Reading : Luke 8:40–56
“Don’t be afraid; just believe, and she will be healed.” — Luke 8:50
Jesus meets two desperate people: Jairus, whose little daughter is dying, and a woman who has suffered for twelve years. Both are helpless. Both come to Jesus in need. And both discover that He has power to give life. Jairus falls at His feet in public grief. The woman reaches for Him in quiet faith. One is known and respected; the other has lived in weakness and sorrow. Yet Jesus receives them both. He is not too busy for the desperate or too distant for the broken. His power is joined to tenderness. He stops for the suffering woman, calls her “Daughter,” and sends her away in peace. Then He goes on to Jairus’s house and speaks life where death seems to have won.
This is why the crowds were amazed. In Jesus they were not simply seeing a teacher or healer, but someone far greater. C. S. Lewis reminds us that throughout history people longed for rescue, and many ancient stories carried faint echoes of a god who dies and brings life. But in Jesus the longing became reality. Among the Jews, who believed in the one holy God, there appeared One who spoke and acted with God’s own authority. Lewis says this was the most shocking claim ever spoken: that this man was not merely sent by God, but was God among us. That is why Jesus can do what no one else can do. He does not merely comfort the grieving or advise the weak. He forgives, restores, heals, and raises the dead.
So this passage invites us to trust Him with our hidden pain and our greatest fears. The woman’s suffering, Jairus’s sorrow, and the child’s death all meet the compassion and authority of Jesus. He still speaks peace to the ashamed, hope to the fearful, and life to what seems lost. Do not be afraid. Bring your need to Him. He is still the Lord who has power to give life.
Prayer
Lord Jesus, thank You that You are full of compassion and power. Teach us to trust You with our hidden pain and deepest fears. Speak peace where we are troubled, healing where we are broken, and life where we feel empty or hopeless. Amen.






