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When Jesus saw their faith, he said, "Friend,
your sins are forgiven." The Pharisees and the
teachers of the law began thinking to themselves,
"Who is this fellow who speaks blasphemy? Who can
forgive sins but God alone?"
Jesus knew what they were thinking and
asked, "Why
are you thinking these things in your hearts?
Which
is easier: to say, 'Your sins are forgiven,'
or to
say, 'Get up and walk'?
Well, which is easier to say?
Naturally, the
easiest thing to say is "Your sins are forgiven",
since you can't see it when a person's sins are
forgiven. Jesus then does the more difficult
of the
two options, so that they might believe that
He can
forgive sins.
But I want you to know that the Son of Man has
authority on earth to forgive sins." So he
said to
the paralyzed man, "I tell you, get up, take your
mat and go home." Immediately he stood up in
front
of them, took what he had been lying on and went
home praising God. Everyone was amazed and gave
praise to God. They were filled with awe and
said,
"We have seen remarkable things today."
There are 3 observations that strike me here:
1. The devotion of the men who carried their
friend
to Jesus. You can actually carry those who are
interested in Jesus, but are damaged in some way.
2. Sometimes you may need to call others to carry
you to Jesus. This was an amazing help to the
paralytic man.
3. Jesus was moved by the faith of the men who
brought the paralytic man to Him. It was their
faith that moved Jesus to forgive the
paralytic's sins.
We desperately need more men who are willing
to rip
out roofs in order to introduce people to
Jesus. We
need people who will actually believe for
others.
Let me ask you, would you be willing to carry
your
friends to Jesus? Are you doing that right now?
Also, are you willing for others to carry you to
Jesus? We need a greater sense of
relationship that
goes both ways. We need more roof-rippers and
stretcher riders! Jesus will do the rest.
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In Luke 5:12 Jesus is uniquely approached by a
leper. Leprosy in Biblical times was a terrible
thing. We're not exactly sure what Biblical
leprosy
was. While it may have described what is
known today
as "Hansen's Disease," the word probably included
other skin diseases, as well. Whatever it
was, once
a person caught it, it was considered
incurable, and
those diagnosed with leprosy were banned from
society. Lepers were considered unclean and
must be
separated from the rest of society.
To the rabbis, the cure of a leper was as
difficult as raising a person from the dead.
In all
Biblical history only two people had been
cured of
leprosy-Miriam, who had leprosy for seven
days as a
punishment for speaking against Moses' leadership
(Numbers 12:9-15), and Naaman, general of the
army
of Aram, a Gentile from Damascus (2 Kings 5).
When
he obeyed Elijah's instruction to wash seven
times
in the Jordan River he was healed. Healing a
leper
had not been done in Israel for seven hundred
years,
and was thought to be a sign of the Messiah.
But to come to Jesus for healing is a risk in
itself. The leper will be beaten if he doesn't
strictly observe the rules to keep his
distance from
"normal" people, at least six feet, and some
people
will throw dirt and stones at him if he is twice
that distance. He decides he must risk it. If
Jesus
can heal him, he must risk any punishment,
however
severe. He must!
So now, all of a sudden, he rushes across the
street to where Jesus is standing, and falls down
with his face to the ground before Him. You can
almost hear a gasp from the people around
Jesus, and
they involuntarily take a step back, hands to
their
mouths. Let's go to the text itself:
While Jesus was in one of the towns, a man
came
along who was covered with leprosy. When he saw
Jesus, he fell with his face to the ground and
begged him, "Lord, if you are willing, you
can make
me clean." Jesus reached out his hand and touched
the man. "I am willing," he said. "Be clean!" And
immediately the leprosy left him.
When you think about it, his statement is
remarkable for its faith. Here is a man who
states
his belief that Jesus can do what only Elijah
could
do--heal a leper. It isn't a matter of
ability, the
leper is saying. It is a matter of will. Jesus is
ABLE to heal him, the man boldly states. Is He
WILLING to do so?
Jesus is standing. The leper is kneeling, face to
the surface of the street, inches from Jesus'
feet,
already violating the law of distance that lepers
were to keep.
And then Jesus begins to stoop. Jesus is moved by
the boldness of this man's faith. Before the
eyes of
the onlookers, Jesus begins to stoop down and
reach
out his hand. He extends His fingers until
they rest
on the unclean leper's head. A murmur goes
through
the crowd as Jesus touches the unclean man,
and then
total silence as Jesus speaks quietly: "I am
willing, be clean!"
Luke records, "Immediately the leprosy
left him."
A moment before, he was covered with leprous
sores
and lesions, "full of leprosy," and now his
skin is
clear, unblemished. A dramatic and instant
transformation has taken place in him.
A gasp goes through the bystanders. The man is
healed! The leper is healed! Then Jesus
ordered
him, "Don't tell anyone, but go, show yourself to
the priest and offer the sacrifices that Moses
commanded for your cleansing, as a testimony
to them."
Yet the news about him spread all the
more, so that
crowds of people came to hear him and to be
healed
of their sicknesses. But Jesus often withdrew to
lonely places and prayed.
Think about this a minute. Only two lepers had
ever been healed and healing a leper was to be
something only the Messiah would be able to do.
Instead of just wowing the crowds with this
amazing
feat, Jesus routes the cleansed leper to his
priest
to perform the appropriate sacrifice for the
healing
of a leper.
No priest had performed the appropriate sacrifice
for such a miracle for a long time until now. I
believe Jesus sent the leper to the priest in
order
to spread the message even further than a simple
word of mouth from the crowd might have done.
Whoever the lucky priest might be who would
get this
walk-in request would, no doubt, call the press,
radio and CNN in order to let the world know
that he
was going to actually perform this sacrifice
for the
first time in centuries.
This, then, was a clear and specific sign that
Jesus was God's Messiah. Healing a leper is an
amazing thing. If Jesus can pull this off, then
just maybe He is able and willing to heal other
things in your life. Are you willing to ask?