Jesus the Doctor : Mark 2:1-17
What
a Wonderful World is a beautiful song that celebrates nature: Trees of
green, red roses too, they bloom for me and you; Skies of blue, clouds of white,
bright blessed day and dark sacred nights. Nature is marvelled at and I’m sure
you have experienced that and felt the same wonder. It’s a song that also celebrates
friendship, and above all it celebrates falling in love: Friends shake hands saying,
‘How do you do?’ What they are really saying is, ‘I love you.’ It’s a great song
about the fantastic gifts of life: creation; friendship; falling in love. But
as we saw from the pictures, there is something wrong with our world.
But in Mitch Markowitz's
film Good Morning Vietnam while the song says one thing the pictures say
another. As we are told ‘the roses bloom for me and for you’, we see a bomb going
off. As we hear the words ‘the colours of the rainbow so pretty in the sky’, we
see protesters being beaten. And, most poignant of all, the chorus of ‘I say to
myself, what a wonderful world’ is accompanied by images of the little child’s
sandal. That’s the world we live in. It should be so good and yet there is something
desperately wrong. The film’s artistry is very clever because it shows us that
the world is not the place it ought to be. It should be a wonderful world, but
all too often it is spoilt by people.
The film is summed up by the Vietnamese
girl with whom Robin Williams has fallen in love. She says that so many things
do not happen the way you want them to. The Bible actually goes deeper than that.
The Bible says that so many things don’t happen the way we want them to because
people are not what they should be.
It’s because people are sick, says Jesus in our passage, that we so desperately
need a doctor. These Sunday mornings we are exploring the person of Jesus through
Mark’s account of his life. We are asking three questions: Who is Jesus? What
was His Purpose? How can I know Him? The verses before us this morning in Chapter
2:1-17 answers each of these questions. Who is Jesus? Why did He come? How can
I be saved?
1. Who is Jesus? (Mark 2:1-4, 10)
From today’s passage we can certainly say Jesus is popular. We see clear evidence of the popularity of Jesus and the drastic lengths people will go to see him. Jesus was in Capernaum. News of Jesus arrival spread quickly. Life in Palestine was very public. In the morning the door of the house was opened and anyone who wished might come in or out. An open door meant an invitation for all to come in.
A crowd soon filled this particular home to capacity and had jammed the area around
the doorway, so eager were the people to hear Jesus. Jesus is popular. On that
particular day, so popular, these men couldn't even get near the house with their
sick friend, it was so crowded. So they climbed onto the roof and started digging.
The roof of a Palestinian house is flat. The roof was a place of rest and quiet,
to sleep in Summer. The stairs were built on the outside of the house so access
was easy. The roof consisted of flat beams laid across from wall to wall about
three feet apart, a bit like the construction of an Elizabethan ceiling. The
space between the beams was filled with brushwood packed tightly with mud which
dried to a kind of clay. Often on top of this they would put earth and grass
would grow. It was quite easy therefore to dig out the filling between the beams.
It didn't damage the structure of the house and was easily repaired. That’s how
the men got their friend into the crowded room.
People have always
been eager to hear Jesus. Jesus is popular. Its still true today. His story is
published in over 1500 languages. Over 1 billion copies of his biography are in
circulation. And the film of his life has, according to Agape, been seen by over
5 billion people in 812 languages. The most widely seen film in history. The most
popular person in history. But we can say much more than that. Look at 2:10 “But
that you may know that the Son of Man has authority on earth to forgive sins…"
(Mark 2:10).
By using the title "The Son of Man", Jesus was
claiming much more than authority to forgive. He was claiming both the right to
forgive and power to heal as God himself, and the miracle proved it. The phrase
"Son of Man" is never used of any other person in the Gospels, nor by
anyone else except Jesus Christ, of himself. The term "Son of Man" was
a title not of honour but humiliation and condescension that Jesus chose to use
to explain how he literally emptied himself taking the form of a servant in coming
to earth.
But Jesus didn’t dream it up himself. The title comes from
a Messianic Prophecy in Daniel 7:13-14 and his hearers would have understood immediately
what Jesus was claiming by using it of himself. Let me read it to you. Daniel
says, "In my vision at night I looked and there before me was one like a
son of man, coming with the clouds of heaven. He approached the Ancient of Days
and was led into His presence. He was given authority, glory and sovereign power;
all peoples, nations and men of every language worshipped him. His dominion is
an everlasting kingdom that will not pass away, and his kingdom is one that will
never be destroyed."
No mistaking who that would be. 1st question. Who is Jesus? Answer - God’s anointed Son of Man to be worshipped.
