Thursday, November 18, 2021

Matthew 15:21-28 - Did Jesus Really Just Say That?

 


Did Jesus Actually Just Say That!? - November 18, 2021

 

Matthew 15:21-28, CEB - From there, Jesus went to the regions of Tyre and Sidon.  A Canaanite woman from those territories came out and shouted, “Show me mercy, Son of David. My daughter is suffering terribly from demon possession.”  But he didn’t respond to her at all.

His disciples came and urged him, “Send her away; she keeps shouting out after us.”

Jesus replied, “I’ve been sent only to the lost sheep, the people of Israel.”

But she knelt before him and said, “Lord, help me.”

He replied, “It is not good to take the children’s bread and toss it to dogs.”

She said, “Yes, Lord. But even the dogs eat the crumbs that fall off their masters’ table.”

Jesus answered, “Woman, you have great faith. It will be just as you wish.” And right then her daughter was healed.

 

This is a troubling story to our modern ears.  We’re not used to Jesus ignoring people and comparing them to dogs.  But Jesus does indeed do both to the Canaanite woman.  She is a Gentile and she is desperate to get help for her daughter. She is desperate enough to put aside some cultural and religious differences to approach a Jewish Messiah who she has heard works miracles for help.  But initially, Jesus does NOT put aside those differences.  In fact, Jesus doesn’t even acknowledge her presence even though she is screaming out for help so loudly and persistently that the disciples beg Jesus to deal with her and send her away.  Just in case it isn’t apparent why this story should be disturbing to us, I would point out that all of us are gentiles.  We’re in the same category as this woman.   

Further, when the woman finally gets Jesus to respond, He basically tells her that what He h as isn’t for her or her daughter.  He says His focus is on the “lost sheep of Israel” and that is not this woman.  The determined mother will not be dismissed, but she is not disrespectful.  She pleads, “Lord, help me.”  He responds with a metaphor; “It is not good to take the children’s bread and toss it to dogs.”

Seriously… did Jesus just compare this woman to a dog to her face?!  Yes, He did.  And don’t first-century Jews view dogs as dirty, disgusting, and unclean animals?  Yes, in fact, they do.  Why would Jesus say such a thing?  This is not the compassionate Jesus we all know and love.  What gives?

What Jesus said needs some cultural context.  First, we should notice that the woman doesn’t seem especially insulted by Jesus’s words.  While Jews did not generally have dogs as pets, gentiles did.  Jesus would not have used this “feed the children first” metaphor with a Jewish audience, because dogs would not even be a consideration in a Jewish household.  But knowing that this woman (a mother pleading for her child) would understand that children get fed before pets, he used the image with her to explain that His first focus at the moment was on Israel.  The mission would expand to gentiles later as we will see later in Matthew, but Jesus is resolute on trying get the lost sheep of Israel to return to their Shepherd.  Just as a mother’s priority is to feed her children before the pets are fed, so Jesus needs to see to Israel before he issues the Great Commission to “make disciples of all nations.” (Matthew 28:19)

The woman’s response here is the turning point of the story.  Still not being deterred, she actually embraces the “dogs” image Jesus has used.  She points that, while children do get fed first, the dogs still get fed by the crumbs that fall from the table.  She, in effect, is saying to Jesus.  “ All I’m asking for is a crumb to you.”  But for her, that “crumb” is her child’s deliverance.  In this moment, her faith reaches Jesus’s heart and He changes His mind.  I don’t want us to miss this.  The woman’s determined faith changes Jesus’s mind.  He grants her request and praises her “great faith.”  This praise should be contrasted with the number of times Jesus described the faith of Israel and even the disciples as being “little.”

Matthew’s gospel has been called the most Jewish of the four in the New Testament, but by including this surprising story, you might say he has thrown us gentiles a “crumb.”  As the Gospel progresses, we will see more and more crumbs falling from the table.  But for now, let’s focus on the tenacious faith of this remarkable mother who reached Jesus’s heart and changed His mind with her persistence.  Should we ever feel like a pet who is being ignored or someone who is on the outside looking in, we should see in this story that our Lord’s heart is moved by persistent faith that keeps asking for what we need.  Don’t give up.  Keep asking and keep watching for those crumbs.

 

Question:  What is it that you need to keep asking God about until answer comes?

 

Prayer:  God, I need your help with ______________.  I’ve asked before, but I’m still waiting for an answer.  Help me recognize Your answer when it comes.  Thank you in advance.  Amen.

 

Prayer Focus:  Say the above prayer again later today.

 

Song:  Ask and Keep on Asking - Liz Baddaley

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g8rdwVvJh4M

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