Mark 2:1-12 · Jesus Heals a Paralytic
Audacious Faith
Mark 2:1-12
Sermon
by Maxie Dunnam
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Some of you have seen the play, “Big River”, now playing in New York. This setting of Mark Twain’s Huck Finn is well done.

The music is exceptional. For days after I saw it, I found myself blurting out, “Arkansas, Arkansas, O how I love Arkansas.” I would find myself humming the tune and trying to remember the words of that haunting piece.

In one scene, two river rogues who have commandeered Huck and his barge, schemed to put together a sort of vaudeville act for river towns. To arouse curiosity, crowd and swindle 50 cents out of people for tickets to what doesn’t amount to much sing about a strange creature who has, apart from some vulgar descriptions of anatomy, “An eye in the middle of her nose”, and the crowds gathered in, spending money they could ill afford, attracted by the curiosity cultivated by the vaudeville charlatans.

Curiosity is a strong force in our lives. Start looking intently into the sky - stay focused and amazed and see how many passers - by will join you in looking - then they’ll begin to ask questions about what you see the quieter you are, the more aroused they will be.

Watch people in the midway of a fair or any public place. They follow the crowd, pressing in to see what the attraction

Curiosity is a strong force in our lives.

Curiosity was rampant in Capernaum on Jesus’ return from his preaching journey through Galilee. Like the leper who had been healed, as we looked in our last sermon, were talking about the miraculous ministry of Jesus. The last verse of Chapter 1 of Mark, immediately preceding our scripture lesson, paints the picture: “But he went out and began to talk freely about it, and to spread the news, so that Jesus could no longer openly enter a town, but was out in the country, and people came to him from every quarter” (Mark 1:45).

Let the picture come alive in your mind. Put yourself into the setting. We’re in the small fishing village of Capernaum, one of my favorite places in the Holy Land - a beautiful setting on the Sea of Galilee. Next to the seashore is a line of small box-shaped houses built of stone or mud-brick. The roofs are made of branches intertwined with sand, mud and a tar-like substance. Some houses have tiles overlaid on the base-roof to make the roof about two feet in depth.

One particular house catches our attention. Crowds swelling about the house and inside. The newly-called disciples, fishermen are there and the inner circle people who hang on his every word with intensity. The rest of the crow spills thorough the windows straining for a look, a word.

Suddenly, Jesus’ message is punctuated by a loud pounding on the roof. Then the ceiling begins to crack open. First a hole is pushed through, causing the sand and splinters of the saplings to shower down upon everyone below. Now we can see a hand reach the edges of the new hole, tearing the hole larger. The people below are frightened and amazed. As the hole expands we can make out the faces of four men on the roof. The hole is now several feet wide and about five feet long. They seem to know what they’re doing, and are not about to be dissuaded by the consternation of either the owner of the house or the scribes.

The men on the roof are positioning a carpet—like pallet over the hole. Ropes are tied to the four corners, and then they begin to lower it down into the room. When it reaches our eye level, we are aghast. There’s a man on that pallet! Who is this? We look closely. The man is lying there quietly, as if trusting his friends implicitly. Now the pallet has reached the floor. Right in front of Jesus. What’s wrong with him?

Observation reveals that he has some movement in his one side. But look at the other side. It is as motionless as a dead rock. The man is a paralytic!

“Now look at Jesus. What interruptability! He forgets his preaching, He disrupts the officials of the synagogue. Everyone else is excluded for a moment as Jesus’ attention is riveted on this man. He stoops to the man and his need, then he looks up through the gaping hole in the ceiling and smiles with affirming approval at the audacious faith of the man’s friends (the audacity of them!)

He talks quietly and briefly with the paralytic man and quickly determines the malady and the prognosis.

