Jesus' Healing: A Journey of Restoration and Gratitude

Devotional

Sermon Summary

Sermon Clips

"How many of us in this room either have been touched by Jesus or today you need a touch from Jesus? You're feeling like you're invisible. You're feeling like you're outside the camp. You've been kicked out because of decisions you made or things that have been done to you, and you don't fit in anymore, and Jesus shows up. He touches you. You recognize you're unclean. You recognize his sin, and your life has separated you from God, and Jesus touches him, and he says, I will be clean. Now, what is our greatest need in the room today? Physical healing, spiritual healing. Let me answer it for you. It's spiritual healing. His greatest need. Now, Jesus did both in this passage. He healed him of leprosy, but he also healed him because of his faith, cleansed him." [00:00:02]

"In the next few weeks, there will be a well dug in a village in India because of your generosity to the Next Generation Initiative already. And I just want to say thank you for that. We're also going to be establishing a medical clinic in a leper colony in India, again, because of your generosity. So thank you for that. Outside on our patio today is Harvest India has a display. If you'd like to learn more about the work that they do in India, they are one of our partners, global partners that we work with. And again, I just want to say thank you. Christian and I, our Next Gen director and myself, will be there to be able to visit and see the well and hand food out in the leper colony in a few weeks. And if you would like to join us, hey, let me know. I would love to have a couple more from the church go with us. So let me know. Happy to talk about all those details." [00:02:13] (58 seconds)



"There's a well that's provided there as well. And so here we are in biblical times. Throughout the Bible, there's a theme when it comes to leprosy. The theme is it relates to, there's a parallel to sin. Leprosy. Leprosy indicates a physical, our physical state, sin, indicates what? Our spiritual state. And so there's, when you're diagnosed with leprosy in the Old Testament, it meant you were separated from the community. You were separated from your family. In fact, to this day, if you're diagnosed with leprosy in India, do you know what your family does? They have a memorial service for you. Because you no longer exist. You are sent outside. Now they say it's illegal to have the caste system in India. It still exists though, right? And so you have the Dalits, the Dalits, the untouchables who are sent outside the city. And they form these colonies, these leper colonies. Leprosy. Leprosy was prevalent in the time of Jesus." [00:04:33] (69 seconds)



"Before he goes to Jesus, he had to recognize that I need to be healed. That I am in a state, I am in a condition that needs the touch of God. In my life. He recognized that. He would not have gone to Jesus and said, Jesus, heal me, if he didn't recognize that he was in need of being healed. Are you tracking with me? And so he comes to Jesus and he says, Lord, if you're willing. Right? He knew he was able. That wasn't the question. I don't know. Had he heard of Jesus? I don't know the story. But he didn't get too close to Jesus. He had to be at least six feet from Jesus, because that's what the Old Testament law said. When you're diagnosed with leprosy in the Old Testament, you could never be six feet within anybody." [00:06:14] (46 seconds)



"And Jesus stretched out his hand. Now remember the context. What does Jesus do? He touches him. He touches him. The Old Testament law said, don't even come near him. Six feet or 150 feet, do not come near him. But Jesus, don't you love Jesus? Jesus breaks all tradition. Now why didn't he obey the Old Testament law? Because he didn't come to obey Old Testament law. He came to fulfill the law. And so he breaks through all of that and says, I know what Moses wrote, but I'm going to touch him. And so now we fill in the blanks, right? And I just wonder what that was like. I think, I think it's a full embrace hug. I think he touched him. And I think he touched him where the leprosy had eaten away at his limbs. Leprosy begins, attacks the nervous system." [00:10:10] (58 seconds)



"He knew most everyone thought his condition was hopeless. I'm sure there were people in the crowd saying, get away from here. What are you doing? And he's not going to listen to you. There was never an experience prior to him of a story where he had heard of somebody else who had leprosy being healed that we know of in Scripture. He couldn't look to another leper and say, oh, he healed him. Now I'm going to go. There was no previous experience that he knew of. He had no promise that Jesus would heal him. He didn't pick up a flyer saying, all lepers come at this time. This place, at this intersection, you'll be healed. He had no invitation from Jesus or the disciples. Others who were healed in the Bible, their friends brought them there, right? The guy, lame man on a cot, his friends carried him and they cut a hole through the roof. That's a determined friend. We all need friends like that. This man didn't have anybody." [00:13:41] (53 seconds)



"And what's interesting is, is Jesus receives his worship and he recognizes the one who goes back and honors him first. Jesus recognizes those who recognize what God has done in our life. He also recognizes, if you continue to read, then Jesus answered, hey, where are the others? How many were there? Weren't there 10 of you? Where are the other nine? From this text, Jesus recognizes those who come and worship him based upon what he's done. He also recognizes those who haven't. You can't fly under the radar. Say, I'm not gonna honor God. He knows it all. He knows all 10. He knows the decisions of all 10 of them. Were there not 10 cleansed? Where are the nine? Was no one found to return and give praise to God except this foreigner? Now the one, we don't know how many Jews and how many Samaritans there were, but the one who went back is a Samaritan. Biblical history, Samaritans were considered dogs." [00:16:47] (71 seconds)