Matthew 8
Leprosy is a horrible disease caused by massive numbers
of microorganisms that destroy nerve function in their human host. It
is this loss of nerve function that results in collateral damage that
is associated with the disease, as the patient faces injury and
infection without having the adequate sensory capabilities in the
extremities to care for the body in a normal way. The result is the
disfiguring effects that can be readily seen, but the underlying
problem comes from the microorganisms that cannot be seen by the
casual observer. As a disease, leprosy is a powerful metaphor for the
problem of sin in our lives. We have a corruption within us that
often is a secret matter, but it will eventually lead to choices that
often have horrible consequences.
Jesus Christ was able to heal lepers. Consider the kind
of miracle-working power that overturns not only the obvious external
effects of the disease, but also removes the internal trouble at the
root of the problem. Even more amazing, God sent His Son into the
world to heal sin, a tremendous display of not only divine love, but
also of divine power. The reason Jesus healed lepers was to show to
us the kind of world He would bring when He has fully taken away all
of the root and fruit of sin that has caused so much trouble all over
a creation that was once declared to be very good. Jesus can fix this
if He wants to. He says, “I will. Be clean.”
Jesus sent the Jewish leper, now healed, to the priest
to fulfill the appropriate provisions of the Law of Moses in such a
situation. But did Jesus come to heal Jews only, or did His plans
extend to the healing of the world? We hear of His help for the
servant of a centurion who was lying at home paralyzed. The centurion
was conscious of His unworthiness as a Gentile to have the Jewish
Messiah within his gates. Yet this Gentile soldier approached Jesus
with great faith, more faith than Jesus had seen from the Jews. The
Gentile man knew that Jesus had such authority over all things that
His Word would make things so. And it did. If God has plans for Jews
and Gentiles in the kingdom of heaven, He is surely able to bring
these about. A small down-payment of this unusual mercy is shown in
the healing of this paralyzed man. A bigger victory is pictured in
this metaphor as well, for one day when the world is healed, many who
have been bound in sin and misery will be set free from that
paralysis that currently gives them so much trouble, and they will be
truly and wonderfully free.
Even now, we are being freed in our spirits, as we are
made alive in Christ. What do people do when they have been freed by
God? When Peter’s mother-in-law was relieved of a fever by the
touch of Jesus, she rose and began to serve him.
This world so oppressed by demonic wickedness is bound
in some crazed darkness. But when He takes our trouble upon Himself,
then we shall be fully healed, and we will all serve the One we
should rightly love, the One who has carried our sorrows.
It is our great privilege to follow the Son of God. We
may be momentarily confused by our attachments to the things that are
precious to us now, but there is no doubt that the joy of serving Him
is worth everything that we have.
When He came to win our heaven for us, He did it at the
cost of His comfort. He came as one who had almost nothing in earthly
comforts, as one who eventually would face pain, torment, and the
wrath of His Father against our sin. This love tells us something
about the One who created the world and sustains us. This God is a
God of justice and of love. He is great in all that He does, and the
glory and blessing of the victory that He won for us at the cost of
His beloved Son must be so very wonderful as to rightly justify the
price that He was willing to pay in order to bring it all to pass.
Nonetheless, we are infected with horrible doubts,
worries, and rebellion. We find it hard to trust the One who calmed
the seas with a simple command. Can’t we believe Him when He
assures us that faith in Him will not be misplaced? What are we like
in this state of foolish frenzy?
We are like desperate, crazy, dangerous men living
around a cemetery, men who do not even have the sense to ask for the
help that they need. But one word from our Savior King, and we can be
delivered.
The Messiah who can do such things is displaying the
greatness of His glorious plans for His children. He has already paid
the price for the glory that is waiting to be revealed at the last
day. There is nothing left for us to pay, no remaining debt that we
need to hang on to.
Yet many who think of themselves as sensible people,
people who suppose that they are in their right minds would refuse
His entreaties, and would ask Him earnestly to leave their region.
Such hardhearted spiritual deadness is the worst kind of disease with
which people can be afflicted. May God deliver many, even now, from
the foolishness of stubborn unbelief.
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