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Text -- Mark 5:26 (NET)

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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Robertson: Mar 5:26 - -- Had suffered many things of many physicians ( polla pathousa hupo pollōn iatrōn ).
A pathetic picture of a woman with a chronic case who had trie...
Had suffered many things of many physicians (
A pathetic picture of a woman with a chronic case who had tried doctor after doctor.

Robertson: Mar 5:26 - -- Had spent all that she had ( dapanēsasa ta par' autēs panta ).
Having spent the all from herself, all her resources. For the idiom with para se...
Had spent all that she had (
Having spent the all from herself, all her resources. For the idiom with
Vincent: Mar 5:26 - -- Mark is much fuller and more vivid than Matthew or Luke.
Had suffered ( παθοῦσα )
To be taken, as everywhere in the New Testament, in t...
Mark is much fuller and more vivid than Matthew or Luke.
Had suffered (
To be taken, as everywhere in the New Testament, in the sense of suffering pain, not merely subjected to treatment. What she may have suffered will appear from the prescription for the medical treatment of such a complaint given in the Talmud. " Take of the gum of Alexandria the weight of a zuzee (a fractional silver coin); of alum the same; of crocus the same. Let them be bruised together, and given in wine to the woman that has an issue of blood. If this does not benefit, take of Persian onions three logs (pints); boil them in wine, and give her to drink, and say, 'Arise from thy flux.' If this does not cure her, set her in a place where two ways meet, and let her hold a cup of wine in her right hand, and let some one come behind and frighten her, and say, ' Arise from thy flux.' But if that do no good, take a handful of cummin (a kind of fennel), a handful of crocus, and a handful of fenugreek (another kind of fennel). Let these be boiled in wine and give them her to drink, and say, ' Arise from thy flux !'" If these do no good, other doses, over ten in number, are prescribed, among them this: " Let them dig seven ditches, in which let them burn some cuttings of vines, not yet four years old. Let her take in her hand a cup of wine, and let them lead her away from this ditch, and make her sit down over that. And let them remove her from that, and make her sit down over another, saying to her at each remove, 'Arise from thy flux!'" (Quoted from Lightfoot by Geikie, " Life and Words of Christ" ).

Of many physicians (
Lit., under; i.e., under the hands of.

Vincent: Mar 5:26 - -- And was nothing bettered, but rather grew worse
Luke's professional pride as a physician kept him from such a statement. Compare Luk 8:43.
And was nothing bettered, but rather grew worse
Luke's professional pride as a physician kept him from such a statement. Compare Luk 8:43.
JFB: Mar 5:26 - -- The expression perhaps does not necessarily refer to the suffering she endured under medical treatment, but to the much varied treatment which she und...
The expression perhaps does not necessarily refer to the suffering she endured under medical treatment, but to the much varied treatment which she underwent.

