THE SECOND SIGN IN GALILEE
“In the mean while the disciples
prayed Him, saying, Rabbi, eat. But He said
unto them, I have meat to eat that ye know not.
The disciples therefore said one to another, Hath
any man brought Him aught to eat? Jesus saith
unto them, My meat is to do the will of Him that
sent Me, and to accomplish His work. Say not ye,
There are yet four months, and then cometh the
harvest? behold, I say unto you, Lift up your
eyes, and look on the fields, that they are white
already unto harvest. He that reapeth receiveth
wages, and gathereth fruit unto life eternal;
that he that soweth and he that reapeth may rejoice
together. For herein is the saying true, One soweth
and another reapeth. I sent you to reap that
whereon ye have not laboured: others have
laboured, and ye are entered into their labour.
And from that city many of the Samaritans believed
on Him because of the word of the woman, who testified,
He told me all things that ever I did. So
when the Samaritans came unto Him, they besought
Him to abide with them: and He abode there two
days. And many more believed because of His
word; and they said to the woman, Now we believe,
not because of thy speaking: for we have heard
for ourselves, and know that this is indeed the
Saviour of the world. And after the two days
He went forth from thence into Galilee. For Jesus
Himself testified, that a prophet hath no honour in
his own country. So when He came into Galilee,
the Galilaeans received Him, having seen all the
things that He did in Jerusalem at the feast:
for they also went unto the feast. He came
therefore again unto Cana of Galilee, where He
made the water wine. And there was a certain
nobleman, whose son was sick at Capernaum.
When he heard that Jesus was come out of Judaea
into Galilee, he went unto Him, and besought Him
that He would come down, and heal his son; for he was
at the point of death. Jesus therefore said
unto him, Except ye see signs and wonders, ye
will in no wise believe. The nobleman saith unto
Him, Sir, come down ere my child die. Jesus
saith unto him, Go thy way; thy son liveth.
The man believed the word that Jesus spake unto him,
and he went his way. And as he was now going down,
his servants met him, saying, that his son lived.
So he inquired of them the hour when he began
to amend. They said therefore unto him, Yesterday
at the seventh hour the fever left him. So
the father knew that it was at that hour in which
Jesus said unto him, Thy son liveth: and himself
believed, and his whole house. This is again the
second sign that Jesus did, having come out of
Judaea into Galilee” JOHN i-54.
The disciples, when they went forward
to buy provisions in Sychar, left Jesus sitting on
the well wearied and faint. On their return they
find Him, to their surprise, elate and full of renewed
energy. Such transformations one has often had
the pleasure of seeing. Success is a better stimulant
than wine. Our Lord had found one who believed
Him and valued His message; and this brought fresh
life to His frame. The disciples go on eating,
and are too busy with their meal to lift their eyes;
but as they eat they talk over the prospects of the
harvest in the rich fields through which they have
just walked. Meanwhile our Lord sees the men
of Sychar coming out of the town in obedience to the
woman’s request, and calls His disciples’
attention to a harvest more worthy of their attention
than the one they were discussing: “Were
you not saying that we must wait four months till
harvest comes again and cheapens the bread for
which you have paid so dear in Sychar? But lift
up your eyes and mark the eager crowd of Samaritans,
and say if you may not expect to reap much this very
day. Are not the fields white already to harvest?
Here in Samaria, which you only wished quickly to pass
through, where you were looking for no additions to
the Kingdom, and where you might suppose sowing and
long waiting were needed, you see the ripened grain.
Others have laboured, the Baptist and this woman and
I, and ye have entered into their labours.”
All labourers in the Kingdom of God
need a similar reminder. We can never certainly
say in what state of preparedness the human heart is;
we do not know what providences of God have ploughed
it, nor what thoughts are sown in it, nor what strivings
are being even now made by the springing life that
seeks the light. We generally give men credit,
not perhaps for less thought than they have, for that
is scarcely possible, but for less capacity of thought.
The disciples were good men, but they went into Sychar
judging the Samaritans good enough to trade with, but
never dreaming of telling them the Messiah was outside
their town. They must have been ashamed to find
how much more capable an apostle the woman was than
they. I think they would not wonder another time
that their Lord should condescend to talk with a woman.
The simple, unthinking, untroubled directness of a
woman will often have a matter finished while a man
is meditating some ponderous and ingenious contrivance
for bringing it to pass. Let us not fall into
the mistake of the disciples, and judge men good enough
to buy and sell with, but quite alien to the matters
of the Kingdom.
“There
is a day in spring
When under all the earth the
secret germs
Begin to stir and glow before
they bud.
