Day 8, Matthew 8 
About one-tenth of all the verses in the four Gospels
tell us something about Jesus' healing ministry.
That's significant! Those many records of Jesus'
healings all demonstrate His divinity. No historical
figure has ever come close to Him when it comes to
miracles. He claimed to be God, and He proved He
was.
Yet the healing stories serve another purpose as
well. They reveal God's will regarding healing and
encourage those who are in need of healing to look
to Him. This point cannot be disputed due to the
fact that Jesus often told those whom He healed, "Your
faith has healed you." Clearly, had they not
had faith they would not have been healed---even
though it was obviously His will for them to be healed,
made evident by the fact that He did heal
them! Faith is obviously the key that opens the healing
door.
Most every Christian believes, like the leper we
read about today, that Jesus can heal
them. He said, "Lord, if You are willing, You
can make me clean" (8:2). But like the leper,
they don't know if Jesus wants to
heal them. They hope He does, but they aren't sure.
And that is their problem, because Jesus never told
anyone, "Your hope has healed you." Hope
is not the same as faith. Scripture says that "Faith
is the assurance of things hoped for" (Heb.
11:1). Notice what Jesus said to the leper to change
his hope to faith: "I am willing; be cleansed." (8:3). To
be healed, we need to change our hope to faith.
The Gentile centurion, a Roman commander, certainly
demonstrated faith in Jesus (8:10, 13), and as a
result, his servant was healed. Incidentally, the
Greek word translated servant in
8:6 (pais) literally means "boy," indicating
that the centurion was his legal guardian, or
perhaps his father. This is important to understand,
as we can find no example in the four Gospels
of Jesus healing an adult solely in response to another
adult's faith. We do, however, find several examples,
like this one, of children being healed by Jesus
in response to his or her parent's faith. Jesus
most often told the sick, "Your faith
has healed you." We can, like
the men who brought their paralyzed friend to Jesus,
encourage the sick to look to Jesus, and we can join
our faith with theirs. But our faith can't overpower
their unbelief. Healing, like salvation, must be
appropriated by each person's own faith.
Matthew indicated that when Jesus healed "all
who were ill" (8:16) in Capernaum, it fulfilled
Isaiah's messianic prophecy, "He Himself took
our infirmities, and carried away our diseases" (8:17).
But surely the healings of the people of Capernaum
that one evening were not the complete fulfillment
of Isaiah's prophecy. Isaiah declared just one verse
later in the very same prophecy that the Messiah
would be "pierced through for our transgressions," and "crushed
for our iniquities" (Is. 53:5).
Those words have obvious universal application. The "our" of
Isaiah 53:5 is no different than the "our" in
Isaiah 53:4. Just as Jesus carried our sins
in His body on the cross (1 Pet. 2:24), so He also "took
our infirmities, and carried away our diseases." That
is good news, and faith-building news! And when Jesus
healed the people of Capernaum, it was proof to Matthew's
Jewish readership that Jesus was obviously the
promised Messiah of Isaiah 53, as evidenced by His
incredible healing ministry there (and elsewhere).
To those who expressed their intentions to follow
Him, Jesus conveyed that there would be hardship
and a demand for devotion. I think it is unlikely,
however, that the man who requested to bury his father first was
saying that his father had just died. Jesus would
have wanted him to honor his parents, and a funeral
would not have caused him much delay. More likely,
the man was indicating that he didn't want to miss
being near his father during his final years. But
Jesus said to everyone, "He who loves father
or mother more than Me is not worthy of Me" (Matt.
10:37). Only God has the right to expect such allegiance.
Only God deserves it.
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