Be Courageous! Your Sins Are Forgiven
What
frightens you?
Spiders? Loneliness?
Getting sick? Losing your
job? Losing the ability to walk?
Every
morning so many of us drape our legs over the edge of our beds, plant feet
squarely on the floor, and stumble into a brand new day. We may mutter at the alarm, squint painfully
at the sun, and shudder at that first cold blast from the shower. But we are on our feet. Balanced.
Strong.
Can
you imagine losing the ability to walk?
One
man in Jesus’ day couldn’t walk.
Paralyzed. He knew that Jesus
had the power to make him walk. But he
couldn’t get to Jesus because he couldn’t walk.
What
do you do? You have your four friends
put you on a mat and carry you to Jesus.
Jesus
is in a house, the crowd so packed that the lame man’s friends can’t get
through.
What
do you do? You have your four friends
carry you to the roof. The front door
is blocked? Let’s make a door through
the ceiling. No kidding. The four friends start pulling off roof
tiles.
Jesus
is in the house. Noise on the
roof. Suddenly, a man dropping from the
ceiling.
All
so he could walk.
Yet
Jesus’ first words to this man? “Be
courageous. Your sins are forgiven.”
Excuse
me? I don’t think he came to have his
sins forgiven. He wants to walk!
Do
we sometimes feel that physical difficulty or physical loss is the real issue
in our lives? Are we afraid of
loneliness, getting sick, or losing our job?
When we think of God, do we work so hard to get his attention, sure that
to be healed of our difficulty will make all well?
Jesus
knew something, didn’t he. He knew that
if he gave the paralyzed man only the ability to walk, he still hadn’t helped
him. Jesus knew that paralyzed men and
walking men all die anyway. Jesus
wanted this paralyzed man to be ready for death.
People
die because people disobey God’s rules.
God commands us to be patient, helpful, joyful, and content. He commands us to love our enemies and do
good to those who hurt us. He commands
us to rejoice in suffering.
Bizarre? It makes us angry,
doesn’t it! “God, you have no right to
expect all that.” How our flesh hates
God. This is why we die. Death is punishment for hating God, for
sinning. But death is just the
beginning. Punishment lasts forever in
hell.
A
man came to Jesus looking to walk.
Jesus knew that bad legs were the least of his problems.
What
could Jesus have said to the lame man?
“You jerk. You disobey me every
day, and now you want something out of me?
To hell you will go.” Jesus had
every right.
He
has every right to speak the same to me.
Yet
what does Jesus say? Amazing! “Be courageous. Your sins are forgiven.”
Your
sins are forgiven too. Your sins were
sent away onto the shoulders of Jesus.
He suffered God’s punishment for your sin, death. Because Jesus has died on the cross in your
place and suffered hell for you, you have been declared innocent in God’s
sight.
That’s
too good to be true!
Some
who heard Jesus say it the first time felt the same. So, to show the crowd that he had the authority to forgive sins,
Jesus made the lame man walk.
Unable
to walk. That wasn’t the lame man’s
real problem.
What
wonder, that Jesus shows us our real problem, and then in mercy takes that
problem away.