Mark 2:1-12 · Jesus Heals a Paralytic
With a Little Help from My Friends
Mark 2:1-12
Sermon
by King Duncan
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There was an interesting article in People magazine recently. It was about a young man, eighteen-year-old Kevin Hines, who, in September of 2000, decided to give up his fight with depression by jumping off San Francisco’s Golden GateBridge.  As he paced and cried along the bridge sidewalk, Kevin looked for someone who would talk him out of his crazy decision.  If even one person expressed concern for him, then Kevin was prepared to back down.  But not one passerby gave Kevin a second glance, with one exception--a tourist asked him to take her picture.  Not one person, including the tourist, cared enough to try to intervene to keep him from killing himself.

Finally, Kevin Hines climbed up on the guard rail and threw himself 220 feet into the waters below.  Miraculously, he survived his jump, although he suffered serious injuries.  While recovering from his injuries, Hines received some encouraging advice from a visiting priest. He said to Kevin, “You are a miracle.  Now go out and save lives.”  Today, according to People magazine, Kevin Hines has gone back to school and is working to put the priest’s words into action in his life and in the lives of others. (1) 

The story had a happy ending. Thank God. But it is sobering to read that Kevin would not have jumped if only one person had reached out to him. What would have happened if you had been on the bridge that day? Would you have intervened to try to save Kevin, or would you have simply passed him by? I hope you understand that as I ask you that question, I am asking myself, as well.

Word got out in Capernaum that Jesus was in the village. You know what happened next. We’ve seen it happen before. Crowds started lining up outside his door. So many gathered that there was no room left for anyone else to squeeze in. When Jesus saw the great crowd, he did what he was sent to do--he began preaching to them. But, as always, he was interrupted. 

Four men have come to see him. They are carrying a man on a stretcher. The man is paralyzed. Since they could not get him to Jesus because of the crowd, the four men make an opening in the roof above Jesus, and then they lower the stretcher with the man on it.  Notice what the Gospel of Mark says next, “When Jesus saw their faith, he said to the paralytic, ‘Son, your sins are forgiven.’”

Some teachers of the law are present and they are shocked that Jesus presumed to forgive sins. Jesus knows what they are thinking and he says to them, “Which is easier: to say to the paralytic, ‘Your sins are forgiven,’ or to say, ‘Get up, take your mat and walk’? But that you may know that the Son of Man has authority on earth to forgive sins. . . .” He said to the paralytic, “I tell you, get up, take your mat and go home.”  The man got up, took his mat and walked out in full view of them all. What a powerful story.

There are several places in the Gospels where Jesus indicates that a person’s faith played a role in the healing process. But this story is different. In this story, it is the faith of the man’s friends that is cited. “When Jesus saw THEIR faith . . .” This man found healing because his friends had faith. That’s fascinating. We can understand when our own faith can affect our healing, but the faith of others, can it make a difference?

The answer is, yes. What you and I believe has an impact on others.

Does it matter when people first become parents that they are people of faith? Of course it does. People who have a healthy, wholesome faith in a loving God who gives purpose to their lives make better parents.

Now notice I said a healthy, wholesome faith. Not every parent has a healthy, wholesome faith. Let’s face it, there are some people with a twisted, mean-spirited faith. They believe in a vindictive God who rewards and punishes in a helter-skelter manner. And they themselves are generally petty and vindictive. Such people make terrible parents and they produce children in their mode. But a person who has a healthy sense of identity as a child of a gracious and loving God will transmit that faith to their children, and their children will have a healthy, wholesome faith, too. What you and I believe will have an impact on our families.

Raising a family is a challenge. One new father said that he had read that, when your baby is teething, you lose one night’s sleep for every tooth. “Well by that reckoning,” he says, “my baby girl would now have about 150 teeth.”  Wait until that baby daughter becomes a teenager, then the sleepless nights will really begin. Raising children is a challenge.

A tired homemaker opened the front door of her home to find a representative of a children’s home.  The kindly gentleman said, “I’m collecting donations for the new children’s home we’re building. I hope you’ll give what you can.”  “Absolutely,” said the beleaguered woman. “I’ll give you two boys and two girls, or one of each.”   Raising children is a challenge. The best parents reflect the love of Jesus.

J. Ellsworth Kalas tells about a friend of his, a Lutheran by faith, who taught in a middle school and operated a small summer business.  One of his sons once asked him, “Dad, what is your goal in life?”  His friend answered, “To put the hands of my family into the hand of God.” (2) What kind of parent do you think he was? Our faith will have an impact on our families.

Pastor John Ortberg once wrote something important I would like to read to you. He writes, “I look in on my children as they sleep at night, [and] I think of the kind of father I want to be. I want to create moments of magic, I want them to remember laughing until the tears flow . . . I want to have slow, sweet talks with them as they’re getting ready to close their eyes. I want to chase fireflies with them, teach them to play tennis, have food fights, and hold them and pray for them in a way that makes them feel cherished. 

“I look in on them,” he continues, “and I remember how the day really went. I remember how they were trapped in a fight over [a game] and I walked out of the room because I didn’t want to spend the energy needed to teach them how to resolve conflict. I remember how my daughter spilled cherry punch at dinner and I yelled at her as if she’d revealed some deep character flaw; I yelled at her even though I spill things all the time and no one yells at me; I yelled at her--to tell the truth--because I’m big and she’s little and I can get away with it. I remember how at nights I didn’t have slow, sweet talks, but merely rushed the children off to bed so I could have more time to myself.” (3) 

Most of us have been there, haven’t we? It’s time to turn our children over to Jesus and to pray that he will make us the kind of parents we ought to be. Our faith will have an impact on our family.

