The Canaanite's Daughter Healed.
21 Then Jesus went thence, and departed into the coasts of Tyre
and Sidon. 22 And, behold, a woman of Canaan came out of the same coasts,
and cried unto him, saying, Have mercy on me, O Lord, thou Son of David;
my daughter is grievously vexed with a devil. 23 But he answered her not
a word. And his disciples came and besought him, saying, Send her away;
for she crieth after us. 24 But he answered and said, I am not sent but
unto the lost sheep of the house of Israel. 25 Then came she and worshipped
him, saying, Lord, help me. 26 But he answered and said, It is not meet
to take the children's bread, and to cast it to dogs. 27 And she said,
Truth, Lord: yet the dogs eat of the crumbs which fall from their masters'
table. 28 Then Jesus answered and said unto her, O woman, great is thy
faith: be it unto thee even as thou wilt. And her daughter was made whole
from that very hour.
We have here that famous story of Christ's casting the devil out of
the woman of Canaan's daughter; it has something in it singular and very
surprising, and which looks favourably upon the poor Gentiles, and is an
earnest of the mercy which Christ had in store for them. Here is a gleam
of that light which was to lighten the Gentiles, Luke ii. 32. Christ came
to his own, and his own received him not; but many of them quarrelled with
him, and were offended in him; and observe what follows, v. 21.
I. Jesus went thence. Note, Justly is the light taken from those that
either play by it, or rebel against it. When Christ and his disciples could
not be quiet among them, he left them, and so left an example to his own
rule (ch. x. 14), Shake off the dust of your feet. Though Christ endure
long, he will not always endure, the contradiction of sinners against himself.
He had said (v. 14), Let them alone, and he did so. Note, Wilful prejudices
against the gospel, and cavils at it, often provoke Christ to withdraw,
and to remove the candlestick out of its place. Acts xiii. 46, 51.
II. When he went thence, he departed into the coasts of Tyre and Sidon;
not to those cities (they were excluded from any share in Christ's mighty
works, ch. xi. 21, 22), but into that part of the land of Israel which
lay that way: thither he went, as Elias to Sarepta, a city of Sidon (Luke
iv. 26); thither he went to look after this poor woman, whom he had mercy
in reserve for. While he went about doing good, he was never out of his
way. The dark corners of the country, which lay most remote, shall have
their share of his benign influences; and as now the ends of the land,
so afterward the ends of the earth, shall see his salvation, Isa. xlix.
6. Here it was, that this miracle was wrought, in the story of which we
may observe,
1. The address of the woman of Canaan to Christ, v. 22. She was a Gentile,
a stranger to the commonwealth of Israel; probably one of the posterity
of those accursed nations that were devoted by that word, Cursed be Canaan.
Note, The doom of political bodies doth not always reach every individual
member of them. God will have his remnant out of all nations, chosen vessels
in all coasts, even the most unlikely: she came out of the same coasts.
If Christ had not now made a visit to these coasts, though the mercy was
worth travelling far for, it is probable that she had never come to him.
Note, It is often an excitement to a dormant faith and zeal, to have opportunities
of acquaintance with Christ brought to our doors, to have the word nigh
us.
Her address was very importunate, she cried to Christ, as one in earnest;
cried, as being at some distance from him, not daring to approach too near,
being a Canaanite, lest she should give offence. In her address,
(1.) She relates her misery; My daughter is grievously vexed with a
devil, kakos daimonizetai--She is ill-bewitched, or possessed. There were
degrees of that misery, and this was the worst sort. It was common case
at that time, and very calamitous. Note, The vexations of children are
the trouble of parents, and nothing should be more so than their being
under the power of Satan. Tender parents very sensibly feel the miseries
of those that are pieces of themselves. "Though vexed with the devil, yet
she is my daughter still." The greatest afflictions of our relations do
not dissolve our obligations to them, and therefore ought not to alienate
our affections from them. It was the distress and trouble of her family,
that now brought her to Christ; she came to him, not for teaching, but
for healing; yet, because she came in faith, he did not reject her. Though
it is need that drives us to Christ, yet we shall not therefore be driven
from him. It was the affliction o her daughter, that gave her this occasion
of applying to Christ. It is good to make the afflictions of others our
own, in sense and sympathy, that we may make them our own, in improvement
and advantage.
(2.) She requests for mercy; Have mercy on me, O Lord, thou Son of David,
she owns him to be the Messiah: that is the great thing which faith should
fasten upon, and fetch comfort from. From the Lord we may expect acts of
power: he can command deliverances; from the Son of David we may expect
all the mercy and grace which were foretold concerning him. Though a Gentile,
she owns the promise made to the fathers of the Jews, and the honour of
the house of David. The Gentiles must receive Christianity, not only as
an improvement of natural religion, but as the perfection of the Jewish
religion, with an eye to the Old Testament.
