Commentary
Jesus enters the region of Tyre hoping to remain unnoticed, but a Gentile mother finds him and begs for her demon-oppressed daughter. Jesus answers with a household image in which the children are fed first and the dogs receive no bread before them. The woman does not dispute that ordering; she asks for mercy within it, noting that even the dogs under the table eat crumbs. Jesus grants her request on account of that reply, and the story ends with the daughter delivered though Jesus never goes to the house.
Mark presents a Gentile woman receiving deliverance for her daughter through Jesus' word, while Jesus' saying about the children being fed first preserves Israel's priority in the sequence of his earthly mission.
7:24 After Jesus left there, he went to the region of Tyre. When he went into a house, he did not want anyone to know, but he was not able to escape notice. 7:25 Instead, a woman whose young daughter had an unclean spirit immediately heard about him and came and fell at his feet. 7:26 The woman was a Greek, of Syrophoenician origin. She asked him to cast the demon out of her daughter. 7:27 He said to her, "Let the children be satisfied first, for it is not right to take the children's bread and to throw it to the dogs." 7:28 She answered, "Yes, Lord, but even the dogs under the table eat the children's crumbs." 7:29 Then he said to her, "Because you said this, you may go. The demon has left your daughter." 7:30 She went home and found the child lying on the bed, and the demon gone.
Observation notes
- The setting in Tyre immediately places the episode in Gentile territory, which matters because Mark has just narrated Jesus' teaching that defilement comes from within rather than from external contact or food laws.
- Jesus seeks anonymity in a house, but the statement that he could not escape notice keeps the focus on the unavoidable spread of his reputation and mission.
- Mark identifies the woman with unusual ethnic specificity: she is "Greek" and "Syrophoenician by birth," underscoring that she stands outside Jewish ethnic identity.
- The daughter's condition is described as having an "unclean spirit," linking this Gentile scene to the wider Markan conflict with demonic uncleanness.
- The woman "kept asking" or petitioned him, indicating persistence rather than a single casual request.
- Jesus' saying includes the adverb "first," which is a major interpretive control: it signals order and priority, not necessarily permanent exclusion.
- The image shifts from "bread" for the children to "crumbs" for the dogs under the table; the woman does not contest the children's place but finds hope within Jesus' own metaphor.
- Jesus says, "Because of this word/saying," making her response the immediate narrative ground for the grant of healing, not ethnic status or ritual qualification alone through the scene's logic as presented by Mark.
- The exorcism occurs at a distance; the daughter is never brought physically to Jesus, which magnifies his authority over demonic powers beyond direct contact.
- The closing verification is concrete and domestic: the child is on the bed and the demon is gone, confirming a real deliverance rather than merely a hopeful report.
Structure
- Jesus departs from the previous dispute and enters Tyrian territory, seeking concealment but remaining impossible to hide (7:24).
- A woman with a demon-oppressed daughter comes immediately, falls at Jesus' feet, and asks for deliverance; Mark marks her explicitly as Gentile and Syrophoenician (7:25-26).
- Jesus answers with a household metaphor: children must be fed first, and bread is not to be thrown to the dogs (7:27).
- The woman accepts the metaphor's ordering and turns it into an appeal: even dogs under the table receive crumbs (7:28).
- Jesus grants the request because of her response, and the narrative closes with verification that the demon has left the daughter though Jesus never visits the house (7:29-30).
Key terms
pneuma akatharton
Strong's: G4151, G169
Gloss: impure/unclean spirit
In the immediate context after 7:1-23, the term sharpens the contrast between ritual categories and actual bondage; Jesus addresses real uncleanness in a Gentile setting.
Hellenis
Strong's: G1674
Gloss: Greek, Gentile
The term makes the crossing of ethnic boundaries explicit and prepares the reader for the tension in Jesus' metaphor about children and dogs.
Syrophoinikissa
Strong's: G4949
Gloss: Syrophoenician woman
Mark deliberately piles up identifiers to remove ambiguity: the petitioner is unmistakably Gentile, so the granting of her request carries salvation-historical significance.
proton
Strong's: G4412
Gloss: first, in the first place
This term prevents reading Jesus' reply as absolute rejection; it implies sequence and priority, leaving conceptual room for later Gentile participation.
kynaria
Strong's: G2952
Gloss: little dogs, household dogs
The diminutive form softens the image from wild scavengers to house dogs, though it remains a status-lowering metaphor. The woman's reply works within this household scene rather than rejecting it.
logos
Strong's: G3056
Gloss: word, statement
Mark highlights the woman's answer as interpretively decisive within the scene; her grasp of Jesus' ordering and mercy is central to the narrative outcome.
