By Johann Peter Lange
Edited by Rev. Marcus Dods
THE HISTORICAL DELINEATION OF THE LIFE OF JESUS.
THE TIME OF JESUS APPEARING AND DISAPPEARING AMID THE PERSECUTIONS OF HIS MORTAL ENEMIES.
SECTION XIII
the healing of the lunatic
(Mat 17:14-21. Mar 9:14-29. Luk
9:37-45)
If, on the one hand, the most
confidential disciples of Jesus
on the mountain received a
revelation from the realms of
glory which should serve to
strengthen them for the days
that were to ensue, it was, on
the other, allotted to the other
disciples, that through a mighty
experience of the power of the
kingdom of darkness and of the
superior power of their Master,
they also should be animated to
greater courage and watchfulness
in their further following after
Jesus.
When the Lord with the three
disciples, ‘on the next day’
(i.e., on the day after the
transfiguration), returned to
the other disciples, who were
waiting for Him at the foot of
the hill, probably in an
inhabited valley, He found ‘a
great multitude about them,’ and
even ‘scribes, who were around,
disputing with them.’1 The group
was evidently in a state of
great excitement. But at the
moment that they saw Jesus,
‘they were greatly amazed, and
running to Him, saluted Him.’
The striking remark of the
Evangelist Mark, that they were
greatly amazed, will be
explained presently. Jesus
observed, probably with
displeasure, that the doctors of
the law, as adepts in
disputation, had with their
questions pressed His disciples
hard up into a corner. He
immediately steps up to them
with the inquiry, ‘What are ye
disputing with them about?’ They
gave Him no answer,—a proof how
much they were afraid of Him. We
can easily understand that the
more thinly scattered lawyers in
those hills of Cesarea Philippi
had not yet gone so far in bold
hostility to Him as those in
Galilee; but yet, without doubt,
enmity to Him was already spread
abroad even among them. But it
is at present in the stage of
timid lying in wait. Upon their
silence, a man stepped forth
from the crowd. He made his
complaint, that he had been
seeking for Him with a sick
person (ἤνεγκα ὲπρός σε) who was
his only son; that he was
lunatic, and was in a very bad
condition; that a dumb demon
(such an one as made him
speechless, and, as we may
suppose, unconscious) had the
mastery of him; that he often
seized him suddenly
(particularly about the time of
the growing moon) cried aloud
out of him, and convulsed him,
so that he foamed and gnashed
his teeth; that thus the patient
was sore tormented by him, till
at last the demon went out of
him again, not, however, until
he had once more convulsed his
whole frame; that, under such
circumstances, it could not fail
that the patient must be
continually pining away; that
this sufferer (whose illness on
its physical side was plainly
epilepsy) he had brought to His
disciples, not being able to
find Jesus Himself, with the
entreaty that they would cast
out the demon, but that they had
not been able to effect it.
We now understand the situation
in which Jesus found His
disciples. They had then
endeavoured to heal the sick
boy, but their attempt had
failed. They had certainly
received from Jesus authority to
cast out demons; and we may
surely assume that in His name
they had sought to do so in this
instance. Yet their treatment of
the case had failed,—a proof
that, in the undertaking, they
had not stood in the power of
full communion with Him. This
circumstance is probably to be
explained mainly by their
present mood of feeling. A short
while before, they had for the
first time heard of the way
leading to the cross, on which
they were to follow Jesus, and
they had in those days, no
doubt, to contend with sore
temptations to leave Him. Who
knows in what measure the power
of darkness might already be
hovering round the spirit of a
Judas, and how much his
dissatisfaction might be
weighing down and crippling the
remaining disciples! And now,
while in this mood, they were
suddenly summoned to heal a sick
person, whose malady had about
it something shocking and awful.
The unhappy result of their endeavour evinces the want of
assurance with which it had been
undertaken. In consequence, they
were, without question,
completely stricken down. This
juncture hostile scribes turn to
account for the purpose of
disputing with them;—we can
imagine in what sense. They
would easily represent the
matter so, that the rebuff of
the disciples appeared to fall
back upon their Master. We may
therefore conjecture, that in
the crowd which surrounded the
disciples, helpless and pressed
hard by the Rabbins, the spirit
of malicious satisfaction and
ridicule began to find
expression in reference to Jesus
and His work.
