Mark 7:24-30 · The Faith of a Syrophoenician Woman
Uncontainable Faith
Mark 7:24-37
Sermon
by Lori Wagner
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“Curiosity killed the cat,” goes the old folk saying. We’ve all heard it. We all know it. Except that’s not what the proverb originally was. The true proverb read, “Care killed the cat.” So where did this new phrase come from? Why the revision? And what did the original phrase mean?

On 23 December 1912, a printed reference to the new variation of the proverb was printed in The Titusville Herald newspaper in a grocery store ad:

You will find greater values here. We are told:
"Curiosity killed the cat,
But satisfaction brought it back."

It is the same story with groceries.
"Prices will sell Groceries, but it is always finality that brings the buyer back."

The sales pitch indicated that although curiosity may provoke a buyer to try something new, the quality of the product and how much they like it is what will make them keep coming back to buy it again and again.

Earlier than that, an Irish newspaper from 1868 wrote:

"They say curiosity killed a cat once.”

The phrase "Curiosity killed the cat" also appears in James Allan Mair's 1873 compendium A Handbook of Proverbs: English, Scottish, Irish, American, Shakesperean, and Scriptural; and Family Mottoes, where it is listed as an Irish proverb. In the 1902 edition of Proverbs: Maxims and Phrases by John Hendricks Bechtel, the phrase "Curiosity killed the cat" is the lone entry under the topic "Curiosity.”

So, by the late 1800s, the phrase had firmly altered from Care to Curiosity.

And from there, parents and grandparents began to use the phrase not as a positive in trying new things but as a warning to curious children to check their desire to delve into things that could harm them or cause them trouble.

So what was the original phrase about?

The original phrase, “Care killed the cat” comes much earlier from the 1500s, in which the meaning was that sorrow or worry could keep one from doing what needed to be done. The cat who plays with the mouse instead of doing what needed to be done may lose it and not have dinner.

This phrase, as you might guess, comes across as just the opposite of the phrase as we use it today. For those who needed to work hard to make a living and who needed to get through life’s difficulties and sorrows while still doing what needed to be done to move forward, the phrase was meant as a boost into action.

“Don’t tarry. Don’t spend time crying over spilt milk, we might say today. Just pick yourself up and move on. There’s no time to lose. Or you may lose your livelihood or your opportunity to keep things afloat.”

“Don’t drown in your sorrows. Don’t procrastinate. Get to it. Just get it done.” These are all kinds of meanings that the original phrase suggests.

As culture changes, language changes, and this phrase is a good example of a move in our culture from a positive view of taking risks to a negative view of taking risks….and back again. While our grandparents or even our parents may have warned us to be more cautious because “curiosity killed the cat,” today’s culture has returned to a more healthy view of risk taking. In fact, most health professionals will tell you that worry and stress can actually kill you!

Our new emphasis on healthy living perhaps might bring the original phrase back into vogue: “Care killed the cat.” For us as human beings living in a hectic 21st century world, and for the church living in a time of stasis and often fear of its own culture, the original phrase might be the mantra of the 21st century:

“Care killed the cat!” So, grab the tiger by the tail and take a chance! Do something fun and new. Reach out and partner up! Take a risk. Try a new approach.

For us today, curiosity to us most of the time seems like a good thing most of the time. It’s what drives us forward and keeps us chafing at the bit to learn and grow, to share and connect with each other.

Care for us on the other hand, while caring is good, care in the sense of worry and anxiety causes us terrible stress. Not only that, worrying and fretting lead to inaction. Worry leads to feelings of uselessness, hopelessness, and disillusionment with one’s situation. One who is caught in the claws of excess worry literally freezes and cannot move forward. It’s often a circular funnel of inaction and stasis that paralyzes one from making one’s situation better.

So how do we become curious. I believe it has a lot to do with faith.

