THE NEW TESTAMENT!
Day 280 – Reading – Matthew 8 and Mark 2
Read and believe in Jesus!
Matthew and Mark
In these two chapters, we see a flurry of miracles by Jesus – healings and deliverances – and some thorny questions answered.
Matthew 8.
Again, Jesus meets a leper, a man filled with faith. He responds by touching and healing him. Our sinless Savior does NOT become unclean, but instead extends His own “cleanness” to the man. He then tells him to go to the Priest, as the law requires, to prove healing.
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Before it was a city official, but now it is a Roman Centurion who comes to Jesus asking for healing for someone at home. He tells Jesus that there is no need for Jesus to come in person, because he, a centurion, is a man of command. He recognizes that Jesus is, too. “Say the word and my servant will be healed.”
Jesus is amazed at this Gentile’s faith, and says, “Go, let it be done for you according to your faith.”
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Crowds begin to press against Jesus and his disciples, so He calls for a boat to go to the other side of Galilee. Before it’s ready, a scribe comes up to Him and vows, “I will follow you wherever you go!” (Did he mean to the other side of the lake??)
Another man tells Jesus he will follow Him anywhere, but first let him go bury his father. (This doesn’t mean his father is dead! He simply wanted to remain at home and collect his inheritance before following Jesus.)
Jesus answered them curiously. “Foxes have holes and birds have nests. I have nowhere (permanently) to lay my head.” And, “Follow me and let the dead bury their dead.”
What in the world did Jesus mean? He was saying to count the cost. They must be willing to leave EVERYTHING to follow Him.
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The boat comes and they climb aboard. The disciples (at least the fishermen) begin rowing towards the other side. Jesus goes to the bench at the back of the boat – and without a pillow – lies down and immediately falls asleep.
A great storm arises.
The boat is flooding.
The disciples panic.
“Save us, Lord; we are perishing.” (Whoa, how appropriate! For in reality, this is what Jesus came to the world to do. But alas, they meant from the storm.)
Jesus speaks and there is now a great calm. They whisper and ask each other, “What sort of man is this, that even wind and sea obey him?”
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On the east side of the lake, a demoniac or two greet them with wild screams and threats. THE DEMONS inside him recognized Jesus, even if the crowds did not. “What have You to do with us, O Son of God? Have You come here to torment us before the time?”
Jesus sends the devilish horde into the nearby herd of swine, which promptly runs to a cliff, and like lemmings, leap off to their death. The man was FREE! But the city wasn’t grateful. “Please go away,” they tell Jesus.
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Mark 2.
In this story, Jesus has returned to Capernaum. He was in the home where he stayed and hordes of people now pressed against him inside and out. A paralytic is carried to the edge of the crowd, but there is NO WAY that stretcher will go through the crowd. The friends look up and get an idea. Around back they carry the man up to the roof and begin dismantling the roof. Everyone inside watched (and ducked the dust) as the sick man is lowered down by Jesus.
He is pleased with their ingenuity and faith. “Son, your sins are forgiven.”
“What???” think some scribes who were inside checking up on Jesus. “He is blaspheming! No man can forgive sins. Only God.“
(Well, duh!)
Jesus then asks a curious question. Think about it before answering. “Which is easier to SAY to the paralytic, ‘Your sins are forgiven’ or ‘Rise, take up your bed and walk?'”
Actually, it’s easier to SAY ‘your sins are forgiven,’ because you don’t have to prove it outwardly. It’s much harder to SAY ‘get up and walk’ because either the man can or cannot do it.
Either way, Jesus tells the man to get up, take his stretcher-bed, and walk. (He’s already forgiven his sins.} Jesus, our all-powerful God in the flesh, can and does both forgive and heal. PRAISE HIM!
The crowds were amazed and glorified God. The scribes were silent.
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Next, the people ask a question. “Why do John’s disciples and the disciples of the Pharisees fast, but YOUR disciples don’t?
Simple. Can you fast while the Bridegroom is here? No. It’s time to rejoice. When He is taken away, then there will be fasting. Huh? Not sure if the people understood that. Or the disciples. Jesus further causes their brains to work. “No one sews a piece of unshrunk cloth on an old garment. Or the patch tears away in the first wash. No one puts NEW WINE into old wineskins. Or the expanding, fermenting wine will split the old stiff wineskin.”
What in the world is Jesus saying? He is telling them that a NEW DAY has come. The Messiah is here. Rejoice for His coming and accept the prophesied Good News!
Not sure they totally understood. But the disciples will. Later.

