Lord I Believe, but help my Unbelief
Lord, I believe but help my unbelief
(9:24) And straightway the father of the child cried out, and said with tears. The words “with tears” are not in the best manuscripts. Vincent, commenting on the words “cried out and said,” has: “the former denoting the inarticulate cry, the ejaculation, followed by the words, ‘Lord, I believe.’ ” Expositors says of the cry, “eager, fear-stricken cry.” Swete says, “His strength of feeling shows itself in a cry as piercing as that of the demoniac son.”
Lord, I believe. Help thou mine unbelief. The word “help” is boētheō (βοηθεω) “to run to the cry” of those in danger, hence, “to succor, bring aid, to help.” In verse 22, this verb is in the aorist imperative. Instant help is asked for. Here it is in the present imperative. Continuous help is asked for. “Be constantly helping my unbelief.” Swete says: “The father instantly responds to the demand for fuller trust on his part … He recognizes that the help he needs is in the first instance help for himself and not for his boy.… He believes, but his faith is defective, and its defect needs the Master’s succor.” The word “unbelief,” apistia (ἀπιστια), Thayer says, can be translated in this context by the expression “weakness of faith.”
Translation. And immediately having cried out, the father of the little boy was saying to Jesus, I am believing. Be helping my weakness of faith.
(2) The struggle for faith (9:24) : The father says, “I do believe, but help me not to doubt!”
9:24 “ ‘I do believe, help my unbelief’ ” This is a PRESENT ACTIVE IMPERATIVE. Remember it is the object of faith, not the quantity, that is crucial (cf. Matt. 17:20; Luke 17:6). Notice that Jesus worked with this man’s doubts, as He will with ours.
Jesus deals with the father’s faith, not the boy’s, because he has been possessed since he was a child. One wonders if one of the reasons the disciples could not exorcize the boy was the father’s lack of faith in them. Jesus often focused on parent’s or friend’s faith in effecting cures and deliverances. This father’s words admit his need and beseeches Jesus’ help to further his faith. This is a prayer we could all pray!
“Help me overcome my unbelief” (9:24). Faith has two aspects: objective and subjective. Objectively our faith is in Jesus, and He is unshakable. Subjectively our faith is often mixed with hesitancy and doubt. The way to overcome uncertainty is to remember that what makes faith valid is not its subjective strength, but the trustworthiness of its object. We can confidently affirm this truth: “I can’t, but Jesus can.”