2. Why did Jesus come? Mark 2:5-9
Mark included this story for a more significant reason, than to simply show that Jesus is popular. In chapter 2, Mark begins to catalogue the growing opposition to Jesus as the religious leaders began to realise who it was He claimed to be.
Lets see how Jesus answers them so provocatively.
2.1 The Priority of Forgiveness (Mark 2:5)
It
was no accident that Jesus chose to say these words, “Son, your sins are forgiven”
There is nothing more important nor profound nor provocative that Jesus could
say. Jesus wasn’t a fool. He could see the man was paralyzed. He knew why his
friends had brought him. He could sense their hope of a miracle. He knew they
knew He was their only hope. But he was not primarily a healer of broken bodies.
That is not why Jesus came. Jesus knew this person's deepest need, as Jesus knows
ours. He was not distracted by the presenting need. There was nothing superficial
about Jesus diagnosis. There is nothing more important that Jesus can say to
you and me than these same words, "Your sins our forgiven." Do you
know that your sins are forgiven? I didn’t say “hope”, I said “know”. Know for
sure your sins are forgiven, past, present and future? On what basis can we know
for sure? Isn’t that arrogant? No, because it has nothing to do with us. We
can’t earn forgiveness and we certainly don’t deserve it. It has nothing to do
with us but everything to do with Jesus. If you are not sure that you are forgiven
before God, then you are missing out on the greatest, most wonderful treasure
in the whole world. A clean heart, a clear conscience, a sound mind.
And it is ours as we confess our sins. The apostle John writes,
“If we claim to be without sin, we deceive ourselves and the truth is not in us. If we confess our sins, he is faithful and just and will forgive us our sins and purify us from all unrighteousness.” (1 John 1:8-9)
John is describing a continuous present experience. There is nothing more liberating than to know that we are forgiven through faith in Jesus. Nothing. Nor is there anything more profound that we can share with someone else. Whether they be young or old, fit or disabled. Indeed the Bible teaches that we have the authority of Jesus to assure people of their state before God, if they turn back to Him. We have here not only the priority of forgiveness.
2.2 The Prerogative to Forgive (Mark 2:6-7)
This
was no casual utterance of Jesus. Jesus is intentionally being provocative. He
knew what he was saying and what effect it would have on those who heard. Luke
fills in some of the detail and tells us in his account in Luke 5:17 that "Pharisees
and teachers of the Law who had come from every village of Galilee and from Judea
and Jerusalem were sitting there" It was therefore a set up. The front two
rows of men seated in that crowded room were there to gather incriminating evidence
to convict Jesus. Jesus was therefore being very provocative. Laying down the
gauntlet. Openly and publicly. He knows what they are thinking. By what authority
do you say "Your sins are forgiven". Only God can forgive sin.
Imagine how you would feel if a neighbours overgrown tree fell on your house,
caused £1000's of pounds worth of damage. Just as you were about to call your
solicitor on your mobile, a stranger walked up and said to your neighbour "Its
OK I forgive you". What would you say? If you were feeling spiritual
it might be something like "What on earth has it got to do with you... its
my house not yours." No third party has the right to interfere and forgive.
The Jews knew that every sin, every injustice, was first and foremost against
God and only secondly against another person. Logically there were only three
alternative ways to understand what Jesus was doing here. As C.S.Lewis rightly
pointed out, Jesus was either totally and completely mad to say this, or wilfully
blasphemous, or God incarnate, God in human form. For only God can ultimately
forgive sin. Which is it? Jesus was either mad, bad or God. There is no middle
ground, no half way house. Jesus was not a good moral teacher. Jesus never left
that option open. He never had that effect on people. Jesus was intentionally
provocative.
We have here not only the priority of forgiveness of sin and the prerogative to
forgive sin, but above all,
2.3 The Power to Forgive Sin (Mark 2:8-9)
Authority
is always in proportion to power. There is no authority without power. When
Stalin was informed that the Pope was displeased with his purges he asked, "Oh
really, how many tank divisions does he have?" Knowing what these teachers
were thinking and why they had come, Jesus set a trap of his own. He asked them
a question. A simple question that appealed to their logic.
Reread verse
9. He was saying basically this. I claim the right to forgive sin. In so doing
I am claiming to be Divine. You do not believe me and therefore naturally you
deny that I have the right to forgive also. Clearly it is very easy for me to
claim to forgive and I grant that it is difficult for you to test if I am right.
So answer me this question, which is easier to say to this man, "You're sins
are forgiven, or get up and walk?" They knew that both the right to forgive
and the power to heal instantly and completely could only come from God. But the
one was impossible to test, the other easy. "So lets link the two"
says Jesus. "Lets double the stakes" All or nothing. "I claim to
forgive, you deny it and its difficult to test, but if I also claim the power
to heal, you can immediately detect whether my claim is true or false."
