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thine hand upon her, and she shall live." Thus St. Matthew records his words, but the others with an important variation:-"My little daughter lieth at the point of death."* (Mark v. 23.) " He had one only daughter, about twelve years of age, and she lay a dying." (Luke viii. 42.) Thus they speak of her as dying when the father came, which the latter part of the history shows to have been the more exact, St. Matthew as already dead. Yet these differences are not hard to adjust; he left her at the last gasp; he knew not whether to regard her as alive or dead; he knew that life was ebbing so fast when he quitted her side, that she could scarcely be living now; and yet, having no certain notices of her death, he was perplexed whether to speak of her as departed or not, and thus at one moment expressed himself in one language, at the next in another. It is singular enough that a circumstance of this kind, so taken from the life, so testifying of the reality of the things recorded, should have been advanced by some as a contradiction between one Gospel and another.

That Lord, upon whose ear the tidings of woe might never fall in vain, at once "arose and followed him, and so did his disciples." The crowd who had been listening to his teaching, followed also, that they might see the end. The miracle of the healing the woman with the issue of blood found place upon the way, but it will naturally be better treated apart, especially as it is entirely separable from this history, though not altogether without its bearing upon it; for the delay, the words to the disciples, the conversation with the woman, must all have been a sore trial to the agonized father, now when every moment was precious, when death was shaking the last few sands in the hour-glass of his daughter's life,-a trial in its kind similar to that with which the sisters of Lazarus were tried, when they beheld their beloved brother drawing ever nigher to death, and the Lord tarried notwithstanding. But however great the trial, we detect no signs of impatience on his part, and this no doubt was laid to his account. While the Lord was yet speaking to the woman, there came from the ruler's house certain of his friends or servants. St. Luke mentions but one, probably that one who was especially charged with the message, whom others went along with, even as it is common for men in their thirst for excitement to have a

* 'Eoxáτws exeivin extremis esse; one of the frequent Latinisms of St. Mark. Το ἱκανὸν ποιῆσαι = satisfacere, (xv. 15,) σπεκουλάτωρ, (vi. 27,) φραγελλόω, (ΣΤ. 15,) λɛyɛúv, (v. 9, 15,) and many more.

+ Bengel: Ita dixit ex conjectura. Augustine (De Cons. Evang., 1. 2, c. 28): Ita enim desperaverat, ut potius eam vellet reviviscere, non credens vivam posse inveniri, quam morientem reliquerat. But Theophylact, not, I think, rightly: 'Hv avžávov tìv συμφορὰν, ὡς εἰς ἔλεον ἑλκύσαι τὸν Χριστόν.

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kind of pleasure in being the bearers even of evil tidings. They come saying to him, Thy daughter is dead, trouble not the Master." They who, perhaps, had faith enough to believe that Christ could fan the last expiring spark of life into a flame, yet had not the stronger faith which would have enabled them to believe the harder thing, that he could once more enkindle that spark of life, when it was quenched altogether. Their hope had perished: perhaps the father's would have perished too, and thus there would have been no room for this miracle, since faith, the necessary condition, would have been wanting; but a gracious Lord prevented his rising doubts, for "as soon as he heard the word that was spoken, he saith to the ruler of the synagogue, Be not afraid, only believe." Here the emphasis should be placed on the first words-as soon as the tidings came, on that very instant the Lord spake, thus leaving no room or place for a doubt to insinuate into the father's mind, before he had pre-occupied him with a word of confidence and encouragement.†

The Lord took with him but three of his apostles, the same three who were allowed, more than once on later occasions, to be witnesses of things hidden from the rest. This, however, is the first time that we read of any such election within the election, and the fact of such now finding place would mark, especially when we remember the solemn significance of the other seasons of a like selection, (Matt. xvii. 2; xxvi. 37,) that this was a new era in the life of the Lord. That which he was about to do was so great and holy that those three only, the flower and the crown of the apostolic band, were its fitting witnesses. The parents were present on grounds altogether different. Those, and these, and none other, accompanied him into the house. There, as every where else, he appears as the calmer and pacifier: "Why make ye this ado and weep? the damsel is not dead, but sleepeth." Some, and those not unbelievers, nor persons who have learned to regard miracles as so much perilous ware, from which it is always an advantage when

* Exúλλw, properly to flay, as oxuλa are originally the spoils, dress, or armor, stripped from the bodies of the slain; see Passow. Afterwards more generally, fatigare, vexare, and often it would seem with a more particular allusion to fatiguing with the length of a journey; and so perhaps here, "Why do you weary the master with this tedious way?" It is well known that some MSS. and Fathers read kokvλμévoi for ikλehvμévoi at Matt. ix. 36, which, if the word have indeed this under meaning, would then be peculiarly appropriate. (See SUICER's Thes., s. v.)

