Intro
“If I only touch his robe, then I’ll be healed.”  So said the woman with a 
chronic, bleeding hemorrhage, which we heard about in today’s reading from St. 
Matthew’s Gospel.  Now, if we were to read St. Mark’s Gospel, we would learn 
that this woman suffered under the care of many doctors who, not only couldn’t 
heal her, but even made her condition worse.  “If I only touch his robe, then 
I’ll be healed.”

Main Body
Now, some say the woman was superstitious.  She superstitiously thought Jesus’ 
clothing had some power permeated within it.  So, if she touched Jesus’ 
clothes, the power within His clothes could heal her.  It was as if she saw 
Jesus’ clothing as something magical and she wanted some of that magical power 
to benefit her. 

Now, I think the people who think the woman was superstitious are the 
superstitious ones.  For they hold the idea of God and His power as something 
abstract.  It’s as if they see God as an abstraction, a disembodied being, who 
does whatever it is that God does.  But with such a god, they fail to recognize 
two truths, which our English translations obscure. 

First, the word translated as “well” or “healed” is also the same word that we 
translate as “save.”  The woman with the chronic bleeding problem wasn’t only 
looking for physical healing.  She was looking for a rescue from this body of 
death.  And to be rescued from this body of death is not real if it’s an 
abstraction.  For, you see, our fallen flesh is not an abstraction; it’s a true 
reality--and so it needs a real flesh-and-blood salvation.  

The woman knew that.  She knew enough to know that sitting in her room and 
thinking about God wouldn’t do it.  She had a real flesh-and-blood problem and 
so she needed a real flesh-and-blood solution. So she went to go see God in the 
Flesh, Jesus Christ.  

Jesus said, “No one comes to the Father except through me” (John 14:6).  One 
doesn’t come to God the Father apart from the Son.  And one doesn’t come to the 
Son apart from the flesh-and-blood Jesus born from the Virgin Mary, nailed on 
the cross, and raised from the dead.  Apart from that Jesus, there is no coming 
to God. 

But what good does that Jesus do us now?  He’s now in heaven.  We can’t leave 
our house and go to Jesus like the woman did.  He’s not here anymore; He’s in 
heaven!  Ah, but He is present in His Church, in His Supper, where He gives us 
Himself in His body and blood.  Jesus is not an abstraction. 

Perhaps, there are other ways to come to Jesus.  But, if so, God the Holy 
Spirit has not chosen to reveal those other ways to us in the Scriptures.  And 
so trying to seek Jesus in those other ways only leads us down the many empty 
roads of speculation. 

Well, what’s the other idea masked in our English translations that are clearer 
in the original?  The second is that our translations say the woman touched the 
fringe of Jesus’ robe.  But that word for “fringe” refers to the distinctive 
tassel on a Jewish man’s clothing.  The tassel was a sign of someone’s 
obedience to the Law, a reminder of the mandate to be holy and fully live in 
the Commandments. 

But only one Man in all of human history was fit to wear the tassel.  Only one 
Man fulfilled what those tassels represented.  Only one Man flawlessly kept the 
Law and fulfilled the Commandments--our Lord Jesus Christ. 

When the woman grasped Jesus’ tassel, she touched more than just a tassel.  She 
touched the One who fulfilled the purpose of that tassel.  She touched the 
obedient One, the One who delighted the Father, the One who did everything 
well.  She touched the only One who loved God with His entire being, and who 
loved His neighbor as Himself.  She grasped an obeying of the Law that she 
could never do for herself. 

The woman grasped the tassel of the robe that had wrapped the flesh-and-blood 
God, the God who wrapped Himself in our flesh and bone.  She touched the Great 
Physician who does what no other doctor can do.  He is the Creator who came to 
rescue His fallen and suffering creation.  Only the flow of blood from His 
spear-pierced side could stop the flow of blood from this woman, which had made 
her life a living hell. 

She touched the tassel, and from it flowed the power of God, for robe was 
wrapped around God Himself.  No, the woman wasn’t superstitious.  Instead, she 
recognized who was inside that robe--and that made all the difference. 

So, if the woman’s thinking was faulty, it wasn’t because she went to go see 
Jesus.  If anything, it was that she held too low of an opinion of our Lord’s 
compassion.  Perhaps, she thought to touch His tassel because she wanted to be 
healed but didn’t want to bother Jesus.  After all, He was going to see someone 
who had died. 

Like with her, our concerns don’t bother our Lord.  We don’t do ourselves, or 
God, and favors when we withhold from Him what’s going on within us.  Don’t 
protect God from your feelings.  Don’t act shy and self-conscious.  That’s an 
insult to His compassion. 

