Connect360: Never Without Hope
- Lesson 6 in the Connect360 unit “The reMARKable Journey Continues: The Gospel of Urgency” focuses on Mark 5:21-23, 35-43.
While on the way to Jairus’ home, Jairus received word his daughter had died. These people urged Jairus not to bother Jesus any longer (Mark 5:35), presumably because they assumed Jesus could not do anything now that she was dead. Having overheard what was not addressed to him, Jesus told Jairus two things: “Don’t be afraid; just believe” (Mark 5:36).
We can empathize with Jairus—a father who has just heard about the death of his daughter. He no doubt feared the many “what-ifs” of his new situation—most immediately, how could he go home to face a household in mourning. In the face of grief, we have many unknowns to fear without someone we love.
Jesus’ first exhortation to Jairus is in the negative: “Don’t be afraid.” Jesus often repeats this phrase throughout his teaching and interaction with the disciples (Matthew 10:31; 14:27; 17:7; Luke 5:10; 12:7), not to mention all the times God urged his people not to fear in the Old Testament (Deuteronomy 31:6; Isaiah 41:10; Haggai 2:5). This imperative command carries the sense of “Stop being afraid.” He commanded Jairus not to focus on the fear, but instead, to focus on his faith.
Jesus then gave Jairus a positive exhortation: “Just believe.” He offered Jairus an alternative to his fear—hold onto your faith. Although Jesus accepted the reality of this girl’s death, he did not accept its finality. He urged Jairus to keep believing, to maintain his certainty Jesus could still save his daughter.
This admonition evokes Jesus’ conversation with Martha after the death of her brother Lazarus. Martha accused Jesus that if he had been there, Lazarus would not have died. Jesus proclaimed Lazarus would live again because Jesus is the Resurrection and the Life. Then Jesus challenged Martha to believe him capable of this power over life and death (John 11:23–27). Similarly, Jesus asked the same faith of Jairus, and Jairus rose to the challenge. He does not try to talk Jesus out of coming to his house as the messengers had suggested.
The miracle Jesus performed in the resurrection of Jairus’ daughter should have a profound impact on our relationship to God today. Do we respond to suffering, disappointment and even death with the faith that Jairus displayed? Certainly, Jairus’ faith opened the door for Jesus to display his glory. Likewise, anytime we respond to hardship with faith, humbly pleading with God for his healing, we are opening the door for God to intervene for his glory in our suffering. Even if we do not see that healing in this life, we honor God with our faith in his power.
Jesus’ counsel to Jairus in the face of death also reminds us to replace fear with faith. Death is not the end of all hope and so is not an outcome to dread or despair. Knowing Jesus’ power over life and death, we can face even our own death with confidence and courage. If we live, we live for him; if we die, we gain an eternity with him. Because of Jesus, we always have hope whenever there is death.
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