The Kind of People Jesus Welcomes

Mark 7:24-30 February 28, 2021 Pastor Ricky Alcantar
Thesis Only a certain kind of person can receive help from Jesus, but that certain kind of person is defined by faith in Christ, not by moral achievement, ethnic identity, or social respectability—and that means the door is open to all who come in humble, wholehearted, persistent trust.
Series
Type
Expository
Tone
pastoraldidacticprophetic
Method
grammatical-historicalredemptive-historicalcanonicalapplicatory
What's in this sermon

The shape of the argument

26 units across exposition, application, illustration, theological claim, and conclusion. The pastor's argument is built from these moving parts.

Pastoral correction · unit #22
"The pastor applies the text directly to the contemporary controversy around LGBTQ issues and the Equality Act. He identifies two dangers: failing to uphold biblical truth on gender and sexuality, and failing to welcome LGBTQ people to hear the gospel. He reads from the church's statement of faith to affirm both biblical truth on gender and the gospel's universal offer. The application is concrete (naming the specific issue and the church's statement) and calls the church to hold both truths simultaneously."
Doctrinal loci· 10 surfaced
Soteriology · 19 Christology · 9 Ecclesiology · 9 Covenant Theology · 4 Ethics / Moral Theology · 4 Anthropology · 3 Bibliology · 1 Eschatology · 1 Hamartiology · 1 Pneumatology · 1
Bible citations· 14
Mark 7:24-30 | Matthew 7:24 | Mark 7:24-26 | Mark 7:25 | Mark 7:26 | Matthew 15 | Mark 7:24-27 | Mark 7:27-28 | Mark 7:27-29 | Ephesians 2:8 | Mark 7:25-28
Illustrations· 3
  1. personal story · unit #4 — The pastor introduces a contemporary story about a transgender woman named Melanie (formerly Howard) who was welcomed into a church community despite the church's clear biblical stance on gender and sexuality. The illustration is positioned to raise the sermon's central question in contemporary terms before the exposition unfolds. It creates tension and stakes for the congregation.
  2. personal story · unit #16 — The pastor returns to the opening illustration and develops it further. Melanie asked to be baptized, and the pastor walked her through the Bible's teaching on gender, leading to her willingness to reconsider her identity. But the key point is the process: the church did not exclude her before she came to faith; they welcomed her, taught her the gospel, and only then addressed repentance. The illustration models the sermon's thesis—the church must not exclude people on external grounds while upholding biblical truth.
  3. personal story · unit #23 — The pastor concludes the Howard/Melanie illustration with its resolution: Howard died shortly after coming to faith, but the church's hope is that he entered heaven through the same door of the cross as all believers. The illustration reinforces the sermon's thesis—no external category excludes anyone from the cross. The emotional weight of the story (death, transformation, eternal hope) serves the sermon's final exhortation.
Theological claims· 4
  1. Jesus has an exclusive message and excludes certain people from coming to him—not everyone who approaches Jesus is welcomed. unit #5
  2. Only a certain kind of person can receive help from Jesus, but that kind of person is not who we think it is. unit #6
  3. Mark's authorial strategy across these two passages is to demolish both false confidence (what we think gets us in doesn't) and false despair (what we think keeps us out doesn't). unit #12
  4. The sole criterion that grants access to Jesus is faith—not identity, ethnicity, or moral achievement, but humble trust in Jesus' generosity. unit #17
Quotations· 4
"the establishment would be scandalized by any rabbi having a conversation with such a person" — Kent Hughes (unit #8)
"She appears to understand the purpose of Israel's Messiah better than Israel does. Her pluck and persistence are a testimony to her trust in the sufficiency and surplus of Jesus. His provision for the disciples in Israel will be abundant enough to provide for one such as herself. The woman is the first person in Mark—to hear and understand a parable of Jesus." — Edwards (unit #14)
"this woman is not saying, give me what I deserve on the basis of my goodness. She is saying, give me what I don't deserve on the basis of your goodness." — Tim Keller (unit #15)
"We do not presume to come to your table, merciful Lord, trusting in our own righteousness. Not in us, but in your manifold and great mercies. We are not worthy so much to gather up the crumbs under your table, but you are the same Lord whose property is to have mercy." — Thomas Cranmer (unit #20)
Read it

Full transcript

31,472 characters 26 units ~35 min reading time Listen instead →

0 · The pastor opens with personal levity about a back injury, then frames the sermon's central question: what kind of person does Jesus welcome? He signals that the text will initially appear troubling but will ultimately reveal better news than expected

faces today. If I hobble around a little bit, it is because I jacked my back up carrying a 30-pound baby, and, um, it's a little bowling ball of a child. I love him, but he's going to put me in the grave sooner than I think. So if you do this, open your Bible, if you would, to Mark chapter 7. Mark chapter 7.

