I have another question! In Matthew 15 verse 21 - 28 is "The faith of a canaanite woman", and it says Jesus says to her "I was sent only to the lost sheep of Israel" and then, "it is not right to take the childrens bread and toss it to the dogs"... what does he mean by this? Does he not want to heal her daughter?
Thanks
More commentary from
The Orthodox Study Bible:
15:21-28 The story of ministry to this Gentile woman illustrates the Jewish orientation of Matthew's gospel. This account is also mentioned in Mk 7:24-30, but with two major differences: (1) Matthew record's Christ's words concerning
the lost sheep of the house of Israel (v.24), while Mark does not, and (2) Matthew records the woman using the title
Son of David, a Jewish term for the Messiah, while mark does not. Christ went to the Gentile cities not to preach, but to withdraw from the faithless Pharisees. This is confirmed in Mark's gospel, where we read that Christ "wanted no one to know" He was there, and here, where Christ says that He was only sent to the house of Israel.
15:22 This woman shows immeasurable love--she so identifies with the sufferings of her daughter that she cries "
Have mercy on me," for she sees her daughter's well-being as her own and her daughter's sufferings as her own.
15:23 Christ refuses to answer, not only because she is a Gentile and His ministry before His Passion is first to the Jews, but also to reveal this woman's profound faith and love. Several of the Fathers see the disciples' request to
send her away as an attempt to persuade Jesus to heal the daughter, as if to say, "Give her what she wants so that she will leave." Christ's response indicates this interpretation is correct, for He again refuses to heal the daughter.
15:21-28 This passage is read on days commemorating female martyrs.
15:26-28 Having evoked this woman's love and persistent faith, Christ now reveals her humility. She accepts her place beneath the Jews, who were the chosen people of God, yet still desires a share in God's grace. Christ's hesitancy was not a lack of compassion, but a conscious means of revealing the virtues of this woman, both to the disciples and for her own sake.
Her ultimate acceptance by Christ also points to the gathering of the Gentiles into the Church after Pentecost, no longer as
dogs, but as
children who are invited to eat the
bread of eternal life.
15:29-31 Christ's healing of the multitudes here shows that these Jews actually had less faith than the Canaanite woman (vv. 21-28). Christ healed the woman "with much delay, but these immediately, because she is more faithful than they. He delays with her to reveal her perseverance, while here He bestows the gift immediately to stop the mouths of the unbelieving Jews" (JohnChr).