| Miracles |
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Philip Fogarty SJ discusses some of the miracles recounted in Mark's gospel and why Jesus asks for secrecy about his miracles.
Mark tells two miracle stories: one about the cure of a seriously ill daughter of a synagogue official, and, interspersed with it, the cure of a woman with a haemorrhage (5:21-43). Before examining these two stories, it might be worth saying a few words about miracles. Startling deeds Different interpretations As they head for Jairus's home, a woman who has suffered with a haemorrhage for twelve years, and whom doctors have been unable to treat, comes up behind Jesus. 'If I but touch his clothes,' she says to herself, 'I will be healed.' On the instant, her haemorrhage stops, and she feels in her body that she has been healed of her disease. Immediately aware that power has gone out from him, Jesus turns about in the large crowd and asks, 'Who has touched me?' Rather quizzically, the disciples say, 'You see how the crowd is pressing around you and yet you say, "Who touched my clothes?" Jesus looks all around to see who has done it. The woman then comes forward, frightened and trembling, falls at Jesus' feet, and tells him the whole truth. 'Daughter,' Jesus answers, 'your faith has made you well; go in peace and be cured of your disease.' On the margin Mark tells us that the woman had been haemorrhaging for twelve years. During those years she would have been effectively marginalized, excluded from the common life of the people, because she was ritually unclean. As long as she was bleeding, she would also render 'unclean' anyone who touched her. So here is her dilemma: to be healed she feels she has to touch Jesus' cloak, but this would involve a brazen act of a ritually unclean woman communicating her uncleanness to a holy man! Nonetheless, she bravely takes her chance and tells Jesus her story. Jesus' reply to the woman, 'Your faith has saved you,' is a remarkable statement that lifts Jesus above any contemporary categories of physician, exorcist, wonder-worker, or holy man. He proclaims that faith has healed the woman. Such faith is the deep conviction that God is good to humanity and that God can and will triumph over all forms of evil, even severe gynaecological problems! The woman is cured because she has faith in Jesus as the vehicle of God's power. Do not be afraid He then takes Peter, James and John to the official's house where people are weeping and wailing unrestrainedly. When he arrives at Jairus' house, he says to them, `Why do you make a commotion and weep? The child is not dead but sleeping.' But the mourners only laugh at him. Then he puts them all outside, and takes the child's father and mother and the three disciples and goes into where the child is. He takes the twelve year little girl by the hand and, in Aramaic, says to her, 'Little girl, get up,' and the little girl gets up at once and begins to walk about. The parents are overcome with amazement but he orders them not to tell anyone and tells them to give the little child something to eat. Messianic secret What we have here is another example, injudiciously placed, of Mark's 'messianic secret' whereby Jesus wishes to hide his identity because of possible misunderstandings of who he really is, something that only becomes clear after his death and resurrection. This article first appeared in The Messenger (June 2007), a publication of the Irish Jesuits. |







