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Text -- Mark 5:29 (NET)

Strongs On/Off
Context
5:29 At once the bleeding stopped, and she felt in her body that she was healed of her disease.
Parallel   Cross Reference (TSK)   ITL  

Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Dictionary Themes and Topics: PLAGUE | Miracles | Jesus, The Christ | Jairus | JESUS CHRIST, 4C1 | JAIRUS (2) | FEELING | Bleeding, Subject to | more
Table of Contents

Word/Phrase Notes
Robertson , Vincent , JFB , TSK

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes

Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis , MHCC , Matthew Henry , Barclay , Constable , College , McGarvey , Lapide

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Robertson: Mar 5:29 - -- She felt in her body ( egnō tōi sōmati ). She knew, the verb means. She said to herself,

She felt in her body ( egnō tōi sōmati ).

She knew, the verb means. She said to herself,

Robertson: Mar 5:29 - -- I am healed ( iāmai ). Iātai retains the perfect passive in the indirect discourse. It was a vivid moment of joy for her. The plague (mastigos ...

I am healed ( iāmai ).

Iātai retains the perfect passive in the indirect discourse. It was a vivid moment of joy for her. The plague (mastigos ) or scourge was a whip used in flagellations as on Paul to find out his guilt (Act 22:24, cf. Heb 11:26). It is an old word that was used for afflictions regarded as a scourge from God. See note on Mar 3:10.

Vincent: Mar 5:29 - -- She knew - she was healed Note the graphic change in the tenses. ἔλνω , she knew ; ἰάται , she is healed .

She knew - she was healed

Note the graphic change in the tenses. ἔλνω , she knew ; ἰάται , she is healed .

Vincent: Mar 5:29 - -- Plague See on Mar 3:10.

Plague

See on Mar 3:10.

JFB: Mar 5:29 - -- Not only was her issue of blood stanched (Luk 8:44), but the cause of it was thoroughly removed, insomuch that by her bodily sensations she immediatel...

Not only was her issue of blood stanched (Luk 8:44), but the cause of it was thoroughly removed, insomuch that by her bodily sensations she immediately knew herself perfectly cured.

TSK: Mar 5:29 - -- straightway : Exo 15:26; Job 33:24, Job 33:25; Psa 30:2, Psa 103:3, Psa 107:20, Psa 147:3 fountain : Lev 20:18 plague : Mar 5:34, Mar 3:10; 1Ki 8:37; ...

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

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.

Mar 5:23

Lieth at the point of death - Is dying; in the last agonies.

Mar 5:26

Had suffered many things - Had resorted to many things painful, by the direction of the physicians, in order to be healed.

Mar 5:27

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.

Mar 5:30

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.

Mar 5:34

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.

Mar 5:35, Mar 5:36

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.

Mar 5:38

The tumult - The confusion and weeping of the assembled people.

Wailed - Making inarticulate, mournful sounds; howling for the dead.

Mar 5:39

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.

Mar 5:41

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."

Mar 5:43

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 - -- 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.

Gill: Mar 5:29 - -- And straightway the fountain of her blood was dried up,.... It was usual with the Jews to call the womb, in which the child is formed, מקור, "a fo...

And straightway the fountain of her blood was dried up,.... It was usual with the Jews to call the womb, in which the child is formed, מקור, "a fountain" s; and because, from hence, issued the blood in a menstruous and profluvious person, they called it, as here, מקור דמיה, "the fountain of her blood" t; and sometimes use the same phrase of the drying up of it, as in this place: they say u, when a woman is searched and found to be pure, she is forbidden her house, עד שיתנגב מעיינה, "until her fountain be dried up"; so that as no blood issued from it, there was none in it, and which was now this woman's case, as she found;

and she felt in her body that she was healed of that plague: she not only found by that quick alteration there was in her animal spirits, which were now free and vigorous; but she perceived, in that part of her body, from whence the issue sprung, that she was perfectly well, and that the disorder was entirely gone, which had been for so many years a sore affliction to her, and a severe correction and chastisement of her, as the word used implies. It properly signifies a "scourge", as every affliction is, a scourge for sin; and very likely this woman's disease was on the same account: sometimes afflictions are God's scourges in a way of wrath, and sometimes in a fatherly way, in love: "for whom the Lord loveth he chasteneth, and scourgeth every son whom he receiveth", Heb 12:6, and who, as he wounds, he heals, and which is sensibly perceived by his people. The word "plague" carries in it something more dreadful, and fitly enough expresses the nature of sin, which is a pestilential disease; the corruption of nature, indwelling sin is called the "plague of the heart", 1Ki 8:38. It is a loathsome disease, and without the grace of God, a mortal one; the body of sin, is a body of death; and all sin is of the same nature and kind; the end of it is destruction and death: the healing of it is the forgiveness of sin, which is through the blood of Christ, and the application of it to the soul; which, when made, is sensibly felt, for it immediately produces spiritual joy, peace, and comfort: this makes the bones, which were broken, to rejoice; this bids every son and daughter of the Lord God Almighty to be of good cheer; it causes the inhabitants of Zion to hold their peace, and no more say they are sick, because their sins are forgiven them. And a man may as easily perceive when his spiritual maladies are healed in this way, as when he is cured of any bodily disorder.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Mar 5:29 The woman was most likely suffering from a vaginal hemorrhage, in which case her bleeding would make her ritually unclean.