Thus, without question, this
group was in a highly profane
mood, and one by no means
friendly to the cause of Jesus;
but now He suddenly approached
them in the well-known majesty
of His being, which at present
was also heightened by the
effects which His
transfiguration left behind it.
His appearance, therefore,
struck the conscience of the
people like a sudden blow; and
Mark has surely not expressed
himself too strongly when he
writes: ‘they were amazed.’ They
sought to repair their fault by
hastening to meet Him with acts
of obeisance.
On hearing the complaint of the
man, Christ exclaimed, ‘Oh
faithless and perverse
generation! How long shall I be
with you? How long shall I
suffer you?’ And forthwith He
commanded the boy to be brought
to Him.
That just at this hour, the
world, in the gloom of its
despair and corruption, should
make the most painful impression
upon Him, lies in the very
nature of the case. Those who
from very high hills come down
to the level ground, pass
through very great changes in
physical respects. They come,
perhaps, out of the region of
eternal snow and of vegetable
growth in its most miserable and
stunted forms, and pass through
a succession of zones, districts
ever more and more warm and
blooming, until in the warm vale
they see themselves surrounded
by the richest vegetation. This
contrast presents itself in its
full power to those who, out of
the higher regions of Lebanon,
descend into its warm and richly
blessed valleys. But any such
change was secondary, in the
case of our Lord, to one of an
opposite character of much
greater significance. He came
out of a warm zone, which was so
near to the kingdom of eternal
light! and was now come into a
region in which the frosts of
unbelief were blowing keen upon
Him. There, the spirits of
heaven were near Him; here, the
spirits of the bottomless pit.
Even artists have felt and
sought to represent the
wonderful contrast between the
heavenly scene of the
transfiguration and this scene
of the bottomless pit, in which
the demon of anguish seems to be
triumphing over the whole human
group which surrounds the
wretched demoniac. But Jesus had
good grounds for giving very
strong utterance to the
impression which this circle
made upon Him. The mountain
behind Him behoved to transform
itself into a Sinai for this
group; His voice behoved like a
peal of thunder to terrify, and
to cleanse the air from the
spirits of frivolity (see above,
vol. i. p. 443).
He here openly gave utterance to
a mood which we may be sure
frequently assailed Him, but
which, as a rule, He did not
express. In this case He could
not but express it.2 But it is
clear that He was rebuking the
whole company; for they were all
blended one with another in one
and the same sentiment of
unbelief.
As soon as the boy was brought
to Him, ‘the demon began to
convulse and shake him,’ and
soon ‘he was lying on the
ground, wallowing and foaming.’
The evil was very great, since
even the influence of the
personal presence of Jesus,
which immediately in. itself was
so wholesome, yet called it
forth so strongly. But, however,
this paroxysm was at the same
time a proof that the power of
Jesus had already begun to work
upon the child. Perhaps the Lord
considered it desirable to leave
this first impression of His
personal presence upon the
patient to work itself in some
measure off.3
With the most elevated calmness
He asked the father of the
patient ‘how long this had been
on him.’ ‘From a child,’4
was his reply. And then he
probably proceeded to relate to
Him particular instances: how
the demon had often suddenly
fallen upon the boy and thrown
him down; sometimes when near
the fire, sometimes when near
the water, so that the patient
had then plunged into one or the
other. He charged the evil
spirit with the malignant
purpose of mischievously
destroying his son (ἵνα ἀπολέσῃ
αὐτόν). This demon-power stood
opposed to him like a sworn
hereditary enemy, who meant in
his only son to root out his
very stock; and imploringly he
begged Him: ‘If Thou canst do
anything, save us! take pity
upon us!’ In this cry there was
a strong dash of the despair
which threatened to overpower
him, since it not only produced
his excitement, but also led him
to utter the senselessly rude
word, ‘If Thou canst do
anything!’
Jesus answered him with an
enigmatical word, which we may
suppose means this: If thou
canst, is the word! Yes, ‘if
thou canst—believe!5 All things
are possible to him that
believeth.’ This word wrought
with a wonderful power upon the
desponding man. He cried out
aloud, with streaming eyes: ‘I
believe! Help my unbelief!’