And we're going to be looking at the question today: what kind of person does Jesus welcome And what kind of person does Jesus help? And really, it's not just that, it really also gets at what kind of person do we allow into our lives? What kind of person do we allow through the doors of our church? We're gonna look at this in Matthew chapter 7 because I'll warn you, at first, it seems as though Jesus is being unfairly exclusive, and yet we end up seeing that the news is better than we thought.

1 · Single-word pause inviting the congregation to consider the framing question before the text is read

Think.

2 · The pastor reads the primary text, Mark 7:24-30, contextualizing it as occurring after the section with the Pharisees

So Matthew 7:24, remember this is right after that section with the Pharisees, it says this, this is God's word. "And from there he, Jesus, arose and went away to the region of Tyre and Sidon. And he entered a house and did not want anyone to know, yet he could not be hidden. But immediately a woman whose little daughter had an unclean spirit heard of him and came and fell down at his feet." The woman was a Gentile, a Syrophoenician by birth, and she begged him to cast the demon out of her daughter. And he said to her, 'Let the children be fed first, for it is not right to take the children's bread and throw it to the dogs.' But she answered him, 'Yes, Lord, yet even the dogs under the table eat the children's crumbs.' And he said to her, 'For this statement you may go your 'Go your way, the demon has left your daughter.' And she went home and found the child lying in bed and the demon gone.

This is the word of the Lord today.

3 · Reiterates the sermon's controlling question after the scripture reading, bridging from text to contemporary illustration

What kind of person does Jesus welcome? What kind of person does Jesus help?

4 · The pastor introduces a contemporary story about a transgender woman named Melanie (formerly Howard) who was welcomed into a church community despite the church's clear biblical stance on gender and sexuality

I wanna tell you a story that my friend Ron, who's a pastor in Pasadena, told me. He's a pastor at one of our partner churches, Sovereign Grace Church of Pasadena.

And he told me the story of Chris and Michelle. Chris and Michelle are just average members of the church there. And about 10 years earlier, they met one of their neighbors, one of their neighbors named Melanie. But as they got to know this neighbor, as they got to know many of their neighbors in the neighborhood, they learned that Melanie had not been born Melanie at birth. She'd been born Howard.

Melanie had transitioned from male to female 20 years earlier. This woman was in her late 60s at the time. And then, she had transitioned 20 years earlier after 20 years of confusion and sort of frustration with her gender identity. Now, that friendship between these two members, Chris and Michelle and Melanie, blossomed and eventually Melanie began attending a community group. She eventually even began going to church.

Now, that may have been something of a surprise for members of the church because their church, like our church, in our statement of faith a clear section on what we believe is the biblical truth, the biblical teaching about gender and sexuality. So many people would have been surprised to see a transgender woman, formerly a man, at their community group, perhaps even coming on Sunday morning. And it raises the question, what kind of person can come to Jesus? What kind of person will Jesus Help.

5 · The pastor establishes a doctrinal baseline: Jesus has an exclusive message

Now, when we see Jesus' ministry in the Gospel of Mark, one of the things we've seen is that Jesus has an exclusive message, right? He excludes certain people from the category of people that come to him and are welcome, that come to God through him. We actually saw one group last week that is excluded, the Pharisees, who come to Jesus, they assume assume that they're good with God, they assume they're about to get in. Jesus says, "No, you will not get in." This pattern will continue. People will come to Jesus and some will leave in sadness and anger and others will leave in joy and gratefulness. How does Jesus decide who he helps?

Where this fits

Recent preaching context

The three sermons immediately preceding this one in the preaching schedule.

