Here are a couple more thoughts from the story in Mark 9.
o 9:25-27: “healing.” Jesus cast out the demon, and He also may have brought the boy back to life. Healing and exorcism are significant in the “already but not yet” world. In Christ’s kingdom people will live long lives as in the days of the patriarchs. The lion will lay down with the lamb. Men will beat their swords into plows. But that is not the world we live in today. ABNY! But should I expect God to always heal if I have faith? The following is from an Australian pastor named David Shaw (from the Gospel Coalition web page) that said what I would say here, so I will use his words.
For example, Jesus raised Lazarus from the dead—once. Poor Lazarus eventually died again, and Jesus didn’t bring him back the next time. Such is life in the already-not-yet kingdom: Yes, Jesus reigns, but we nevertheless await the full consummation of that reign where sin, evil, and death will be defeated once and for all. Consequently, faith simultaneously believes that God desires healing and can heal (James 5), and that even if He doesn’t, His grace is sufficient (2 Cor. 12). The Christian must hold that tension because to veer to either side leads one to despair (I don’t have enough faith) or hopelessness (God is powerless to help me)—neither of which is true.
o 9:28-29: “prayer and fasting.” We now come back to the inability of the disciples to deal with the boy, and what Jesus says is amazing. The disciples’ problem was that, in addition to the authority Christ had given them, they needed to fast and pray. What is amazing is that this is exactly what we have been given in this ABNY age. The prayer of faith will save the sick, and the Lord will raise him up (Jas. 6:15).
· 9:30-32, the practical application. Jesus had said these words before (8:31-33), and now we see that He was teaching the disciples about these words. What He was saying was not just a “put it on your calendar” event. This describes the lifestyle, the perspective we must have in the ABNY world in which we live. The teaching would include what Jesus said in Mk. 8:34-38. If you choose to follow Christ, it is all or nothing. Deny yourself! Take up your cross! And follow Him to the place where that cross will be firmly planted. Your life is not your own but it is His. Lose it for His sake and the gospel’s and you will save it!
One thing we have seen in these illustrations of the ABNY life is that our Lord has provided all we need to live in His life. We may still be waiting for a day when things will be “better,” but things are not now “hopeless” for the followers of Christ. For us, what is essential is that we walk in faith, in the Spirit. We will then have all Christ had available to do the will of His Father!