“The people marvel and exchange looks of amazement, then delight. But the faces of the scribes are red with rage. They quickly huddle together, exchanging excited questions. “Why does this man speak thus? It is blasphemy! Who can forgive sins but God alone?” (material in quotation marks in the preceding paragraphs come from Lloyd Ogilvie, “Life Without Limits”, Word, 1975, pp. 45-46)

So here we are in the center of a happening that speaks bundles about Jesus, about the human condition, and about the audacious faith of four men. We’re going to concentrate on the audacious faith of these four men, but first let’s look at the first word Jesus speaks to the man to be healed and the reaction of the scribes.

I

What was Jesus’ first word? Look at it. Verse 5, “My son, your sins are forgiven you.” Lodge this truth in your mind. Jesus saw sin as humankind’s basic and biggest problem. In my last sermon we looked at the leper healed by Jesus. One of the big lessons on which we focused was the fact that the leper knew his condition. We raised the question, “Do we? Do we know our condition?”

Jerry and I were in Edinburgh, Scotland, the first part of December there for 3 days vacation following my work in London with the Evangelism Committee of the World Methodist Council. There’s hardly any time, whether on vacation or not, when I’m not thinking about preaching and looking for that which will communicate the word. I knew this particular sermon was in the offing. So, when John Birkbeck and I walked by the church where Alexander White, one of Scotland’s great preachers, had proclaimed the word with such power, I remembered a story out of his life.

Once an evangelist came to Edinburgh, and to enliven his preaching, he began criticizing the local ministers, among them Dr. White. A man who heard the criticisms came the next day to Dr. White. “The evangelist said that Dr. Hood was not a converted man,” he told Dr. White. The great preacher rose from his chair in anger. “The rascal! The rascal” Dr. Wilson was not a converted man!” The visitor was amazed at the extent of Dr. White’s response. He continued “That wasn’t all he said, Dr. White, he said that you were not a converted man either.”

Alexander White stopped and sank into his chair. He put his face in his hands, and for a moment did not say a word. Then he looked up to his friend, and said with great earnestness, “Leave me, friend, leave me! I must examine my heart.” (William E. Sangster, The Pure in Heart pp. 161—162).

Dr. White knew the power of sin in human life, how subtle it is and how it can play havoc in our lives unless we keep vigilance against it.

A close look at Jesus’ perception of sin is very revealing to those who have almost eliminated the word from their vocabulary, as well as those folks who have allowed their efforts at morality, their commitment to righteousness to blind them to the most devastating expression of sin in their life.

Anger, hostility, impatience, competition run wild.

Pride - people actually thinking they can control their lives.

Neglect — the sin most common to us because we’re so self— centered and so self-serving.

These are the sins Jesus dealt with most. These sins that play havoc with our physical and psychological health.

II

Which brings us to the second consideration about sin and human nature before we move to our primary consideration of the audacious faith demonstrated by the four main characters in our drama. Look again at the scripture – Jesus’ first word to the parable, you remember, was “Your sins are forgiven.”

One of the most relevant issues raised here is the connection between forgiving sins and healing a person, and that raises the further issue: the connection between sin and sickness.

I know need to tread lightly, and you need to hear me clearly. Sickness is not punishment for sin.

I want that to be made clear. At the same time, we also need to recognize the fact that there is a connection between physical and spiritual disease. I do not believe, as some TV evangelists have echoed loudly, that AIDS is God’s judgment of a society that has turned its back on morality. But who can miss the connection between sickness and sinful sexual promiscuity?

Again, no one would say that what any one of us is suffering from today is caused in this fashion, but there is a call here and a challenge. The data dictates that we examine ourselves daily tot see if we’re not allowing ourselves vulnerable to physical disease by falling to appropriate the forgiving and healing power of the indwelling Christ, and the forgiveness that He offers.

So Jesus said first, “My Son, thy sins are forgiven you.” That’s the biggest and basic problem in human life. “It is of little use to cure symptoms unless you cure diseases. The tap-roots of all misery is sin; and until it is grubbed up, hacking at the branches is a sad waste of time.” (Maclaren, Expositions of Holy Scripture Mark, Volume 8. pp. 64-65).

