Fourth Sunday of Pascha
Healing of the Paralytic
John 5:1-15
From The Explanation of the Gospel of St. John
by Blessed Theophylact, Archbishop of Ochrid and Bulgaria
1-4.
After this there was a feast of the Jews; and Jesus went up to
Jerusalem. Now there is at Jerusalem by the sheep market a pool, which
is called in the Hebrew tongue Bethesda, having five porches. In these
lay a great multitude of impotent folk, of blind, halt, withered,
waiting for the moving of the water. For an angel went down at a certain
season into the pool, and troubled the water: whosoever then first
after the troubling of the water stepped in was made whole of whatsoever
disease he had. It was a feast of the Jews, Pentecost, I
believe. The Lord went up on this feast for two reasons: first, so as
not to appear by His absence to be opposed to the law, but to be seen
celebrating together with the others. Secondly, He went up to the feast
to draw more people to Himself by His signs and teaching, especially
from among the guileless multitude. For the farmers and craftsmen, who
on other days would be busy at their work, always gathered together on
the feast days. The pool was called Sheep's Pool, because the sheep
intended for sacrifice were gathered there, and after they were slain
their entrails were washed in its water. It was the common belief that
simply from the washing of the sacrificial entrails the water took on a
divine power, and because of this, the angel would come to it at certain
times to work a miracle. Here we see divine providence guiding the Jews
from the beginning towards faith in Christ, preordaining for them this
miracle of the pool. In these Judaic beliefs and practices God
prefigured Baptism, which would contain great power and the gifts of
cleansing sins and bringing souls to life. He had already given them
water for the cleansing of stains, not of the fundamental stain, but
those which appeared as such before (the New Covenant), such as the
stain of touching a corpse, a leper, and so forth. Then He gave them
this miracle of the pool, preparing them to receive Baptism. An angel
would come down at certain times and trouble the water, infusing it with
healing power. Truly, it is not the nature of water to heal by itself
(if this were so it would invariably heal); it is entirely through the
activity of the angel that the miracle was accomplished. So it is with
us that the water of Baptism is simple water, which, through the
invocations made to God, receives the grace of the Holy Spirit to free
us from spiritual disease. And this water heals all: the blind, whose
spiritual eyes are darkened and unable to discern the better from the
worse; the lame, who can neither move towards doing good, nor even
advance towards what is better; the withered, who are in total despair,
and have no part in anything good. All are healed by the water of
Baptism. Before, our very weakness had prevented us from being healed,
but now there is no hindrance to our being baptized. In the waters of
that pool just one was healed, while the others remained sick; now, even
if the whole world should approach at once for Baptism, the grace would
not diminish.
5-7.
And a certain man was there, who had an infirmity thirty and eight
years. When Jesus saw him lie, and knew that he had been now a long time
in that case, He saith unto him, Wilt thou be made whole? The impotent
man answered Him, Sir, I have no man, when the water is troubled, to put
me into the pool: but while I am coming, another steppeth down before
me. The perseverance of the paralytic is astounding. For
thirty-eight years he lay there waiting, each year hoping to be healed,
but always prevented by those who were stronger. Yet he neither gave up,
nor despaired. This is why the Lord questioned him, in order to show us
the steadfastness of the man, and not of course because He was ignorant
of the answer. Not only was it unnecessary for Him to learn the answer,
it would have been foolish for anyone to ask such a question, whether a
sick man wanted to be healed. The Lord spoke as He did only to bring to
our attention the patience of the man. How does he answer? With great
kindness and gentleness. "Yea, Lord, I wish to be healed, but I have no
man who is able to carry me into the water." He does not answer with
blasphemy; he does not rebuke Christ for asking a stupid question; he
does not curse the day of his birth as we often do, fainthearted as we
are, when undergoing a much lesser affliction than his. He answers
meekly and pleadingly, indeed not knowing to Whom he was speaking, and
also intending perhaps to ask Christ to carry him into the water. Note
also that Christ did not say, "Wilt thou that I make thee whole?" lest
He appear to boast.
