Read: Mark 2:1-12 |
When
Jesus saw their faith, he said to the paralyzed man, “Son, your
sins are forgiven.” Mark
2:5
During
my childhood, one of the most feared diseases was polio, often called
“infantile paralysis” because most of those infected were young
children. Before a preventive vaccine was developed in the mid-1950s,
some 20,000 people were paralyzed by polio and about 1,000 died from
it each year in the United States alone.
In
ancient times, paralysis was viewed as a permanent, hopeless
condition. But one group of men believed Jesus could help their
paralyzed friend. While Jesus was teaching in the village of
Capernaum, four of the men carried the man to Him. When they couldn’t
reach Jesus because of the crowd, “they made an opening in the roof
above Jesus by digging through it and then lowered the mat the man
was lying on” (Mark 2:1-4).
Jesus is the only One who can meet our deepest needs.
“When
Jesus saw their faith, he said to the paralyzed man, ‘Son, your
sins are forgiven’ ” (v. 5), followed by “Get up, take your mat
and go home” (v. 11). How remarkable that in response to the faith
of the men who brought their friend, Jesus forgave his sins and
healed his incurable condition!
When
someone we know is facing serious physical difficulty or a spiritual
crisis, it is our privilege to join together in prayer, bringing our
friends to Jesus—the only One who can meet their deepest needs.
Lord Jesus, we know that You can speak the words of eternal life and healing to people in great need. We bring them to You in prayer today.
Praying for others is a privilege—and a responsibility.
INSIGHT:
Capernaum
was a fishing community on the western shore of the Sea of Galilee,
which essentially became the headquarters of Jesus’ northern
ministry (Matt. 4:13). Home to Peter, James, John, and Andrew—four
of Jesus’ disciples—Capernaum was an important village on a major
trade route. The name Capernaum means “the village of Nahum,” and
Nahum was one of the Old Testament prophets. This fact seems to have
been conveniently ignored by the religious leaders of Jesus’ day
who, when debating His legitimacy as a prophet, said, “You are not
also from Galilee, are you? Search, and see that no prophet arises
out of Galilee” (John 7:52).
--Bill Crowder
Bible in a Year: Jeremiah 43–45; Hebrews 5
By
David McCasland
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