Monday, March 18, 2019

According To John: Signs of Jesus


John 5:2-11, 16-18 
Now in Jerusalem by the Sheep Gate there is a pool, called in Hebrew Beth-zatha, which has five porticoes. In these lay many invalids—blind, lame, and paralyzed. One man was there who had been ill for thirty-eight years. When Jesus saw him lying there and knew that he had been there a long time, he said to him, “Do you want to be made well?” The sick man answered him, “Sir, I have no one to put me into the pool when the water is stirred up; and while I am making my way, someone else steps down ahead of me.” Jesus said to him, “Stand up, take your mat and walk.” At once the man was made well, and he took up his mat and began to walk.

Now that day was a sabbath. So the Jews said to the man who had been cured, “It is the sabbath; it is not lawful for you to carry your mat.” But he answered them, “The man who made me well said to me, ‘Take up your mat and walk.’”

Therefore the Jews started persecuting Jesus, because he was doing such things on the sabbath. But Jesus answered them, “My Father is still working, and I also am working.” For this reason the Jews were seeking all the more to kill him, because he was not only breaking the sabbath, but was also calling God his own Father, thereby making himself equal to God.



Can you imagine a President of the United States that did not believe that Jesus was God?

A President who didn’t believe that the miracles of Jesus were authentic but rather were myths?

A President devoted to the teaching of Jesus — but not always agreeing with how Jesus was interpreted by the biblical sources?
         
Can you imagine a President who saw the four gospels as "untrustworthy correspondents?"

Thomas Jefferson struggled with the Biblical account of Jesus --- so he created his own gospel by taking a sharp instrument, perhaps a penknife, to copies of the New Testament and pieced together his own account of Christ’s philosophy.

Much of the material Jefferson elected to not include related to miraculous events, he rejected anything that he perceived as “contrary to reason.”
          Including the resurrection stories

Thomas Jefferson did what many of us want to do at times —- excise from our minds things that don’t make sense or cannot be proven.

Last week, I had the privilege of teaching the re-confirm class. 

It is a class for adults who want to go over the same material that the youth are learning in confirmation.

It was my first chance to teach the class and I found it fascinating.

What I realized is that:
·         They have the same questions that the youth have — they just have better tools to articulate those questions
·         They are not always sure what to do with the things that don’t make sense

But what fascinated me the most was an explanation given why our youth struggle so much with accepting what they read in the Bible

What was shared was that students today are taught in school that they must prove things.
          Papers are written with the need to PROVE a position
                   How does one PROVE what is written in the Bible?

Even John understood this in his conclusion to his Gospel in Jesus’ encounter with Thomas — when he said (20:29)
“Have you believed because you have seen me? Blessed are those who have not seen and yet have come to believe.”

It is understandable how Jefferson could then conclude that we should remove all those un-provable stories from the Bible —
but then again — maybe he was missing the point

John has only seven miracle stories in the Gospel while the Synoptic Gospel's have over 30 different ones

John not only excludes many of the miracles in the synoptic Gospels, but he sees them as having a very different purpose
          In the synoptics they are there to win people to Jesus
                   That is not John’s purpose

John does not even call them miracles
          He sees them as SIGNS

Let me elaborate a little
          In John there are 7 Signs — in biblical times numerology was very important
                   7 = wholeness or completeness

          In John there are 7 "I Am" sayings
                   I don’t think it is a coincidence

Bart Ehrman says:
Jesus does not do as many miracles in John as he does in the Synoptics, but the ones he does are, for the most part, far more spectacular. Indeed, unlike in the Synoptics, Jesus does nothing to hide his abilities; he performs miracles openly in order to demonstrate who he is. 

Jesus performs miracles openly in order to demonstrate who he is

What do these signs say about who Jesus is?
          For John —- there is always more than what is visible to the eye

I find the first sign in John’s Gospel fascinating — It is the story of Jesus and his mother attending a wedding together in the small community of Cana

It is the elements of the Cana story that are so intriguing.

Jesus and his disciples, who have been down in the Jordan valley with John the Baptist, return to the Galilee to join a wedding celebration.

Jesus’ mother Mary and his brothers are already there (2:12), so it seems to be some kind of “family affair.”

Indeed, Mary seems to be at some level officially involved in the celebration as a kind of co-hostess since she takes charge of things when the wine planned for the occasion, unexpectedly runs out, indicating either that the crowd was larger than expected or that things became quite festive, or both.

Mary turns to Jesus and tells him take care of the problem

Jesus finds nearby six stone jars (not the typical clay jars) that could hold 20 or 30 gallons of water and he told the servants to fill the jars to the brim.

After filling the jars, he instructs them to draw off some of the water and take it to the headwaiter

John 2:9-10 (The Message)
When the host tasted the water that had become wine (he didn’t know what had just happened but the servants, of course, knew), he called out to the bridegroom, “Everybody I know begins with their finest wines and after the guests have had their fill brings in the cheap stuff. But you’ve saved the best till now!”

In some ways this is one of the strangest stories in the Bible surrounding Jesus.

We all know the point of the story isn’t that Jesus is the life of the party and if you run out of wine Jesus will bring the good stuff
          But what is John trying to tell us?

What is hidden beneath the surface that a literal reading won't tell us?

