Sin has brought all kinds of misery into the world, and Jesus has come to deliver us from sin and, consequently, its miseries. Furthermore, Jesus performed this sign on the Sabbath to challenge prevailing religious notions of rest. It is neither quietist inactivity nor ritualistic drudgery, but peace and empowerment. Jesus comes to bring rest. He meets us in the Waiting Place, but he does not leave us there.
I enjoy good children’s books, and not just to read to my children, but because they can be beautiful, fun, and moving. Oh the Places You’ll Go by Dr. Seuss is one of my favorites. It contains a page halfway through that is dedicated to the Waiting Place, drawn in dreary shades of grey, blue, and brown. Anyone who has felt stuck in life can relate to this page. Whether you were frozen by indecision, waylaid by illness, job loss, or some other crisis, or facing some other intractable scenario, what got you unstuck? Did someone come alongside and help, did an opportunity simply emerge in time, or did a sudden burst of insight and inspiration propel you forward? The lame man in John 5 was in the Waiting Place. And Jesus met him there.
J. C. Ryle describes his bleak state quite well:
We read of a man who had been ill for no less than thirty-eight years! For eight-and-thirty weary summers and winters he had endured pain and infirmity. He had seen others healed at the waters of Bethesda, and going to their homes rejoicing. But for him there had been no healing. Friendless, helpless, and hopeless, he lay near the wonder-working waters, but derived no benefit from them. Year after year passed away, and left him still uncured. No relief or change for the better seemed likely to come, except from the grave.[1]
Whatever we make of the healing waters of Bethesda, this man had not found his way into them. And yet rivers of living water came to him.
Jesus’ question in verse 6, “Do you want to be healed?” is both arresting and puzzling. But it requires no speculation to detect the compassion behind it. Jesus looked out, saw the crowds, and had compassion on them. And he saw individuals too. Jesus question serves to draw the man out of himself and prepare him for his rescue. The man’s answer shows that while he is only yards away from a potential solution, he no longer entertains hope of improvement. Then, having singled the man out of the crowd, Jesus issues direct commands: “Get up, take up your bed, and walk.” Immediately, the man does.
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