Copycat Faith: Matthew 14:34-36


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At the end of a long twenty-four hours and the end of a tiring night of fighting the wind while crossing the lake, Jesus and His disciples arrive at Gennesaret. However, while some of the gospel writers have stopped giving details, Matthew and Mark include a few verses about what happened after they landed.

While it would be very easy to skim over these verses in favor of a more glamorous miracle, I wonder if you’ll catch some interesting details in these three verses that remind you of miracles we have already looked at.

Our passage is found in the gospel of Matthew, chapter 14, and we will read it from the God’s Word translation. Starting in verse 34, Matthew tells us that:

34 They crossed the sea and landed at Gennesaret. 35 The men there recognized Jesus and sent messengers all around the countryside. The people brought him everyone who was sick. 36 They begged him to let them touch just the edge of his clothes. Everyone who touched his clothes was made well.

Do you remember earlier this year we spent an episode that focused on a woman pushing her way through a crowd just to touch the edge of Jesus’ garment? When reading our passage for this episode, this miracle comes to mind. This got me thinking about where the woman’s miracle took place. While the gospels aren’t real explicit about where the synagogue leader who Jesus was going to help lived, when we read the broader context, we can conclude that that set of miracles likely happened in Capernaum.

I then did a quick search and discovered that Gennesaret and Capernaum were neighboring cities on the north side of the Sea of Galilee. What we read in the three summary verses we are focusing on in this episode is likely a direct result of the miracle we read about where the woman pushed her way through the crowd. All these miracles show us one big, clear theme: Faith, when added to just a sliver of Jesus, is capable of extraordinary miracles. The faith of all these people, when mixed with a momentary touch of Jesus’ garment experienced healing.

However, while looking up Gennesaret, I discovered that another prominent miracle happened here, and this other miracle is one that we looked at earlier this year as well. While Matthew and Mark are the gospels that give us the summary we are focusing in on in this episode, Luke, chapter 5, shares a different miracle that happened at Gennesaret.

Luke’s Gennesaret miracle is where Peter and the other fishermen disciples get a miraculous catch of fish. It is likely that while Jesus may have been raised in Nazareth, the group of most famous disciples, specifically Peter, Andrew, James, and John very well could have grown up in Gennesaret. This is where their fishing business was centered, and it was where Jesus invited them to become followers and “fishers of men”.

While some might think that it is too great of a stretch to take, my mind clearly sees a connection between the miraculous catch of fish miracle, and the miracles we see included in these transition verses. While it would be easy to connect the passages by saying that both events include faith, it is significant in my mind the type of faith that each of these events display. When we look at both of these events and the faith that each includes, we discover that each event and each miracle has faith built on the foundation of another person’s experience or word.

When we look at Jesus asking Peter to go out fishing when it was the worst time of day for catching fish, Peter takes Jesus up on the challenge. The little bit of faith Peter had, whether it was based on seeing if Jesus would be right or proving Jesus wrong, Peter and the other fishermen take Jesus at His word and experience a miraculous catch of fish that should not have happened.

In our transition passage of miracles, we discover that this region likely had heard about the woman’s almost secret miracle, and they were willing to claim the truth that if touching Jesus’ garment healed someone else, then touching it personally would be enough to heal me. All the sick people who were brought to Jesus simply wanted to touch his garment because they knew in their hearts that this simple act would heal them.

This makes me wonder something about faith: When we see people demonstrate faith in Jesus, does it show more faith to think Jesus can touch them and heal them personally, or does it display more faith to simply believe that touching the edge of His garment will make them well?

As I think about this, I imagine that those who believed that touching the edge of Jesus’ garment had more faith. If we were to imagine the formula for a miracle as the sum of two element: Jesus and faith, the more we increase Jesus, the less faith we would need, but the more faith we have, the less Jesus we would need. However, this does not necessarily mean that Jesus is not needed for a miracle to happen; it simply means that it would take an extraordinary level of faith to overcome the absence of Jesus.

This detail is incredibly relevant for us today. If miracles work based on this formula, and provided that the miracle will bring God glory, then our faith in this life is critically important. If we read about miracles in Jesus ministry where little faith is present, we can see Jesus is clearly present. This is the case for the miracle of the miraculous catch of fish. Peter likely had no faith, but only a desire to prove Jesus wrong. Any faith that was present was likely just enough to follow through with the actions of fishing to get his point across.

The next stage of faith is displayed by the sick people in the next time we see Gennesaret mentioned in the gospels. They have a lot of faith based on the evidence they had seen and heard about Jesus, and this means that their faith only needed to touch something connected with Jesus to be healed.

This doesn’t look too good for us living today, because the closest we can come to touching something of Jesus’ is by connecting with a group of people who are His followers – specifically people who are reflecting His character. This is something we can and should do, but it doesn’t mean that we can skimp at all regarding our faith. Instead, this means that we would need extraordinary faith in order to see miracles in our lives, and while this may sound discouraging, in our case, we have another option.

For those of us living 2,000+ years later, we have the option of leaning into the Holy Spirit for both our connection to Jesus and for our source of faith. With a Holy Spirit connection, we can have both the faith we need and the connection we need to see and experience miracles in our own lives. The big test of our faith is actually choosing to step out in faith that we will get answers and see the miracle.

I will be the first to say that sometimes the miracle doesn’t happen the way we’d expect it to, and other times, the miracle we are asking for doesn’t happen. However, the big thing for us to remember is that all the miracles Jesus did brought glory to God, and all the miracles we see Him doing today will ultimately bring glory to God as well. While it takes faith and trust to believe God knows what He is doing, we can have faith that every miracle we see today is given to help bring more people into a saving relationship with Jesus for eternity!

As we come to the end of another podcast episode, here are the challenges I will leave you with:

If you are uncertain how much faith you have or how much faith you need, don’t let your questions or doubt stop you from seeking God and from stepping out in faith. God rarely gives people the end picture before they have begun, and this is because knowing the end from the beginning, God knows we would either chicken out of His plan for us, or we’d get arrogant and try to push our own way. Learn to trust God and walk with Him one step of faith at a time!

Also, always pray and study the Bible for yourself to continue growing personally towards God. God wants a personal connection with you and prayer and Bible study are two of the best ways to grow this connection!

And as I end every set of challenges by saying in one way or another, never stop short of, back away from, chicken out of, or walk away from where God wants to lead you to in your life with Him!

Year of Miracles – Episode 29: In a transition two of the gospels include, we discover a series of miracles Jesus does that remind us of a miracle that happened earlier in Jesus’ ministry, and in a place that had a much different miracle take place as well. Discover how three verses can transform your view of the importance of faith in your life living 2,000+ years later!

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