Acts 16: 9-15
John 5: 1-18
“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.”
Prayer: Stir us up O Lord, with your Spirit, that we may see your path in front of us. Amen.
Our custodian Jose arrives here early on Monday mornings. When I arrive, we often greet each other and converse together… he with his broken English, and me with my broken Spanish. Somehow, I think we get what each other is saying! Last Monday morning, we were chatting about big things… large problems in the world. And at one point, he pulled out his cell phone, pointed to it and said that this is a major source of our problems in the world. Social Media. Fake news. Misinformation.
Now you may agree with him. Maybe not. But, I have to say—there may be some truth to his point. I mean the latest statistic is that about 25% of Americans do not question or question only slightly the accuracy of social media news. I find that amazing! Of course, then again, I got that figure from Social media… No, I’m just kidding (Social media news accuracy perceptions 2022 | Statista, retrieved May 20, 2022). But this is a big problem in today’s world. Fake news is an insidious and widespread issue in the news industry as a whole.
We have gotten fake news about COVID, Russia, cyber attacks, election results. We’ve gotten accurate news and were told it by some that it was fake news. So this is a huge problem.
But, surprise, surprise! Fake news may have been happening in the biblical world as well. I wonder if the sick man, whom we assume was paralyzed, was caught up in some misinformation about the stirred up water. I mean did you wonder why the man makes the excuse to Jesus that no one puts him into the water when it is stirred up? That’s because there was this belief that an angel of the Lord came and stirred up the water at certain times, and when that happened, the water took on healing properties. And as fake news told it, the first person in the water when it’s agitated like that would get healed from whatever disease that person had.1
It could be argued then that the man bought into the fake news about the water. For thirty-eight years he was stuck in that belief and whined and complained about the fact that people would jockey for position, maybe throwing some elbows as they clamored to be the first ones in the pool. And he never could get there first. So, when Jesus asked him, “Do you want to be made well?” rather than opening his heart and mind to the healing available right in front of him, the man focused on why he was NOT healed, revealing his spiritual paralysis.
And Jesus had zero time for that! Jesus didn’t coddle the man’s belief in the fake news. He didn’t enable superstitions. Jesus told him to stop buying into false beliefs. Stop making excuses. Instead he said, “Stand up! Take your mat and walk!” Do not sin by placing belief in falseness. At once the man was made well, and he took up his mat and began to walk, freed from his spiritual and physical paralysis. You see, a new path toward health and wholeness was right in front of the man, but he couldn’t see it because he was blinded by fake beliefs, paralyzed by old ideas and those old practices that had to go. And new ones take hold.
Later Jesus found the man at the temple presumably to worship, not stuck at the pool of Bethesda.
Retired Lutheran pastor Frank Honeycutt tells the story of how his wife Cindy had a stroke that affected her speech very significantly. Cindy’s speech therapist said that singing would stimulate her right paralyzed vocal cord. So, they began singing hymns before breakfast that connected to daily Bible readings. Then, they started reading the Bible stories together. Cindy was a retired high school English teacher and also taught public speaking, so this was welcomed, but her voice, she said sounded like a kindergartner’s. The “r’s” gave her a special challenge.
Lo and behold these new practices of singing and reading the bible out loud taught them new ways to listen for God’s voice each morning. And after 40 years of marriage, singing and speaking words of faith in the morning taught them how to speak to one another in new ways, creating life in their marriage and new pathways in their faith. Frank wrote, “Here’s a weird truth. Cindy and I have discovered a new voice in our married life through partially losing the old one” (“Honeycutt, Frank, “Finding a New Voice,” Christian Century, May 4, 2022, pgs. 14-15).
A new path of health and wholeness was right there in front of them. They only saw it through Cindy’s stroke and struggle with speech and through their faith in God’s ability to find a way to life when there seemed to be no way at first.
Faith is like that, you see. Faith creates new paths. In all our circumstances. The Spirit’s inspiration can help us see a new path, right in front of us, even in our own troubled times. I mean maybe it’s a smart idea to have a prayer dialogue with God every time we watch the news… the real news, that is. Because that’s a perfect time to ask God for insight on how best to respond to warmakers overseas—it feels like we can’t do anything except pray on that one. We can also pray for God’s Presence in the lives affected by constant shootings and acts of violence here in our own country. Let’s ask for God’s wisdom to balance women’s reproductive rights with the values inherent in all life, or patience for all of us as we deal with inflation, or families deal with a shortage of baby formula, or with counting election results. Have faith that God deals in all the particulars of life. We do. So God does.
When we’re up against the wall, faith in God creates new paths. Maybe you feel guilt for what you’ve done, or regret for things that we’ve not done, faith in God opens doors. Let go of the guilt and regret. Have faith that God will create new paths going forward. Stop buying into the thought that God will love you less for what you have done and what you’ve not done. Let go of the idea that God loves only those who have been splashed in the waters of baptism. Drop the thought that the good news of God in Christ Jesus is just for us and those who are like us. God is much bigger than all those concepts.
Because remember… we serve a God who is bent on freeing anyone from whatever paralyzes our spiritual life. We serve a God who can raise us from the dead. We serve a God who can heal our broken hearts, who can quench our deepest thirst, who can feed our spiritual hunger. We serve a God who can take our spiritual paralysis and make us able to take up our mat and walk again.
Friends, this isn’t fake news. This is faith news. And it’s very good news. So, let us live our faith. On the new path that faith in God creates. Amen.
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