WELCOME TO MY BLOG, MY FRIEND!

Tuesday, October 22, 2013

Brown's Daily Word 10-22-13

   The Lord blessed us beyond belief this past weekend during our prayer conference.  Rev. Nigel Mumford preached on healing and prayed for healing.  We have seen the Lord move among us.  We are so blessed.  With much love and holy humor, Rev. Nigel presented the Good News of Jesus who still heals.
    One of my favorite preachers is Dr. Fred Craddock.  Fred Craddock tells of a young pastor visiting an elderly woman in the hospital. The pastor finds the woman to be quite ill, gasping for breath, and obviously nearing the end of her life. In the midst of tubes, bags, and beeping medical machines, . . .

    “The pastor says, ‘What would you like me to pray for today?’

    “The patient responds, ‘That I would be healed.’

    “The pastor gulps. . . .

    “[Then he prays,] ‘Lord, we pray for your sustaining presence with this sick sister, and if it be your will, we pray she will be restored to health and to service. But if it’s not your will, we certainly hope she will adjust to her circumstances.’ . . .

    “Immediately after the pastor puts an amen on this safe prayer, the woman opens her eyes and sits up in bed.  Then she throws her feet over the side and stands up. . . .

    “Before the pastor can react, the woman walks over to the door, pulls it open, and strides down the hospital corridor.  The last thing the pastor hears before she disappears are the words ‘Look at me, look at me. I’m healed.’

    “The pastor pushes his mouth closed, gets up, and slowly walks down the stairs and out to the parking lot. There is no sign of the former patient. He opens his car door, and stops. Looking up to the heavens, the pastors says, ‘Please don’t ever do that to me again’ (Beukema, in Biblical Preaching, 130).

    In some cases, even pastors are slow to believe that God wills to heal. Nevertheless, He keeps on astounding us with His grace as He did the leper in Matthew 8:1-4.

    We often qualify our requests for healing. (Matthew 8:1-2)  Whenever we’re sick, most of us pray, “Lord, if you are willing, you can make me [well].”  We know He’s able to heal us, yet for some reason, we’re never quite sure if Christ wants to heal us for various reasons.  Maybe we brought this sickness on ourselves.  Maybe we didn’t take proper care of ourselves.  Worst still, maybe we have sinned and we fear our sickness is God’s punishment.  Frankly, we don’t know why this man was sick, probably because it doesn’t matter.

    Jesus always takes time for the individual as well as the multitude.  (Matthew 8:1-2)  After “[Christ] came down from the mountainside, large crowds followed him. [And] a man with leprosy came and knelt before him.”  When we draw near to Him, it should be with the confidence, the humility, and the reverence this leper had because they are the only attitudes appropriate for a person asking God for a favor (Barclay, Matthew, volume 1, 302-3).

    Unlike religious hucksters, Jesus never shuns the ‘hard cases.’ (Matthew 8:2) This “man [had] leprosy.”  Jesus welcomed him nonetheless.  He always welcomes outcasts.  He welcomes those who are self-conscious about their appearance.  He welcomes the fearful.  Jesus apparently welcomes strangers, since we don’t even know this man’s name.  Therefore, if we  fear that we do not know Christ well enough to approach Him for help we are mistaken.

    Even though Jesus always has time for the individual and never shuns the hard cases, we still tend to doubt His willingness to heal.  Jesus normally responds to our requests for healing. (Matthew 8:3-4)  How wonderful it is when we sense Him saying to us, “I am willing, . . . be thou healed!"   Matthew records this story so that we may know that Christ possesses both the ability and the willingness to heal us of our illnesses.  As it has been said, “Never put a question mark where God has put a period.”

    Jesus took immediate action to reassure us of His concern. (Matthew 8:3)  While the leper knelt trembling in the dirt before Him, “Jesus reached out his hand and touched [him].”  Imagine the leper’s stench.  Think about the Lord’s sympathy (Mark 1:41).  The leper probably hadn’t felt the warmth of human touch in years. What thoughts must have flashed through his mind at this moment?  Besides,   “By touching an unclean leper, Jesus would become ceremonially defiled himself. . . . But at Jesus’ touch nothing remains defiled.  Far from becoming unclean, Jesus makes the unclean clean” (Carson, Matthew, 198).

    Afterward, the leper could have sung the words of that old gospel tune we know:

        “Shackled by a heavy burden,

        ’Neath a load of guilt and shame

        Then the hand of Jesus touched me,

        And now I am no longer the same” (“He Touched Me,” ).

  In Jesus our Lord

  Brown

No comments: