"Caesarea-Philippi" changed to "Caesarea Philippi"
Original Paragraph:
P1698:3, 152:0.3
When Jesus heard this, he took the woman by the hand and, lifting her up, said:
"Daughter, your faith has made you whole; go in peace." It was her faith
and not her touch that made her whole. And this case is a good illustration
of many apparently miraculous cures which attended upon Jesus' earth career,
but which he in no sense consciously willed. The passing of time demonstrated
that this woman was really cured of her malady. Her faith was of the sort that
laid direct hold upon the creative power resident in the Master's person. With
the faith she had, it was only necessary to approach the Master's person. It
was not at all necessary to touch his garment; that was merely the superstitious
part of her belief. Jesus called this woman, Veronica of Caesarea-Philippi,
into his presence to correct two errors which might have lingered in her mind,
or which might have persisted in the minds of those who witnessed this healing:
He did not want Veronica to go away thinking that her fear in attempting to
steal her cure had been honored, or that her superstition in associating the
touch of his garment with her healing had been effective. He desired all to
know that it was her pure and living faith that had wrought the cure.