God loves you. “ The Lamb, who was killed before the origin of the world, is a man who has received support, splendor, wisdom, power, refinement, whole month, respect, faith and silt। Let him be glorified forever. ”Now came true Amen। In this world you have received everything but so far Jesus has not believed in Christ, you are the saddest and most righteous man ! The poorest people on earth are not without money but without Jesus Amen ! Your first need and need is the forgiveness of eternal security sins, salvation and eternal life – “ Behold, the Lamb of God who has raised the sin of the world’।And he is atonement for our sins, and not only for us, but also for the sins of the whole world। The only Creator God – Ekmatra Caste Man – Ekkatra Blood Red – Ekkatra Problem Sin – Ekkatra Solution Jesus Christ Do you know that there is eternal life even after the deer only God loves you ! Because God loved the world so much that he gave it to his only born Son – No one who believes in him is unhappy, But he may have eternal life, but God reveals his love for us: Christ died for us when we were sinners। Because you are saved by grace by faith; And it is not from you, it is God’s donation; He who is waking up to my door every day hears me waiting for the pillars of my doors, Blessed is that man। But God reveals his love for us: Christ died for us, while we are sinners। But in all these things we are even more than the winners by him, who loved us। Because I have been completely unarmed, neither death nor life, nor angels, neither the princes, nor the rights, nor the things that come from now, nor the things that come later, neither the heights, nor the deep, Neither any other creation can separate us from the love of God in our Lord Christ Jesus। Love is in this – not that we loved God, but that He loved us and sent his Son to be atone for our sins। For God made sin for us, who did not know that we would be the righteousness of God। Jesus said to him: “ Bato, truth and life are me; No one comes to the Father except me. ” Your word is a light for my feet, and a light for my way। I cried before Miramire fell bright; I hope in your word। My eyes are open at night’s guard to meditate on your word। And call me on the day of the storm; I will deliver you, and you will raise me। He cures those with broken hearts and binds them to the ointment of their injuries। You will be in me and ask for whatever you want if my words are in you, and that will be done for you।
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THE 3 LESSONS WE CAN LEARN FROM THE STORY OF JAIRUS’ DAUGHTER

The story of Jarius’ daughter teaches us

of miraculous faith through suffering. Suffering and loss can be lonely ventures in this world. When we are healthy and have provisions, our outlook is bright and our relationships full and supportive. But when suffering, sorrow, and death come, when the cruel bite of sin in our world reminds us of our mortality, we often find ourselves alone. The narrative provided in Mark 5 demonstrates that while suffering can isolate and overwhelm us, faith in Jesus, in His reality and in His timing, provides both comfort and hope in times of trouble. In the preceding chapters, Jesus is seeking specific people with which to interact and using situations to provoke responses from the disciples. Jesus calls the twelve disciples in chapter three, having sought them out individually to follow Him (Mark 1:17; 2:14; 3:13). 

Jesus teaches the crowds through parables and then provides additional instruction to the twelve, highlighting the meaning behind the parables (Mark 4:11). Jesus’ teaching and illustrations flow into life for the disciples as well as He finished parables about faith and then demonstrated their need for faith when a storm arose on the Sea of Galilee that almost sank their ship (Mark 4:37). Jesus called the twelve and was teaching them through Word and action what it means to have faith in Him as God, to trust Jesus to define truth and reality, trusting that His time, purpose, and plan are right and loving. With the resolution of the storm, Jesus with the twelve lands in Gentile territory on the other side of the Sea of Galilee for Jesus to heal a demon-possessed man, returning immediately after to the other side, back in Capernaum. Jesus’ intentionality in seeking the lost and calling them to Himself is overwhelming in this section, flowing into Jesus’ return to Capernaum and the urgent arrival of Jairus to plead for the health of his daughter.

What Is the Story of Jairus’ Daughter?