JFB: Mar 5:26 - -- Pitiable case, and affectingly aggravated; emblem of our natural state as fallen creatures (Eze 16:5-6), and illustrating the worse than vanity of all...
Pitiable case, and affectingly aggravated; emblem of our natural state as fallen creatures (Eze 16:5-6), and illustrating the worse than vanity of all human remedies for spiritual maladies (Hos 5:13). The higher design of all our Lord's miracles of healing irresistibly suggests this way of viewing the present case, the propriety of which will still more appear as we proceed.
Clarke -> Mar 5:26
Clarke: Mar 5:26 - -- Had suffered many things of many physicians, - and was nothing bettered, but rather grew worse - No person will wonder at this account, when he cons...
Had suffered many things of many physicians, - and was nothing bettered, but rather grew worse - No person will wonder at this account, when he considers the therapeutics of the Jewish physicians in reference to hemorrhages, especially of the kind with which this woman was afflicted
Rabbi Jochanan says: "Take of gum Alexandria, of alum, and of crocus hortensis, the weight of a zuzee each; let them be bruised together, and given in wine to the woman that hath an issue of blood. But if this fail, "Take of Persian onions nine logs, boil them in wine, and give it to her to drink: and say, Arise from thy flux. But should this fail, "Set her in a place where two ways meet, and let her hold a cup of wine in her hand; and let somebody come behind and affright her, and say, Arise from thy flux. But should this do no good, "Take a handful of cummin and a handful of crocus, and a handful of faenu-greek; let these be boiled, and given her to drink, and say, Arise from thy flux. But should this also fail, "Dig seven trenches, and burn in them some cuttings of vines not yet circumcised (vines not four years old); and let her take in her hand a cup of wine, and let her be led from this trench and set down over that, and let her be removed from that, and set down over another: and in each removal say unto her, Arise from thy flux."Dr. Lightfoot gives these as a sample, out of many others, extracted from Bab. Shabb. fol. 110
And from some of these nostrums it is evident the woman could not be bettered, and from some others it is as evident that she must be made worse; and from all together it is indubitably certain that she must have suffered many things; - and from the persons employed, the expense of the medicaments, and the number of years she was afflicted, as she was not a person of great opulence, it is most perfectly credible that she spent all that she had. She was therefore a fit patient for the Great Physician
The case of this woman was a very afflicting one
1. Because of the nature of her malady; it was such as could not be made public, without exposing her to shame and contempt
2. It was an inveterate disorder; it had lasted twelve years
3. It was continual; she appears to have had no interval of health
4. Her disorder was aggravated by the medicines she used - she suffered much, etc
5. Her malady was ruinous both to her health and circumstances - she spent all that she had
6. She was now brought to the last point of wretchedness, want, and despair; she was growing worse, and had neither money nor goods to make another experiment to procure her health
7. She was brought so low by her disorder as to be incapable of earning any thing to support her wretched life a little longer
It has been said, and the saying is a good one, "Man’ s extremity is God’ s opportunity."Never could the power and goodness of God be shown in a more difficult and distressful case. And now Jesus comes, and she is healed.
Defender -> Mar 5:26
Defender: Mar 5:26 - -- Large and fruitless medical bills are apparently not uniquely a modern phenomenon. It is interesting that in his parallel account, Luke (who was himse...
Large and fruitless medical bills are apparently not uniquely a modern phenomenon. It is interesting that in his parallel account, Luke (who was himself a physician) mentioned that she had unsuccessfully spent all she had on physicians but could not bring himself to the further acknowledgment that she "rather grew worse.""
TSK -> Mar 5:26
TSK: Mar 5:26 - -- had suffered : No person will wonder at this account when he considers the therapeutics of the Jewish physicians, in reference to diseases of this kin...
had suffered : No person will wonder at this account when he considers the therapeutics of the Jewish physicians, in reference to diseases of this kind (for an account of which, see Drs. Lightfoot and Clarke). She was, therefore, a fit patient for the Great Physician. Job 13:4; Jer 8:22, Jer 30:12, Jer 30:13, Jer 51:8
nothing : Psa 108:12

