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29 Jesus departed from there, skirted the Sea of Galilee, and went up on the mountain and sat down there. 30 Then great multitudes came to Him, having with them the lame, blind, mute, maimed, and many others; and they laid them down at Jesus’ feet, and He healed them. 31 So the multitude marveled when they saw the mute speaking, the maimed made whole, the lame walking, and the blind seeing; and they glorified the God of Israel. ~ Matthew 15:29-31
Today, we return to our study of Matthew 15. The Lord Jesus began His earthly ministry in the northern region of Israel, and, for two years plus He ministered in that region. As it is today, Galilee was a rural area then, and the people are far more common and less educated. Before leaving that area for Jerusalem, the Lord Jesus traveled over the border to the north and west of Israel and entered into Gentile territory once again even though He had been rejected there before.
In v.29 of today's passage we read, "Jesus departed from there, skirted the Sea of Galilee, and went up on the mountain and sat down there."
According to Mark's gospel, the Lord Jesus went to the Decapolis or the Ten Greek Towns which were occupied by Romans. As a result, the culture there was defined accordingly. Needless to say there weren't many who were mindful of God who lived in that area. Earlier, when the Lord Jesus was in that area, the people asked Him to leave because they thought Him to be a threat to their way of life. The Lord Jesus complied and departed to the area of Capernaum.
On this occasion when the Lord Jesus returned to that eastern shore area, the locals brought to Him many who were quite ill. In that group according to Mark's gospel was a deaf mute man. This desperate man, and all the rest who were brought to the Lord Jesus, was an illustration of how desperation can serve us best. Desperate people do desperate things. These people undoubtedly had tried everything else to remedy their problems. They were obviously dangling from their last rope. Like them, it was out of my desperation that I cried out to the Lord. It was the death of my parents that led me to the point of being desperate enough to cry out to the Lord for help. And boy, am I glad I did. As a side note, Abraham, the first Jew, was a Gentile before he became a Jew. It was God's culture or definitions of things that brought about the difference. And, by the way, the word "Jew" comes from the word Judah which means "Thank you!"
In v.30 of today's passage we read, "Then great multitudes came to Him, having with them the lame, blind, mute, maimed, and many others; and they laid them down at Jesus’ feet, and He healed them."
The once skeptical people in the Decapolis brought many ill people to the Lord Jesus who healed them. According to Mark there was one man whom the Lord Jesus healed by placing His fingers in his ears. Since the man was deaf, he could not hear, but, he could feel. The Lord put His fingers in this man's ears so that he could feel the touch of God who was addressing his ear problem. And, since speech is tied to our ability to hear, the Lord Jesus then touched the man's tongue. He spat, perhaps into His hand, and then He touched the man's tongue. To somebody who was so helpless, the touch of the Messiah was a great encouragement, and, it bolstered the man's faith in the Lord Jesus. When the Lord Jesus looked in the man's eyes, He saw the look of faith. It was at that point that the man was immediately healed. Faith is the required ingredient to receiving anything from God. With the physical healing, the Lord Jesus awakened the man's faith and caused him to believe in Him. His faith was a product of his healing.
According to Mark, at that moment the Lord Jesus looked up to heaven, revealing the source of His power. God's power, when accessed, is always accessed through submission to the Father's will. The Lord Jesus spoke, not to the man’s ears, but to his heart. This is what He does for all who call on Him for help. In fact, He continues to speaks to our hearts daily. This is the key to abiding in Him. And, He has been known to use some rather unusual means to make an audience out of our hearts. Just after I had graduated from high school, I didn’t know God, so I didn’t know how to listen to Him or how to speak with Him. As you know, in May of 1981, my father became very sick to the point of death. Just three days before his death in October of the same year, the Lord Jesus met me right where I was. That day, He clearly spoke to my heart which was garrisoned by my grief. As a result, that day I cried out to Him and it was then that He became my Savior.
Although my emotional blockages hindered my ability to understand, over time the Lord communicated with me in a way that I could understand. Somehow, He enabled me to know that His intentions for me were all good and that I could trust Him. Like the many that He healed that day on that mountain at the Decapolis, I sensed His deep sigh many times. He probed the deep places of my heart, where the pains of life had left many scars. He confronted that deep, searing pain, that was in me due to loss of both of my parents at a young age. He performed His work of enabling my heart to see and hear Him for myself mostly through my pain.
In v.31 of today's passage we read, "So the multitude marveled when they saw the mute speaking, the maimed made whole, the lame walking, and the blind seeing; and they glorified the God of Israel."
The people marveled that day as the Lord Jesus healed so many. Like the multitude, the eyes of our hearts are drawn to Him through the many healings. That is where our faith must rest. Sadly, as Henry David Thoreau pointed out so long ago, "Most men lead lives of quiet desperation and go to the grave with the song still in them." Just like these desperate people, the Lord Jesus came looking for us to offer to us what we could not produce for ourselves. If we are desperate enough, when we come to faith in Him, we will become living symbols of what the Lord can do in and through our willing hearts. This was not only what we needed, this is what this desperate world needs. Like you and me, they need His undying love to set them free from the way of the enemy who is out to destroy them. And, once the Lord does this work in their hearts, they will be granted His heart to see the lost who are desperate to be set free from the evil ties that bind them.