Going to God in prayer is an act of intimacy.  To hold back in your prayers is 
to hold out on God.  To hold out in some areas shows that you don’t fully trust 
Him in all areas.  If you won’t ask God for what He wants to give you, that may 
mean that you think God doesn’t care about that.  Or, can it be that you don’t 
think He has the power to deal with whatever is going on in your life? 

God wants you to open your heart to Him in prayer, to lay yourself vulnerable.  
Why won’t you trust Him?  Repent!  Don’t be afraid.  He loves you.  He loves 
your prayers.  Your prayers won’t shock Him, any more than a four-year old 
shocks his mother when he says that he wants every toy he sees or wants to be a 
superhero. 

If there was a fault in the woman, it wasn’t that she was superstitious.  Jesus 
felt the power go out of Him, so He knew that He had been touched by faith.  
And He wasn’t too busy to stop and speak to her, even though He was going to 
raise a dead girl, even though He was in the company of a distraught father.  
He had time for her.  He always has time.  And even if she was hesitant, He 
wasn’t angry.  He loved her and her faith. 

He said, “Your faith has made you well.”  But as I already hinted, we might 
better translate that as, “Your faith has saved you.”  Either way, that was 
highest praise from the same God-in-the-Flesh who rebuked His disciples for 
having little faith.  She had faith and Jesus praised her for it. 

After Jesus healed the woman, He then made His way to Jairus’ house.  He was 
the person in our Gospel text whose daughter had died.  From St. Mark’s Gospel, 
we learn that Jairus’ daughter was 12-years old when she died.  The woman whom 
Jesus had just healed had a hemorrhage for 12 years.  

And so the girl’s birth matched the beginning of the slow death for the woman 
who had suffered a hemorrhaging of blood for 12 years.  Yet, these two women 
were connected in more ways than Matthew happening to include them in the same 
paragraph.  

Jesus touching them and their touching of Him was the true connection.  Jairus 
asked Jesus to place His hands on His dead daughter.  But instead, Jesus took 
her hand, as though she was the one placing her hands in Him!  The woman with 
the chronic bleeding reached out her hand to grasped Jesus’ tassel.  Both 
touched Jesus. 

That describes faith!  For faith is the hand that grasps grace.  The woman had 
faith.  She recognized that our Lord could do what the medical doctors couldn’t 
do.  That faith saved her.  The girl also had faith.  But in her case, our Lord 
slipped His hand under hers to give it to her.  She was dead.  So He gave her 
the hand, the grasp, that grasped Him, and He called her back from death. 

Jesus’ raising the dead girl explains the faith of the bleeding woman.  Her 
faith saved her.  But where did that faith originate?  It came from Jesus, the 
same Lord in the Flesh who slipped His hand under the dead girl’s hand and 
guided it to Him. 

That’s how it is with faith.  It seeks the risen, living, bodily Jesus because 
the Holy Spirit gives and upholds such faith.  That’s what the Holy Spirit 
does--He always testifies to, and of, that same Jesus.  

That’s why we also come to the holy Supper.  For we aren’t here just to think 
about Jesus.  We are here to touch Him, to be healed, saved, and raised.  This 
touch is not a metaphor.  It is real, physical, even as Jesus is real and 
physical.  

Jesus did not rise as a disembodied spectre.  He is flesh and blood, alive from 
the grave.  That’s why Jesus doesn’t come to us as an idea but as a body, 
crucified and risen, in His holy Supper. 

Conclusion
Spiritually speaking, we are all bleeding to death.  We are in danger of losing 
our lives, slowly bleeding to death because of sin.  So, as our Great 
Physician, our Lord gives us a blood transfusion--His blood.  He pours His 
risen blood into us in His Supper.  That not only stops the blood loss, that 
is, forgives our sins, but also infuses us with His own life, which will raise 
us to life eternal. 

“If only His body is placed on my tongue, I will me made well, I will be 
saved,” says the Christian.  “Take heart and rise,” says the Lord.  “Take and 
eat.  Take and drink.  Your faith has saved you.”  Amen. 


--
Rich Futrell, Pastor
Shepherd of the Hills Lutheran Church, Kimberling City, MO
http://sothl.com 

Where we receive and confess the faith of the Church (in and with the Augsburg 
Confession): The faith once delivered to the saints, the faith of Christ Jesus, 
His Word of the Gospel, His full forgiveness of sins, His flesh and blood given 
and poured out for us, and His gracious gift of life for body, soul, and 
spirit.  

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