Sunday Homilies
The Healing of the Paralytic On this Third Sunday after Pascha, we witness the dramatic healing of a man paralyzed for thirty-eight years. Apparently, this particular paralytic was all alone, for year after year, he lay by these pools of Bethesda hoping someone would help him into the water after the stirring. Jesus intentionally comes to this paralytic, knowing his exact circumstances. The Holy Fathers of the Church placed this gospel reading on this Sunday of Pascha to show the connection between our Lord's power over life and death with His power over every sickness and infirmity of the human body. Imagine the atrophied and withered state of this paralytic's body after thirty-eight years of paralysis! With just a word, Jesus straightened and strengthened the man's body and made him whole. The disciples of Christ and everyone else present witnessed this man's miraculous physical transformation with their own eyes. It is necessary to point out two other interesting aspects of this healing. First, Jesus asks the paralytic before the healing an interesting question: “Do you want to be healed?” We might think this question unnecessary and obvious, but by asking this question, Jesus seeks to engage this man's free will and his faith. Jesus is not simply interested in this paralytic's physical health. He is supremely interested in his spiritual health and his eternal well-being. It is out of Jesus ultimate concern and love for this man that we point out the second interesting aspect of this amazing encounter. Jesus says to the man after he has been healed and then questioned by the Jewish religious leaders, “See, you are well! Sin no more, that nothing worse befall you.” Here Jesus makes the connection in some cases between sin and physical consequences to that sin. We do not know what the paralytic may have done to suffer his paralysis, but it does make sense that sinful or bad decisions on our part can lead to physical or temporal consequences and suffering. Both the miraculous healing and our Lord's warning afterwards show His great love, unfathomable mercy, and His desire for a continued relationship with this healed paralytic, that he may become a devoted disciple and utilize his second chance of health to continue a life of faithfulness and repentance.
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