The Powerful Purpose of Christ
Today we are going to look at the passage in Luke 9:37-45. Jesus, Peter, John and James are coming down the mountain the day after the transfiguration of Jesus, in which his majesty and glory were revealed to the Three. If you add that situation with all of the other signs and wonders they had seen, the power of Christ was well impressed upon them. In this passage there is another powerful encounter as Jesus casts a demon out of a boy. This kind of power can cause people to drool over all the imagination of what you can do. Whether it is the people of Israel ready to conquer the Romans and remove the wicked leaders in the Sanhedrin or the disciples imagining their positions of power alongside of Jesus, we would not use such power for the same thing Jesus did.
Yes, Jesus healed people everywhere he went. But, that wasn’t his main objective. Jesus physically couldn’t fix all the difficulties in the world limited within a human body. But even if he did go around healing people and setting them free from evil spirits, it wouldn’t fix the underlying problem: our sin. Jesus was sent to deal with the root of mankind’s problem. We are a world that has come under the sway of sin and spiritual death. Such a problem needs a spiritual answer. Yet, that answer is counter-intuitive to our worldly thinking. Even when we accept Christ’s death on the cross, we tend to see it as an example of how bad hatred is and how good love is. Jesus is merely an example. However, the testimony of Scripture is that he was paying the price for the sins of mankind. Jesus had to lay down his powerful life and die on a cross in order to deal with our sin. This seems like a waste of power to many people.
Jesus Heals A Possessed Boy
In verses 37-42, a large crowd sees Jesus coming down off the mountain and meets him. Particularly, there is one gentleman who has a demon possessed boy. He begs Jesus for help and states that his disciples (the nine who did not go up the mountain) couldn’t cast out the demon.
Now in the gospel of Mark chapter 9 we are given a lot more detail than Luke gives. Let me go through some of those details. We are told that the boy has been possessed since he was a small child. The spirit had caused him to become mute and deaf. The spirit would often seize the boy near fire or water, thus endangering his life. He would not only seize, but would also foam and gnash his teeth. It would be easy to scoff at the idea of a demon and look at these descriptions as antiquated relics of ignorance. Of course medically we do know much more. However, they had medicine back then as well. Even today, there are incidents that modern medicine have problem explaining. They typically get thrown under the banner of “mental disorders.” Now not all mental issues have to do with demons. However, there are three main problems that crop up in some mental issues. The first is that the mention of Jesus or Scripture triggers events of seizure and difficulty in some. Secondly, they sometimes speak in a different voice cursing Christ, the Bible, and Christians. Lastly, it can be brought to the end at a vocal command through the power of Jesus. These things cannot be mere coincidence or cultural. So this really does seem to be more than just a brain problem. There is a spirit that is doing this to the child.
The 9 disciples that had stayed behind had been trying to cast out this demon without success. Now keep in mind that they had previously gone out throughout Israel healing people and casting out demons. Jesus had given them authority to do so. There was something wrong in this situation and they didn’t know what it was. This goes to show that casting out demons is not about knowing the right words or merely being a disciple of Jesus. Definitely we need to be connected to Christ in a living relationship. But there is more to it than that.
In verse 41 Jesus brings up the issue of faith and perversion. It is not addressed to the disciples, but to the generation as a whole. It seems that this situation is itself a picture of how degraded Israel had become and how plundered by the enemy they were. Spirits cannot just possess someone. They can only take hold of someone when they have willfully opened themselves up to them. This is done through false religions, occult arts, magic, sorcery, fortune tellers or any other such things. Somewhere someone in this family has been going to spirits for something and it has resulted in a small child being possessed. What does faith and perversion have to do with this? God had given Israel perfect laws that would enable them to walk in power before the spirits of this world. He had warned them of those spiritual traps the enemy used to gain power over people. Yet, some did not believe the “old, archaic” words of the Bible. Instead they willfully went their own way seeking power from sources God had told them not to. On top of this, Israel had not merely sought power from another source, they also had done so while still claiming to be God’s people. Their lives had become a mixture of things from the Bible and yet things forbidden in the Bible. To twist God’s ways is to pervert them. Thus the child bound by a demon and the impotence of the disciples is a small picture of the problem throughout all of Israel.
Yet, Jesus tells the man, “If you believe all things are possible.” To which the man replies, “I believe, help my unbelief.” Here we see the mercy of Christ. Though it is frustrating that they are in the situation because of their own willfulness and sin, God still has compassion on us and wants to save us. Jesus points him back to the root problem. If you will have faith in God all things are possible. We are being challenged in this ourselves. We are a generation that is lacking faith in God’s word and in His ways. We have called our perversions acceptable to God by twisting Scripture to our own ends. We need to take warning.
Mark tells us that Jesus commanded the Deaf and mute spirit to come out of the boy. The boy convulsed greatly and screamed and then suddenly stopped. The crowd thought the boy was dead. However, Jesus took the boy by the hand and raised him up and gave him back to his father. This is a picture of us. We come to God full of all manner of evil things begging for help. Though he sets us free, it leaves us in a powerless state like this boy, as if dead. In his mercy, Jesus takes us by the hand and helps us to get up and walk in the new freedom that he has given us. Not all have been possessed by demons, but we all have found ourselves helpless and bound to the lies that they have sown throughout our society. Only Jesus can set us free.
Mark also has the additional information of why the 9 disciples could not cast out the demon. Jesus told them, “This kind can come out by nothing but prayer and fasting.” There are two things that stick out in this answer. First of all, there are kinds of spirits. Some are apparently harder to cast out than others. The disciples had not run into this kind before. The second issue has to do with prayer and fasting. We are not given the explanation of what prayer and fasting does to enable casting out “stronger” spirits. However, the greatest work of prayer is to focus us on God and his work. If we live our lives mostly focused on material things of this world and rarely on God, we will find that we lack power for certain spiritual things. Jesus points his disciples to this area. When he is gone, they are going to need to prayer and fast at greater levels in order to do the work that God has for them.
Christ’s Purpose vs His Power
In verses 43-45 we see an interaction between Jesus and his disciples. All of the displays of power that Jesus had been doing caused them to expect the exact opposite of what Jesus was going to do. They expected a confrontation with the Romans and the leaders of Israel in which Jesus takes over. All of the majestic power of Christ was not headed to this objective. Rather, He was headed to a cross. Even today, many reject Christ because his answer to the world seems weak and pitiful to them. What a colossal waste of power, they think to themselves. This difficulty in understanding God’s ways has been a timeless problem for mankind. We don’t just think differently, but our thoughts lead in the exact opposite direction. The bible tells us that even the foolishness of God is far higher than the greatest wisdom of man. In Luke Jesus says, “let these words sink down into your ears…” A surface understanding alone will not work. Jesus was to be betrayed and killed; get it through your head. If we follow Jesus in a superficial way and ignore all the tough things that he says, we will not get far. The closer Jesus got to the cross the fewer people who gathered around him, until he was all alone. Jesus is the Rejected One. No matter how popular he is in a moment in time, we will all be tested in the long run. You will be forced to choose. Whom are you following? Are you following Jesus or the wise and great of this world? This is the question that is constantly put before those who wish to follow Jesus. To follow Jesus is to pick up your own cross expecting to die along with him. Let these words sink into your ears.
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