Mark 2:1-12. This sermon was preached by Pastor Marty Bonner on March 17, 2019.
Although we will look at a story where Jesus heals somebody, this story is not so much about healing as it begs the question, What is our greatest need? It positions a physical healing opposite the forgiveness of sins and questions if we would work so hard to be rid of our sins as we would to be rid of sickness or disease.
I could have entitled this as, “Obstacles to being Healed,” but that is not the true emphasis of the story. Jesus is asking us to think about why we might come to Him and what really is our greatest need. If we see Jesus only as a means to an end, then He simply becomes a gumball machine from which we get our gumball and then walk away. However, Jesus has not left this option open to us. Even being free of sins can become a means to an end if we are only seeking to assuage our guilt and avoid judgment. We need more than physical healing and we need more than spiritual forgiveness of sins.
Ultimately, we need a relationship with Jesus, who is the Lord of all those things and more. Jesus is not a means to an end. He is the end or goal for which we must desire and strive.
We do not know how long this man has been paralyzed nor how he came to be in that condition. However, it would pose a problem to finding Jesus and asking for a healer. At least the leper in the previous story could track down Jesus and catch Him on the road, but this man is debilitated to the point that he cannot do this.
Yet, this man has friends who are willing to help him. It is important in life that we have people who care about us enough that they will help us when we need them. Of course, we too should be a friend back towards them, but friendship should not be about an equation of help.
In this life it is easy to let differences and hurts lead us into isolation from the world, but we still need others. We need others because we are not enough by ourselves and God desires others to help us. He created us to be social creatures who work together for the good. No one person has all the gifts, regardless of how talented they may be. Eventually they will need others around them. It is true that there are some people from whom we may be better off dissociating ourselves. Yet, hurt can cause us to dissociate from people who don’t deserve it and to our own detriment.
Still, no number of friends can replace Jesus in your life. Thus, the best kind of friends are those who will help you to come to Jesus for all the needs in your life, not just healing. Four friends determined to carry their paralyzed friend to Jesus so that he could be healed.
When the paralyzed man and his friends get to Jesus, there is a problem. There are too many people surrounding Jesus and they cannot get close enough to ask for help. We are going to see later in the story that not all of these people are believers in Jesus. These crowds are themselves a physical barrier, and yet they can also be psychological barrier to people who do not like crowds. Some people are not interested in Churches and crowds of Christians. Yet, they still need Jesus.
In His humanity Jesus was often surrounded by crowds, but in His divinity, He is always accessible to those who will reach out to Him in faith, whether by themselves are with the help of a friend. Don’t just limit yourself to inviting people to Church to hear the Gospel. Learn to share Christ with people one on one, or in smaller groups of friends.
Notice that these friends are not easily daunted. They don’t quit just because they run into an obstacle and it gets hard. Instead, they devise a way around the obstacle, which involved tearing through the roof and lowering the man down in front of Jesus by ropes. Their faith or belief that Jesus would heal the man stirred up a determination within them that wouldn’t quit.
Sometimes, whether individually or as a group, we can lose heart because we run into barriers. If getting people to Jesus was easy then they would already be with Him. No, this is a difficult job that is full of obstacles. Am I determined to help my friends get to Jesus? Of course, in our lives today the answer will not be tearing a whole in a roof. However, may God help us to see the true barriers that keep our friends and family at a distance from Jesus. Let’s continue reading at verse 5.
This story takes a turn with the response of Jesus. Here is a man on his sick bed, lowered down by ropes in front of Him. Yet, Jesus chooses to tell the man that his sins are forgiven. This is important because it changes the story. To the man and his friends, his greatest need was to have his paralysis healed. To Jesus, the man’s greatest need was to be free from his sins.
Now, it is easy to let this story become cluttered with the intellectual trappings of healing. We are not told if the paralysis was due to his sin. So, we should be careful of making this about the need to have your sins forgiven before you are healed. Jesus will go on to heal the man, but not because he now has his sins forgiven. Jesus himself states that he healed the man to prove to them that He had power to forgive sins on earth.
There are many things that we need in life, some of which we only think we need. However, they all pale next to the need to have our sins forgiven. Our sins separate us from God and cause us to be guilty before Him. We do not deserve His grace or His benefits. We only deserve His wrath and judgment.
The statement of forgiveness in verse 5 is connected to the statement of Jesus in verse 10. Jesus has the power (both authority and capability) to forgive sins. As believers we can assist our Lord in helping people to be free from their sins. This is their greatest need, whether they understand it or not. What does it profit a man to be healed in this life, but not have their sins forgiven? Yes, you would think that it would always be good to have both, but one is immensely more important than the other.
It is important to recognize that not all who surround Jesus, then and today, truly believe in Him. You either believe or you don’t. However, there is a tendency within us as humans to give up faith while attempting to keep remnants of religion. It can be a security blanket, sentimentality, or even crass opportunism. Without faith in Jesus, religion is dead and cannot help us, but with faith, religion can be pure and full of life.
These religious unbelievers think that Jesus is blaspheming because only God can forgive sins. However, they willfully forget that God had set up a whole system of priests whose job it was to perform rituals through which they could declare that people’s sin was now forgiven. This delegation of forgiving was not blasphemy. It was merely obeying what God had sent them to do. They just weren’t used to seeing this outside of the temple compound and the priests. Surely, Jesus must be blaspheming. Yet, the priests over the centuries had been pointing people to the Lamb of God that would one day come in order to take away our sins, once and for all. Jesus stood as the ultimate High Priest and declares that this man is forgiven.
This leads to a challenge from Jesus. He asks them which is easier to say to the paralyzed man, Your sins are forgiven, or Arise, take up your bed and walk? “Your sins are forgiven” is easier in the sense that it can’t be verified. How can you know it actually happened? It is not like you get a certificate in the mail stating that God has forgiven your sins. Yet, “take up your bed and walk” is easier in the sense of actually doing it.
Do we really understand that healing people is easier for God then forgiving their sins? Healing is so easy that humans themselves are figuring out ways to get the cells and DNA to do what they are supposed to do in some situations. I doubt we will ever get to a place where we have conquered all disease. However, no man on earth has any power to forgive someone’s sin outside of Christ. The obstacles to being set free from sin are legion: We can be paralyzed to even try and come to Jesus, We can fight with and reject those friends who try to bring us to Him, We can give up when we run into obstacles that make it hard, and We can even believe that our sins are too great to be forgiven.
I pray that today you will see the truth of this passage. Sin is our biggest issue, and not just getting rid of it. Sin itself is a barrier to the relationship that God intended for us to have with Him. There is nothing more important in life than to have Christ declare over us that our sins are forgiven. If you do not know Christ or you have friends that do not know Christ, I pray that you will not let any of the obstacles of this life and your own heart keep you from coming to Christ. He will receive you with open arms if you will turn from your sins and run to Him.