The wealth and festal pomps
of midsummer
Lie in the heart of that inglorious
hour
Which no man names with blessing,
though its work
Is bless’d by all the
world. Such days there are
In the slow story of the growth
of souls.”
Such days may be passing in those
around us, though all unknown to us. We can never
tell how many months there are till harvest. We
never know who or what has been labouring before we
appear on the scene.
The woman’s testimony was enough
to excite curiosity. The men on her word came
out to judge for themselves. What they saw and
heard completed their conviction; “And they
said to the woman, Now we believe, not because of
thy speaking: for we have heard for ourselves,
and know that this is indeed the Saviour of the world.”
This growth of faith is one of the subjects John delights
to exhibit. He is fond of showing how a weak
and ill-founded faith may grow into a faith that is
well rooted and strong.
This Samaritan episode is significant
as an integral part of the Gospel, not only because
it shows how readily unsophisticated minds perceive
the inalienable majesty of Christ, but also because
it forms so striking a foil to the reception our Lord
had met with in Jerusalem, and was shortly to meet
with in Galilee. In Jerusalem He did many miracles;
but the people were too political and too prejudiced
to own Him as a spiritual Lord. In Galilee He
was known, and might have expected to be understood;
but there the people longed only for physical blessings
and the excitement of miracles. Here in Samaria,
on the contrary, He did no miracles, and had no forerunner
to herald His approach. He was found a weary
wayfarer, sitting by the roadside, begging for refreshment.
Yet, through this appearance of weakness, and dependence,
and lowliness, there shone His native kindness, and
truth, and kingliness, to such a degree, that the
Samaritans, although naturally suspicious of Him as
a Jew, believed in Him, delighted in Him, and proclaimed
Him “Saviour of the world.”
After two days of happy intercourse
with the Samaritans Jesus continues His journey to
Galilee. The proverbial expression which our Lord
used regarding His relation to Galilee that
a prophet has no honour in his own country is
one we have frequent opportunity of verifying.
The man that has grown up among us, whom we have seen
struggling up through the ignorance, and weakness,
and folly of boyhood, whom we have had to help and
to protect, can scarcely receive the same respect as
one who presents himself a mature man, with already
developed faculties, no longer a learner, but prepared
to teach. Montaigne complained that in his own
country he had to purchase publishers, whereas elsewhere
publishers were anxious to purchase him. “The
farther off I am read from my own home,” he
says, “the better I am esteemed.”
The men of Anathoth sought Jeremiah’s life when
he began to prophesy among them.
It is not the truth of the proverb
that presents any difficulty, but its application
to the present case. For the fact that a prophet
has no honour in his own country would seem to be
a reason for His declining to go to Galilee, whereas
it is here introduced as His reason for going there.
The explanation is found in the beginning of the chapter,
where we are told that it was in search of retirement
He was now leaving the popularity and publicity of
Judaea, and repairing to His own country.
But, as frequently on other occasions,
He now found that He could not be hid. His countrymen,
who had thought so little of Him previously, had heard
of His Judaean fame, and echoed the recognition and
applause of the south. They had not discovered
the greatness of this Galilean, although He had lived
among them for thirty years; but no sooner do they
hear that He has created a sensation in Jerusalem
than they begin to be proud of Him. Every one
has seen the same thing a hundred times. A lad
who has been despised as almost half-witted in his
native place goes up to London and makes a name for
himself as poet, artist, or inventor, and when he
returns to his village everybody claims him as cousin.
Such a change of sentiment was not likely to escape
the observation of Jesus nor to deceive Him.
It is with an accent of disappointment, not unmingled
with reproach, that He utters His first recorded words
in Galilee: “Except ye see signs and wonders,
ye will in no wise believe.”
This sets us in the point of view
from which we can clearly see the significance of
the one incident which John selects from all that
happened during our Lord’s stay in Galilee at
this time. John wishes to illustrate the difference
between the Galilean and the Samaritan faith, and
the possibility of the one growing into the other;
and he does so by introducing the brief narrative
of the courtier from Capernaum. Accounts, more
or less accurate, of the miracles of Jesus in Jerusalem
had found their way even into the household of Herod
Antipas. For no sooner was He known to have arrived
in Galilee than one of the royal household sought
Him out to obtain a boon which no royal favour could
grant. The supposition is not without plausibility
that this nobleman was Chuza, Herod’s chamberlain,
and that this miracle, which had so powerful an effect
on the family in which it was wrought, was the origin
of that devotion to our Lord which was afterwards shown
by Chuza’s wife.
The nobleman, whoever he was, came
to Jesus with an urgent request. He had come
twenty miles to appeal to Jesus, and he had been unable
to trust his petition to a messenger. But instead
of meeting this distracted father with words of sympathy
and encouragement, Jesus merely utters a general and
chilling observation. Why is this? Why does
He seem to lament that this father should so urgently
plead for his son? Why does He seem only to submit
to the inevitable, if He grants the request at all?
