Monday, March 16, 2026

The Healing Ministry

It is impossible to read the gospels without encountering the healing ministry of Jesus.  It is particularly true in the gospel written by Mark.  While the first act of healing recorded by Him happens with Peter's mother-in-law (Mark 1:31), it says a few verses later that "...He (Jesus) cured many who were sick with various diseases..." (vs. 34) and this is followed by a references to casting out demons in vs. 39.  Later there is an account of Jesus cleansing a leper (Mark 1:41) and restoring a paralytic. (Mark 2:11). Mark 3:1-6 tells of a man's withered hand being made whole.  Going on to Mark 2:10 the Word says, "...He (Jesus) cured many so that all who had diseases pressed upon Him to touch Him..."  

Mark shows no reluctance in lifting up the healing ministry of Jesus.  It is obvious that the healing ministry was an integral part of the ministry of Jesus and an expression of His compassion and concern for those suffering with illness.  To look at the history of the church is to see periods when it was an intentional ministry and to see other times when it disappeared.  The church of our day seems content with healing being left solely in the hands of the medical community.  While the medical community is an important instrument of healing in the hands of God, the church is also given an important role if the Scripture and the ministry of Jesus is taken seriously.  

In addition to the healing ministry of Jesus, ministries of healing continued in the early church after the ascension of Jesus.  James 5:13-18 make it clear that prayers for the sick and anointing them with oil was a common practice in the early church.  If the church of our day is serious about faithfulness to the ministries entrusted to it, the ministry of healing can no longer be ignored.  

The Talked About Ministry

It does not take but a few strokes of the pen for Mark to write about a ministry of Jesus which confounds the contemporary church.  One of the struggles of the church is deciding what to do with the healing ministry of Jesus.  Though eager to be His hands and feet on the streets of suffering, and though eager to feed the hungry in soup kitchens, and though ready to be about preaching and teaching in the sanctuary, it shows some confusion about being an instrument of healing in the world.  Of course, the church is more than ready to heal the kind of brokenness which requires acts of of reconciliation, but healing the body of its illnesses and brokenness is mostly handled by putting names of a prayer list.  

In most places the church is hesitant to enter into a visible and intentional ministry of healing.  Mark makes it clear that such a ministry was close to the heart of Jesus.  The first place this ministry is really encountered is in stories found in Mark 1:29-34.  After that synagogue visit where Jesus cast out evil spirits from a man, He went to the home of Peter's mother-in-law.  She was healed of a fever by Jesus and then later in the evening the people brought their sick to the place He was staying and the Word says, "And He cured many who were sick with various diseases..." (Mark 1:34).  There would be many such moments in the ministry of Jesus.  

The church often speaks of itself as the body of Christ, or a community which is expressed as the hands and feet of Jesus.  The ministries of Jesus provide a model for the ministries to be embraced.  It seems strange that there are no evidences of the ministry of healing being taken seriously by the church.  Aside from names being put on prayer list and occasional verbal assurances that God can heal the sick of their illnesses, the healing ministry of Jesus is largely delegated to something that the church holds at a distance.  Unfortunately, it has become a talked about ministry, but not really a practiced one.

Sunday, March 15, 2026

A Surprise in the Synagogue

A surprising thing happened on that Sabbath when Jesus went to the synagogue in Capernaum.  It is not surprising that Jesus entered and taught, neither is it surprising that the people who listened were astounded at the way He spoke with such authority.  What is surprising was the presence of some normal looking man who was actually possessed by an unclean spirit.  What is surprising is the fact that the evil one, confronted only a short time earlier in the wilderness, was once again confronting Jesus, but this time is was in one of the holy places of Israel.   

There were, however, some significant differences in the encounter between Jesus and the evil one in the synagogue.  First, in the wilderness, Satan was on the offense.  The evil one was the aggressor.  In the synagogue it is obvious that evil is on defense.  What is actually true is that Satan acts like a fearful and defeated foe instead of the foe of the wilderness so full of confidence in his own power.  When revealed, the evil spirit cries out, "What have You to do with us, Jesus of Nazareth? Have You come to destroy us?" (Mark 1:24)   Another interesting thing about this moment in the synagogue is that the first recorded witness affirming the power of Jesus comes from the realm of the evil one.  

Mark makes it clear that this ministry of Jesus, as full and as powerful as it is and will be, will be an ongoing struggle.  Satan did not just show up in the wilderness and then leave Jesus, but every step Jesus took was contested.  Even though still present and at work, the power of evil knows the power unleashed at the cross and the empty tomb was a signal of its coming final defeat. Martin Luther has us singing truth when he wrote that great hymn, "A Mighty Fortress is Our God."  Verse 3 says, "And though this world, with devils filled, should threaten to undo us, we will not fear, for God hath willed His truth to triumph through us...his doom is sure; one little word shall fell him."

Preaching with Authority

A few months ago I heard a preacher who was 85 years old preach one of the most powerful sermons I have heard in a long time.  His was a commanding presence in the pulpit.  His voice was strong.  As folks used to say, "He had fire in his belly," but for sure he had fire in his eyes.  His sermon thundered in that room like the ancient prophets who said, "Thus saith the Lord!"  No one in the room was drifting off to sleep.  All eyes were focused on him.  He preached with such conviction and authority.  There was no doubt in my mind that what he preached was the Word of the Lord.  

