Portraits of Power Matthew 8:1-17

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Intro:

If you were to take a tour of the White House you would be taken by the portraits of all the past presidents
Each portrait is meant to portray power and confidence
Contrast that with the Haunted Mansion at Disneyland
As you walk down the hallway to get on the ride you walk by portraits of previous owners of the Mansion
These are holograms, where the eyes follow you, are meant to scare you and make you laugh
Both walls of portraits are meant to convey a message
Matthew does the same thing with chapter 8
Today we are going to look at three portraits of Jesus’ power
Each portrait is a picture of the of healing of an unlikely person
Thru these portraits you will not only see the power of Jesus but you will sense His touch, experience His Openness, and see His compassion,
That power is still at work today and you can experience His touch and compassion through your faith

Read Matthew 8:1-4

Transition:
It is important to remember that the Gospel of Matthew is not written on a linear timeline
He is trying to establish Jesus’ claim of being the Messiah to the Jewish reader
In establishing Jesus’ messiahship Matthew demonstrated His legal qualification through His genealogy,
His prophetic qualification through the fulfillment of prophecy by His birth and infancy,
His divine qualification by the Father’s own attestation at His baptism,
His spiritual qualification by His perfect resistance to Satan’s temptations
His theological qualification through the teaching of the Sermon on the Mount.
In chapters 8 and 9 Matthew dramatically sets forth still another qualification: Jesus’ divine power.
Jesus’ miracles were the supreme proof of His divinity and the irrefutable credentials of His messiahship
Jesus’ authority over sickness, demons and nature summons people to recognize his authority over their lives
What makes these portraits so relatable is who he touched and how he went about it
In all three miracles Jesus ministered to the needs of someone who was most loathed by society, a leper, a gentile, and a woman
Our Lord showed special compassion toward those for whom society had special disdain.

Power thru Touch vs. 1-4

The first portrait we look at is one of power thru touch
The first healing we look at is Jesus touching a leper
In New Testament times disease was rampant and medical science as we know it did not exist.
Sufferers were often left scarred, deformed, crippled, or otherwise debilitated for the rest of their lives.
Plagues would sometimes wipe out entire villages
For those of us who live in a society where basic good health is accepted largely as a matter of course, it is difficult to appreciate the impact Jesus’ healing ministry had in Palestine.
When Jesus healed, He did so with a word or a touch
He healed instantaneously
He healed totally, not partially, no matter how serious the disease or deformity
That’s going to be tested right after the sermon on the mount
As Jesus comes down from the mountain he encounters a leper
Leprosy was the most feared disease of the ancient world, and even today it cannot be totally cured
Spongy, tumor like swellings would eventually grow on the face and body, and the bacillus would become systemic and affect internal organs, while the bones would begin to deteriorate.
Anyone who had leprosy was pronounced unclean by the priests and became a social pariah
Among the sixty-one defilements of ancient Judaism, leprosy was second only to a dead body in seriousness. The Talmud forbade a Jew from coming closer than six feet to a leper
The first sign of social distancing
As hideous as this disease was he was the first to be healed by Jesus in this sequence
Even more scandalous was that Jesus touched him
Vs. 3 makes it very clear that Jesus reached for him and touched him
Jesus wanted to make him clean
The first portrait of power is the power of Jesus’ touch
When you have been touched by Jesus through healing it changes you
When our oldest daughter was healed it changed more than us
The doctors were still talking about it a month later
Jesus has the power to touch you
That’s why I am amazed that people won’t come up to the altar for prayer
James 5:14 ESV
Is anyone among you sick? Let him call for the elders of the church, and let them pray over him, anointing him with oil in the name of the Lord.

Power thru Faith vs. 5-13

The second portrait we look at is one of power thru faith
Next Jesus deals with a Gentile soldier
He was the commander of 100 soldiers
Many commentators believe that the first three miracles of Matthew 8 occurred on the same day.
If so, Jesus entered Capernaum only a short while after healing the leper.
It was a lovely town in Jesus’ day and He spent considerable time there, much of it perhaps in Peter’s home
Most Roman soldiers were hated by the Jews, but this one was loved
He was held in great esteem by the Jews of Capernaum, because, as they told Jesus, “He is worthy for You to grant this to him; for he loves our nation, and it was he who built us our synagogue”
Luke 7:3–4 ESV
When the centurion heard about Jesus, he sent to him elders of the Jews, asking him to come and heal his servant. And when they came to Jesus, they pleaded with him earnestly, saying, “He is worthy to have you do this for him,
Like Cornelius (Acts 10:2), this centurion was undoubtedly a God-fearing Gentile.
The fact that the centurion cared so much for his servant set him apart from the typical Roman soldier, who could be brutally heartless
vs. 7 Jesus was willing to come and heal the servant
Here we see Jesus’ heart for the world
Jews didn’t enter the homes of Gentiles
It made them unclean
vs. 8 The Centurion didn’t consider himself worthy of having the Messiah coming to him
He tells Jesus to “Say the word” and my servant will be made well
Jesus marvels at this faith
In fact, he remarks to those with him that he hadn’t encountered faith like this in Israel
Israel is a picture of the church today
They have the power at their fingertips but they don’t possess the faith
2 Corinthians 5:7 ESV
for we walk by faith, not by sight.
We need to be reminded by people like the Roman Centurion that faith can move God to act
Hebrews 11:1 ESV
Now faith is the assurance of things hoped for, the conviction of things not seen.
Faith also leans on the Word of God and trusts for it to be true
Matthew 21:21 ESV
And Jesus answered them, “Truly, I say to you, if you have faith and do not doubt, you will not only do what has been done to the fig tree, but even if you say to this mountain, ‘Be taken up and thrown into the sea,’ it will happen.
Jesus told the Centurion “Let it be done.”

Power thru Compassion vs. 14-17

The final portrait we look at is power thru compassion
We see two acts of compassion in the passage
First, Peter’s mother-in-law was sick in a bed with a fever
Second, that evening he healed all who were sick
Jesus doesn’t look at any illness as too small
She could’ve rode the fever out and been fine the next day
Jesus touched her because it was killing her to be ill with guests in the house who she couldn’t serve
In some cultures it is a great humiliation to leave guests unserved
As soon as she was made well she got up and began to serve
Jesus showed compassion by helping her save face
That evening Peter’s house and surrounding area was filled with demon oppressed and the sick
He healed all of them
Jesus has compassion on everyone
Lamentations 3:22–23 ESV
The steadfast love of the Lord never ceases; his mercies never come to an end; they are new every morning; great is your faithfulness.
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