(Compare Mark 7:24–30)
DISCOVERY OF THE FACTS
1. Faith Seeking a Blessing, vv. 21, 22
Where is the scene of this miracle laid? For what purpose did our Lord depart to those parts? (12:15; 14:3; 15:12.) Did He desire to have His presence in those parts known? (Mark 7:24.) Why did it become known? Can it ever be hid when He is present in a house?
Who came to Him there? What brought her? What made her think that He could help her? How did she show that she was in earnest? (“Cried,” v. 22; “crieth” vv. 23, 25, 27.) What was her prayer? Did He often hear that cry? (9:27; 17:15; Luke 17:13; 18:13.) Did He ever let it pass unheeded? Why did she cry: “Have mercy on me”? Why didn’t she cry: “Have mercy on my daughter”? How did she address Him? What did the title “Son of David” mean? (1:1; 20:30, 31; 22:42–45.)
2. Faith Tested, vv. 23–26
What was Christ’s reply? Why did He not answer? Did He answer her by anything if not by a word? What prayer did the disciples make to Him? Why? Did they want Him to heal her child and thus send her away, or simply send her away without the blessing? (Matt. 19:13; Luke 18:39.) What did He reply? What did His answer imply under the circumstances? What did He mean by saying that He was sent only to the lost sheep of the house of Israel? (John 10:16; Eph. 2:16, 17.) When was the barrier that stood between Christ and the Gentiles removed? (Eph. 2:15, 16.)
Did she give up? Suppose she had? Did her persistence do any good? What is meant by “she worshipped Him”? What was her prayer? What were its characteristics? What did our Lord reply? What sentence is added in Mark’s account? (Mark 7:27.) What is implied by “Let the children first be fed”? What did He mean by “the children’s bread”? (Ro. 9:4.) Was the word He used as harsh as “dogs” sounds to us? Was the Gentiles’ position like that of a little dog under the table compared with Israel’s as a child at the table?
3. Faith Overcoming Difficulties and Obtaining the Blessing, vv. 27, 28
What did the woman reply? What does the answer reveal? Is one who is willing to take a lowly place likely to get a blessing from Christ? (8:8; Ps. 51:4, 5; Luke 15:18, 19; 23:40–42.) Is one who does not? (Luke 18:11.) What is the force of her reasoning: “The dogs eat of the crumbs which fall from their master’s table”? In what sense was what she asked crumbs that fell from the Master’s table?
What reward did she get? What was it overcame the real obstacle that lay in the way of His granting her request? What word of Christ is illustrated by that? (Matt. 21:21.) What did this woman’s faith make her? (Gal. 3:7.) Whose else faith did our Lord commend as great? (8:8–10.) Where do we find the greatest faith today, in Christian or heathen nations? What does faith usually get? (8:13; 9:29; Mark 5:34; 9:23; Luke 7:50; 18:42, 43; John 4:50–53.) When was her daughter healed? Where can any one find deliverance from Satan’s power? How can he get it?
CLASSIFICATION OF TEACHINGS
1. Our Lord Jesus
His nature—divine, 25; human, 27.
His office—Messiah, 22; sent of God, 24.
His desire for solitude; could not be hid, 21, 22.
His mission—first to the Jew, 23, 24, 26; then to the Gentile, 26.
His fidelity to His mission, 24.
His compassion—could not send the needy away unhelped, 23, 24; healed the sufferer, 28.
His justice—demanded that the woman take her right place before He granted the desired blessing, 26.
What He does—tries faith, 23, 24; answers prayer; gives faith all it asks; commends faith; heals the sick, 28; delivers from Satan’s power those who are grievously vexed by him, 22, 28.
2. The Syrophoenician Woman
(1). Her position:
Outside the covenant promises and blessings, 22, 24, 27; in sore distress, 22; no helper, 25.
(2). What she did:
Believed in Jesus as the Messiah, came to Him, at first on wrong grounds, prayed, believed, 22, 28; worshipped, persisted, 25–27; humbled herself and took her rightful place, 27.
(3). What she got:
Testing, instruction, 23–26; commendation, blessing, 28.
Another arrangement:
(1). Her trouble, 22.
(2). Her hindrances:
Her position as a heathen, 22, 24; the unsympathetic disciples, the seemingly unheeding Saviour, 23.
(3). Her mistake:
Came as one within the covenant, 22–24.
(4). Her faith:
Great, 28; prayerful, persistent, 22, 25; prevailing, 24, 28.
(5). Her prayer:
Earnest, 22, 23; direct, brief, personal, 25; definite, 22, 25; humble, persistent, 22, 25, 27; believing, prevailing, 28.
(6). Her humility:
Took the dog’s place, 27.
(7). Her victory:
Immediate, complete, 28.
3. The Daughter
What she was—in Satan’s power, grievously tormented, 22.
What she had—a believing, praying mother, 22.
What was done for her—taken in prayer to Jesus, 22, 25, 27.
What she got—immediate and complete deliverance, 28.
4. Faith
Where found—often where least expected, 22, 28.
In whom rooted—Jesus, 22.
How manifested—in coming to, praying to, holding on to, expecting much from Jesus, 22, 25, 27.
What it accomplishes—overcomes seemingly insurmountable obstacles, 24; obtains all it asks, pleases Christ, wins commendation, 28.
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R.A. Torrey (1856 - 1928)
An American evangelist, pastor, educator, and writer. Called by D. L. Moody to head Bible institute in Chicago (now Moody Bible Institute). Dean of Bible Institute of Los Angeles. Pastorates included Chicago Avenue Church (now Moody Memorial) and Church of the Open Door, Los Angeles. Worldwide evangelistic meetings with Charlie Alexander. Founded Montrose Bible Conference, PA. Wrote more than forty books.Torrey held his last evangelistic meeting in Florida in 1927, additional meetings being canceled because of his failing health. He died at home in Asheville, North Carolina, on October 26, 1928, having preached throughout the world and written more than 40 books. Torrey-Gray Auditorium, the main auditorium at Moody, was named for Torrey and his successor, James M. Gray. At Biola, the Torrey Honors Institute honors him, as does the university's annual Bible conference.
Reuben Archer Torrey was an American evangelist, pastor, educator, and writer. Held evangelistic meetings around the world with song leader Charlie Alexander. Called by D.L. Moody to head the Bible Institute of the Chicago Evangelization Society (now Moody Bible Institute); Dean of Bible Institute of Los Angeles; pastorates included Chicago Avenue Church (now Moody Memorial Church) and Church of the Open Door, Los Angeles.
Besides his obvious gifts in all these areas, he was also a man of prayer, a student of the Bible, and an outstanding personal soul-winner. It is said that he daily read the Bible in four languages, having a good working knowledge of Greek and Hebrew. Some students of church history feel he did more to promote personal evangelism than any other one man since the days of the apostles. His prayer life has seldom been equaled in the annals of Christendom.
Reuben A. Torrey wrote some forty books and his practical writings on the Holy Spirit, prayer, salvation, soul-winning, and evangelism are still favorites of many Christians.