N
Nazianzen
Guest
In Matthew 15:22-28, when the Canaanite woman asks Jesus to help her daugher who is possessed, Jesus says, “I was sent only to the lost sheep of the house of Israel.” Why do you suppose he says this? I wonder who he means are the lost sheep? Only the Israelites? The gentiles? Why not the Canaanites?
It seems to me that what happens here is that the woman, moved by her faith to approach Jesus because she believes and trusts that he can help her daughter, only gets what she desires when she allows herself to be humbled. I wonder if this means that when Jesus says, “great is your faith,” he means that her faith is evidenced by her willingness to be humbled before him, or her faith is great because of her humility.
Do you suppose that, if Jesus means that he was not sent to the Canaanites because of their sinfulness, by saying so he is offering her the opportunity to humble herself and thereby make her faith great?
It seems to me that what happens here is that the woman, moved by her faith to approach Jesus because she believes and trusts that he can help her daughter, only gets what she desires when she allows herself to be humbled. I wonder if this means that when Jesus says, “great is your faith,” he means that her faith is evidenced by her willingness to be humbled before him, or her faith is great because of her humility.
Do you suppose that, if Jesus means that he was not sent to the Canaanites because of their sinfulness, by saying so he is offering her the opportunity to humble herself and thereby make her faith great?