Mark introduces Jairus as “one of the rulers of the synagogue” in Capernaum (Mark 5:22), most probably where Jesus attended with His disciples as He used Capernaum as a sort of base camp for His earthly ministry (Matt. 9:1; Mark 1:21; 2:1). Jairus demonstrated faith in Jesus by imploring Him to come and heal his twelve-year-old daughter, believing that Jesus could make her well again (Mark 5:23). Afraid for the life of his only daughter (Luke 8:42), Jairus’ faith is tested as Jesus delays His journey, stopping to seek out one more person. Within a crush of bodies in the crowd, an unnamed and outcast woman who had experienced incurable bleeding for 12 years reached out and touched Jesus’ outer coat, believing that “If I touch even his garments, I will be made well” (Mark 5:28). From this touch, the woman was immediately healed, and Jesus interrupted her plan for miraculous anonymity by seeking her out. While her faith made her well, it was not her faith in Jesus’ cloak but in the person of Jesus that provided the healing.

While we seek miracles, Jesus desires relationships and provides the means for connection by calling us out of the crowd to acknowledge our need for Him and His provision for us. For a woman who lived as dead for 12 years, an outcast from society through ritual uncleanness and outside the capacity for touch and relationship, Jesus provides new life and purpose, calling her “Daughter” (Mark 5:34), the only time Jesus is recorded using this affectionate title, demonstrating that healing, hope, and new life come through relationship with Him.

Jairus’ fear for the life of his daughter is realized as men arrived from his home to report that during this delay, his daughter died (Mark 5:35). In the minds of these men, death marked the end of Jesus’ ability to help, but Jesus’ plans and purposes are different from ours and Jesus reiterated His call to Jairus to continue in his belief, acknowledging Jairus’ reality with “Do not fear, only believe” (Mark 5:36). Extricating Himself from the throng, Jesus proceeded with His inner three disciples (Peter, James, and John) to Jairus’ home. Upon their arrival, Jesus challenged the reality of the crowd of mourners already gathered, stating that their pronouncement of the girl’s death was incorrect (Luke 8:52). Again, using touch and calling her in Aramaic, Jesus commanded the little girl to get up (Mark 5:41). From death to life, the 12-year-old girl got up and walked around. Both the parents and the disciples were astonished, “out of their minds with great amazement” (Bible Knowledge Commentary).

What Does the Story of Jairus’ Daughter Teach Us?

The story of Jairus’ daughter cannot be separated from the context of Mark’s narrative as this section has a “sandwich” structure, with the incident of the woman with the issue of blood dividing the story of Jairus’s daughter in the middle to connect the stories together. This connection between the 12-year-old girl and the woman with a 12-year-long hemorrhage provides two examples of the same three lessons from this passage.

Lesson 1: Our Faith Resides in the Person of Christ, Not Our Plans

Both Jairus and the woman had a plan that Jesus disrupted. Jairus rightly believed that Jesus could heal his daughter to make her well, needing only to lay His hands on her, but this belief was challenged and produced fear when his daughter died. The woman’s plan was to remain unknown and unseen, retaining her position on the outside and seeking only physical relief from her perpetual bleeding. Jesus disrupted both their plans because our faith does not reside in a thing, like the laying on of hands or the touch of a garment, but in relationship with the person of Jesus Christ. Jesus challenged Jairus to stop fearing and keep believing in Him, even when it seems impossible. Jesus expanded the woman’s plan by not just healing her physically, but by seeing her and connecting in relational terms, providing wholeness to her healing and addressing her felt need and her actual need of relationship with Him as His child.

Lesson 2: Trust Jesus to Define Reality and Truth, Not the Crowd

The disciples were confounded with Jesus’ question about who touched Him, stressing what they thought seemed obvious that everyone was touching Him as the crowd pressed upon them. Mark notes that as Jesus looked around, to the probable confusion of the disciples, the woman knew and responded. The crowd viewed the woman as unhealable and unclean, beyond help (5:26), but Jesus saw her and sought her, changing her reality through relationship with Him and bringing her from death to life. She was not beyond His capacity or concern. The men who arrived from Jairus’s home believed that death meant the end of Jesus’ ability to heal Jairus’s daughter. “Your daughter is dead. Why trouble the Teacher any further?” (Mark 5:35). The professional mourners laughed at Jesus when He said “The child is not dead but sleeping” (Mark 5:39). When all hope seems lost – when life goes from bad to dead – we need to see things not like the crowd, but like Jesus. Each touch matters. Even death cannot contain or disrupt the purpose and provision of our Savior (1 Cor. 15:20-26). When the troubles around us seem insurmountable, the waves are crashing over the gunnels and we have tried everything we can try, “Do not be afraid, only believe” (Mark 5:36).