And if I can show my power to do the latter, you cannot deny my authority to do
the former. Are you with me?
The teachers were trapped, in public surrounded by believers, skeptics and spectators,
all had sufficient grey matter to understand the logic of Jesus question. Jesus
not only asked them the question he also gave them the answer. Jesus is not only
popular and provocative but powerful. "That you may know that the Son of
man has authority on earth to forgive sins, He said to the paralytic, I tell you
get up, take your mat and go home, and the man got up and walked out in full view
of them all". That little sentence "Get up and walk." Demonstrated
Jesus power to forgive. The priority to forgive; the prerogative to forgive and
the power to forgive. People today are just as paralyzed by fear, by guilt and
by doubt. Whether people appear healthy or sick in body is irrelevant.
Jesus healed this man first and foremost by assuring him that he was forgiven,
and then healed his body in compassion to prove it. Like this man, Jesus treats
us as individuals.
He deals with us as personally as He did with this person brought by his friends.
Like no one else on earth, Jesus Christ claims the absolute and complete authority
to forgive you your sins. To give you peace with God. To bring you into a personal,
relationship with Him. We had three questions this morning and we have answered
two: Who is Jesus? Answer : The Anointed Son of Man. What did Jesus come? Answer
: To rescue sinners and forgive your sin. Our final question is this:
3. How can I be saved? (Mark 2:13-17)
“While Jesus was having dinner at Levi’s house...” (2:15)
Let the enormity of that sentence sink in. Jesus spends time with sinners. He goes to their homes. He eats with them. He wants to meet their friends. This is shocking. A Holy God came to earth not to destroy sinners but to rescue them. When challenged, Jesus says, ‘It is not the healthy who need a doctor, but the sick. I have not come to call the righteous, but sinners’ (2:17). Jesus makes it quite clear he is interested only in people who know they are sick, not in people who think they are well. So, the qualification for coming to Jesus is not, ‘Are you good enough?’ but, ‘Are you bad enough?’ ‘Are you desperate enough to know you need rescuing’ What does Jesus say to Levi? “Follow me” (2:14) The word “follow” means "to walk the same road" Notice 3 things about this sentence.
3.1 An Imperative Command
Notice Jesus takes the initiative. The word “follow” reflects Jesus initiative and is in the imperative mode. Jesus was issuing a command. Jesus was not saying, "Would you like to follow me" This was no invitation as if he was doing Jesus a favour. It was a command from the King to be obeyed. Levi stood up immediately and followed Jesus. An imperative command.
3.2 An Irrevocable Claim
Not
only is the verb in the imperative, a command, It is also in the present tense.
That means Jesus was commanding the beginning of an action and its habitual continuance.
Jesus was saying "Start following me, and continue as a habit of life to
follow me." This gives the lie to the superficial appeals sometimes made,
when people are invited to make a decision for Christ. Jesus was not calling
Levi to make a decision to come forward at the end of the service, but to a lifelong
path of discipleship. To walk the same road that Jesus was walking meant the
road of self sacrifice, the road of separation, of altruism, of suffering, of
holiness but is is also the road home. The road to rescue. Of all the disciples
Levi probably gave up the most. He, of all of them, literally left everything
to follow Jesus. Peter and Andrew, James and John could at least go back to fishing.
There were always fish to catch, and always the old trade to fall back on. But
Levi burnt his boats completely,
With that one action, in one moment
of time he had put himself out of a job forever. He could never go back to being
a tax collector. The Jews would never employ a quisling. The Romans wouldn't
give him a second chance. Levi was a man who staked everything on Christ. He
suddenly knew that the little villa by the sea at Joppa and the cash stowed away
in the hollowed out bricks at the back of his home simply weren't worth anything
compared to being wanted - for himself. The old Levi was good for nothing. He
was dead to the world even while he lived. The new Levi, aptly re-named Matthew,
meaning gift of the Lord, was as different to the old Levi as if he had died and
been born all over again. In fact that's what had happened to him. And that is
what happens to us when we hear God's voice in Jesus Christ and respond to the
gift of grace. An imperative command, an irrevocable claim.
3.3 An Irresistible Call
Jesus didn't just say "Follow me". What he actually said was "Follow with me". Matthew was not being called simply to become a follower. Jesus was welcoming Matthew to be his companion and co-worker. It was to be a side by side walk down the same road. At last someone accepted him for who he was. To know that God loves us so much that he sent Jesus to rescue us and wants us to be with him is surely irresistible. Such love. An imperative command, an irrevocable claim, an irresistible call. Three questions. Who is Jesus? The anointed Son of Man Why did He come? To rescue you and forgive you. How can I be saved? Follow Him. Lets pray.