The Miracles of JesusSýnishorn
Claimed by Jesus
She said, “If I touch even his garments, I will be made well.” (v. 28)
Have you ever felt like the woman in today’s reading? Or do you know someone who has suffered much, spent all they have trying to find relief, without result? The reality is that medical care can’t cure everything, and chronic illness can produce a unique despair.
Mark shows us that the woman had faith. She believed that just touching Jesus’s clothing would be enough, but it would have to be done secretly. According to Mosaic law, a woman with a flow of blood was “unclean,” and by touching Jesus, she would make him unclean. But that’s not what happened. She was healed—made clean, just by touching Jesus’s clothing.
Her healing is not the end of the story. Jesus called her out. The woman was embarrassed, perhaps ashamed, but courageous. She told Jesus the truth. And this confession completed her act of faith. “Daughter, your faith has made you well; go in peace, and be healed of your disease” (v. 34). In all the gospels, this woman is the only one called “daughter” by Jesus.
When you follow the woman’s example, declare your faith, and put your trust in Jesus, Jesus brings you to himself, removes your shame, and makes you part of his family—a transformation even greater than the healing of any physical ailment.
As you pray, confess your faith to God. Accept your membership in God’s family. Ask God to lead you in sharing that faith with others.
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About this Plan
The miracles of Jesus are one of the best places to understand why and how God performs miracles. Jesus’s miracles are simultaneously seeds of belief, planted in our hearts to grow into a living faith, and expressions of God’s character, enacted by Jesus because he did what his Father, God, is doing. This 16-day series will take you through the miracles of Jesus found in all four gospels.
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