III

Turn now to the four men and their audacious faith. I believe that Mark, in this Gospel portion, wanted to establish two things: the power of the Messiah to forgive and to heal but, also, I believe that Mark, in his Gospel portion, wanted to establish two things: the power of the Messiah to forgive and to heal – but, also, I believe, he wanted us to look at the audacious faith of the paralytic’s friend and learn from them.

“Had they been less certain of a cure, and less eager, they would have shouldered their burden and carried him home again.” (Maclaren, p. 62)

They had every reason to give up. They had good intentions; their heart was in the right place; but their mission failed. They might as well go home! But look at them. Their audacious faith drives them to imaginative action, bold, daring. Never mind how Jesus might respond to their audacity — they would talk to him later. Their friend needed what Jesus had to offer. So they did what persons of lesser faith never considered. They tore a hole through the ceiling and lowered their friend into the very presence of Jesus, and we all know the rest of the story. Two lessons are here for us.

One, faith never says: “We cannot” or “Impossible.”

Let me illustrate.

Back in October or early November, of 1986, the New York marathon was run through the boroughs of that great city. Thousands and thousands of people competed, somewhere over 50,000 according to one estimate, but only 19,413 actually finished the race. One man in that race, who finished dead last, is a picture for us as we think about audacious faith.

“His name is Bob Wieland, and it took him four days and two hours and seventeen minutes to complete the marathon. But when he finished, even though he finished dead last, he wound up being first in many hearts because you see, Bob Wieland did that marathon without any legs at all! “Without any legs at all,” you say, “well, how in the world did he do that?” And I’ll tell you. He did it on his hands, swinging his torso forward about a yard at a time on his powerful arms, at an average speed of about one mile per hour! He had to stop several times because his arms got so tired. But just as soon as they were rested, off he’d go again heaving his torso forward a yard at a time and at a pace of one mile an hour. Finally, four days and two hours and seventeen minutes later he completed the race.

The race director had already marked his name off the list. He concluded that Wieland wouldn’t be able to cover the 26 miles and 385 yards on his hands and arms alone, and that surely he had given up. But Wieland hadn’t given up at all, because he had a very important point to make. As he said to one of the reporters, “I am a born—again Christian, and this was a demonstration that faith in the Lord Jesus Christ will always overcome the impossible!

(Norman Neaves, “Do Not Surrender Your Hope!”)

That’s it, isn’t it? The kind of faith demonstrated by the four friends of the paralytic never says, “We cannot,” or “Impossible.”

Will you keep that in mind as we move into our stewardship program to raise $6 million for the desperately needed funding to carry on the ministry of the church.

This congregation has been extravagantly blessed by God. We can do anything God calls us to do. Our faith must not allow us to say, “We cannot,” or “Impossible”

Are you facing some hard task that seems impossible? Some decision that is demanding wisdom that you don’t think you have?

Is there a mountain of physical or mental illness you think to steep to ever climb? – A dark, dark valley through which you are walking and fear plagues every step, you just don’t know if you can get through.

Remember Jesus, remember that He walks with you, and in and through Him we can do all things, for tie gives us strength Faith never says, “I cannot”, or “Impossible.’

The second lesson we learn from the audacious faith of the paralytic’s four friends is that our faith saves others. Now that’s strong, but think about it. The paralytic would have never been healed, but for the faith of his friends.

Augustine confessed that it was the faith and prayer of his mother, Monica, that saved him. How many of us can witness to miracles wrought in our own lives by the love, prayers, and faith of family and friends.

Turn the coin over. Are we doing that for others? Martin Luther liked to say that we are “little Christs”, that we are to embody Christ, to be vessels through which his healing, for giving, redeeming love comes to others.

Jesus not only said, “I am the Light,” He said, “You are the light of the world.”

Who are the persons – the paralytic, the sick of body and soul, the sad and lonely, those who are depressed an verging on despair? – who are the persons that may not get through the crowd to Jesus unless you bring them!

Audacious Faith through which others are healed and brought to Jesus.

Audacious faith that never says, “We cannot” or “Impossible”.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Collected Sermons, by Maxie Dunnam