Mark 7:31–37
The Messiah opens what is closed and restores what is impaired.
Scripture Text
7:31 Again He departed from the borders of Tyre and Sidon, and came to the sea of Galilee, through the middle of the region of Decapolis.
7:32 They brought to Him one who was deaf and had an impediment in His speech. They begged Him to lay His hand on Him.
7:33 He took Him aside from the multitude, privately, and put His fingers into His ears, and He spat, and touched His tongue.
7:34 Looking up to heaven, He sighed, and said to Him, “Ephphatha!” that is, “Be opened!”
7:35 Immediately His ears were opened, and the impediment of His tongue was released, and He spoke clearly.
7:36 He commanded them that they should tell no one, but the more He commanded them, so much the more widely they proclaimed it.
7:37 They were astonished beyond measure, saying, “He has done all things well. He makes even the deaf hear, and the mute speak!”
The Messiah opens what is closed and restores what is impaired.
Jesus fulfills Isaiah’s promise by restoring what sin has broken.
God's people must stop hiding behind tradition, reputation, external religion, and blame-shifting. They must submit to Scripture, confess heart corruption, seek Christ's cleansing mercy, and rejoice that His grace reaches outsiders and opens what sin and brokenness have closed.
- External tradition challenges Jesus' disciples Religious authorities accuse Jesus' disciples of violating the tradition of the elders concerning handwashing.
- Jesus exposes hollow worship Jesus applies Isaiah to the leaders, exposing worship that uses God-language while the heart remains far from God.
- Human tradition nullifies God's command The Corban example shows how religious tradition can be used to evade obedience to God's command.
- True defilement is redefined Jesus teaches that defilement comes from within, from the corrupt heart, not from food entering the body.
- Gentile faith receives messianic mercy The Syrophoenician woman humbly receives the priority of Israel and yet trusts the abundance of Jesus' mercy for Gentile outsiders.
- Creation-restoring mercy opens ears and tongue Jesus heals a deaf and speech-impaired man, fulfilling restoration imagery and causing the crowd to marvel that He does everything well.
Mark 7 moves from religious accusation over external defilement, to Jesus' indictment of tradition that nullifies God's word, to His teaching that evil comes from the human heart, and then to mercy that crosses into Gentile and Decapolis regions through deliverance and healing.
Mark 7 argues that Jesus' authority reaches beyond ritual disputes to the true condition of humanity before God. Human tradition becomes evil when it replaces God's command. External washings cannot cleanse the heart. Defilement arises from inward corruption and expresses itself in sinful words, desires, and actions. Yet Jesus' mercy is not trapped within purity boundaries or ethnic expectations. The Gentile woman's daughter is delivered, and the deaf man is restored, showing that the kingdom brings cleansing, deliverance, and new-creation restoration through Jesus.
Theological logic
- Religious tradition can become a rival authority to God's command.
- External religious honor can conceal inward distance from God.
- Worship becomes vain when human rules are taught as divine doctrine.
- Piety that avoids obedience is rebellion disguised as devotion.
- True defilement is moral and spiritual before it is external or ritual.
- The human heart is the source of evil expression.
- The disciples remain slow to understand Jesus' purity teaching.
- Jesus' mission to Israel has priority, but his mercy is abundant enough to reach Gentile outsiders.
- Faith may appear as humble persistence that receives Jesus' word and trusts his mercy.
- Jesus' restorative power fulfills prophetic hope.
- Jesus' works testify to divine goodness and new-creation restoration.
- Do not treat physical gestures as formulaic method.
- Do not ignore prophetic fulfillment context.
- Do not separate healing from messianic mission.
- Do not minimize Gentile inclusion.
- Christ meets individuals personally.
- Healing reflects messianic identity.
- Divine word brings restoration.
- Compassion accompanies authority.
- Spiritual deafness requires divine opening.
- Audit inherited practices by asking whether they serve or replace God's word.
- Confess any form of worship that has become lip-service without heart-nearness.
- Identify pious excuses used to avoid costly obedience.
- Pray through Jesus' list of heart-born evils with honest repentance.
- Stop treating sin as merely external influence and bring the heart before Christ.
- Teach holiness as inward transformation, not merely visible conformity.
- Pray for Christ's mercy for those outside expected religious boundaries.
- Bring afflicted children and loved ones to Jesus with humble persistence.
- Ask Jesus to open ears to hear His word and loosen tongues to speak His praise.
- Proclaim Jesus' works with understanding, not uncontrolled spectacle.
Scripture-governed obedience, heart-level repentance, humility, mercy toward outsiders, honest confession of inward evil, reverent worship, faithful family obedience, and restored hearing and speech under Christ.
- Lips and heart : Jesus applies Isaiah's critique of hollow worship to the religious leaders challenging Him.
- God's command over tradition : Jesus upholds God's command to honor parents against tradition-based evasion.
- Heart corruption : Jesus' teaching that evil comes from within aligns with the Old Testament's diagnosis of the human heart.
- Food and purity transition : Jesus' declaration concerning food anticipates the New Testament's wider teaching on clean and unclean.
- Nations receiving blessing : The Syrophoenician woman anticipates the blessing of the nations through Israel's Messiah.
- Crumbs and abundance : The woman's crumb imagery trusts that even the overflow of messianic provision is sufficient.
- Demonic deliverance : Jesus' deliverance of the Gentile woman's daughter continues His authority over unclean spirits.
- The deaf hear and the mute speak : The Decapolis healing echoes Isaiah's promise of restoration when God comes to save.
- He has done everything well : The crowd's declaration resonates with creation goodness and new-creation restoration.
The Messiah who opens deaf ears ultimately opens sinful hearts through His atoning death and victorious resurrection, restoring life to all who believe.