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Mar 5:22-43
Barnes: Mar 5:22-43 - -- See the account of the raising of Jairus’ daughter, and the healing of the woman with an issue of blood, fully explained in the notes at Mat 9...
See the account of the raising of Jairus’ daughter, and the healing of the woman with an issue of blood, fully explained in the notes at Mat 9:18-26.
Lieth at the point of death - Is dying; in the last agonies.
Had suffered many things - Had resorted to many things painful, by the direction of the physicians, in order to be healed.
Came in the press behind - In the crowd that pressed upon him. This was done to avoid being noticed. It was an act of faith. She was full of confidence that Jesus was able to heal, but she trembled on account of her conscious unworthiness, thus illustrating the humility and confidence of a sinner coming to God for pardon and life.
Virtue had gone out of him - Power to heal. The word in the original means power.
Who touched my clothes? - This be said, not to obtain information, for he had healed her, and must have known on whom the blessing was conferred; but he did it that the woman might herself make a confession of the whole matter, so that the power of her faith and the greatness of the miracle might be manifested to the praise of God.
Daughter - A word of kindness, tending to inspire confidence and to dissipate her fears.
Be whole - That is, continue to be whole, for she was already cured.
Of thy plague - Thy disease; literally, thy "scourge."So a word from Jesus heals the moral malady of the sinner.
Why troublest thou ... - It seems that the people had not yet confidence that Jesus could raise the dead. He had not yet done it; and as the child was now dead, and as they supposed that his power over her was at an end, they wished no farther to trouble him. Jesus kindly set the fears of the ruler at rest, and assured him that he had equal power over the dead and the living, and could as easily raise those who had expired as those who were expiring.
The tumult - The confusion and weeping of the assembled people.
Wailed - Making inarticulate, mournful sounds; howling for the dead.
This ado - This tumult, this bustle or confusion.
And weep - Weep in this inordinate and improper manner. See the notes at Mat 9:23.
But sleepeth - See the notes at Mat 9:24.
Talitha cumi - This is the language which our Saviour commonly spoke. It is a mixture of Syriac and Chaldee, called Syro-Chaldaic. The proper translation is given by the evangelist - "Damsel, arise."
Something should be given her to eat - "He had raised her by extraordinary power, but he willed that she should be sustained by ordinary means."He also in this gave full evidence that she was really restored to life and health. The changes were great, sudden, and certain. There could be no illusion. So, when the Saviour had risen, he gave evidence of his own resurrection by eating with his disciples, Joh 21:1-13.
Poole -> Mar 5:25-34
Poole: Mar 5:25-34 - -- Ver. 25-34. See Poole on "Mat 9:18" , and following verses to Mat 9:22 , upon this whole history, containing a passage which happened in the way bet...
Ver. 25-34. See Poole on "Mat 9:18" , and following verses to Mat 9:22 , upon this whole history, containing a passage which happened in the way between the place where our Saviour first heard of the sickness of Jairus’ s daughter and his house, whither our Saviour was now going. We shall in these histories observe our Saviour propounding several questions to persons: of the matter to which they related, he could not be presumed to be ignorant, being as to his Divine nature omniscient; but he only propounded them for the bettering of the knowledge of those to whom or amongst whom he spake, that his miracles might be more fully and distinctly understood. So also he is said to have known many things (as here,
that virtue had gone out of him ) which he only knew as he was God, and knew all things. It is also observable how Christ encourages the first rudiments of saving faith in him. All that we read of this woman is, that she said,
If I may but touch his clothes, I shall be whole: this was much short of her owning and receiving him as her Lord and Saviour. It amounted to no more than a persuasion she had of his Divine power and goodness, and that with respect to the healing of a bodily distemper; neither doth it import her believing him to be the eternal Son of God, but one to whom God had communicated a power of healing. In this confidence she cometh unto him, and toucheth the border of his garment. She is presently healed. Christ saith, her faith had made her whole. Christ measures her faith by the light and means she had received, and accordingly rewards it; and if the notion be true, that where he healed the body he also healed the soul, this was the beginning of a greater faith in her.
Lightfoot -> Mar 5:26
Lightfoot: Mar 5:26 - -- And had suffered many things of many physicians, and had spent all that she had, and was nothing bettered, but rather grew worse,  [And ...
And had suffered many things of many physicians, and had spent all that she had, and was nothing bettered, but rather grew worse,  