I believe there are a couple of key concepts here

·         John seems to imply that if we do as Jesus tells us to do — then our ordinary lives can become extraordinary

·         Jesus took stone jars, not clay ones, because stone jars were used for ritual cleansing.  Jesus seems to be saying that he will cleanse us of the impurities in our life if we will follow.   Or as Hamilton put it: “life in Christ is richer and more joyful than the ritualistic religion of first century Judaism.”

·         This full extraordinary life is available right now — not just in the future

What is amazing, is these same concepts are found in the second “Sign” story that I want to look at

This is one of my favorite of the "Sign" stories in John

Jesus has made his way back to Jerusalem for his 2nd (of three visits)
          This is one of the big differences between John and the Synoptic Gospels
In the Synoptic Gospels Jesus only goes to Jerusalem once (at the end of his ministry)
                             In John, Jesus travels to Jerusalem three times

Jesus is near the sheep gate — near the modern Lion’s Gate (or St. Stephen’s gate)

It is the Sabbath — and that will become an important detail

The location of this sign is the Pools of Bethesda the remains of which are still visible today

It was believed that this was a place where one could experience healing — thus people would gather in the hope that they might be the next one healed.

The Pools of Bethesda are described as having five porticoes — a puzzling feature suggesting an unusual five-sided pool, which most scholars dismissed as an unhistorical literary creation.
Yet when this site was excavated, it revealed a rectangular pool with two basins separated by a wall—thus a five-sided pool—and each side had a portico.

This story about Jesus’ miracle suggests a long history of healing at the site.

Roman medicinal baths constructed at the Bethesda Pool only a century or two later reflect this continued tradition.
When Christians controlled Jerusalem in the Byzantine and Crusader periods, they liked to mark the sites of Jesus’ miracles and other important events in his life, so they added a chapel and churches that now cover the Bethesda Pool complex.

The way the story is told it was understood that the first person to enter the pool when the waters were stirred up would supposedly be cured of his or her ailment

We are told that there was a man who had been ill for 38 years who had been coming to the pools for a long time hoping to be cured.

Jesus sees him and asks him a profound question: “Do you want to get well?”

The truth of the matter is, many of us don’t want to be made well
          We like our addictions, our illnesses, our whatever it is that ails us

But this man wants to be cured — he says to Jesus
“Sir, when the water is stirred, I don’t have anybody to put me in the pool. By the time I get there, somebody else is already in.”  John 5:7 (MSG)

The very next thing we see is Jesus — seemingly ignoring the superstition surrounding the water AND the man’s complaint as to why he’s still there after 38 years — telling the man to get up, pick up his mat and walk --- Notice, Jesus does not put him in the waters.

What’s lost in the translation from Greek is that Jesus’ words to the man carry the implication of an order — almost like that of a commanding General to a private.

Immediately the guy was on his feet — mat in hand — heading toward the Temple

It is at this point that we can begin to see the deeper meaning John has been leading us toward.

"DO YOU WANT TO GET WELL?”

With this question, Jesus meant to get both this ailing man’s attention and ours — to help us see a truth which is too often overlooked.

Jesus knew that healing and moving forward in transformation was going to require the paralytic man to move into territory he’d never known.

His circumstances were sad and unfortunate, and undoubtedly he’d wished, wanted, and even prayed to be able to walk thousands of times over the last 38 years.

But Jesus knew that not everything about being healed would be easy.

There would be some results of his healing that would be a challenge.

For instance, he was immediately going to be accused of being a sinner by the religious leaders.
          Why? Because he was breaking the law by carrying his mat on the Sabbath

Yet, when we read the story carefully, it appears that Jesus very intentionally picked a Sabbath to heal the man

We Jesus trying to make a point to the religious leaders?
          Was he trying to push their buttons?
                   It really seems so

Jesus is seems is trying to open the eyes of those who get wrapped up in the law and fail to see God's grace because of it.
          Sometimes we cannot see what it right in front of us.

Hamilton reminds us of this with a story about Vincent Van Gogh's masterpiece painting: Starry Night

The painting shows a town and a church at night --- I am sure you are familiar with it.

Above this beautiful scene is the most amazing sky: the moon and the stars whirl like pinwheels above the town.

Many see the lights in the sky representing Jesus --- the light of the world --- or maybe just the light of God's love (Van Gogh was a very religious man)

Most of the houses in the village have this light in them as well --- perhaps signifying the light of the Christ in the hearts and lives of the people.

But what is striking is that the church ---
the church which is at the center of the painting ---
the church has no light.

Many believe this is Van Gogh pointing out that the church of his day often seemed to lack the love of God --- so he painted it as a cold building without the light of Christ in it.

He suggests that the church is more concerned about following the letter of the law --- than being a conduit for the light and life of Jesus.

John seems to be asking us --- is the light of Christ shining through our lives, or are we so captivated by following the rules --- that the light and life of God is diminished.

And from that moment on, John tells us, the religious folk redoubled their efforts to get rid of this troublemaker

To get rid of the one who to them seemed to lessen God because he failed to follow all the rules.

And not just get rid of him --- to put him to death.
Because they could not hear the question Jesus was asking them: Do You Want To Be Healed?

Pick up your mat, Jesus says --- and be made well.

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