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

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 - --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 - -- 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 - --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...

Constable: Mar 5:21-43 - --The raising of Jairus' daughter and the healing of a woman with a hemorrhage 5:21-43 (cf. Matt. 9:18-26; Luke 8:40-56) This is one of the sections of ...

College: Mar 5:1-43 - --MARK 5 2. Authority over Demons (5:1-20) 1 They went across the lake to the region of the Gerasenes. a 2 When Jesus got out of the boat, a man with ...

McGarvey: Mar 5:23-43 - -- LVIII. JAIRUS' DAUGHTER AND THE INVALID WOMAN. (Capernaum, same day as last.) aMATT. IX. 18-26; bMARK V. 22-43; cLUKE VIII. 41-56.    ...

Lapide: Mar 5:1-43 - --CHAPTER 5 1 Christ delivereth the possessed of the legion of devils, 13 they enter into the swine. 25 H e healeth the woman of the bloody issue, 3...

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Introduction / Outline

Robertson: Mark (Book Introduction) THE GOSPEL ACCORDING TO MARK By Way of Introduction One of the clearest results of modern critical study of the Gospels is the early date of Mark...

JFB: Mark (Book Introduction) THAT the Second Gospel was written by Mark is universally agreed, though by what Mark, not so. The great majority of critics take the writer to be "Jo...

JFB: Mark (Outline) THE PREACHING AND BAPTISM OF JOHN. ( = Mat 3:1-12; Luke 3:1-18). (Mar 1:1-8) HEALING OF A DEMONIAC IN THE SYNAGOGUE OF CAPERNAUM AND THEREAFTER OF SI...

TSK: Mark 5 (Chapter Introduction) Overview Mar 5:1, Christ delivering the possessed of the legion of devils, Mar 5:13. they enter into the swine; Mar 5:22, He is entreated by Jairu...

Poole: Mark 5 (Chapter Introduction) CHAPTER 5

MHCC: Mark (Book Introduction) Mark was a sister's son to Barnabas, Col 4:10; and Act 12:12 shows that he was the son of Mary, a pious woman of Jerusalem, at whose house the apostle...

MHCC: Mark 5 (Chapter Introduction) (v. 1-20) The demoniac healed. (Mar 5:21-34) A woman healed. (Mar 5:35-43) The daughter of Jairus raised.

Matthew Henry: Mark (Book Introduction) An Exposition, with Practical Observations, of The Gospel According to St. Mark We have heard the evidence given in by the first witness to the doctri...

Matthew Henry: Mark 5 (Chapter Introduction) In this chapter, we have, I. Christ's casting the legion of devils out of the man possessed, and suffering them to enter into the swine (v. 1-20)....

Barclay: Mark (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO THE GOSPEL ACCORDING TO SAINT MARK The Synoptic Gospels The first three gospels, Matthew, Mark and Luke, are always known as the s...

Barclay: Mark 5 (Chapter Introduction) The Banishing Of The Demons (Mar_5:1-13) Bidding Christ Be Gone (Mar_5:14-17) A Witness For Christ (Mar_5:18-20) In The Hour Of Need (Mar_5:21-24...

Constable: Mark (Book Introduction) Introduction Writer The writer did not identify himself as the writer anywhere in this...

Constable: Mark (Outline) Outline I. Introduction 1:1-13 A. The title of the book 1:1 B. Jesus' pr...

Constable: Mark Mark Bibliography Adams, J. McKee. Biblical Backgrounds. Nashville: Broadman Press, 1965. Alexa...

Haydock: Mark (Book Introduction) THE HOLY GOSPEL OF JESUS CHRIST, ACCORDING TO ST. MARK. INTRODUCTION. St. Mark, who wrote this Gospel, is called by St. Augustine, the abridge...

Gill: Mark (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO MARK This is the title of the book, the subject of which is the Gospel; a joyful account of the ministry, miracles, actions, and su...

College: Mark (Book Introduction) FOREWORD No story is more important than the story of Jesus. I am confident that my comments do not do it justice. Even granting the limitations of a...

College: Mark (Outline) OUTLINE I. INTRODUCTION - Mark 1:1-15 A. The Beginning of the Gospel - 1:1-8 B. John Baptizes Jesus - 1:9-11 C. Temptation in the Wildernes...

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