Commentary
Jesus heals a deaf man who also speaks with difficulty by taking him aside, touching the affected organs, looking to heaven, and commanding, "Ephphatha." Mark lingers over the physical details and the man's privacy, then turns to the familiar irony: Jesus orders silence, but the news spreads even more. The crowd's verdict, "He has done everything well... he even makes the deaf hear and the mute speak," casts the miracle as more than a striking cure; it sounds like the arrival of God's promised restoration.
Mark presents this healing as a deliberate, compassionate act in Gentile territory through which Jesus restores hearing and speech by his own authoritative word. The crowd's astonished conclusion links the event with prophetic hopes of deaf ears opened and impaired speech released, even if their amazement does not yet amount to full understanding.
7:31 Then Jesus went out again from the region of Tyre and came through Sidon to the Sea of Galilee in the region of the Decapolis. 7:32 They brought to him a deaf man who had difficulty speaking, and they asked him to place his hands on him. 7:33 After Jesus took him aside privately, away from the crowd, he put his fingers in the man's ears, and after spitting, he touched his tongue. 7:34 Then he looked up to heaven and said with a sigh, "Ephphatha" (that is, "Be opened"). 7:35 And immediately the man's ears were opened, his tongue loosened, and he spoke plainly. 7:36 Jesus ordered them not to tell anything. But as much as he ordered them not to do this, they proclaimed it all the more. 7:37 People were completely astounded and said, "He has done everything well. He even makes the deaf hear and the mute speak."
Observation notes
- Mark gives unusually concrete healing details here: fingers in ears, spittle, touch to tongue, upward gaze, sigh, and preserved Aramaic speech.
- The man is not described as fully mute but as one who speaks with difficulty; the healing therefore restores both hearing and intelligible speech.
- Jesus takes the man away from the crowd before healing him, which directs attention to personal care rather than spectacle.
- The healing command is singular and direct: "Be opened," followed by immediate fulfillment.
- Verse 35 uses two restoration statements, one for hearing and one for speech, making the miracle comprehensive.
- The prohibition of publicity is explicit, yet the response is inverse: command decreases nothing and proclamation increases.
- The final crowd saying is more than amazement at technique; it interprets the event by summarizing Jesus' works in evaluative and restorative terms.
- Placed after the Syrophoenician woman's episode and before the feeding of the four thousand, the unit continues Mark's portrayal of Jesus' ministry among Gentiles.
Structure
- Jesus travels from Tyre by way of Sidon to the Sea of Galilee in the Decapolis, locating the scene in Gentile territory (7:31).
- Others bring a deaf man with impaired speech and request Jesus' touch, establishing both need and mediated access to Jesus (7:32).
- Jesus takes the man aside privately and uses tangible gestures directed to the man's ears and tongue (7:33).
- Jesus looks to heaven, sighs, and speaks the command "Ephphatha," identifying the healing as divine-power-invoking yet personally enacted authority (7:34).
- The healing occurs immediately: ears opened, tongue released, plain speech restored (7:35).
- Jesus commands silence, but the more he orders it, the more widely they proclaim it (7:36).
- The crowd concludes with extravagant astonishment and a summary confession: Jesus does all things well and even makes the deaf hear and the mute speak (7:37).
Key terms
kophos
Strong's: G2974
Gloss: deaf; sometimes mute in some contexts
The term helps frame the miracle as literal restoration and anticipates Mark 8:18, where inability to hear becomes a spiritual category for the disciples.
mogilalos
Strong's: G3424
Gloss: speaking with difficulty; speech-impaired
Its rarity strengthens the link to Isaiah 35:6 in the Greek Old Testament tradition, where related language appears in restoration imagery.
ephphatha
Strong's: G2188
Gloss: be opened
Mark's retention of the Semitic form gives vivid immediacy and highlights Jesus' authoritative word as the decisive turning point in the miracle.
stenazo
Strong's: G4727
Gloss: groan; sigh
The sigh fits the scene's burdened compassion and the reality of human brokenness, not magical effort or uncertainty.
orthos
Strong's: G3723
Gloss: correctly; plainly
The point is not mere sound production but normal, ordered speech, underscoring full restoration.
Syntactical features
Participial sequence preceding the command
Textual signal: "after spitting, he touched his tongue... looking up to heaven... said"
Interpretive effect: The chain of actions slows the narrative and foregrounds intentional, embodied care before the authoritative spoken word.
Aorist imperative in direct speech
Textual signal: "Ephphatha" translated as "Be opened"
Interpretive effect: The concise command presents Jesus' speech as effectual and decisive rather than prayerful uncertainty.
