If you have a Scandinavian heritage
you are probably familiar with Sven and Ole jokes. It is hard to imagine two more bungling
people, and the jokes always add absurdity to absurdity in a completely
unpredictable way. For example, Sven and
Ole are nailing siding on a house. Sven
hears Ole regularly cursing and throwing away nails. He says, “Ole, what’s the matter that you
keep throwing away nails?” Ole replies,
“Half of these nails are junk. The heads
and points are on the wrong ends!” Sven
replies, “Ole you idiot! There’s nothing
wrong with them nails. Them nails is for
the other side of the house!”
Now there’s no connection between that
silly Sven and Ole story and the gospel reading, except that the gospel reading
also has some completely unexpected twists.
Usually someone comes to Jesus asking to be healed. In the gospel reading Jesus comes to the man
without him asking. In fact it’s Jesus
who asks him, “Do you want to be made well?”
Well of course this man wants to be
made well, we think. He’s been sick for
38 years after all! Or does he? That’s a good question to ask. A healthy man would have to go out into the
fields and work for a living. He’d be
out in the scorching hot sun sweating and toiling, day after day, or perhaps
the cold and rain and storms and wind… year after year, wearing out his body
for a subsistence living at best, or at worst as a servant or hired hand where
his labor was making someone else rich.
By contrast this guy could lay in the
shade of the temple complex all day every day.
He could beg from people for his food rather than working for it. He could receive pity basically for free
rather than having to work to earn respect.
It is very hard to “make it” today.
It takes a lot of hard work, good decisions, commitment, and character
and integrity. The same could be said
for those days.
You may remember the Christian
education course Servant or Sucker that
we ran a few years ago. It addressed the
question of what is the best way to help people who beg. It showed that the situation is complicated. Often people have addictions or mental health
problems, and no simple handout from someone driving by is likely to help. Sometimes people do truly need help. And sometimes they’re just scamming because
it’s easier than working. The course concludes
that the best thing to do is not directly help people who beg, but instead
support organizations that do. Those
organizations have the staff and training to handle the complexities of things. You can support those organizations either
with financial gifts or by volunteering your time.
As an aside, that’s the way we apply
our efforts as a congregation. We do no
direct support. The Community Outreach
Committee works through other organizations.
We partner with other churches for the food cupboard and other help
programs. Family Promise is coming on
board and that will be run by people trained in identifying people most likely
to benefit from help.
When I did my clinical pastoral
education at the University of Tennessee Medical Center I served as a chaplain
for the large hospital. The chaplains’
office had some things available to help people in need, and many people asked
for help. But it was always hard to know
how to discern who should be helped and who was scamming.
I remember one night when I was on
call a young single woman who was having trouble with her pregnancy came into
the hospital with some problems. The
hospital quickly addressed her medical needs, but that left her the problem of
how to get back home. She was living in
an apartment and apparently the baby’s father was no longer in the picture and
he wouldn’t give her a ride. She knew
the chaplains had vouchers for taxi rides and she asked me to give her
one. I was concerned for more than just
her getting home so I engaged her in a conversation about her whole life
situation.
It turns out she came from a
financially successful family that ran a car dealership. Her family was supportive. They hadn’t kicked her out. She was welcome to move back home. But they did want her to act more responsibly
than she had.
I decided not to give her a taxi
voucher. I thought she was both milking
the generosity of the hospital, and that she needed to reconnect to her family
for the support she would need for the baby.
Helping her with a taxi voucher felt like it would do more harm than
good.
She wasn’t too happy with me, but I
wasn’t afraid of using tough love.
However she was quite clever. She
knew my shift would end in several hours and a new chaplain would come on
duty. Indeed the next chaplain gave her
a taxi voucher, and at our next staff meeting I was reprimanded for being
hard-hearted. Maybe I was wrong, but I
still maintain that she had a supportive family system and was only turning
away from her family out of pride, and that swallowing that pride was the long
term healthiest thing for her.
Would that we had the insight of our
all-knowing Lord. But we don’t. We muddle through sometimes getting it right
and sometimes getting it wrong.
Notice the man’s reply to Jesus, “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.” And did you also notice that there is no
verse 4 in our gospel? It’s been left
out. It’s been dropped because the most
ancient and reliable copies of John we have don’t include it. But it does help to explain the whole
situation. Verse 4 continues verse 3,
“In these [porticos] lay many invalids – blind, lame, and paralyzed waiting for
the stirring of the water; for an angel of the Lord went down at certain
seasons into the pool, and stirred up the water; whoever stepped in first after
the stirring of the water wade made well from whatever disease that person
had.”
We would think this is medical
nonsense, but it does explain why the man was there and it explains his
answer. He’s tried to get into the pool,
but he apparently doesn’t have anyone to help him get there and he’s not fast
enough to get there first.
Whether we agree with the idea of an
angel coming and stirring a pool in the temple complex and people getting
healed by it or not, this text does point out one certain truth. Receiving a miracle - being restored to
fullness of life – immediately leads to complications. You’d think the religious leaders who saw
this man would rejoice at his health!
You’d think they’d want to hear his story and track down the man who did
it – Jesus. You’d think they’d rejoice
in the mercy and power of God that Jesus embodies. But what do they focus on? They say, “It is the Sabbath; it is not
lawful for you to carry your mat.” The
sarcastic side of me thinks, “What, should he have left it behind? Then you would have fined him for
littering!”
Notice the religious leaders
completely miss the miracle that has just happened. They are so offended by a petty offense of
Sabbath observance that they can’t see anything else. They cannot believe that God would work
outside the boundaries they believe God has.
They need to read their own scriptures!
Forget what the New Testament teaches, it’s all in the Old Testament
too. God gave rules and regulations to
promote health, create safety, and create good order. Never ever does God say I want you to follow
the rules for their own sake.
But accepting the grace of God would
upend the world of the religious leaders.
And so, they don’t receive it.
There is a contrast between a man literally sick and crippled who is
healed and restored to a joyous productive life. I think this guy rejoiced at the idea of
going out and working in the hot sun all day every day because it meant
productive work for him. He wasn’t lazy,
or manipulative or scheming.
Now look at the religious
leaders. They’re crippled by their own
rules and regulations. They can’t see
God’s grace outside of their own view.
Jesus has come and he will free them too – free them for much greater
productivity. But they won’t take
it. It is they who choose to stay sick.
May your eyes be open to the ever new
possibilities and things God is doing.
May you have the strength to accept healing and forgiveness even when it
might complicate your life like it did the man Jesus healed. But like him, may you know the joy of
wholeness that Jesus provides to all who accept his touch.