from the pew of a church.

We seek to hold faith, trust in God and the life through Christ that God has given.

Not far from this place is a woman friend of mine who is crippled beyond imagination. She is alone most of the day and very helpless. Only with a large-button telephone by her side can she call for help. She lives in a country setting. But her witness is that she is not alone. She has a faith and trust in God who cares for her in spirit. Those who volunteer to help her from time to time admit that she helps them far more ... because of her faith and trust in God.

In the late evening in a hospital I prayed with a man about to undergo cancer surgery. He did not have any idea how it would turn out that next morning. As we held hands during those moments of prayer, he said, "I don't worry. I have always known that life is a gift to me. I have always believed in God's care. I have no reason to change my mind now, no matter what happens tomorrow."

I read of a man who died and left his possessions to his children. The heritage was carefully listed in the will. But a final paragraph made that will different from most others. This is what he had written: "I desire also to bequeath to my children and their families my testimony to the truth and preciousness of the gospel of Jesus Christ. This heritage of the Christian faith, received in unbroken line from the apostles and prophets and martyrs, is of infinitely more value than any house or automobile or land or material possession. I hereby bequeath it to them all." Trust in God and the life that God has given through Christ. Is that you?

Beloved brothers and sisters in Christ: the message is, seek to live by faith and trust in God. That is the mark. In that, the Christian life is found ... and it is very good!

CSS Publishing Company, The Spirit's Tether, by Leonard H. Budd