Through the noble honesty which
the deepest anguish of soul was
blessed to produce in him, this
man gives us the opportunity of
looking deep into the very
birthplace of faith. We see how
faith as a free and necessary
act of heroic trust, on the path
of earnest supplication, of
calling upon Jesus, struggles
her way upwards out of the dull,
servile mood of unbelief.6 Here
repentance and confession of sin
follow upon faith or the
confession of faith; so mighty
in its operation is this
strengthening, of the soul
begotten out of the deepest
distress through the promise of
Christ. And now Christ had again
prepared an open road for
Himself to work upon the sick
son—through the heart of the
father, who felt the distress of
his son as deeply as if he had
himself been also convulsed by
the demon. The father’s cry of
anguish was observed to cause a
fresh pressing in of the crowd.
But the disturbing effect of
this thronging of the press
Jesus sought quickly to
anticipate. Remarkable for its
stern decision was the sentence
of expulsion with which He
accomplished the cure: ‘Thou
dumb and deaf spirit, I charge
thee, come out of him, and enter
no more into him!’ Forthwith the
conflict of recovery set in: a
wild outcry; convulsive spasms;
and then the patient lay there
perfectly still, free from the
symptoms he had been suffering
from hitherto, but as motionless
as if he were dead. Many, in
fact, said he was dead. ‘But
Jesus took him by the hand and
lifted him up, and he stood up
upon his feet: from that hour he
was cured.’
Now there began to spread a
great astonishment at the mighty
power of God shown in the works
of Jesus, in that same multitude
which for a while had been so
doubtful in its sentiments; many
expressions of rapturous
admiration of Him were heard.
Jesus advised His disciples to
keep in recollection these
utterances of feeling. Not so
much (we may be sure) for the
reason that doing so might serve
for the confirmation of their
faith, as that they might
thoroughly learn what men were.
‘For’ (He said) ‘the time was
coming that the Son of man would
be delivered into the hands of
men.’ But the disciples were now
once more as little disposed as
possible implicitly to receive
so sorrowful a prediction. Why,
their Master has just now again
shown that, under the most
desperate circumstances, He
could forthwith work
deliverance; that He could
coerce the worst demons; that He
could change the most
unfavourable sentiments in the
minds of the people into the
most favourable. Luke makes a
point of expressing in the
strongest manner that they were
incapable of taking home
Christ’s declaration. ‘They
misunderstood’ or ‘ignored7 the
word; and it was for them a
closed riddle, so that they did
not apprehend’ its proper
meaning.8 But ‘they were also
afraid to ask Him’ for more
specific information. With
reverence for His person there
blended, no doubt, at the same
time the dread of a more
distinct and terrible
announcement.
When the Lord was again alone
with His disciples, they asked
Him, ‘Why could not we cast him
(the demon) out?’ Jesus declared
to them in direct terms: ‘On
account of your unbelief;’ and
added, ‘Verily I say unto you,
If ye have faith as a grain of
mustard-seed, then say only to
this mountain, Remove hence, and
place thyself thither! and it
shall remove thither; and
nothing shall be impossible unto
you.’
Faith cannot make it her
concern, in a literal sense, to
be removing mountains of the
earth. But if it could be and
ought to be its concern, then
faith would be able really to
remove mountains. For faith is
the heart’s becoming one with,
and being closely joined to, the
omnipotence of God. The
smallest, finest grain9 of this
power of working in God can
effect the most extraordinary
operations, and, in actual fact,
all things must be possible to
it, because all things are
possible to God. But on that
very account also, faith is not
dependent on human caprice, not
self-willed, as human enthusiasm
is. First of all, it is called
by God to remove, to drive out
from the soul, the inward
corruptions and errors which lie
like mountains between the soul
and its happiness. Not till then
is it called to remove the
mountains of spiritual
corruption in the life of
others. After this, it can then
also concern itself with
removing the mountains of other
people’s distress,—the task with
which in the story before us the
disciples essayed to concern
themselves, without having given
heed to the right order of
things, without having first put
aside the mountain of sadness
and dissatisfaction in their own
hearts, and then the mountain of
weakness of faith in the mind of
the sorrowing father. At length
there come then, in the
succession, the mountains of
those earthly difficulties which
in a thousand ways oppose
themselves to the kingdom of
God; and at last faith will also
address herself to transfigure
the earth, and with the earth to
change the form of its
mountains. And this last is not
the most difficult, namely, that
at last the mountains of the
earth should be removed; but the
first, namely, that the
mountains of unbelief should be
done away.10 But, however, the
order which is by God appointed
to man in the work of removing
mountains man must not overleap;
and if he, without faith, essays
to remove mountains in any way,
then that alone redounds to his
reproach: as with the disciples
it not merely redounded to their
reproach that they could not
heal the sick boy, but also most
especially that they had sought
to do it without faith. The
first thing they should have set
about, was to do away with the
mountain of unbelief which had
placed itself between them and
the working of their divine
Master’s power.