Her petition is, Have mercy on me. She does not limit Christ to this
or that particular instance of mercy, but mercy, mercy is the thing she
begs: she pleads not merit, but depends upon mercy; Have mercy upon me.
Mercies to the children are mercies to the parents; favours to ours are
favours to us, and are so to be accounted. Note, It is the duty of parents
to pray for their children, and to be earnest in prayer for them, especially
for their souls; "I have a son, a daughter, grievously vexed with a proud
will, an unclean devil, a malicious devil, led captive by him at his will;
Lord, help them." This is a case more deplorable than that of a bodily
possession. Bring them to Christ by faith and prayer, who alone is able
to heal them. Parents should look upon it as a great mercy to themselves,
to have Satan's power broken in the souls of their children.
2. The discouragement she met with in this address; in all the story
of Christ's ministry we do not meet with the like. He was wont to countenance
and encourage all that came to him, and either to answer before they called,
or to hear while they were yet speaking; but here was one otherwise treated:
and what could be the reason of it? (1.) Some think that Christ showed
himself backward to gratify this poor woman, because he would not give
offence to the Jews, by being as free and forward in his favour to the
Gentiles as to them. He had bid his disciples not go into the way of the
Gentiles (ch. x. 5), and therefore would not himself seem so inclinable
to them as to others, but rather more shy. Or rather, (2.) Christ treated
her thus, to try her; he knows what is in the heart, knew the strength
of her faith, and how well able she was, by his grace, to break through
such discouragements; he therefore met her with them, that the trial of
her faith might be found unto praise, and honour, and glory, 1 Pet. i.
6, 7. This was like God's tempting Abraham (Gen. xxii. 1), like the angel's
wrestling with Jacob, only to put him upon wrestling, Gen. xxxii. 24. Many
of the methods of Christ's providence, and especially of his grace, in
dealing with his people, which are dark and perplexing, may be explained
with the key of this story, which is for that end left upon record, to
teach us that there may be love in his face, and to encourage us, therefore,
though he slay us, yet to trust in him.
Observe the particular discouragements given her:
[1.] When she cried after him, he answered her not a word, v. 23. His
ear was wont to be always open and attentive to the cries of poor supplicants,
and his lips, which dropped as the honeycomb, always ready to give an answer
of peace; but to this poor woman he turned a deaf ear, and she could get
neither an alms nor an answer. It was a wonder that she did not fly off
in a fret, and say, "Is this he that is so famed for clemency and tenderness?
Have so many been heard and answered by him, as they talk, and must I be
the first rejected suitor? Why so distant to me, if it be true that he
hath stooped to so many?" But Christ knew what he did, and therefore did
not answer, that she might be the more earnest in prayer. He heard her,
and was pleased with her, and strengthened her with strength in her soul
to prosecute her request (Ps. cxxxviii. 3; Job xxiii. 6), though he did
not immediately give her the answer she expected. By seeming to draw away
the desired mercy from her, he drew her on to be so much the more importunate
for it. Note, Every accepted prayer is not immediately an answered prayer.
Sometimes God seems not to regard his people's prayers, like a man asleep
or astonished (Ps. xliv. 23; Jer. xiv. 9; Ps. xxii. 1, 2); nay, to be angry
at them (Ps. lxxx. 4; Lam. iii. 8, 44); but it is to prove, and so to improve,
their faith, and to make his after-appearances for them the more glorious
to himself, and the more welcome to them; for the vision, at the end, shall
speak, and shall not lie, Heb. ii. 3. See Job xxxv. 14.
[2.] When the disciples spake a good word for her, he gave a reason
why he refused her, which was yet more discouraging.
First, It was some little relief, that the disciples interposed on her
behalf; they said, Send her away, for she crieth after us. It is desirable
to have an interest in the prayers of good people, and we should be desirous
of it. But the disciples, though wishing she might have what she came for,
yet therein consulted rather their own ease than the poor woman's satisfaction;
"Send her away with a cure, for she cries, and is in good earnest; she
cries after us, and is troublesome to us, and shames us." Continued importunity
may be uneasy to men, even to good men; but Christ loves to be cried after.
Secondly, Christ's answer to the disciples quite dashed her expectations;
"I am not sent, but to the lost sheep of the house of Israel; you know
I am not, she is none of them, and would you have me go beyond by commission?"
