The Lord said to me…”I will test my people with a Plumbline,
Amos 7:8 (TLB)
Mark 1:41 (NKJV) “Then Jesus…touched him."
The Touch of the Master
The Master |
Moved by compassion (“having deep
pity”), Jesus... touched the untouchable and cured the incurable. His touch
showed that Jesus was not bound by Rabbinic regulations regarding ritual
defilement. Both this symbolic touch (cf. 7:33; 8:22) and Jesus’ authoritative
pronouncement—I am willing (pres. tense), be clean (aorist pass., decisive act
received)—constituted the cure. It was immediate, complete and visible to all
who were standing near by.
Bob Gass reminds us of a legendary
illustration of a battered old violin being auctioned off. “It was battered and
scarred and the auctioneer thought it hardly worth his while, to waste much
time on the old violin so he held it up with a smile. ‘What am I bidden for
this old violin? Who’ll start the bidding for me? A dollar, a dollar, who’ll
make it two? Two dollars, and who’ll make it three? Three dollars once, three
dollars twice, going for three,’ but no; from the back of the room a gray
haired man came forward and picked up the bow. Then sweeping the dust from the
old violin, and tightening up all the strings, he played a melody pure and
sweet, as sweet as the angels sing. The music ceased and the auctioneer, with a
voice that was quiet and low, said, ‘What am I bid for the old violin?’ and he
held it up with the bow. ‘A thousand dollars, and who’ll make it two? Two thousand,
and who’ll make it three? Three thousand once, three thousand twice, going, and
gone,’ said he. The people cheered, but some of them said, We do not quite
understand. What changed its worth?’ Then came the reply, ‘The touch of the
Master’s hand.’
“And many a man with his life out
of tune, battered and scarred with sin, is auctioned cheap to a thoughtless
crowd, much like the old violin. A mess of pottage, a glass of wine, a game,
and he shuffles along: going once, going twice, he’s going and almost gone. But
the Master comes, and the thoughtless crowd never can quite understand, the
worth of the soul, and the change that’s wrought, by the touch of the Master’s
hand.”
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