[And had suffered many things of many physicians.] And it is no wonder: for see what various and manifold kinds of medicines are prescribed to a woman labouring under a flux: "R. Jochanan saith, Bring (or take) of gum of Alexandria the weight of a zuzee; and of alum, the weight of a zuzee; and of crocus hortensis the weight of a zuzee; let these be bruised together, and be given in wine to the woman that hath an issue of blood; etc.  
"But if this does not benefit, take of Persian onions thrice three logs; boil them in wine, and then give it her to drink, and say Arise from thy flux  
"But if this does not prevail, set her in a place where two ways meet; and let her hold a cup of wine in her hand; and let somebody come behind her and affright her, and say, Arise from thy flux.  
"But if that do no good, take a handful of cummin, and a handful of crocus, and a handful of foenum groecum. Let these be boiled in wine, and give them her to drink, and say, Arise from thy flux."  
But if these do not benefit, other doses and others still are prescribed, in number ten or more, which see, if you please, in the place cited [Babylonian Schabb. folio 110.]. Among them I cannot omit this:  
" Let them dig seven ditches: in which let them burn some cuttings of such vines as are not circumcised; [that is, that are not yet four years old]. And let her take in her hand a cup of wine. And let them lead her away from this ditch, and make her sit down over that. And let them remove her from that, and make her sit down over another. And in every removal you must say to her, Arise from thy flux;" etc.
Gill -> Mar 5:26
Gill: Mar 5:26 - -- And had suffered many things of many physicians,.... She took many a nauseous medicine, and had gone through courses of physic with different physicia...
And had suffered many things of many physicians,.... She took many a nauseous medicine, and had gone through courses of physic with different physicians; for there were many among the Jews that pretended to the cure of fluxes; and various are the prescriptions the Jewish doctors give for such a disorder, as may be seen in their Talmud q; and many of which Dr. Lightfoot r has transcribed: and among the rest, they direct to the use of gum of Alexandria, alum, saffron, Persian onions, cummin, and "faenum graecum", put into wine and drank.
And had spent all that she had; had wasted her substance, and brought herself to poverty, by pursuing the directions given her; so that she was not in circumstances now to employ a physician;
and was nothing bettered, but rather grew worse: the several medicines she had taken had done her no good, had not, in the least, restrained and checked the disorder, but it was rather increased thereby. This is often the case of persons who are, in some measure, sensible of the disease of sin, but are ignorant of the proper methods to be taken for the cure of it. They apply to their own works of righteousness, moral and civil, to the duties of religion, private and public, to a legal repentance, external humiliation and tears, and an outward reformation of life, hoping hereby, in process of time, to be rid of their disorder, and be in good health; whereas these are physicians of no value, and of no real service in their case: they are so far from being the better, that they are rather worse and worse, there being so much impurity, imperfection, and sin, in all these things, and which is increased by a dependence on them; that their iniquities grow upon them, and the score of their transgressions is become greater, and their distemper the more inveterate, and less easy to be cured; yea, not only they spend their money for that which does not bring them a cure, and exhaust all the stock of nature's power to no purpose, but they also suffer much hereby. For such a course of action, such conduct and methods as these bring them into a spirit of bondage; for when they fail in their duties, do not come up to the rules prescribed them, what terror of mind possesses them! what horror and wrath does the law work in their consciences! what a fearful looking for is there of fiery indignation, to consume them! It cannot be expressed what some have suffered by following such prescriptions.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Mar 5:1-43
TSK Synopsis: Mar 5:1-43 - --1 Christ delivering the possessed of the legion of devils,13 they enter into the swine.22 He is entreated by Jairus to go and heal his daughter.25 He ...
MHCC -> Mar 5:21-34
MHCC: Mar 5:21-34 - --A despised gospel will go where it will be better received. One of the rulers of a synagogue earnestly besought Christ for a little daughter, about tw...
Matthew Henry -> Mar 5:21-34
Matthew Henry: Mar 5:21-34 - -- The Gadarenes having desired Christ to leave their country, he did not stay to trouble them long, but presently went by water, as he came, back to ...
Barclay -> Mar 5:25-29
Barclay: Mar 5:25-29 - --The woman in this story suffered from a trouble which was very common and very hard to deal with. The Talmud itself gives no fewer than eleven cures ...
Constable: Mar 3:7--6:7 - --III. The Servant's later Galilean ministry 3:7--6:6a
There are some structural similarities between 1:14-3:6 and...

Constable: Mar 4:35--6:7 - --C. Jesus' demonstrations of power and the Nazarenes' rejection 4:35-6:6a
In spite of demonstrations of s...

Constable: Mar 4:35--6:1 - --1. The demonstrations of Jesus' power 4:35-5:43
There are four miracles in this section. Jesus a...