Immediate-result marker
Textual signal: "And immediately" in verse 35
Interpretive effect: Mark makes the causal link between Jesus' command and the restoration unmistakable.
Passive opening and release language
Textual signal: "his ears were opened, his tongue loosened"
Interpretive effect: The wording places the focus on the result effected upon the man, underscoring divine restoration rather than human self-recovery.
Correlative comparative construction
Textual signal: "as much as he ordered... they proclaimed it all the more"
Interpretive effect: The syntax intensifies the irony surrounding the messianic secret and the uncontrollable spread of Jesus' fame.
Textual critical issues
Wording of the speech impairment in verse 32
Variants: Some witnesses show minor variation around the description of the man's speaking difficulty, but the sense remains that he had impaired speech rather than normal speech.
Preferred reading: The reading describing a deaf man who spoke with difficulty.
Interpretive effect: Little effect on the overall meaning; it preserves the twofold disability healed in the narrative.
Rationale: The external support and contextual coherence favor the common text, and Mark's later description in verse 35 confirms restoration of speech clarity.
Form of the crowd's acclamation in verse 37
Variants: Minor differences occur in wording and order around "He has done everything well" and the description of making deaf hear and mute speak.
Preferred reading: The reading that includes both the evaluative statement and the paired restoration claim.
Interpretive effect: The preferred text best preserves the allusive force to scriptural restoration motifs and the crowd's interpretive summary of the miracle.
Rationale: The fuller reading is well attested and fits Mark's tendency to conclude scenes with strong crowd reactions.
Old Testament background
Isaiah 35:5-6
Connection type: allusion
Note: The closing words about the deaf hearing and the speech-impaired speaking strongly echo Isaiah's restoration promises, suggesting that Jesus' act manifests messianic-age renewal.
Genesis 1
Connection type: echo
Note: The crowd's statement, "He has done everything well," recalls the scriptural pattern of God's good ordering work, casting Jesus' healing as restorative re-creation.
Isaiah 29:18
Connection type: thematic_background
Note: The opening of deaf ears belongs to prophetic hope that God will reverse incapacity and darkness; the miracle fits that pattern without requiring a direct quotation.
Interpretive options
Why does Jesus use physical gestures like fingers, spittle, and touch?
- They function pastorally and communicatively for a man who cannot hear, showing what Jesus is about to heal.
- They reflect culturally familiar healing actions but are subordinated to Jesus' authority, not dependent on technique.
- They are primarily symbolic acts with little narrative importance beyond vividness.
Preferred option: They function pastorally and communicatively for a man who cannot hear, while also showing that the healing is personally mediated rather than magical.
Rationale: The private setting, the man's deafness, and the narrative's focus on directed touch to ears and tongue make the gestures intelligible as compassionate communication tied to the specific impairment.
What is the significance of Jesus' sigh?
- It expresses compassion and grief in the face of human brokenness.
- It signals exertion in performing the miracle.
- It mainly anticipates his later deep sigh over unbelief in Mark 8:12.
Preferred option: It expresses compassion and grief in the face of human brokenness, with some narrative resonance to the later sigh over unbelief.
Rationale: Nothing in the context suggests difficulty in healing; the miracle follows immediately. The sigh fits Jesus' personal engagement with suffering and Mark's portrait of his affective response.
Why does Jesus command silence after the healing?
- He seeks to restrain premature or distorted messianic publicity built on miracles alone.
- He wants to avoid crowd pressure and maintain control of his movements.
- The command is merely a literary device with no historical or theological significance.
Preferred option: He seeks to restrain premature or distorted messianic publicity built on miracles alone, which also helps limit crowd-driven disruption.
Rationale: Mark repeatedly pairs miracles with commands to silence, and the immediate disobedient proclamation shows the tension between Jesus' identity and popular misunderstanding.
Conner principles audit
context
Relevance: high
Note: The scene must be read between the Syrophoenician episode and the Decapolis feeding; together they show Jesus' restoring ministry extending in Gentile regions, not an isolated wonder-story.
mention_principles
Relevance: medium
Note: The text mentions concrete bodily healing, not abstract spirituality alone; later spiritual applications in Mark must not erase the literal miracle here.
christological
Relevance: high
Note: The unit's decisive issue is who Jesus is as revealed by what he does; the crowd's conclusion and Isaiah-shaped echo control interpretation more than the healing technique.
moral
Relevance: medium
Note: The crowd's disobedience to Jesus' command should not be romanticized simply because it results in publicity; zeal is not automatically obedience.
symbolic_typical_parabolic
Relevance: medium
Note: The healing can prepare readers for Mark's theme of hearing and understanding, especially before 8:18, but symbolic significance must arise from the narrative context and not replace the historical event.
prophetic
Relevance: high
Note: Isaianic restoration background guards against reducing the scene to wonder-working; the miracle functions as a sign of promised divine renewal.