Might it not even seem as if He wrought the miracle
of healing rather for His own sake than for the boy’s
or for the father’s sake, since He says, “Except
ye see signs and wonders, ye will in no wise believe” that
is, will not believe in Me?
But these words did not express any
reluctance on the part of Jesus to heal the nobleman’s
son. Possibly they were intended, in the first
instance, to rebuke the desire of the father that Jesus
should go with him to Capernaum and pronounce over
the boy words of healing. The father thought
the presence of Christ was necessary. He had not
attained to the faith of the centurion, who believed
that an expression of will was enough. Jesus,
therefore, demands a stronger faith; and in His presence
that stronger faith which can trust His word is developed.
The words, however, were especially
a warning that His physical gifts were not the greatest
He had to bestow, and that a faith which required
to be buttressed by the sight of miracles was not the
best kind of faith. Our Lord was always in danger
of being looked upon as a mere thaumaturge, who could
dispense cures merely as a physician could within
his own limits order a certain treatment. He was
in danger of being considered a dispenser of blessings
to persons who had no faith in Him as the Saviour
of the world. It is therefore with the accent
of one who submits to the inevitable that He says,
“Except ye see signs and wonders, ye will in
no wise believe.”
But especially did our Lord wish to
point out that the faith He approves and delights
in is a faith which does not require miracles as its
foundation. This higher faith He had found among
the Samaritans. Many of them believed, as John
is careful to note, because of His conversation.
There was that in Himself and in His talk which was
its own best evidence. Some men who introduce
themselves to us, to win our countenance to some enterprise,
carry integrity in their whole bearing; and we should
feel it to be an impertinence to ask them for credentials.
If they offer to prove their identity and trustworthiness
we waive such proof aside, and assure them that they
need no certificate. This had been our Lord’s
experience in Samaria. There no news of His miracles
had come from Jerusalem. He came among the Samaritans
from nobody knew where. He came without introduction
and without certificate, yet they had discernment
to see that they had never met His like before.
Every word He spoke seemed to identify Him as the
Saviour of the world. They forgot to ask for
miracles. They felt in themselves His supernatural
power, lifting them into God’s presence, and
filling them with light.
The Galilaean faith was of another
kind. It was based on His miracles; a kind of
faith He deplored, although He did not quite repudiate
it. To be accepted not on His own account, not
because of the truth He spoke, not because His greatness
was perceived and His friendship valued, but because
of the wonders He performed this could not
be a pleasant experience. We do not greatly value
the visits of a person who cannot get on without our
advice or assistance; we value the friendship of him
who seeks our company for the pleasure he finds in
it. And although we must all be ceaselessly and
infinitely dependent on the good offices of Christ,
our faith should be something more than a counting
upon His ability and willingness to discharge these
good offices. A faith which is merely selfish,
which recognises that Christ can save from disaster
in this life or in the life to come, and which cleaves
to Him solely on that account, is scarcely the faith
that Christ approves. There is a faith which
responds to the glory of Christ’s personality,
which rests on what He is, which builds itself on
the truth He utters, and recognises that all spiritual
life centres in Him; it is this faith He approves.
They who find in Him the link they have sought with
the spiritual world, the pledge they have needed to
certify them of an eternal righteousness, they to
whom the supernatural is revealed more patently in
Himself than in His miracles, are those whom the Lord
delights in.
But the lower kind of faith may be
a step to the higher. The agony of the father
can make nothing of general principles, but can only
reiterate the one petition, “Come down ere my
child die.” And Jesus, with His perfect
knowledge of human nature, sees that it is vain trying
to teach a man in this absorbed condition of mind,
and that probably the very best way to clarify his
faith and lead him to higher and worthier thoughts
is to grant his request a hint not to be
overlooked or despised by those who seek to do good,
and who are, possibly, sometimes a little prone to
obtrude their teaching at most inopportune seasons at
seasons when it is impossible for the mind to admit
anything but the one absorbing topic. Circumstances
are, in general, much better educators of men than
any verbal teaching; and that verbal teaching can only
do harm which interposes between the moving events
that are occurring and the person who is passing through
them. The success of our Lord’s method was
proved by the result; which was, that the slender faith
of this nobleman became a genuine faith in Christ
as the Lord, a faith which his whole household shared.