8-10.
Jesus saith unto him, Rise, take up thy bed, and walk. And immediately
the man was made whole, and took up his bed, and walked: and on the same
day was the Sabbath. The Jews therefore said unto him that was cured,
It is the Sabbath day: it is not lawful for thee to carry thy bed.
He commands him to pick up his bed in order to confirm that the miracle
was not an illusion, for the man would not have been able to carry his
bed if his limbs were not firmly and solidly knit together. The Lord
does not require faith of him before the healing, as He did with many
others, for the paralytic had never seen Him work any signs. And of the
others of whom the Lord did require faith, it was not before but after
He had performed miracles in their presence. See how the paralytic
immediately heard and believed the Lord's command. He did not hesitate
and say to himself, "Is he not mad to command me to get up at once? I
have been here thirty-eight years without ever being healed, and now I
should suddenly stand up?" With no such thought, he believed, and rose.
The Lord heals on the Sabbath, teaching men to understand the observance
of the law in a new way, that they should not think that it is by
bodily rest that they honor the Sabbath, but by refraining from evil.
How could the law forbid one from doing good on the Sabbath when the law
comes from God, Who is always doing good?
11-13.
He that made me whole, the same said unto me, Take up thy bed, and
walk. Then asked they him, What man is that which said unto thee, Take
up thy bed, and walk? And he that was healed knew not who it was: for
Jesus had conveyed Himself away, a multitude being in that place. One must marvel at the boldness of the man towards the Jews. While they badgered him, saying, "It is not lawful for thee to carry thy bed on the Sabbath," he boldly proclaimed his Benefactor, He that made me whole, the same said unto me, Take up thy bed, and walk.
It is as if he were saying, "It is nonsense to forbid me to obey the
man who saved me from such a long, hard sickness." The Jews do not ask
him, "Who is it that made thee whole?" but, "Who is it that said unto thee, Take up thy bed, and walk?"
It is as if they chose to be blind to the good, but were obsessed by
what they considered to be a transgression of the Sabbath. Jesus conveyed Himself away
so that the man's testimony to his healing would be evidence of the
truth, and not liable to the accusation that he was attempting to curry
favor with Jesus by crediting Him with the miracle. (For not only did
the man not know who Jesus was, but) Jesus Himself was no longer present
on the scene. Jesus left that place for another reason as well, to
avoid arousing the Jews to further anger. He knew that the mere sight of
the object of envy is enough to ignite a flame of spite. Therefore, He
allows the facts of the matter to be examined entirely on their own
merit. And the more the Jews accuse, interrogate and examine, the more
swiftly travels word of the miracle.
14-16.
Afterward Jesus findeth him in the temple, and said unto him, Behold,
thou art made whole: sin no more, lest a worse thing come unto thee. The
man departed, and told the Jews that it was Jesus, which had made him
whole. And therefore did the Jews persecute Jesus, and sought to slay
Him, because He had done these things on the Sabbath day. By the Lord's words to the paralytic, Behold, thou art made whole: sin no more,
we learn first of all that illness in man stems from sin. Secondly, we
learn that the Christian teaching about hell is true, and that the
punishment there is eternal. Where are those now who say, "I fornicated
for one hour; how [is it possible] that I will be punished eternally?"