Theological significance
- Jesus' work in the Decapolis shows that his restorative ministry is already reaching beyond Jewish settings, though the scene does not erase Israel's role in the larger story.
- The miracle shows Jesus addressing bodily brokenness directly, not merely teaching about restoration from a distance.
- Jesus' look to heaven situates the act in relation to the Father, while the healing itself comes through Jesus' own command.
- The result matches prophetic restoration imagery, especially the opening of deaf ears and the release of impaired speech.
- The order to keep silent warns against building a picture of Jesus from miracles alone; public excitement can still miss the shape of his mission.
- Set near Mark 8, the opening of this man's ears sharpens the contrast with others who still fail to hear and understand.
Philosophical appreciation
Exegetical and linguistic: The narration moves from obstruction to release through concrete, bodily language: ears opened, tongue loosened, speech made right. By preserving the Aramaic command, Mark lets Jesus' word stand at the center of the transition from incapacity to restored function.
Biblical theological: In this Decapolis setting, the healing reads as a local instance of prophetic renewal arriving through Israel's Messiah. The scene is not just about relief for one sufferer, though it includes that; it presents Jesus as enacting the kind of restoration associated with God's saving visitation.
Metaphysical: The passage treats hearing and speech as good created capacities that have become impaired and are now restored. Jesus does not work as a manipulator of hidden forces but as the personal agent through whom divine order reasserts itself over bodily disorder.
Psychological Spiritual: Jesus removes the man from the crowd and deals with him in ways fitted to his condition, which gives the miracle unusual personal texture. The episode also prepares for Mark's later use of hearing as a category of understanding, without reducing this scene to a mere symbol.
Divine Perspective: The sigh and upward look refuse any tone of spectacle. Human affliction is met with compassion, gravity, and purposeful action.
Category: character
Note: The healing shows compassion that is neither vague nor theatrical but closely fitted to the man's need.
Category: works_providence_glory
Note: In Jesus' act, God's restoring power appears in concrete human life and evokes astonishment.
Category: revelatory_self_disclosure
Note: The miracle discloses Jesus through deeds that resonate with scriptural hopes for restored hearing and speech.
Category: attributes
Note: The immediate cure displays effective power, while the sigh shows that such power is not emotionally detached.
- Jesus commands with direct authority, yet looks to heaven in filial dependence.
- The event naturally invites proclamation, yet Jesus forbids it because miracle publicity can misrepresent him.
- The healing is intimate and private, yet its significance reaches beyond the individual man to wider restoration hopes.
Enrichment summary
The scene is driven by restoration, not technique. In the Decapolis Jesus performs the sort of renewal associated with prophetic hope: deaf ears opened, impaired speech released. The tactile gestures suit the man's condition and underscore personal care, while the Aramaic command functions as the decisive, effectual word. The crowd's praise is scripturally charged, but Mark still leaves room between amazed recognition and full christological understanding. Their loud publicity should therefore not be romanticized as obedience.
Traditions of men check
Treating healing gestures or substances as repeatable techniques that guarantee miraculous results.
Why it conflicts: The narrative centers on Jesus' personal authority and compassion, not a transferable ritual formula.
Textual pressure point: The decisive turning point is Jesus' command and immediate effect, not the gestures by themselves.
Caution: One should not deny that God may use means, but this text does not authorize method-driven miracle systems.
Celebrating any religious publicity as obedience regardless of Christ's explicit command.
Why it conflicts: The crowd's proclamation arises in direct contradiction to Jesus' order.
Textual pressure point: Verse 36 states that the more he charged them not to speak, the more they spread the news.
Caution: This should not be turned into a blanket prohibition on witness elsewhere; the point is that zeal detached from Jesus' timing and purpose can still be disobedient.
Reducing Jesus' miracles to symbols of inclusion or inner healing with no firm historical referent.
Why it conflicts: Mark narrates a particular bodily restoration with concrete sensory details and immediate results.
Textual pressure point: The ears are opened, the tongue is loosed, and the man speaks plainly.
Caution: Symbolic significance may be present, but it must be built on the actual event rather than replacing it.
Thought-world reading
Dynamic: prophetic_restoration_frame
Why It Matters: The crowd's words about the deaf hearing and the speech-impaired speaking place the event within Israel's hopes for God's restorative visitation. In the Decapolis, that hope is now appearing through Jesus' action.