From the very greatness of Christ,
and our consequent inability to bring Him into comparison
with other men, we are apt to miss some of the significant
features of His conduct. In the circumstances
before us, for example, most teachers at an early
stage in their career would have been in some excitement,
and would probably have shown no reluctance to accede
to the nobleman’s request, and go down to his
house, and so make a favourable impression on Herod’s
court. It was an opportunity of getting a footing
in high places which a man of the world could not have
overlooked. But Jesus was well aware that if the
foundations of His kingdom were to be solidly laid,
there must be excluded all influence of a worldly
kind, all the overpowering constraint which fashion
and great names exercise over the mind. His work,
He saw, would be most enduringly, if most slowly,
done in a more private manner. His own personal
influence on individuals must first of all be the chief
agency. He speaks, therefore, to this nobleman
without any regard to his rank and influence; indeed,
rather curtly dismisses him with the words, “Go,
thy son lives.” The total absence of display
is remarkable. He did not go to Capernaum, to
stand by the sickbed, and be acknowledged as the healer.
He made no bargain with the nobleman that if his son
recovered he would let the cause be known. He
simply did the thing, and said nothing at all about
it.
Though it was only one in the afternoon
when the nobleman was dismissed he did not go back
to Capernaum that night why, we do not know.
A thousand things may have detained him. He may
have had business for Herod in Cana or on the road
as well as for himself; the beast he rode may have
gone lame where he could not procure another; at any
rate, it is quite uncalled for to ascribe his delay
to the confidence he had in Christ’s word, an
instance of the truth, “He that believeth shall
not make haste.” The more certainly he
believed Christ’s word the more anxious would
he be to see his son. His servants knew how anxious
he would be to hear, for they went to meet him; and
were no doubt astonished to find that the sudden recovery
of the boy was due to Him whom their master had visited.
The cure had travelled much faster than he who had
received the assurance of it.
The process by which they verified
the miracle and connected the cure with the word of
Jesus was simple, but perfectly satisfactory.
They compared notes regarding the time, and found
that the utterance of Jesus was simultaneous with
the recovery of the boy. The servants who saw
the boy recover did not ascribe his recovery to any
miraculous agency; they would no doubt suppose that
it was one of those unaccountable cases which occasionally
occur, and which most of us have witnessed. Nature
has secrets which the most skilful of her interpreters
cannot disclose; and even so marvellous a thing as
an instantaneous cure of a hopeless case may be due
to some hidden law of nature. But no sooner did
their master assure them that the hour in which the
boy began to amend was the very hour in which Jesus
said he would get better, than they all saw to what
agency the cure was due.
Here lies the special significance
of this miracle; it brings into prominence this distinctive
peculiarity of a miracle, that it consists of a marvel
which is coincident with an express announcement of
it, and is therefore referrible to a personal agent.
It is the two things taken together that prove that
there is a superhuman agency. The marvel alone,
a sudden return of sight to the blind, or of vigour
to the paralysed, does not prove that there is anything
supernatural in the case; but if this marvel follows
upon the word of one who commands it, and does so
in all cases in which such a command is given, it becomes
obvious that this is not the working of a hidden law
of nature, nor a mere coincidence, but the intervention
of a supernatural agency. That which convinced
the nobleman’s household that a miracle had been
wrought was not the recovery of the boy, but his recovery
in connection with the word of Jesus. What they
felt they had to account for was not merely the marvellous
recovery, but his recovery at that particular time.
Even though it could be shown, then, as
it can never be, that every cure reported
in the Gospels might possibly be the result of some
natural law, even though it could be shown that men
born blind might receive their sight without a miracle,
and that persons who had consulted the best physician
suddenly recovered strength this, we are
to remember, is by no means the whole of what we have
to account for. We have to account not only for
sudden, and certainly most extraordinary cures, but
also for these cures following uniformly, and in every
case the word of One who said the cure would follow.
It is this coincidence which puts it beyond a doubt
that the cures can be referred only to the will of
Christ.
Another striking feature of this miracle
is that the Agent was at a distance from the subject
of it. This is, of course, quite beyond our comprehension.
We cannot understand how the will of Jesus, without
employing any known physical means of communication
between Himself and the boy, without even appearing
before him so as to seem to inspire him by look or
word, should instantaneously effect his cure.
The only possible link of such a kind between the
boy and Jesus was that he may have been aware that
his father had gone to seek help for him, from a renowned
physician, and may have had his hopes greatly excited.
This supposition is, however, gratuitous. The
boy may quite as likely have been delirious, or too
young to know anything; and even though this slender
link did exist, no sensible person will build much
on that. And certainly it is encouraging to find
that even while on earth our Lord did not require
to be in contact with the person healed. “His
word was as effective as His presence.”
And if it is credible that while on earth He could
heal at the distance of twenty miles, it is difficult
to disbelieve that He can from heaven exercise the
same omnipotent will.