The gospel writer Mark tells us about the first preaching foray of Jesus as He moved through the region of Galilee. (Mark 1:14-15). A little later in his account of these early days of the ministry of Jesus, he writes about a visit to the synagogue of Capernaum, "They went to Capernaum; and when the Sabbath came, he entered the synagogue and taught.  They were astounded at His teaching, for He taught them as one having authority and not as the scribes." (Mark 1:21-22). The scribes taught by constantly making reference to older scribes who had left written and oral teachings.  The writings and teachings of other men were the authority of these Sabbath teachers, but no so with Jesus.  He bypassed such references and preached and taught according to the direction of the Holy Spirit.  His Words that day were more like the ancient prophets who made it clear that their authority was the revealed Word of the Lord. 

The church today needs preachers who preach with such authority.  If the preacher to whom we are listening is lacing sermons with words like "I think..maybe...it could be..." or is basing the sermon on something seen on television, find another preacher quickly.  A preacher's only authority is the Scripture, the Word of God. If the sermon does not begin with the Word, it is not worthy of the time invested in listening.  We need more preachers like that old preacher who overwhelmed us that day as he preached with the authority of the Word and the power of the Holy Spirit.

Saturday, March 14, 2026

One or Two

There was a time when I was of the opinion that there were two kinds of conversions.  Each was characterized by an event in the New Testament.  There was the instantaneous conversion such as Saul of Tarsus experienced on the Damascus Road.  There was the gradual transformation in which a person came to an awareness of the love of Christ growing in their heart.  The story of the Emmaus Road illustrates such an experience.  Why I spent time considering something so unimportant is beyond me as I live out this season of my life.  

These thoughts resurfaced as I was reading the first chapter of the book of Mark.  It would seem from the story that Jesus was strolling along the Sea of Galilee, saw four fishermen, and suddenly at almost a single word from Him, each one became a disciple.  A slower reading, however, enable us to include a previous section within the framework of what was happening.  In the earlier section, the Scripture says, "Now after John was arrested, Jesus came to Galilee, proclaiming the good news."  (Mark 1:14). It is likely that those fishermen heard Jesus preaching, talked about what they heard, and had carried His words with them as they returned to their boats.  When Jesus called out to them that day, their hearts had been prepared and made ready to say "Yes!"  What looks like an instantaneous decision might have been one that had been growing within them since they first heard Jesus preach.  

I wonder how long the grace of Jesus had been working in my heart that night I knelt by bed in the Alamo parsonage and said,"Yes" to Him.  Saul's Damascus Road experience may have been the culmination of a work of grace that really began as Saul held the coats of those who cast deadly stones at Stephen.  I know not when grace first appeared in my life, but it did.  Grace always comes before faith and as it does, we do not always see it taking hold in our life. Grace comes quietly, but surely.   

Friday, March 13, 2026

The Final "Yes"

After leaving the waters of the Jordan and dry arid sand of the desert, Mark begins to speak of the beginning days of Jesus' ministry.  As He began His preaching ministry in Galilee, four men became His first disciples.  Simon and Andrew were the first to hear Jesus calling, "Follow Me..."  (Mark 1:17). The brothers, James and John, were the next two who left everything to follow Jesus.  One of the interesting and often missed things about the moment of their entering into a relationship with Jesus was that it all happened at His initiative.  It was truly a moment of grace which, of course, is always the case.  It was then and continues to be.   

Those four fishermen were not required to attend a discipleship training class to prove themselves.  Jesus took them as they were and they were four fishermen who knew how to fish, but not really trained for being entrusted with the affairs of the Kingdom of God.  Such training would come over the next three years, but at the moment of their calling they were raw and untrained.  What cannot be missed as we read the text is that Jesus saw them.  He chose them.  They did not make any initial movement toward Jesus. They became disciples because He chose them and called them.  Everything those four fishermen did that day was in response to what Jesus was offering to them.   

It is still working the same way today.  Our faith in Christ is not the initial act which brings us into relationship with Jesus.  Grace is the primary and the original factor in the relationship we have with Jesus.  This is what Paul was affirming as he wrote those oft quoted words to the Ephesians, "For by grace you have been saved through faith..." (Ephesians 2:8).  All of us are created by God.   All of us are seen by God.  All of us are chosen by God.  All of us are called by God.  Even as those four fishermen had to abandon a life dependent on self and choose to follow Jesus, so do we.  His grace makes it all possible, but the final "Yes" is ours to speak.

Seeing What Has Been Unseen

Mark looks at the life of Jesus and sees the unfolding plan of God.  It is evident in the very first part of his gospel.  As he tells the story, it is as if he is saying, "this event follows this event and then comes the next event."  For Mark the story started centuries earlier with the prophecies of Isaiah who not only spoke of Jesus as the suffering Messiah, but also spoke of one who would come to announce the coming of the Holy One of God.  "As it is written,.." he says.  (Mark 1:2).   Then John the Baptist appears to baptize and to proclaim, "The one who is more powerful than I is coming..." (Mark 1:4-7).  

"Jesus came..." (Mark 1:9)  He was baptized, anointed by the Holy Spirit and led into the wilderness,  (Mark 1:9-13).  John is arrested and the ministry of the Kingdom begins. (Mark 1:14-15).  Each event is like the building block for what is to come.  Everything happens in such rapid fire fashion those reading the story hardly have time to catch their breath, or perhaps, to absorb the significance of what is unfolding before their very eyes.  What we see is the plan of God, one step at a time.  Surely, this Word from the Word which tells us that we are not outside the plan of God is true.  God does not just have a plan for certain folks, but for all of us.  

What is also true is that we live such hurried lives that we miss seeing the steps which God has used to bring us to place where we are.  Our lives are not just about our efforts and what we manage to accomplish, but a plan that God put in place from the moment of our conception in our mother's womb.  It is His grace and His plan which has taken us from there to here.  The season of Lent calls us to a period of reflection which can be used to look back, see what we have not seen, and be grateful.