I first wrote about The Woman with the Issue of Blood here. For summary’s sake, this story, as captured in Mark 5:25-341, is about a woman who had been bleeding for 12 years (I can’t even) and could not find a cure. One day, she sees Jesus walking by and reaches out to touch him, believing that touching Jesus will be enough to heal her, and no spoilers here, it was. She was healed instantaneously and instructed by Jesus to “Go in peace and be healed from [her] affliction.” Mk. 5:34.
It is interesting that Jesus told her, I call her “The Woman,” to be healed when she had already sensed that she was healed in her body. Verse 29 tells us that The Woman touches Jesus and “[i]nstantly her flow of blood ceased, and she sensed in her body that she was healed of her affliction.” If The Woman was already healed, why would Jesus then tell her to go in peace and be healed from her affliction (v. 34)? Because Jesus knows that our healing is both instantaneous and a process.
Think about it: if you break a bone to the point of needing surgical repair, you have the surgery and your bone is technically healed. But then it takes weeks or even months for you to be able to use that particular body party in the way God originally intended. I would also argue that the same principle applies to the inside. Forgiveness, releasing shame, guilt, bitterness, all of those things involve an instantaneous decision to let go of emotional hurt and continued work of rewiring our thinking to not fall back into the same emotional rut and need emotional surgery, let’s say. And while it’s been somewhat of a trend these days to talk about emotional healing and doing the work to heal ourselves, Jesus knew that this life would require that type of work and told us so over 2,000 years ago.
Having had this condition for the past twelve years, maybe now The Woman would have to present herself to the priest or rabbi to show herself as “clean.” (Leviticus 15:25-28). She was ostracized from her community. Now would come the hard work of rejoining her people, her family, as a healed and better person. Yes, she was healed instantaneously by Jesus, but there were practical, literal steps she had to take to walk fully in her healing. In this life, being bold enough to get to Jesus for healing, just like The Woman, is required and good for us. But it is also up to us to continue to take the practical steps to continue in emotional healing. That Jesus would give us the grace and stamina for instantaneous and continued healing. Amen.
1 This story also appears in Luke 8:43-48 and Matthew 9:20-22.
