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- The Life Of Jesus Christ In Its Historical Connexion
- Section 187. Christ Cures A Demoniacal Youth After The Disciples Had Attempted It In Vain. (Mark, Ix., 14; Matt., Xvii., 14; Luke, Ix., 37.) -He Reproves The Unbelieving Multitude.
Section 187. Christ Cures a Demoniacal Youth after the Disciples had attempted it in vain. (Mark, ix., 14; Matt., xvii., 14; Luke, ix., 37.)--He Reproves the unbelieving Multitude.
In the mean time, Christ suddenly appeared amid the throng, to their great surprise. [512] Part of the multitude were full of hope that He would do what his disciples had failed to accomplish; others, doubtless, as anxiously hoped that his efforts would be as impotent as theirs. In this, as in other cases, the Saviour combined earnest reproof with con descending love. He reproved them because his long labours had not yet satisfied them; because they still felt no higher than corporeal wants; because their unbelief still demanded sensible miracles. "O faithless generation! how long shall I be with you and suffer you." [513]
The demoniac was brought in; and, as usual in such cases, the Divine manifestation appears to have produced a crisis, attraction and repulsion. His convulsions came on with new power. To prepare the mind of the father, Christ listened patiently to his history of the disease, which he closed, as if oppressed by the sight of his suffering son, with the prayer, "But if thou canst do any thing, have compassion on us and help us." Fervent as the prayer was, the words, "If thou canst do any thing," implying a distant doubt, led Christ to reprove him gently, and encourage him to believe, not by saying, "Doubt not; I can do all things," but by pointing out to him the defect within himself: "Can I do any thing? Know that if thou canst believe, all things are possible to him that believeth" (thou thyself canst do all things, if thou only believest; faith can do all). [514] The gentle reproof had its full effect; the father, full of feeling, cried out in tears, "Yes, Lord, I believe (yet I feel as yet that I do not believe sufficiently); help thou my unbelief." Christ then spoke in tones of. confident command; and the demoniac suffered a new and intense paroxysm, which exhausted all his strength. He lay like a corpse; "but Jesus took him by the hand and lifted him up, and he arose."