+ Titus Bostrensis (in CRAMER's Cat., in Luc.): "Iva jàg μù einn kaì avròs,’Eñíoχες, οὐ χρείαν σου ἔχω, Κύριε, ήδη γέγονε τὸ πέρας, ἀπέθανεν, ἣν προσεδοκῶμεν ὑγιαί νειν· ἄπιστος γὰρ ἦν, Ἰουδαϊκὸν ἔχων φρόνημα, φθάνει ὁ Κύριος καὶ φησι; Μὴ φοβοῦ, παῦσον τῆς ἀπιστίας τὰ ῥήματα.

The three, Peter, James, and John, are called therefore by Clement of Alexan dria, ἐκλεκτῶν ἐκλεκτοτέρους.

the Gospels can be a little lightened,-Olshausen, for instance,* who is as far as possible from wishing to explain away the wonderful works of our Lord, have yet considered his words, repeated by all the narrators, "The maid is not dead, but sleepeth," to be so explicit and distinct a declaration that death had not absolutely taken place, that in obedience, as they believe, to these words of our Lord's, they refuse to number this among the actual raisings from the dead. They will count it only a raising from a death-like swoon; though one it may have been from which the maiden would never have returned but for that life-giving touch and voice. Had this, however, been the case, Christ's word to the father would clearly have been different, when the tidings came that the spirit of the child had actually fled. The consolation must have clothed itself in another language. He might have brought out the side of his omniscience, and bid him not to fear, for he knew that no such evil had befallen him as he imagined. But that "Be not afraid, only believe," points another way; it is an evident summoning him to a trust in the all-might of the gracious helper, who is coming with him to his house.

And as regards the Lord's words, that the maiden was not dead, but slept, he uses exactly the same language concerning Lazarus, "Our friend Lazarus sleepeth," (John xi. 11;) and when Olshausen replies to this obvious objection, that Christ explains there distinctly that he meant the sleep of death, adding presently, "Lazarus is dead," it is enough to answer that he does not do so till his disciples have misunderstood his words: he would have left those words, but for their mistaking them and supposing he had spoken of natural sleep-"Then said Jesus unto them plainly, Lazarus is dead." But as Lazarus only slept, because Jesus was going that he "might awake him out of sleep," so was she only sleeping, because her awakening was so near. Beside this, to speak of death as a sleep, is an image common, I suppose, to all languages and nations. Thereby the reality of the death is not denied, but only the fact implicitly assumed, that death will be followed by a resurrection, as sleep is by an awakening. Nor is it hard to perceive why the Lord should have spoken in this language here. First, in regard to the father, the words are an establishing of a tottering faith, which the sight of all

* Origen (Con. Cels., ii. 48) has, I think, the same view of this miracle. He is observing on the absence of all prodigality in the miracles, and notes that we have but three raisings from the dead in all: mentioning this first of Jairus's daughter, he adds, περὶ ἧς οὐκ οἶδ' ὅπως εἶπεν, Οὐκ ἀπέθανεν, ἀλλὰ καθεύδει· λέγων τι περὶ αὐτῆς ὃ οὐ πᾶσι τοῖς ἀποθανοῦσαι προσήν, but he does not express himself very plainly.

Fritzsche: Puellam ne pro mortuâ habetote, sed dormire existimatote, quippe in vitam mox redituram.

these signs of mourning, these evidences that all was finished, might easily have overturned altogether. They are a saying over again, "Be not afraid, only believe." He, the Lord of life, takes away that word of fear, "She is dead," and puts in its room that milder word which gives promise of an awakening, "She sleepeth." And then in regard of the multitude, according to that holy humility which makes him ever withdraw his miracles as much as possible from observation, he will by this word of a double signification cast a veil over that which he is about to accomplish.