Jan 31, 2021
Feb 14, 2021
Our storms reveal that Jesus is both higher than we think—sovereign over all creation as the wave-walking God—and nearer than we think—the incarnate Savior who climbs into the boat with doubters and sinners.
Mark 6:45-52
Feb 21, 2021
The heart of the problem is our heart, but Jesus aims his ministry at the heart of our problem by offering his righteousness in exchange for our defilement and renovating our hearts by the Spirit.
Mark 7:1-23
February 28 · This sermon
The Kind of People Jesus Welcomes
Only a certain kind of person can receive help from Jesus, but that certain kind of person is defined by faith in Christ, not by moral achievement, ethnic identity, or social respectability—and that means the door is open to all who come in humble, wholehearted, persistent trust.
Mark 7:24-30
Take it further

Discuss · apply · pray

Daily readings · Monday–Friday

5-day reading plan

This week we follow the spine of who Jesus welcomes: from the foundation that faith alone grants access, to the demolition of false categories, to the radical freedom and humility that comes from knowing we all enter by grace alone.

Monday Ephesians 2:8

Paul writes the foundational truth: we are saved by grace through faith, and even that faith is not our own achievement but God's gift. This is the bedrock beneath the Syrophoenician woman's welcome. She brought nothing but trust; she carried no credentials. When we grasp that we, too, enter only through faith in Christ's generosity—not through our moral standing or our insider status—we begin to see as Jesus sees.

Tuesday Matthew 15

Matthew's parallel account of this same encounter shows us the full weight of what Jesus is doing. The disciples wanted to send her away; the woman knew she had no claim on Jesus by birthright or merit. Yet she was the one Jesus commended. Our categories—of who belongs and who doesn't—are being systematically torn down by Christ. The only category that matters is faith.

Wednesday Matthew 7:24

Jesus teaches that the wise builder is the one who hears his words and acts on them—not the one with the right credentials or family name. Likewise, the person Jesus welcomes is not the respectable insider but the one who humbles herself before Christ and trusts his word. The Syrophoenician woman's persistence in faith—her refusal to accept exclusion based on anything but Christ's own rejection—marks her as the truly wise seeker.

Thursday Mark 7:24-26

We cannot soften Jesus' initial refusal or pretend it never happened. He does exclude; he does have boundaries. But notice what the boundary is not: it is not ethnicity, gender, or social status. When we understand what Jesus actually excludes—false faith, hardness of heart, refusal to trust—we are freed from the false categories we use to keep people at arm's length. The real barrier is not being Gentile; it is not believing.

Friday Mark 7:27-29

The woman's humility—her willingness to accept the place of a child under the table, gathering crumbs from the master's table—became her strength. She did not demand entry; she trusted in Christ's character and his generosity. This week, examine your own heart: Where are you tempted to exclude others? Where do you trust in your own standing rather than in grace? Like her, we enter only through the cross, and that same cross is open to all who come in faith.

Draft · pending review
Pray together this week

Prayer: The Door of Faith Open to All

Father, we come before you with gratitude for Jesus, who welcomes us not because we deserve it, but because we come to him in faith. You have shown us in this encounter with the Syrophoenician woman that the categories we use to exclude others—her gender, her ethnicity, her outsider status—are no barrier to your grace. We adore you for a generosity that exceeds our narrow understanding of who belongs in your kingdom.

We confess that we, too, have built invisible walls around your welcome. We have unconsciously decided who looks like a Christian and who does not. We have trusted in our own insider status, our own moral achievement, our own religious pedigree—as if these things could earn us a place at your table. We have excluded others while trusting in ourselves. Forgive us, Father. We have forgotten that none of us enter your presence by merit. All of us, without exception, stand on the other side of the cross.

Thank you that the sole criterion for receiving your help is faith—humble, wholehearted, persistent trust in Jesus' generosity. Like the woman in this story, we come to you with nothing to offer but our need and our belief that you are good. Thank you that the door to your presence is the cross, and it stands open to anyone who comes in faith. (Mark 7:27-28) This is both humbling and liberating: we have no grounds for boasting, and we have no grounds for excluding anyone.

Give us grace this week to examine the categories we carry, to repent of the walls we have built, and to welcome others as boldly as you have welcomed us. Make us a people who see others not as insiders or outsiders, but as men and women for whom Christ died, to whom the door of faith stands wide open. We commit ourselves to you—to speaking your truth and offering your welcome in the same breath. Glory to you, Father, through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.

