Seeing Potential: Healing Beyond the Surface

Devotional

Sermon Summary

Bible Study Guide

Sermon Clips

"They saw past the infirmity. They saw past the situation for this man. They saw in this man possibility. They saw in this man agency, capacity. They saw in this man an opportunity for freedom. They did more than just slip him a few dollars. They did more than just sort of keep him alive. They healed him and broke him free from that bond of that disability." [06:46]( | | )

"I can't help but think that that is such an incredible model for us today. When we see homeless, in our streets and around these, in this neighborhood, often associated with severe addictions, drug addictions, substance abuse addictions, and the concomitant association with mental health and mental illness." [07:51]( | | )

"How are we actually healing? And we're not. Which then gets me starting to think about how, how are our homeless folks part of a process of exploitation themselves? Because sure enough, their existence keeps an industry, a public health industry going, but it's not an industry that seems to actually be committed to recovery and treatment and healing." [08:47]( | | )

"So I look at this story and I see a parallel today. I can't help but see the parallel today. And I ask the same questions, and I'm often dismissed or worse called terrible things, because I actually believe that we have, we can see the capacity, the capability, the possibility for these individuals who are in these circumstances." [09:45]( | | )

"Peter and John are walking to the temple for daily prayer. So this particular time within Judaism, the practice of praying three times a day was a common daily practice. So Peter, so not just Peter and John, but, all the apostles are continuing to practice all of the same Jewish daily ritual, daily prayer practices that they had been doing before Jesus even began his ministry." [01:28]( | | )

"But why that jumped out at me was because how Peter and John, how they respond to the man. The text tells us that they see him, or they saw him. In other words, it's more than just, as we do in our daily reality around this church, there are all kinds of homeless people looking, looking for money on the streets. We kind of walk by them. Do we ever really see them?" [04:42]( | | )

"And if you ever really see them, do you ever really talk with them? I enjoy going up and talking with them. They think I'm kind of crazy, I think. But I at least make that effort to try and see people. The text tells us that seeing someone implies, and they directly engage the man. This isn't just a case of slipping the disabled man some money and moving on." [05:37]( | | )

Ask a question about this sermon