I
am a father of four daughters. I love each dearly. I see
pictures of their childhood and treasure those times. I
don't see them daily any more, but the desire for their
wellbeing is no less.
The welfare of your children or dearest loved is no small
thing either, is it? If the issue is one of life and death,
parents would move heaven and earth, if they could, just spare
their child.
The Bible tells of a man named Jairus, a father whose young
daughter was deathly ill. Helpless, he came to Jesus.
Everything else was irrelevant. Here was a prominent man, a
ruler of the synagogue whom we could suspect was normally very
distinguished and not one to be down on all fours begging.
But his dignity was immaterial.
In faith, he beseeched Jesus to touch his child so she might
live. There is no room for pride when death threatens. All
hope and credit rests in Jesus.
A great crowd also surrounded Jesus. But this too was of no
consideration to Jairus. Did the ruler of the synagogue not
realize he was expecting a great deal to ask Jesus to come to
his house, treat his daughter, and respond to his insistence
when many others also were hurting? In the crowd were other
folks in need. Didn't they count? Yes, he was asking a great
deal. But that's why he came to Jesus!
In fact, right in the middle of this chapter the Bible
suspends the story of Jairus and tells of a woman with a
chronic hemorrhage who slipped through the crowd to touch
Jesus and was healed. Everything about Jairus' the little
girl is postponed while Jesus inquires after this woman, finds
her, and speaks comfortingly to her.
A few, it seems, were mindful of not asking too much of
Jesus. In fact, when the report came that the little girl had
died, some suggested Jesus not be troubled any further which
was not really a concern for Jesus but a belief that He would
be irrelevant in the face of death. If the child has died,
then what's the point of bringing in Jesus? What's the point
of counting on Jesus when his delay in ministering to someone
else makes him too late for little Talitha. What's the point
of pleading for help if, in the long run, God is "a day late
and a dollar short"?
One can only imagine Jairus' feelings as a father to have
loved his daughter so much that he would leave her side when
critically ill, prostrate himself before Jesus, plead for
help, persist in spite of other people's needs, have his hopes
raised only to face the holdup of a woman whose problem traced
back twelve years. After twelve years, couldn't that wait a
bit longer when today minutes, even seconds, count?
All this only to be told the little girl had died.
What a severe test of faith this was. Jairus believed in
Jesus though his faith was taxed. It would be strained
further. A gauntlet of yowling mourners waited at the house,
an uproar probably increased because it was a youngster who
had died. How this must have shook Jairus especially when the
bawling turned to derisive laughter when Jesus announced the
child was only sleeping.
The Lord's word cut past all the experts, all outward
indications, all "reasonable" human conclusions, all
experience, all scientific deductions, and all collective
judgments. All such things are subordinate to the Word of
Christ to which faith clings when all other intrusions,
conclusions, and derision interfere.
Nothing but faith belongs in the death chamber. Jesus does not
allow the doubter, the cynic, the agnostic, the pessimist, or
the naysayer into the child's presence. He takes only those
who hope in Him. Speculation or misgivings about the power of
Christ are out of place. Contempt is incompatible with hope.
Science cannot raise the dead.
But Jesus can - and does.
He calls death sleep, and it is so.
He
calls you who have sinned, saved, and it is so.
He calls you who mourn, the comforted, and it is so.
He calls you who hunger for righteousness, the satisfied, and
it is so.
He calls you who are insulted, persecuted, or falsely accused
for his sake, the blessed, and it is so.
He calls to the little girl, "Talitha cumi," and immediately
she rises because only Christ can make it so.
He takes those who believe in him, who know that Christ is the
Lord of life, tested though they may be, right to where faith
sees its validation - in the resurrection!
Jairus received even more than what he asked. He asked that
his daughter be made well, yet Jesus did more than keep her
from dying. He conquered the death in her. Jesus raised her
from death to life.
This is the Christ you and I know and trust. He gives us more
than we could ask. He exceeds all our hopes. He pays double
for all our sins. He answers before we ask and surpasses the
best we can imagine.
Therefore when others recommend Jesus not be bothered; when
others howl that death defeats us all; when others brazenly
laugh that Jesus is "above his pay grade," you and I remember
the empty tomb. You and I enter where the Christian bereaved
have gathered and sing:
"Now all the vault of heaven resounds,
in praise of love that still abounds:
Christ has triumphed! He is living!
Now still He comes to give us life
And by His presence stills all strife.
Christ has triumphed. He is living.
Alleluia! Alleluia! Alleluia!
(LSB 465)
Pastor Reed
© 2008