It will also have an impact on our friends. Would these four men have brought this man to Jesus if they were different kind of people? They surely had other things to do, but they cared about their friend and they believed that Jesus could heal him.  Dick Innes in his Internet column, Daily Encounter, tells about friendship among the North American Indians. Native Americans had no written language before they met the white man.  Their language, however, was far from primitive.  Many of the Indians had as many words in their vocabulary as their English and French exploiters.  Some of their words were much more picturesque, too.  For example, “friend” to the Indians was “one-who-carries-my-sorrows-on-his-back. “

Says Dick Innes, “Everybody needs at least one trusted ‘Indian-type’ friend with whom he or she can share his or her deepest sorrows and painful feelings.  We all need a helping hand and a listening ear when we’re going through difficult times. How do we find such a friend?  First, by praying and asking God to help us to be an ‘Indian-type’ friend.  And then by asking God to help us find such a friend. (4)

Heather Floyd, a member of the contemporary Christian music group Point of Grace, found such a friend. It was a guy from her church. One day before lunch, her friend Mike invited her to go off campus and have lunch with him. Not thinking much about it, Heather said, “Sure.” They had a really nice time together at one of Heather’s favorite places. About a year later she learned why he invited her to lunch that day. He had overheard some her friends of talking. They were planning to push Heather out of their group. They’d decided to go out to lunch--and leave her behind. When Mike heard this, he found Heather and talked her into going to lunch with him so she wouldn’t find out what her friends had planned.

“I know it was a little thing,” says Heather Floyd, “but what he did was so kind and unselfish. He really cared about my feelings. It just showed me what it means to be a real friend.” (5) What we believe can have an impact on our families and our friends.

What you and I believe can also have an impact on complete strangers. I have been assuming the four men in this story were friends of the paralyzed man on the stretcher. Maybe they were complete strangers. Maybe they came to hear Jesus preach and they saw this man on the street stretched out on his mat begging for alms and they said to one another, “Hey, the Master can help this man. Why don’t we take him with us and see if we can get him some help?” Then Jesus’ words about their faith take on even more significance. They cared about a stranger and they brought him to Jesus.

Is that possible? Certainly such things have happened before. And you don’t have to go to religious journals to find them. Secular magazines have begun to notice that faith can make a difference in people’s lives.

For example, Family Circle carried a story recently about Dr. Joseph E. Murray. Dr. Murray performed the first successful human organ transplant operation on December 23, 1954.  Dr. Murray devoted himself to unlocking the secrets of successful organ transplantation after serving as an Army surgeon in World War II.  In addition to perfecting organ transplantation techniques, Dr. Murray has also spent part of his career performing plastic surgery on those with facial deformities.  He has traveled around the world, offering his services as a plastic surgeon in some of the poorest nations.  In 1990, Dr. Murray was recognized for his work and awarded the Nobel Prize in medicine. 

An observant Catholic, Dr. Murray begins each morning with the prayer that “all my acts are consistent with being the creature of a loving Creator.” (6) According to Family Circle Joseph Murray’s faith impacts complete strangers.

Even Time magazine is beginning to recognize the difference faith can make. They published a remarkable story recently about a young man named Peter Howell.  Every week, the young men of Sigma Nu fraternity house at IndianaUniversity expect a visit from Peter Howell.  Howell is a fellow student and president of Greek InterVarsity, a Christian group on campus.  For the past two years, he has paid every guy in his dormitory a weekly visit and invited him to a Bible study.  Most guys turn him down.  Howell could easily become discouraged.  Why does he keep trying to share his faith with guys who don’t seem to care?  Because sometimes it makes a difference.  As one of Howell’s frat brothers told Time, “In the biggest meathead frat, he’s himself.  He’s 100%.  And no matter what day I say no, he’ll always come back.  “One day, when I’m ready,” says this frat brother, “I’ll remember Peter.” (7) What you and I believe can impact even complete strangers.

Let’s suppose you were walking across a tall bridge and you saw a young man pacing back and forth and crying. If you were a person of faith might it not cause you to reach out to that young man and thereby possibly prevent a tragedy? Left to our own motivations, we might not see any reason to leave our comfort zone and reach out to a stranger, but as people of faith, might we not feel Christ pushing us to forget about ourselves and care about someone else?

Four men brought a paralyzed man on a mat to Jesus. When they couldn’t find any other way to get to Jesus, they made a hole in the roof and lowered the man into Jesus’ presence. “When Jesus saw their faith, he said to the paralytic, ‘Son, your sins are forgiven.’” Later Jesus would tell the paralyzed man to take up his mat and walk, which he did. The power of faith. Not simply the power of faith on us, but the power of our faith on others. Such faith can change the world.


1. “The Jumper Who Lived” by Thomas Fields-Meyer and Andrea Orr, People, September 5, 2005, pp. 129-131.

2. Preaching the Calendar: Celebrating Holidays and Holy Days (Louisville: Westminster John Knox Press, 2004), p. 79.

3. “The Life You Always Wanted,” http://sermonideas.com/Sermon47.asp.

4. www. actsweb. org/subscribe.

5. Campus Life, Sep/Oct 1996, p. 21.

6. “The Transplant Pioneer: Dr. Murray’s Miracles” by Bette-Jane Raphael, August 10, 2004, pp. 62-65.

7. “Faith and Frat Boys” by Jeff Chu, Time, May 9, 2005, p. 50.    

Collected Sermons, by King Duncan