Our continued thanks to Allison Gingras and Elizabeth Riordan for inviting Catholic bloggers re-post their favorite articles on “It’s Worth Revisiting” Wednesdays!
Go there now (and every Wednesday) and let these authors bless and challenge you in your Faith journey.
During the rest of the week, visit Allison at Reconciled To You and Elizabeth at Theology Is A Verb.
This is my offering for the week:
Reflection on John’s Gospel – Do You Really Want To Get Well?
(Image source: Wikimedia Commons) |
Did you notice in [today’s] Gospel (John 5:1-16) that the paralytic did not answer Jesus’ question: “Do you want to get well?” Instead, he complained and whined about the injustice of not having anyone to put him into the healing waters of the pool once they were “stirred up”.
In not answering the specific question
posed to him, this paralyzed man was much like many of us. One of the most difficult
things I could get my clients to understand when I practiced law was the
necessity to just answer the specific question they were asked. It is shocking
how few of them and us actually do that. We are all over the place, either
because we didn’t listen carefully enough to what was asked or because we want
to avoid answering that question at all costs – to do so might make us uncomfortable
or suggest changes we should, but are unwilling, to make in our lives.
Fortunately for this man, Jesus
took no offense at his failure to answer the question and healed him anyway.
But what if this man had not done
what Jesus directed him to? What if he remained motionless on his mat unwilling
to believe and to obey?
I suspect that most of us are
very much like this disabled man. As uncomfortable as we may be with our own
sinfulness, we remain attached to our sins, just as this man was attached to
his mat. We may loath our sinfulness (as he did his physical paralysis) but we hold
on to them as tenaciously as he did to his mat, convincing ourselves that we have
no one to help us overcome them.
But we would be wrong.
Jesus is ever present and ever
ready to forgive us and to make us whole. He is constantly asking each of us “if
we wish to be well?”
Learn a lesson from today’s
Gospel and answer immediately –“Yes. Lord, Yes! I want to get well!" - let Him lift you off your mats of addiction, fear,
discouragement, despair, gluttony, lust, selfishness, self-loathing or whatever
other sinful behavior you have allowed to paralyze you.
Today, walk into His forgiving,
merciful, healing and loving arms!
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