Doctrine of
Healing; John 5:1-16
There is the initial calling
of six disciples in John chapter one but that is not the official calling. They
travel with Him throughout this part of the year. At the end of the first year they
go back to their businesses. He has a Galilean ministry. Most
of the time He is just out there by Himself teaching. Sometimes some of
the disciples are with Him but it is not until almost the beginning of the
third year that there is the official call. In this Galilean ministry He has a
number of miracles, there are some teachings and
different things going on. John is going to mention other Passovers. He
mentions a Passover in
The chapter begins with a
healing event that takes place at the pool of
This pool that is mentioned
here is inside the sheep gate but it is just north of the temple area in
Then we have a parenthetical
phrase describing the kinds of sickness that are present—blind, lame and
withered, in the English, but we need to retranslate that to get a better
concept. The first is tuphlos [tufloj] and that literally means blind. The second group are
those that are cholos [xwloj], and that refers to those who are lame or unable to
walk. They are crippled in some sense and unable to move around. Then the third
group are those that are xeros [chroj] which literally means to be dried up, so it came to
be used to refer to those who were paralysed and their muscles had atrophied
and had withered up. So it is talking about three categories of people here,
the blind, the lame and the paralysed. This situation portrays for us the
spiritual impotence of the human race. This whole situation is to demonstrate
the grace of God and the gracious provision of God.
Jesus has come into town, has
gone to the temple that day, and has walked around and seen the Pharisees and
all of their legalistic wrangling, arguing the fine points of the law and how
they can acquire the praise of God though all of their human works. Then He
leaves and head one or two hundred yards north of the temple scene to what are
really the dregs of humanity. Jesus walks in and He sees all of these people in
all of their horrible condition, and he has compassion for all of them. But
Jesus’ mission is not to heal or alleviate the suffering of humanity. If it
was, Jesus would have healed everyone there that particular morning. He doesn’t
do that. He looks around and picks what was probably the most pathetic case in
the entire place, this one man who has been there for 38 years, unable to move,
desperately believing this myth that an angel is going to come and stir up the
waters, and if he can just get into that pool first then he would be able to
walk again. People can become desperate in situations of illness and try any
kind of so-called healing techniques in order to alleviate their suffering and
their condition. This man had been doing this for years and was unable to get
anybody to take him to the water. Jesus chooses him to be the object of His
miracle that day. The point here is that this man is not a believer; he is not
seeking healing from Jesus; he does not even become a believer as far as the
text is concerned and as far as we know as a result of this. This is solely an
expression of God’s grace. Jesus Christ initiates, that is the point of grace.
God the Father has initiated grace in human history and it is not up to man, it
is up to God to initiate, and it is on the basis of who and what God is and not
on the basis of who and what we are. So this whole situation is a training aid
for us in the grace of God.
This scene at the pool of
John 5:4 NASB
“for an angel of the Lord went down at certain seasons into the pool and
stirred up the water; whoever then first, after the stirring up of the water,
stepped in was made well from whatever disease with which he was afflicted. [5]
A man was there who had been ill for thirty-eight years.” Another thing we need
to remember is the Jewish emphasis on cleansing. They were obsessed with
cleaning. This man has this Jewish belief that the water will cleanse him and
give him physical healing.
John 5:6
NASB “When Jesus saw him lying {there,} and knew that he had already
been a long time {in that condition,} He said to him, ‘Do you wish to get
well?’” There are hundreds of
people here and nobody is paying attention to this one man. Jesus saw him there
and this was pure grace initiative. There was nothing in this man that made him
deserving of this healing. He is not positive, he is not a believer, Jesus just picks him out to make a point.
John 5:7 NASB
“The sick man answered Him, ‘Sir, I have no man to put me into the pool when
the water is stirred up, but while I am coming, another steps down before me’.
[8] Jesus said to him, ‘Get up, pick up your pallet and walk’.” What must the
expression on that man’s face have been! Because he knew from the
self-authenticating command of Jesus Christ that he could. There was no doubt
in his mind because the next verses says: John 5:9 NASB
“Immediately the man became well, and picked up his pallet and {began} to
walk.” When Jesus said “Get up,” the man felt a surge of energy through his body
that rejuvenated all of his nerve endings, all of his muscles. This is dramatic
and this is impressive. Then Jesus just turns and disappears into the crowd.
“… Now it was the Sabbath on that day.” This is sort of added as if it is
an afterthought, but this is the point. Jesus is bringing this whole issue of
Pharisaic legalism to a head; it is a public confrontation.
The doctrine
of healing (cont.)
10) In the early church God healed mediately through
believers. The term “mediately” means there is somebody between God and the
person being healed. God worked through somebody. In the New Testament He gives
somebody the gift of healing and the healing is mediated through a human agent.
Once the New Testament period is over God heals immediately without the human
agent. We pray for people to be healed. That doesn’t mean that God will heal
but we should pray for people who are sick. We believe that God heals today in
answer to prayer but it is only due to His sovereign will.
11) God’s sovereign will intervenes in only rare cases of
healing for His specific purposes.
12) Faith in miracles. If we look at the miracles in the
New Testament we can classify them two ways. There are those where the faith of
the recipient was not present at the time of healing. This means that the
person who was healed did not have faith at all and wasn’t even seeking healing
at the time. There was the nobleman’s son in John 4:46-54. Afterwards he was a
believer but he wasn’t when he came seeking healing for his son. The son had no
faith at all, he became a believer later. Second, there is the cripple at
13) In the 19th century there was a healing
movement related to the holiness theology that was putting an emphasis on
healing. Also in the mid-19th century there was some thing called
new though metaphysics, that man can control his health by his mental attitude.
The most famous disciple of new thought metaphysics was Mary Baker Glover
Patterson Eddy.
Back to our passage in
John chapter five, the man is made whole and that was on the Sabbath. What is
the response?
John
The Pharisees had developed
a lengthy series of law codes in order to apply the Sabbath law. The Sabbath
law from the Mosaic law simply prohibited work on the
Sabbath. Then people came along and said: “What do you mean by work? Let’s define
work.” It is the legalistic mentality that tries to find every circumlocution
and thread, every eye of the legalistic needle in order to walk the edge. Sabbath
began at sunset on Friday and started with three trumpet blasts from the temple
and synagogues to let everybody know that from now on they couldn’t work, and
it ended with sunset on Saturday. All food had to be prepared before the
Sabbath, all dishes had to be washed before the Sabbath, and all light lit. Everything
had to be done before that trumpet blew. The Mosaic law
simply prohibited work on the Sabbath but the rabbis developed a system for
defining work.
The rule that applied most
to the situation was this: “A living person on a bed is exempt, even for the
bed because the bed is secondary, but a corpse on a couch is culpable.” In
other words, you had to make sure the guy was alive or dead before you licked
up the bed and carried it. And it was not permissible to pick up anything and
carry it from a public place to a private place, or
from a private place to a public place. That was the violation that this man
engaged in in John chapter five. The Jews aren’t
concerned that he hasn’t been able to walk for 38 years, they are concerned
with his Sabbath violation and all they want to know is who told him to do it.
And he didn’t know; he had no idea.
John
This is going to create a
head-to-head confrontation with the Jews.