DELIVERED TO RESPONSIBILITY
John [NLT]
5:1-9a [While in Galilee He performed miracles.] Afterward Jesus returned to
Jerusalem for one of the Jewish holy days. Inside the city, near the Sheep
Gate, was the pool of Bethesda, with five covered porches. Crowds of sick
people—blind, lame, or paralyzed—lay on the porches. One of the men lying there
had been sick for thirty-eight years. When Jesus saw him and knew he had been
ill for a long time, he asked him, “Would you like to get well?” “I can’t,
sir,” the sick man said, “for I have no one to put me into the pool when the
water bubbles up. Someone else always gets there ahead of me.” Jesus told him,
“Stand up, pick up your mat, and walk!” Instantly, the man was healed! He
rolled up his sleeping mat and began walking!
The above passage
of Scripture puzzled me for years. Then Mark Welch introduced me to e-Sword.
The thing that
puzzled me is why would any person, especially Jesus ask “Would you like to get
well?”
After being incapacitated for 38 years, why might a
person not want to get well?
Using e-Sword to
conveniently access Strong’s and other resources I understood, and then considered
some cases of deliverance I’ve observed.
The word “walk”
in verse 8 opened my eyes. Whereas I typically think in English, I believed
Jesus was referring to physical movement, putting one foot in front of the
other. A core meaning in Greek is “to deport oneself”, which is a whole
different story far beyond podiatric plodding.
Understanding this
one word changed how I saw the account recorded in John 5:1-9. It no longer was
story of Jesus’ only exercising love by omnipotence. It is largely about His
omniscience.
Deporting oneself
can be scary business. Have we not all seen individuals draw back from
accepting the responsibilities of deporting oneself? Have you ever been faced
with increased mobility and felt like laying back down on a familiar bed, or
actually done so? I have.
I’ve seen men
long for the deliverance of sobriety, but once free, when confronted with
expectation and responsibilities of deportment, soon go back to bottle and/or
needle, or deliberately go back to the safety
of familiar incarceration. (This is part of my educating by inmates.)
My mind now turns
to a favorite verse that both comforts and at times frightens me: “When I was a
child, I spoke and thought and reasoned as a child. But when I grew up, I put
away childish things.” (NLT 1Cor.13:11) This Word comforts when I consider
progress away from pallet. It is frightening if I view largely angst over the
hints of future deportment.
My final thought
this morning: “… look carefully into the perfect law that sets you free, and if
you do what it says and don’t forget what you heard, then God will bless you
for doing it.”(NLT Jam.1:25)
EBB4 Sunday,
April 08, 2018
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