Importunity seldom conquers the settled reason of a wise man; and those
refusals are most silencing, which are so backed. He doth not only not
answer her, but he argues against her, and stops her mouth with a reason.
It is true, she is a lost sheep, and hath as much need of his care as any,
but she is not of the house of Israel, to whom he was first sent (Acts
iii. 26), and therefore not immediately interested in it, and entitled
to it. Christ was a Minister of the circumcision (Rom. xv. 8); and though
he was intended for a Light to the Gentiles, yet the fulness of time for
that was not now come, the veil was not yet rent, nor the partition-wall
taken down. Christ's personal ministry was to be the glory of his people
Israel; "If I am sent to them, what have I to do with those that are none
of them." Note, It is a great trial, when we have occasion given us to
question whether we be of those to whom Christ was sent. But, blessed be
God, no room is left for that doubt; the distinction between Jew and Gentile
is taken away; we are sure that he gave his life a ransom for many, and
if for many, why not for me?
Thirdly, When she continued her importunity, he insisted upon the unfitness
of the thing, and gave her not only a repulse, but a seeming reproach too
(v. 26); It is not meet to take the children's bread and to cast it to
dogs. This seems to cut her off from all hope, and might have driven her
to despair, if she had not had a very strong faith indeed. Gospel grace
and miraculous cures (the appurtenances of it), were children's bread;
they belonged to them to whom pertained the adoption (Rom. ix. 4), and
lay not upon the same level with that rain from heaven, and those fruitful
seasons, which God gave to the nations whom he suffered to walk in their
own ways (Acts xiv. 16, 17); no, these were peculiar favours, appropriated
to the peculiar people, the garden enclosed. Christ preached to the Samaritans
(John iv. 41), but we read not of any cures he wrought among them; that
salvation was of the Jews: it is not meet therefore to alienate these.
The Gentiles were looked upon by the Jews with great contempt, were called
and counted dogs; and, in comparison with the house of Israel, who were
so dignified and privileged, Christ here seems to allow it, and therefore
thinks it not meet that the Gentiles should share in the favours bestowed
on the Jews. But see how the tables are turned; after the bringing of the
Gentiles into the church, the Jewish zealots for the law are called dogs,
Phil. iii. 2.
Now this Christ urgeth against this woman of Canaan; "How can she expect
to eat of the children's bread, who is not of the family?" Note, 1. Those
whom Christ intends most signally to honour, he first humbles and lays
low in a sense of their own meanness and unworthiness. We must first see
ourselves to be as dogs, less than the least of all God's mercies, before
we are fit to be dignified and privileged with them. 2. Christ delights
to exercise great faith with great trials, and sometimes reserves the sharpest
for the last, that, being tried, we may come forth like gold. This general
rule is applicable to other cases for direction, though here used only
for trial. Special ordinances and church-privileges are children's bread,
and must not be prostituted to the grossly ignorant and profane. Common
charity must be extended to all, but spiritual dignities are appropriated
to the household of faith; and therefore promiscuous admission to them,
without distinction, wastes the children's bread, and is the giving of
that which is holy to the dogs, ch. vii. 6. Procul hinc, procul inde, profani--Off,
ye profane.
3. Here is the strength of her faith and resolution, in breaking through
all these discouragements. Many a one, thus tried, would either have sunk
into silence, or broken out into passion. "Here is cold comfort," might
she have said, "for a poor distressed creature; as good for me to have
staid at home, as come hither to be taunted at and abused at this rate;
not only to have a piteous case slighted, but to be called a dog!" A proud,
unhumbled heart would not have borne it. The reputation of the house of
Israel was not now so great in the world, but that this slight put upon
the Gentiles was capable of being retorted, had the poor woman been so
minded. It might have occasioned a reflection upon Christ, and might have
been a blemish upon his reputation, as well as a shock to the good opinion,
she had entertained of him; for we re apt to judge of persons as we ourselves
find them; and think that they are what they are to us. "Is this the Son
of David?" (might she have said): "Is this he that has such a reputation
for kindness, tenderness, and compassion? I am sure I have no reason to
give him that character, for I was never treated so roughly in my life;
he might have done as much for me as for others; or, if not, he needed
not to have set me with the dogs of his flock. I am not a dog, I am a woman,
and an honest woman, and a woman in misery; and I am sure it is not meet
to call me a dog." No, here is not a word of this. Note, A humble, believing
soul, that truly loves Christ, takes every thing in good part that he saith
and doeth, and puts the best construction upon it.
She breaks through all these discouragements,
(1.) With a holy earnestness of desire in prosecuting her petition.