Syntactical features
Adversative narrative turn
Textual signal: "but he was not able to escape notice" after Jesus' desire for secrecy
Interpretive effect: The contrast shows that the encounter is not accidental filler; Jesus' hiddenness gives way to a divinely significant disclosure of mercy in Gentile territory.
Participial and verbal sequence of urgent response
Textual signal: "immediately heard... came... fell at his feet... asked him"
Interpretive effect: The clustered actions portray desperation, reverence, and persistence, shaping the reader to view her as earnest rather than presumptuous.
Infinitive construction expressing purpose/content of request
Textual signal: "asked him to cast the demon out of her daughter"
Interpretive effect: The request is specific and faith-filled: she seeks not vague help but Jesus' decisive authority over the demon.
Priority marker in Jesus' saying
Textual signal: "Let the children be satisfied first"
Interpretive effect: The adverb controls the metaphor by indicating sequence in redemptive mission rather than a flat denial of Gentile mercy.
Causal grounding of the miracle grant
Textual signal: "Because of this word/saying"
Interpretive effect: Jesus explicitly ties the granting to her reply, making her response the hinge of the scene's interpretation.
Textual critical issues
Wording of the granting formula in verse 29
Variants: Some witnesses vary between "the demon has gone out" and closely related formulations, with minor differences in wording around Jesus' dismissal.
Preferred reading: "Because of this word, go; the demon has gone out of your daughter."
Interpretive effect: The variants do not materially alter the meaning; Jesus' authoritative declaration and the completed deliverance remain the same.
Rationale: The main textual tradition supports the familiar form, and no variant substantially changes the unit's theological or narrative force.
Old Testament background
Isaiah 49:6
Connection type: thematic_background
Note: The Servant's mission moves from restoring Israel toward reaching the nations. Mark does not quote the text here, but the Israel-first-yet-not-Israel-only pattern coheres with Jesus' wording.
Genesis 12:3
Connection type: thematic_background
Note: The Abrahamic pattern of blessing extending to the nations forms a broad background for Gentile inclusion through Israel's Messiah, while this scene still preserves covenantal ordering.
Interpretive options
How should Jesus' reference to the children and dogs be understood?
- A hard ethnic refusal expressing exclusion of Gentiles from present mercy.
- A salvation-historical statement of Israel's priority in Jesus' earthly ministry, without denying later or overflow mercy to Gentiles.
- A deliberate test designed mainly to draw out the woman's faith, with little salvation-historical significance.
Preferred option: A salvation-historical statement of Israel's priority in Jesus' earthly ministry, without denying later or overflow mercy to Gentiles.
Rationale: The decisive word is "first," and the woman herself accepts the ordering while appealing for mercy within it. The narrative setting in Gentile territory and Jesus' positive response favor sequence rather than exclusion.
Why does Jesus say, "Because of this word"?
- Her witty, humble, faith-filled reply is the immediate narrative basis for granting the request.
- The phrase points chiefly to a magical or formulaic trigger in spoken words.
- The response is irrelevant, since Jesus always intended to heal regardless of her answer and the phrase is only rhetorical.
Preferred option: Her witty, humble, faith-filled reply is the immediate narrative basis for granting the request.
Rationale: Mark explicitly directs the reader to her spoken answer. The scene presents her response as perceptive submission to Jesus' mission order and confidence in his abundant mercy.
Does the passage teach that Gentiles are merely secondary recipients with no direct place in God's plan?
- Yes; Gentiles only receive incidental leftovers and remain outside the central scope of salvation.
- No; the metaphor communicates temporal and historical priority, not permanent inferiority or exclusion.
- The passage has no bearing on Gentile inclusion beyond this isolated miracle story.
Preferred option: No; the metaphor communicates temporal and historical priority, not permanent inferiority or exclusion.
Rationale: The granting of the request itself, together with the term "first," shows that Gentile mercy is real, even if Israel's priority in the Messiah's earthly ministry is maintained.