Behold this man, whose years of sin were far fewer than his years of
punishment, seeing that his punishment lasted almost the length of a
man's life. For sins are not judged by their duration in time but by the
nature of the transgression. We also learn from the Lord's words that
even if we have paid a harsh penalty for our former sins, and then
return again to those same sins, we will be punished more severely than
before. Indeed, this is only right. If a man does not correct his ways
after his first punishment, he must be treated more severely, because he
is insensible to the good and scorns it. But why are not all punished
in this manner? We see that many of the wicked are healthy and
energetic, and pass their days happily. But their lack of sufferings in
this life becomes the grounds for even greater punishment in the next
life. Saint Paul makes this clear when he writes, But when we are judged by the Lord, meaning, in this life, we are chastened, that we should not be condemned with the world,
that is, in the next life (I Cor. 11-32). What we receive in this life
are only admonitions: in the next life they are truly punishments. So
then, are all illnesses the result of sin? Not all, but most. Some
illnesses arise from sin, as we see with the paralytic and also with one
of the kings of Judah, who suffered pain in his legs as a result of sin
(III Kings 15:23); other illnesses are given as a testing and proving
of virtue, as with Job; yet other sicknesses result from overindulgence
of various kinds, such as gluttony and drunkenness. Some have supposed
that His words, Sin no more, indicate that
the Lord knew that the paralytic would reveal Him to the Jews after He
met him in the temple. But this is not so. It is apparent that the man
was pious, for the Evangelist says, Jesus findeth him in the temple.
If he had not been pious, he would have given himself over to
relaxation and eating and drinking, and run home to escape the ravings
and questioning of the Jews. But none of these things dissuaded him from
going to the temple. After recognizing Jesus, see how gratefully he
proclaims him to the Jews. He did not say the words they wanted to hear,
"It is Jesus Who told me to take up my bed," but instead, "It is Jesus
Who made me whole." These grateful words infuriated them, for they held
the breaking of the Sabbath to be a crime. If the Jews then persecuted
the Lord, how was the man at fault by revealing Him to them? With
sincere motives he proclaimed his Healer to them in order to draw others
to believe in Him. If they persecuted the One Who did good things, it
is their own sin.
Understand
the sheep's pool to represent the grace of Baptism, in which the Sheep
sacrificed for us, the Lord Jesus, was washed when He was baptized for
our sake. This pool has five porches, symbolizing the four great virtues
plus the divine contemplation of dogma which are revealed in Baptism.
Human nature, paralyzed in all its spiritual powers, lay sick for
thirty-eight years. It was not sound in its belief in the Holy Trinity
(i.e. 3), nor did it have a sure belief in the eighth age (i.e. 8), that
is, the general Resurrection and the Last Judgement. This is why it
could not find healing, for it did not have any man to put it into the
pool. That is to say, the Son of God, Who intended to heal through
Baptism, had not yet been made man. But when He was made man, then He
healed our nature and commanded us to take up our bed, that is, lift up
our body from the earth, making it light and free, not weighted down by
flesh and earthly cares, and raising it from slothfulness so that it is
able to walk, which means, active in doing good. The troubling of the
water in the pool suggests the stirring up the evil spirits lurking in
the waters of Baptism, crushing and choking them by the grace of the
Holy Spirit. May we also obtain healing, for we are paralyzed and
motionless in the doing of anything good; we also have no man,
that is, no human and rational thought, which distinguishes us from the
irrational beasts, to carry us into the pool of tears of repentance, in
which the first who enters is healed. He who procrastinates and puts
off his repentance until later, and does not hurry to repent now, does
not obtain healing. Hasten to be the first to enter this pool, lest
death overtake you. And there is an angel which troubles this pool of
repentance. What angel is it? The Angel of Great Counsel of the Father,
Christ the Saviour. (see Is. 9:6). For unless the divine Word touches
our heart and troubles it with thought of the torments of the age to
come, this pool cannot become active and effective, and there is no
healing for the paralyzed soul. The pool of repentance may also
fittingly be called a sheep's pool; for in it are washed like sheep the
inward parts and thoughts of the saints who are made ready to become a
living sacrifice pleasing to God, making them innocent and guileless.
May we also obtain healing, and afterwards be found in God's holy
temple, no longer stained by unholy thoughts, lest a worse thing, the eternal torments, come unto us.
No comments:
Post a Comment