Western Misread: Reading the story chiefly as an ancient healing report whose religious meaning was added later.
Interpretive Difference: The miracle is read as a sign of messianic restoration, not merely as a memorable cure.
Dynamic: functional_language
Why It Matters: "Be opened" addresses blocked capacities in a terse, result-focused way. The interest is in restored hearing, intelligible speech, and reintegration into ordinary human communication.
Western Misread: Treating the command either as a magical formula or as a dramatic flourish with no real interpretive weight.
Interpretive Difference: Jesus' word is presented as performative authority that removes incapacity.
Idioms and figures
Expression: Ephphatha
Category: other
Explanation: Mark preserves the Aramaic command and then translates it. The retained form gives the scene vivid immediacy, but the power lies in Jesus' authoritative word, not in a special sound-pattern to be repeated.
Interpretive effect: Attention falls on Jesus' effectual speech as the turning point of the miracle.
Expression: He has done everything well
Category: other
Explanation: This is more than excited applause. In context it sounds like scripturally shaped praise for fitting, restorative action that corresponds to God's good ordering work.
Interpretive effect: The crowd interprets the healing as evidence of extraordinary, God-related restoration, though not yet with full clarity.
Expression: He even makes the deaf hear and the mute speak
Category: other
Explanation: The line does more than report a successful cure; it echoes prophetic restoration language about opened ears and released speech.
Interpretive effect: The miracle is framed as a sign of promised renewal breaking in through Jesus.
Application implications
- Care for the afflicted should show the same personal attentiveness seen here; Jesus does not turn the man's vulnerability into public theater.
- Bodily need belongs within faithful ministry. This healing honors embodied mercy rather than treating physical suffering as spiritually unimportant.
- Religious zeal is not self-justifying. The crowd spreads true news, yet does so against Jesus' explicit command.
- The scene encourages confidence that Jesus can restore capacities that seem blocked, damaged, or beyond human remedy.
- Astonishment at Jesus' works is not the same as understanding him rightly; Mark keeps pressing that distinction.
Enrichment applications
- Care for suffering people should be fitted to their actual condition rather than shaped by spectacle or ministry performance.
- Churches should resist method-centered healing culture. This passage supports confidence in Christ's authority, not confidence in reproducing his gestures, substances, or exact wording.
- Amazement at Jesus' mighty works should be schooled by scriptural categories of restoration, not by a craving for the dramatic alone.
Warnings
- Do not build a sacramental or magical theory of healing from Jesus' use of saliva and touch; the passage gives a narrated event, not a universal procedure.
- Do not flatten the crowd's statement into a full christological confession; it is a true and weighty acclamation, but still short of Mark's later fuller disclosures.
- Do not overread the secrecy command as embarrassment about miracles; in Mark it more likely manages misunderstanding and premature messianic enthusiasm.
- Do not miss the Gentile setting, but do not force an anti-Israel contrast from it; the scene displays widening ministry rather than replacement theology.
Enrichment warnings
- Do not overclaim the Isaiah connection as though Mark gives a formal quotation; the force is allusive but strong.
- Do not treat the Aramaic word as an incantation or privileged prayer formula.
- Do not use the Gentile setting to force replacement-theology claims; the point is widening restoration through Israel's Messiah, not erasure of Israel's story.
Interpretive misread risks
Misreading: Treating the fingers, saliva, and touch as a fixed method for later healing ministry.
Why It Happens: The narrative gives unusual physical detail, and readers often assume detailed actions are meant to be copied.
Correction: The gestures fit this man's condition and the private setting. The decisive element in the scene is Jesus' authority and command, not a transferable procedure.
Misreading: Taking the crowd's response as a full and settled confession of Jesus' identity.
Why It Happens: Their words are strong and resonate with scriptural restoration themes.
Correction: The acclamation is significant and true as far as it goes, but in Mark amazement and even fitting language do not necessarily equal full understanding of Jesus' mission.
Misreading: Treating the crowd's proclamation as exemplary obedience because it publicizes a true miracle.
Why It Happens: Modern instincts often equate enthusiasm and successful publicity with faithfulness.
Correction: Verse 36 presents their spreading of the news as disobedience to Jesus' command. Right witness is governed by Jesus' terms, not by zeal alone.
Misreading: Reducing the passage to a symbol of spiritual hearing and ignoring the bodily healing.
Why It Happens: Mark soon speaks of people who have ears but do not hear, which invites symbolic connections.
Correction: That later resonance is real, but it grows out of an actual restoration of hearing and speech narrated in concrete detail.