And now, having thus spoken, he expelled from the house the crowd of turbulent mourners, and this for two reasons; and first, their presence was evidently inappropriate and superfluous there; they were mourners for the dead, and she was not dead; or, at least, her death was so soon to give place to returning life, that it did not deserve the name; it was but as a sleep and an awakening, though they, indeed, who heard this assertion of the Lord, so little understood it, that they met it with laughter and with scorn, "knowing that she was dead," that they were mourners for the dead. This would have been reason enough for silencing and putting out those mourners. But in addition to this, the boisterous and turbulent grief of some, the hired lamentations, it may be, of others,* gave no promise of the true tone and temper, which became the witnesses of so holy and awful a mystery, a mystery from which even apostles themselves were excluded-not to speak of the profane and scornful spirit with which they had received the Lord's assurance, that the child should presently awake. The scorners were not to witness the holy act; -the pearls were for others than for them.†

The house was now solitary and still. Two souls, believing and hoping, stand like funeral tapers beside the couch of the dead maiden -the father and the mother. His Church the Lord sees represented in his three most trusted apostles. And now the solemn awakening finds place. He took the child, for such she was, being but twelve years of age, (Mark v. 42,) "by the hand, and called, saying, Maid, arise.” Saint Mark gives us the very words which the Lord spake in the very language wherein he uttered them, “ Talitha Cumi," no doubt as having something especially solemn in them, as he does the "Ephphatha" on another occasion, (vii. 34.) And at that word, and at the touch of that hand, "her spirit came again,‡ and she arose straightway (Luke viii. 55)

* The presence of the hired mourners at a funeral, in general women, (Opnvwdoi, præficæ, cornicines, tubicines,) was a Greek and Roman, as well as a Jewish, custom. (See BECKER'S Charikles, v. 2, p. 180.)

We may compare 2 Kin. iv. 33, where every one is in like manner excluded. The words of St. Luke, kaì éñéorpeye tò ñveûμa avtñs, are exactly the same as those 1 Kin. xvii. 22, LXX.

and walked." (Mark v. 42.) And then at once to strengthen that life which was come back to her, and to prove that she was indeed no ghost, but had returned to the realities of a mortal existence, (Luke xxiv. 41; John xxi. 5; Acts x. 41,) "he commanded to give her meat;" which precaution was the more necessary, as the parents in that ecstatic moment night easily have forgotten it.

These miracles of raising from the dead, whereof we have been now considering the first, have always been regarded as the mightiest outcomings of the power of Christ; and with justice. They are those, also, at which unbelief is readiest to stumble, standing as they do in a yet more striking contrast than any of the other, to all that experience has known. The line between health and sickness is not definitely fixed; the two conditions melt one into the other, and the transition from this to that is frequent. In like manner storms alternate with calms; the fiercest tempest allays itself at last, and Christ's word did but anticipate and effect in a moment, what the very course of nature must have effected in the end. Even the transmutation from water to wine, and the multiplication of the bread, are not without their analogies, however remote; and thus too is it with most of the other miracles. But between being and the negation of being the opposition is not relative but absolute: between death and life a gulf lies, which nothing that nature lends, helps us even in imagination to bridge over. These considerations sufficiently explain how it should come to pass that these raisings from the dead are signs more spoken against than any other among the mighty works which the Lord accomplished.

The present will be an apt moment for saying something concerning them and the relations of difficulty in which they stand, if not to the other miracles, yet to one another. For they are not exactly the same miracle repeated three times over, but may be contemplated as in an ever ascending scale of difficulty, each a greater outcoming of the power of Christ than the preceding. For as the body of one freshly dead, from which life is but just departed, is very different from a mummy or a skeleton, so is it, though not in so great a degree, different from a corpse, whence for some days the breath of life has fled. There is, so to speak, a fresh trodden way between the body, and the soul which just has forsaken and, according to that Jewish legend which may rest on a very deep truth, lingers for a while and hovers near the tabernacle where it has dwelt so long, and to which it knows itself bound by links, which even now have not been divided for ever. Even science itself has arrived at the conjecture, that the last echoes of life ring in the body much longer than is commonly supposed; that for a while it is full of

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