Most especially in this case,
since they had to deal with a
demoniac evil of especial
magnitude. For, ‘This kind,’
said the Lord in conclusion,
‘goeth not out (is not cast out)
except only by virtue of prayer
and fasting.’ Prayer and fasting
are evidently here regarded as
the two opposed activities in
the living exercise of operative
faith. Out of the one energy of
its self-exercise proceeds, on
the one hand, prayer, the
striving of the soul after union
with God, and her confirmation
in this oneness; on the other
hand, fasting, the spontaneous
abstinence and well calculated
renunciation of the soul, in her
earnest endeavour to get free
from her old attachments to the
world. Thus must a man shake his
wings, if in faith he will do
miracles. He must, in prayer,
conjoin himself with the will of
God, and in the same measure, in
fasting, struggle himself free
from the world; and then he is
able, in God, being free, and
standing in antagonism to the
world, to remove the mountains
which are in the world. But the
greater the evil is which he
will coerce, the greater must be
his experience in both these
points, and therefore in the
life of faith. Possibly the
disciples might have been able
to control a lesser demoniac
suffering with that weakened
faith of theirs, which in the
season of their conflict they
had not sufficiently nourished
by prayer and fasting; but if
they would control this kind of
demoniac suffering, this fearful
bondage of a human being, who
seemed to have been from a child
given up to all pernicious
influences, cosmical and
ethical,—for such a work as
that, they needed to be armed by
a faith which was engaged in the
liveliest energy, in full
tension and exercise, between
its two poles of life, which are
praying and fasting.
By this incident not only had
the disciples been humbled,
raised up, and warned, and in
consequence strengthened for
their path of suffering in
following after Jesus, but they
had also gained from bitter
experience a living
consciousness of the chasm,
which was opening ever wider and
wider, between them and that
spirit of their nation which was
under the leading of the
scribes. But that this contrast
should be brought more and more
home to their consciousness, was
just the thing which they most
pressingly needed.
───♦───
Notes
The expression, remove
mountains, root up mountains,
was very current in the schools
of the Rabbins, to express the
doing away of great spiritual or
intellectual difficulties.
‘Among the Jews an eloquent
teacher is called
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1) Neander observes that this circumstance, that here scribes are meeting Jesus, is more in favour of the transaction having taken place at a hill in Galilee than at Hermon, on the hills near Paneas. But surely we may suppose that scribes were to be found in the dominions of Philip, a Jewish prince. 2) See the beautiful observations of Stier, ii. 350. 3) Weisse is disposed (i. 522) to regard the interlocution between Jesus and the father of the possessed boy as an hors d'œurre. He missed the signification of this pause. 4) The hankering of Olshausen to explain demoniac sufferings by secret sins, through Which a defective conception of these eases appears in his Commentary, is especially confusing here, since it is expressly said of the boy, that he had had the affliction from childhood, ‘There is, further, nothing in the representation to lead us to refer, as others do, the disasters of the patient falling into the fire and into water to accesses of melancholy. 5) The expression, εἰ δύνασαι, Jesus seems with an intended double meaning to be giving back to the man as a riddle, in some such sense as this: τὸ εἰ δύνασαῖ-εἱ σὺ δύνασαι—πιστεῦσαι. 6) See Olshausen in loc. 7) We must not mistake the ethical element in the word ἀγνοέω. It lies in the word very much in the same way as it does in the word ignore. 8) The same judgment recurs in Luke xviii. 34. 9) Concerning the image of the grain of mustard-seed, see Stier, ii. 236. 10) See Slier, ii. 355, &c.
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