Conner principles audit
context
Relevance: high
Note: The immediately preceding discussion of defilement prepares the reader to see Jesus acting in Gentile space without ritual contamination concerns controlling the scene.
mention_principles
Relevance: high
Note: The text mentions the woman's Gentile identity twice and Jesus' word "first" once; both details must control interpretation rather than be minimized.
christological
Relevance: high
Note: The distance exorcism and effective spoken command reveal Jesus' messianic authority over demonic powers beyond geographic proximity.
election_covenant_ethnic
Relevance: high
Note: Israel's covenant priority is not erased; the children/dogs metaphor assumes an order in redemptive history while still allowing Gentile participation.
moral
Relevance: medium
Note: The woman's humility and persistence are narrated concretely, but the passage should not be reduced to a generic moral lesson detached from Jesus' mission structure.
chronometrical_dispensational
Relevance: medium
Note: The term "first" invites attention to salvation-historical sequence in Jesus' earthly ministry, though the unit does not itself map out a full dispensational scheme.
Theological significance
- Jesus' mercy reaches a Gentile household without erasing Israel's prior place in the Messiah's mission.
- In the wake of the defilement dispute, the passage shifts attention from ritual boundary to actual uncleanness: demonic bondage, which Jesus removes even in Gentile territory.
- Faith here is not self-assertion but needy, perceptive trust that takes Jesus at his word and still asks for mercy.
- Jesus' authority over demons does not depend on proximity, touch, or visible action; his spoken declaration is enough.
- The scene opens outward toward Gentile inclusion, but it does so through the sequence implied by "first," not by denying Israel's role.
Philosophical appreciation
Exegetical and linguistic: The exchange depends on a compact household metaphor and on the woman's refusal to step outside its logic. "First" keeps Jesus' saying from becoming absolute exclusion, and "because of this word" makes her reply the turning point of the scene.
Biblical theological: Placed after the discussion of what truly defiles, the episode shows Jesus in Gentile space confronting an unclean spirit rather than avoiding contamination. The pattern is Israel first, yet not Israel only.
Metaphysical: The narrative assumes that personal evil is real and that Jesus' authority reaches beyond physical presence. His word is not advice or ritual speech; it effects what it declares across distance.
Psychological Spiritual: The mother's response combines urgency, humility, and unusual steadiness. She neither claims status nor withdraws in offense, but keeps asking on the assumption that even apparent leftovers from Jesus are sufficient.
Divine Perspective: The scene presents divine mercy as ordered rather than indiscriminate. Israel's priority stands, yet that order does not trap grace within ethnic boundaries.
Category: works_providence_glory
Note: The distant exorcism displays sovereign authority over an unseen hostile power.
Category: character
Note: Jesus holds together covenantal order and compassion for a desperate outsider.
Category: revelatory_self_disclosure
Note: The dialogue reveals both the sequence of Jesus' mission and the abundance of his power.
Category: personhood
Note: The woman's answer matters; the story is personal encounter, not impersonal force.
- Israel has priority in Jesus' mission, yet a Gentile petitioner receives mercy.
- Jesus seeks concealment, yet cannot remain hidden.
- The woman accepts a lower place in the metaphor, yet her answer becomes the hinge of the miracle.
- The exorcism is unseen when spoken, yet plainly verified when she returns home.
Enrichment summary
The exchange works through covenantal household imagery, not mere insult. Jesus' "first" marks Israel's historical priority, while the woman's reply shows that this priority does not shut out Gentile mercy. Read after the dispute over defilement, the setting in Tyre sharpens another contrast: the real uncleanness in view is not contact with Gentiles but the unclean spirit afflicting the child, and Jesus removes it without effort.
Traditions of men check
Reading Jesus' ministry as if ethnic Israel has no historical priority at all.
Why it conflicts: Jesus explicitly says the children must be fed first, which preserves an order in redemptive history.
Textual pressure point: The adverb "first" in verse 27.
Caution: Do not overextend this into ethnic partiality in salvation; the same unit grants mercy to a Gentile petitioner.
Treating faith as a demand for personal entitlement before God.
Why it conflicts: The woman does not claim rights; she receives Jesus' mission ordering and appeals to his mercy within it.
Textual pressure point: Her reply about dogs under the table eating crumbs.
Caution: Humility here should not be twisted into denying that Gentiles are truly welcomed by Christ.
Reducing spiritual evil to metaphor for social or psychological distress only.
Why it conflicts: Mark presents an actual unclean spirit departing at Jesus' word and verifies the daughter's deliverance concretely.
Textual pressure point: The repeated references to the unclean spirit and the daughter's condition after Jesus speaks.
Caution: Recognizing demonic reality should not lead to simplistic attributions of every illness or hardship to direct demonic activity.
Thought-world reading
Dynamic: covenantal_identity
Why It Matters: "Children" and table-bread name belonging within Israel's covenant story. Jesus is not speaking in the abstract about human worth but about the order of his messianic mission.