Draft · pending review
Couples · three questions over coffee

Faith That Breaks Down Barriers

  1. What did you hear about the kind of person Jesus welcomes? Where did that challenge or comfort you personally?
  2. In our marriage, where do we unconsciously exclude people or build walls based on categories Jesus doesn't recognize? How can we repent of that together?
  3. What is one way we can pray for each other to grow in humble, wholehearted trust in Jesus' generosity—the kind that breaks down the barriers we build?
Draft · pending review
Small-group discussion

6 questions for your group this week

  1. Read Mark 7:24-30 aloud together. What details does Mark include about the woman who approaches Jesus—her identity, her background, her need? What does the text tell us about how she would have been viewed by Jesus' Jewish disciples?
    Mark 7:24-26
    → Why do you think Mark is so specific about these details? What is he trying to establish about who this woman is?
  2. In verse 27, Jesus says, 'Let the children eat first, for it is not right to take the children's bread and throw it to the dogs.' What is Jesus actually saying here about who has access to his help? How would you have felt if you were the woman hearing those words?
    Mark 7:27
  3. The woman's response in verse 28 is remarkable—'Yes, Lord, yet even the dogs under the table eat the crumbs from the children's feast.' What does her answer reveal about how she understands both her own need and Jesus' generosity? What kind of faith is she displaying?
    Mark 7:27-28
    → Can you think of a time when you've had to trust Jesus' goodness even when circumstances seemed to suggest rejection or delay?
  4. Jesus then tells her, 'For this statement you may go your way; the demon has left your daughter' (verse 29). On what basis does Jesus grant her request—what is the one thing that opens the door to his help?
    Mark 7:29
    → The sermon claims that 'only a certain kind of person can receive help from Jesus, but that kind of person is not who we think.' Based on this passage, who is that certain kind of person?
  5. The sermon reminds us that all of us—like Peter in Matthew 16 and like this Syrophoenician woman—enter God's presence only through the cross, by grace, not by merit. Where do you find yourself unconsciously believing that some people 'belong' in God's kingdom more than others, or that you belong because of something you've done rather than because of Christ?
    Ephesians 2:8
    → What would change in how you welcome others if you truly believed that the only grounds for entry is faith in Jesus, not ethnicity, moral achievement, or social respectability?
  6. The sermon concludes with a story of a transgender woman who came to faith through a church that upheld biblical truth while offering bold welcome. What does it look like for our church to follow that example—to hold firm to who Jesus is and what he teaches, while also extending genuine, humble welcome to anyone who comes seeking him in faith?
Draft · pending review
Sunday-evening family table

Who Does Jesus Welcome?

For the parent

This prompt invites your family to think about who Jesus welcomes—and to notice that it might not be who they expect. The goal is to help kids see that Jesus doesn't have a checklist of who's 'in' and who's 'out'; he welcomes anyone who trusts him. Listen for moments where kids reveal what they think 'good Christians' look like, and gently broaden that picture.

In today's sermon, Ricky told the story of a woman who wasn't supposed to be someone Jesus would help—but Jesus helped her anyway because she trusted him. If Jesus were walking around our neighborhood right now, what kind of person do you think he would welcome? Who would he help? And would that person look the way you think they should?
works for ages 7+
Draft · pending review
Memory verse this week

Ephesians 2:8

For by grace you have been saved through faith. And this is not your own doing; it is the gift of God.

Why this verse: This verse crystallizes the sermon's central claim: the sole criterion for receiving help from Jesus is faith, not identity, ethnicity, or moral achievement. The Syrophoenician woman and Peter both enter God's presence only through grace received by faith—and so do we, which means the door is open to all who trust Christ, and closed to all who trust themselves.

Draft · pending review
Where this was preached

About the church

Cross of Grace Church
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# Cross of Grace Church

A church preaching expository sermons through the books of the Bible.

## Sermons
- [Where We're At 2021 (2021-01-31)](/CoGElPaso/sermons/2021/01/where-we-re-at-2021)
- [The Ghost on the Sea (Mark 6:45-52, 2021-02-14)](/CoGElPaso/sermons/2021/02/the-ghost-on-the-sea)
- [Heart of Darkness (Mark 7:1-23, 2021-02-21)](/CoGElPaso/sermons/2021/02/heart-of-darkness)
- [The Kind of People Jesus Welcomes (Mark 7:24-30, 2021-02-28)](/CoGElPaso/sermons/2021/02/the-kind-of-people-jesus-welcomes)

## About
- [About the church](/about)
- [Plan a visit](/visit)

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