This appeared upon the former repulse (v. 25); Then came she, and worshipped
him, saying, Lord, help me. [1.] She continued to pray. What Christ said,
silenced the disciples; you hear no more of them; they took the answer,
but the woman did not. Note, The more sensibly we feel the burthen, the
more resolutely we should pray for the removal of it. And it is the will
of God that we should continue instant in prayer, should always pray, and
not faint. [2.] She improved in prayer. Instead of blaming Christ, or charging
him with unkindness, she seems rather to suspect herself, and lay the fault
upon herself. She fears lest, in her first address, she had not been humble
and reverent enough, and therefore now she came, and worshipped him, and
paid him more respect than she had done; or she fears that she had not
been earnest enough, and therefore now she cries, Lord, help me. Note,
When the answers of prayer are deferred, God is thereby teaching us to
pray more, and pray better. It is then time to enquire wherein we have
come short in our former prayers, that what has been amiss may be amended
for the future. Disappointments in the success of prayer, must be excitements
to the duty of prayer. Christ, in his agony, prayed more earnestly. [3.]
She waives the question, whether she was of those to whom Christ was sent
or no; she will not argue that with him, though perhaps she might have
claimed some kindred to the house of Israel; but, "Whether an Israelite
or no, I come to the Son of David for mercy, and I will not let him go,
except he bless me." Many weak Christians perplex themselves with questions
and doubts about their election, whether they are of the house of Israel
or no; such had better mind their errand to God, and continue instant in
prayer for mercy and grace; throw themselves by faith at the feet of Christ,
and say, If I perish, I will perish here; and then that matter will by
degrees clear itself. If we cannot reason down our unbelief, let us pray
it down. A fervent, affectionate Lord, help me, will help us over many
of the discouragements which are sometimes ready to bear us down and overwhelm
us. [4.] Her prayer is very short, but comprehensive and fervent, Lord,
help me. Take this, First, As lamenting her case; "If the Messiah be sent
only to the house of Israel, the Lord help me, what will become of me and
mine," Note, It is not in vain for broken hearts to bemoan themselves;
God looks upon them then, Jer. xxxi. 18. Or, Secondly, As begging grace
to insist her in this hour of temptation. She found it hard to keep up
her faith when it was thus frowned upon, and therefore prays, "Lord, help
me; Lord, strengthen my faith now; Lord, let thy right hand uphold me,
while my soul is following hard after thee," Ps. lxiii. 8. Or, Thirdly,
As enforcing her original request, "Lord, help me; Lord, give me what I
come for." She believed that Christ could and would help her, though she
was not of the house of Israel; else she would have dropt her petition.
Still she keeps up good thoughts of Christ, and will not quit her hold.
Lord, help me, is a good prayer, if well put up; and it is pity that it
should be turned into a byword, and that we should take God's name in vain
in it.
(2.) With a holy skilfulness of faith, suggesting a very surprising
plea. Christ had placed the Jews with the children, as olive-plants round
about God's table, and had put the Gentiles with the dogs, under the table;
and she doth not deny the aptness of the similitude. Note, There is nothing
got by contradicting any word of Christ, though it bear ever so hard upon
us. But this poor woman, since she cannot object against it, resolves to
make the best of it (v. 27); Truth, Lord, yet the dogs eat of the crumbs.
Now, here,
[1.] Her acknowledgment was very humble: Truth, Lord. Note, You cannot
speak so meanly and slightly of a humble believer, but he is ready to speak
as meanly and slightly of himself. Some that seem to dispraise and disparage
themselves, will yet take it as an affront if others do so too; but one
that is humbled aright, will subscribe to the most abasing challenges,
and not call them abusing ones. "Truth, Lord; I cannot deny it; I am a
dog, and have no right to the children's bread." David, Thou hast done
foolishly, very foolishly; Truth, Lord. Asaph, Thou hast been as a beast
before God; Truth, Lord. Agur, Thou art more brutish than any man; Truth,
Lord. Paul, Thou hast been the chief of sinners, art less than the least
of saints, not meet to be called an apostle; Truth, Lord.
[2.] Her improvement of this into a plea was very ingenious; Yet the
dogs eat of the crumbs. It was by a singular acumen, and spiritual quickness
and sagacity, that she discerned matter of argument in that which looked
like a slight. Note, A lively, active faith will make that to be for us,
which seems to be against us; will fetch meat out of the eater, and sweetness
out of the strong. Unbelief is apt to mistake recruits for enemies, and
to draw dismal conclusions even from comfortable premises (Judges xiii.
22, 23); but faith can find encouragement even in that which is discouraging,
and get nearer to God by taking hold on that hand which is stretched out
to push it away. So good a thing it is to be of quick understanding in
the fear of the Lord, Isa. xi. 3.