Western Misread: Reducing the exchange to a lesson in social tact or offense.
Interpretive Difference: The saying reads as an ordered statement of mission rather than as either sheer hostility or a denial that Gentiles can receive mercy.
Dynamic: purity_and_uncleanness
Why It Matters: Coming right after 7:1-23, the Tyre setting shows Jesus entering Gentile space and dealing with a truly "unclean" reality: demonic oppression.
Western Misread: Either treating uncleanness here as merely ceremonial or missing the link with the previous argument about defilement.
Interpretive Difference: The story underscores that Jesus confronts actual spiritual bondage rather than managing ritual contamination.
Idioms and figures
Expression: "Let the children be satisfied first"
Category: metaphor
Explanation: A household meal image that marks order of provision. The key term is "first": Israel has priority, but the wording does not require permanent exclusion of others.
Interpretive effect: It frames the dialogue around sequence rather than flat refusal.
Expression: "to throw it to the dogs" / "even the dogs under the table eat the children's crumbs"
Category: metaphor
Explanation: The image lowers status, yet remains within a domestic scene of a shared household space. The woman answers from inside that scene rather than rejecting it.
Interpretive effect: The exchange stays sharp, but the focus is rank within the household metaphor and the abundance of the table.
Expression: "Because of this word"
Category: other
Explanation: Jesus points directly to her reply as the reason for the granted request.
Interpretive effect: The narrative highlights her discerning, humble answer rather than any magical force in speech itself.
Application implications
- Bring concrete needs to Jesus with the persistence this mother shows, especially when help seems delayed or distant.
- Receive Jesus' framing rather than approaching him as though mercy were owed on your terms.
- Intercede for others with specific hope; the mother asks for her daughter's deliverance, not for vague relief.
- Do not treat ethnic or cultural distance as a barrier to Christ's authority and compassion.
- When Jesus' words are difficult, stay in the conversation long enough to hear their order and mercy together.
Enrichment applications
- Read hard sayings of Jesus in their local narrative and covenantal setting before drawing moral conclusions from tone alone.
- Approach Christ's mercy without entitlement; this mother is bold, but her boldness is governed by humility and trust.
- Hold together both lines the passage keeps together: Israel's priority in the order of Jesus' mission and real mercy for outsiders.
Warnings
- Do not read the "dogs" metaphor apart from the qualifying word "first," or the scene will be flattened into simple ethnic rejection.
- Do not reduce the passage to a generic message about persistence; the dialogue also concerns the order of Jesus' mission and the extension of mercy beyond Israel.
- Do not use the story either to erase Israel's historical role or to deny Gentiles genuine access to Jesus' mercy.
- Avoid speculative reconstructions of Jesus' inner motive beyond what Mark narrates; the text puts the weight on the exchange and its result.
- Later New Testament expansion to the nations may clarify the trajectory, but this scene itself presents an anticipatory moment, not the whole developed doctrine.
Enrichment warnings
- Do not soften the metaphor so much that its social sting disappears.
- Do not harden the metaphor into total exclusion; both "first" and the granted request resist that reading.
- Do not treat the distant exorcism as a technique to imitate; the point is Jesus' authority.
- Do not let background discussion about idiom or covenant order overshadow Mark's emphasis on the woman's reply and Jesus' effective word.
Interpretive misread risks
Misreading: Jesus is simply voicing ethnic prejudice that the woman overcomes by out-arguing him.
Why It Happens: Readers may isolate "dogs" from the household setting and from the word "first."
Correction: The saying carries real sting, but the scene is better read as marking Israel's priority in Jesus' mission while still granting Gentile mercy.
Misreading: The passage is mainly a general lesson about persistence.
Why It Happens: The mother's repeated asking is easy to detach from the rest of the exchange.
Correction: Her persistence matters, but the scene turns on how she receives Jesus' ordering and appeals to his sufficiency within it.
Misreading: By this point the Gentile setting no longer has interpretive weight.
Why It Happens: Later New Testament teaching about the nations can be read back into the scene too quickly.
Correction: Mark highlights her outsider status on purpose. The story opens toward Gentile inclusion while still retaining Israel's historical priority.
Misreading: "Unclean spirit" is only a premodern way of describing distress.
Why It Happens: Modern discomfort with supernatural categories encourages reductionism.
Correction: Mark presents an actual demonic departure, confirmed by the daughter's condition when her mother returns.