Your life is in your hands … There is no such thing as a hopeless situation. Every single circumstance of your life can change!’
Rhonda Byrne
Positive thinking is a central belief in the self-help movement. How reasonable do you think it is to ‘believe in yourself’ no matter what?
Can you think of any circumstances that can’t be changed by the power of positive thinking?
Despite Jesus’ growing reputation, the sight of a respected synagogue ruler falling at the feet of this self-appointed rural rabbi may well have seemed odd and inappropriate to the people watching – especially because of the increasing disapproval expressed by the religious authorities.
What does Jairus’ behaviour and request suggest about his situation?
Laying hands on the sick was a common religious practice that Jairus would have done for others. What’s striking about how Jairus makes this request of Jesus?
Following Jairus’ request, Mark simply tells us that Jesus went with him.
Considering his reluctance to be known as a miracle worker, why do you think Jesus continues to agree to these requests?
What do we learn in verses 25–28 about the woman in the crowd who touched Jesus? How would this woman have felt? In what ways does her situation seem desperate and beyond hope?
As well as chronic illness, the woman’s condition meant social isolation owing to the cultural stigma attached to her bleeding. Desperate, having spent all her money on doctors’ cures, she took the risky step of entering the crowd to get near Jesus. A touch, she thought, might be enough to heal her.
When the woman was brought to Jesus, why do you think she was fearful rather than being overjoyed about her healing?
How do these verses demonstrate Jesus’ tenderness towards this desperate woman?
Jesus could have let her be healed quietly, but instead he draws attention to her. Why do you think Jesus made the woman talk with him about her healing so publicly? What did he want her to understand?
How is this woman different from Jairus? Yet what do they have in common? What does it show about Jesus that he delayed helping Jairus to meet the needs of this unnamed woman?
You can imagine Jairus’ and the disciples’ frustration. From their perspective, Jesus had delayed helping a critically ill child from an important family in order to speak with an unnamed woman about a twelve-year chronic condition. We now discover that during the delay the child had died.
Why, despite Jesus being known as a healer, might everyone at the home of Jairus have lacked any hope for the little girl?
Consider Jesus’ reaction. How does it contrast with their lack of hope? What do you think would be the effect of Jesus’ words if he turned out to be wrong?
How does Jesus respond to the fact of death? How does he speak to the girl?
Twice in this account Jesus has emphasised the importance of faith in him.
Try to imagine that this account was all you had to help you understand the meaning of the word ‘faith’. What is faith? What does it feel like? What does it involve?
Faith in Jesus is an important theme in Mark that is easily misunderstood. Put simply, it involves giving up confidence or trust in ourselves and our own resources and instead placing our confidence in Jesus as the one who alone can meet our deepest needs.
As with the woman and Jairus, faith is displayed most strongly by those who find themselves otherwise powerless and beyond hope.
What things do you hope will provide peace or fulfilment in your own life? Have you ever questioned your faith in the ability of these things to provide what you’re looking for?
Can you understand why people put their faith in Jesus? What have you seen in Jesus that might encourage you to put faith in him?
The gospels are full of people telling their stories - people asking questions, seeking relationships, searching for something more.
A central character, woven throughout each story, is Jesus, a historical figure surrounded by mystery. Join us as we explore these stories, and build up a picture of Jesus through the people he meets and the accounts that are written about him.