Her plea is, Yet the dogs eat of the crumbs. It is true, the full and
regular provision is intended for the children only, but the small, casual,
neglected crumbs are allowed to the dogs, and are not grudged them; that
is to the dogs under the table, that attend there expecting them. We poor
Gentiles cannot expect the stated ministry and miracles of the Son of David,
that belongs to the Jews; but they begin now to be weary of their meat,
and to play with it, they find fault with it, and crumble it away; surely
then some of the broken meat may fall to a poor Gentile; "I beg a cure
by the by, which is but a crumb, though of the same precious bread, yet
but a small inconsiderable piece, compared with the loaves which they have."
Note, When we are ready to surfeit on the children's bread, we should remember
how many there are, that would be glad of the crumbs. Our broken meat in
spiritual privileges, would be a feast to many a soul; Acts xiii. 42. Observe
here,
First, Her humility and necessity made her glad of crumbs. Those who
are conscious to themselves that they deserve nothing, will be thankful
for any thing; and then we are prepared for the greatest of God's mercies,
when we see ourselves less than the least of them. The least of Christ
is precious to a believer, and the very crumbs of the bread of life.
Secondly, Her faith encouraged her to expect these crumbs. Why should
it not be at Christ's table as at a great man's, where the dogs are fed
as sure as the children? Observe, She calls it their master's table; if
she were a dog, she was his dog, and it cannot be ill with us, if we stand
but in the meanest relation to Christ; "Though unworthy to be called children,
yet make me as one of thy hired servants: nay, rather let me be set with
the dogs than turned out of the house; for in my Father's house there is
not only bread enough, but to spare," Luke xv. 17-19. It is good lying
in God's house, though we lie at the threshold there.
4. The happy issue and success of all this. She came off with credit
and comfort from this struggle; and, though a Canaanite, approved herself
a true daughter of Israel, who, like a prince, had power with God, and
prevailed. Hitherto Christ hid his face from her, but now gathers her with
everlasting kindness, v. 28. Then Jesus said, O woman, great is thy faith.
This was like Joseph's making himself know to his brethren, I am Joseph;
so here, in effect, I am Jesus. Now he begins to speak like himself, and
to put on his own countenance. He will not contend for ever.
(1.) He commended her faith. O woman, great is thy faith. Observe, [1.]
It is her faith that he commends. There were several other graces that
shone bright in her conduct of this affair-wisdom, humility, meekness,
patience, perseverance in prayer; but these were the product of her faith,
and therefore Christ fastens upon that as most commendable; because of
all graces faith honours Christ most, therefore of all graces Christ honours
faith most. [2.] It is the greatness of her faith. Note, First, Though
the faith of all the saints is alike precious, yet it is not in all alike
strong; all believers are not of the same size and stature. Secondly, The
greatness of faith consists much in a resolute adherence to Jesus Christ
as an all-sufficient Saviour, even in the face of discouragements; to love
him, and trust him, as a Friend, even then when he seems to come forth
against us as an Enemy. This is great faith! Thirdly, Though weak faith,
if true, shall not be rejected, yet great faith shall be commended, and
shall appear greatly well-pleasing to Christ; for in them that thus believe
he is most admired. Thus Christ commended the faith of the centurion, and
he was a Gentile too, he had a strong faith in the power of Christ, this
woman in the good-will of Christ; both were acceptable.
(2.) He cured her daughter; "Be it unto thee even as thou wilt: I can
deny thee nothing, take what thou camest for." Note, Great believers may
have what they will for the asking. When our will conforms to the will
of Christ's precept, his will concurs with the will of our desire. Those
that will deny Christ nothing, shall find that he will deny them nothing
at last, though for a time he seems to hide his face from them. "Thou wouldst
have thy sins pardoned, thy corruptions mortified, thy nature sanctified;
be it unto thee even as thou wilt. And what canst thou desire more?" When
we come, as this poor woman did, to pray against Satan and his kingdom,
we concur with the intercession of Christ, and it shall be accordingly.
Though Satan may sift Peter, and buffet Paul, yet, through Christ's prayer
and the sufficiency of his grace, we shall be more than conquerors, Luke
xxii. 31, 32; 2 Cor. xii. 7-9; Rom. xvi. 20.
The event was answerable to the word of Christ; Her daughter was made
whole from that very hour; from thenceforward was never vexed with the
devil any more; the mother's faith prevailed for the daughter's cure. Though
the patient was at a distance, that was no hindrance to the efficacy of
Christ's word. He spake, and it was done.