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From Fear to Faith: The Two Healing Stories of Jairus’ Daughter and the Hemorrhaging Woman
Ezra Sang Beop Shim Presbyterian General Assembly Theological Seminary 2010 CHONGSHIN THEOLOGICAL JOURNAL Vol.15 No.1
This essay deals with Mark 5:21-43 by the ‘narrative reading’ method on the text, reading the text as it is and as a whole and then finding the author’s rhetorical strategies or intentions for the intended readers. It will be the narrative- rhetorical interpretation focusing on the ‘sandwich technique’ or intercalation. Through this interpretative method, the article will present a theme to the readers: From Fear(shattered or defective faith) to Faith(consistent faith). In this case, the narrative function and/or theological purpose of Mark 5:21- 43, which is called a ‘masterpiece’ among Markan intercalations, will be discussed. According to this method, we can recognize that the narrative is interrelated structurally as well as thematically so that true faith is demanded (v. 36): “mh. fobou/( mo,non pi,steue?” This is also suggested by the function of suspense and irony in the narrative. This faith is not only the faith that Jesus demands to Jairus (story level), the theme participant of the whole narrative, but also the one that his disciples and also the implied readers will have (narrative level). In this case, the story of the hemorrhaging woman interprets and clarifies the kind of faith that is productive of wholeness in the narrative.