Mark 5:21–34
Faith reaches out to Christ and receives saving restoration.
Scripture Text
5:21 When Jesus had crossed back over in the boat to the other side, a great multitude was gathered to Him; and He was by the sea.
5:22 Behold, one of the rulers of the synagogue, Jairus by name, came; and seeing Him, He fell at His feet,
5:23 And begged Him much, saying, “My little daughter is at the point of death. Please come and lay Your hands on her, that she may be made healthy, and live.”
5:24 He went with Him, and a great multitude followed Him, and they pressed upon Him on all sides.
5:25 A certain woman, who had a discharge of blood for twelve years,
5:26 And had suffered many things by many physicians, and had spent all that she had, and was no better, but rather grew worse,
5:27 Having heard the things concerning Jesus, came up behind Him in the crowd, and touched His clothes.
5:28 For she said, “If I just touch His clothes, I will be made well.”
5:29 Immediately the flow of her blood was dried up, and she felt in her body that she was healed of her affliction.
5:30 Immediately Jesus, perceiving in Himself that the power had gone out from Him, turned around in the crowd, and asked, “Who touched my clothes?”
5:31 His disciples said to Him, “You see the multitude pressing against You, and You say, ‘Who touched me?’ ”
5:32 He looked around to see her who had done this thing.
5:33 But the woman, fearing and trembling, knowing what had been done to her, came and fell down before Him, and told Him all the truth.
5:34 He said to her, “Daughter, Your faith has made You well. Go in peace, and be cured of Your disease.”
Faith reaches out to Christ and receives saving restoration.
Jesus’ power restores those who trust Him, overcoming long-standing impurity and suffering.
God's people must bring hopeless cases to Jesus, resist fear, refuse to reject His disruptive mercy, and trust that His holiness cleanses rather than recoils from uncleanness.
- Authority over demonic bondage Jesus confronts and expels a legion of demons from a man beyond human restraint.
- Restoration and rejected presence The restored man sits clothed and sane, while the fearful community asks Jesus to leave.
- Witness sent home Jesus commissions the delivered man to testify to the Lord's mercy among His own people.
- Desperate appeal from Jairus A synagogue leader publicly falls before Jesus and pleads for His dying daughter.
- Hidden faith and public restoration The bleeding woman is healed by faith and publicly restored as daughter, whole, and at peace.
- Faith commanded after death When death seems to close the case, Jesus calls Jairus away from fear into faith.
- Death overcome by Jesus' word Jesus raises the girl with a personal command, revealing authority even over death.
Mark 5 moves from Jesus crossing into unclean territory and delivering a man from a legion of demons, to Jesus returning among Jewish crowds where a bleeding woman is healed by faith, to Jesus raising Jairus's daughter from death and commanding faith over fear.
Mark 5 argues that Jesus' kingdom authority penetrates the most unclean, hopeless, and feared places. He frees a man from demonic occupation, restores Him as a witness, heals a woman whose impurity and suffering have isolated her for twelve years, and raises a dead child by His word. The chapter calls readers away from fear into faith and shows that Jesus' holiness is not contaminated by uncleanness; His holiness cleanses, restores, and gives life.
Theological logic
- Jesus enters territories marked by uncleanness and bondage without being threatened by them.
- Human restraint cannot solve spiritual bondage.
- Demonic powers recognize Jesus' superior authority.
- Jesus' authority over demons is decisive and liberating.
- People may fear Jesus' power more than they rejoice in his mercy.
- Delivered people become witnesses to the Lord's mercy.
- Desperation can drive people of status and people of shame alike to Jesus.
- Faith reaches toward Jesus even when shame and uncleanness would keep a person hidden.
- Jesus does not only heal secretly; he restores publicly and relationally.
- Death does not end Jesus' authority.
- Fear is answered by faith in the person and authority of Jesus.
- Jesus' life-giving word anticipates resurrection hope.
- Name the areas where fear has become more authoritative than Jesus' word.
- Pray for seemingly hopeless people with renewed confidence in Christ's authority.
- Move toward the isolated and ashamed with the mercy of Jesus.
- Tell the whole truth before Christ rather than hiding in shame.
- Turn personal deliverance into testimony of the Lord's mercy.
- Trust Jesus when His timing feels delayed.
- Comfort grieving people with resurrection hope without minimizing sorrow.
- Refuse spectacle-driven faith and seek obedient trust.
- Remember that Jesus' holiness overcomes uncleanness, bondage, and death.
Courageous faith, truthful confession, mercy-shaped witness, hope under delay, reverent confidence in Jesus' authority, compassion for the isolated, and steadfast trust in the Lord of life.
- Deliverance from bondage : Jesus' liberation of the Gerasene man fits the biblical pattern of God rescuing captives from powers too strong for them.
- Defeat of demonic powers : The legion's defeat develops the strong-man theme from Mark 3 and points to Christ's triumph over hostile powers.
- Uncleanness overcome : The chapter gathers tombs, pigs, blood impurity, and death, yet Jesus' holiness brings restoration instead of defilement.
- Testimony to mercy : The restored man's witness echoes the biblical call to declare the works and mercy of the Lord.
- Faith that reaches for Christ : The bleeding woman's faith aligns with the larger biblical pattern of trusting God's power and mercy.
- Peace after salvation : Jesus sends the woman in peace, echoing the biblical fullness of shalom granted by divine salvation.
- Resurrection power : Jesus' raising of Jairus's daughter belongs to the biblical pattern of God giving life to the dead and anticipates the resurrection.
- Do not fear; believe : Jesus' command to Jairus stands in the biblical tradition of God's people being called from fear into trust.
Through His death and resurrection, Jesus cleanses the impurity of sin and grants peace with God to all who trust in Him, restoring them fully into covenant fellowship.