Lesson 3: Our Time and God’s Time May Be Different

Twelve years. Twelve years must have felt like forever for the woman with the issue of blood. She had tried everything and “had spent all that she had, and was no better but grew worse” (Mark 5:26). According to the Law, this woman’s condition would have made her ritually unclean and exclude her from social relationships as anything she touched or that touched her would be made unclean as well (Lev. 15:25-27). Like a leper, this woman would have to live alone and isolated from others. For Jairus and his daughter, twelve years was too short. She was only twelve, still a little girl (Mark 5:41), his only daughter (Luke 8:42). The same amount of time, but the experience of these years was vastly different. This young girl lived her twelve years in relationship with her parents and community, about to enter puberty and womanhood herself, while this woman lived alone and unclean, outside the community. Jairus found Jesus upon His return to the shore and pleaded for Him to come and heal his daughter, but Jesus delayed to identify someone who touched Him in a crushing crowd of people. So close, but then she died. If only Jesus had been there, maybe she would not have died. This was the response of Mary and Martha to Jesus at the death of their brother, Lazarus (John 11:21, 32). If only God had intervened differently or sooner for something in our lives, we wouldn’t be in this situation or have to experienced this loss or suffering. God’s timing, purpose, and plans are often different from ours, but His purpose is always for His glory (John 11:41 Cor. 10:312 Cor. 1:20). God is working for us and in us for His good pleasure (Phil. 2:13), often using time and process to help us get to the end of ourselves and our own assumption of self-sufficiency, so we can learn dependency and sufficiency in Him alone (2 Cor. 3:52 Cor. 12:9). Do not fear, but keep believing.

The Bible provides the story of the work of God as the Word of God throughout time, speaking in and to the lives of people just like you and me. From the fear and urgency of sickness and death that turn a respected community leader into an imploring father on his knees to the hopelessness and helplessness of a woman seeking relief from every source without results, we can relate. These are our experiences – suffering, struggle, fear, and loss. We attempt our plans, but see our capacity as insufficient or too late, feeling like life is too long or too short and God is delayed or absent in our need. But the lesson of this young girl and older woman is just the opposite. God loves us and seeks us out, crossing a sea in terrifying storms to show His mercy and compassion in our sinfulness (Mark 5:19). “Trust in the Lord with all your heart, and do not lean on your own understanding (or plans or perceptions). In all your ways acknowledge Him, and He will make straight your paths” (Prov. 3:5-6). Our faith resides in the person of Jesus Christ, who loves us and gave Himself for us (Eph. 5:2). While we may feel overwhelmed and alone, He is here and His timing and purpose are perfect (Ps. 18:30). He is working all things together for His good (Rom. 8:28) and for His glory (1 Cor. 10:31), conforming us to the image of Christ (Rom. 8:29-30), making all things new (Rev. 21:5), because He loves us (Rom. 5:8Rom. 8:37-39Eph. 2:4-10).

For he that findeth me shall find life, and shall receive mercy from the Lord. But he that sinneth against me, harmeth his own soul; All those who hate me love death.’ Proverb. 8:35-36 But God shows his love for us in this: While we were still sinners, Christ died for us. Romans 5:8 He committed no sin, nor was any guile found in his mouth; He did not rebuke in return; He did not threaten when he suffered, but committed himself to the righteous judge. He Himself bore our sins in His own body on the cross, that we might die to sins and live to righteousness; By His stripes you were healed. 1 st. Proverb. 8:35-36 Nor is salvation in any other; For there is no other name under heaven given among men by which we must be saved.” Acts 4:12 Jesus said to him: “I am the way, the truth, and the life; No one comes to the Father except through me.” John 14:6 Behold, he comes with the clouds, and every eye shall see him, even those who despise him; And all the tribes of the earth will mourn because of him. So be it! Amen! Revelation 1:7 And he was clothed in blood; And his name is called ‘Word of God’. Revelation 19:13 “And behold, I come quickly; And I have my reward to give to every man according to his work. I am Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the end, the first and the last.” Revelation 22:12-13 Note: Today people don’t even have time to go to heaven. Believe in Jesus Christ and you will receive forgiveness of sins, salvation and eternal life.

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