Faith propels us into action. Faith causes us to seek out a solution, assistance, or to find hope that things can change for the better. Faith gives us hope that when we reach out, someone will be on the other side to help and take our hand. Faith allows us the courage to inquire. Faith causes us to be curious.

While care and worry provoke stasis and paralysis, faith provokes curiosity, initiative, and the belief in a different future than the situation miring one down at present.

In our scripture for today, we see Jesus encountering a woman from Tyre, a woman who was Greek, Syrophoenician by birth. This description is vitally important to the story. After Jesus’ encounter with this woman, the text says, he left Tyre and went through Sidon through the region of the Ten Cities. There he healed a deaf and mute man.

Why are these descriptions so important? None of these areas are Jewish. Jesus has deliberately entered into pagan territory. These areas are not on his way home. He has consciously made a decision to encounter people who are not Jewish and heal people who are not members of the Jewish community. Not only that, they don’t subscribe to the same faith. Greeks were polytheistic. They worshipped multiple gods. So did those of Syrophoenicia and other pagan territories to the north.

When Jesus commends the woman for her answer, he is giving her a test. She has come to him begging for him to heal her daughter. She has not gone to her own gods or her own temples. She has come to him. That is the kind of faith and curiosity that gives her the courage to approach Jesus, a Jewish rabbi, who she has heard of but not seen until now, and to ask him to heal her daughter.

Likewise, when Jesus enters into the Decapolis (the region of the Ten Cities), some people (again who were not Jewish) had the curiosity and the faith to bring their neighbor to Jesus and beg that he heal him. Again, Jesus heals him.

And the people are amazed.

They could have continued to fret and worry over their condition. But instead, they decided to take a chance, to go out on a limb, go outside of their own culture and faith, and to put their faith in Jesus, and the God of the Israelites.

Every time you pray, you do the same. You don’t pray because you believe that there is no god or that no one is listening. You pray, because you are taking a chance. Maybe it’s your last resort. Your last chance. But you are praying, talking to God, because you believe that when you are praying, someone out there is hearing you, and just may respond.

The most faith comes many times from those who are entrenched in pain, in sickness, in worry, or in strife, because they will take the most risks. They will risk anything to get out of that place of sorrow and into a better place, even if it means praying to a God, a Jesus, whom they have never known and never worshipped. There’s always a first time. This is true evangelism.

Evangelism is not something you make a strategy for. It’s not a complicated marketing scheme. It’s not a door to door sales pitch. It’s not simply a command you are supposed to obey.

Evangelism, true evangelism, is what Jesus shows us in the scriptures: it’s healing.

The greatest examples of conversion, proclamation, recognition, and loyalty to Jesus in the scriptures all come from his taking the time to heal people.

And notice this. Jesus doesn’t first ask them what religion they ascribe to. He doesn’t make them become baptized first. He doesn’t make them come to synagogue with him. He doesn’t even talk to them about religion. He recognizes their pain, their desperation, and he recognizes that their approach of him, their curiosity and their faith and trust of him, their courage to come to him, despite their culture and their position in life, are in a sense, their prayers.

We are called not to minister to people like us, the people who already know Jesus. We are called to minister to the people who are not like us, who don’t know Jesus, who are suffering and don’t know where to turn. We are called to re-claim that proverb, “Care killed the cat,” and to stop worrying about who will come into our doors or how to fill our pews.

When we start trusting Jesus, and healing in His name, the people will celebrate. And the people will come.

Healthy people are trusting people. A healthy church is a church in which faith comes first.

Faith, deep faith, the kind of uncontainable faith that comes from healing, joy, and assurance of Jesus’ presence, will drive you forward, make you curious, allay your fears, and give you the strength to give others hope.

Increase your faith. Take risks. Stop worrying about the state of the church and start to heal God’s people. Be courageous in your faith. And joyful in your mission. For you ARE able. And “care killed the cat.”

ChristianGlobe Network, Inc., by Lori Wagner