Plan for: Thanksgiving | Advent | Christmas

Sermons

Summary: Father Dave’s sermon on the Jesus’ healing of a man with leprosy and His compassion.

  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • Next

Mark chapter 1: Jesus has the power to heal a man of his leprosy, but He doesn’t have the power to keep him quiet!

That’s the story of this reading today, isn’t it? Leprosy was the great scourge of those ancient communities, in a similar way to which AIDS has been a scourge in our own time, and Jesus touches the man and heals him instantly!

It is an extraordinary scene, particularly as this is one of the first healing miracles of Jesus’ ministry. Jesus’ touch is all powerful, and yet His words here are ineffective! We are told Jesus charged the man ‘sternly’ and told him to say nothing to anyone. But the healed man disregards Jesus’ instructions and talks openly to everybody.

So did Jesus give him his leprosy back? No, He didn’t, but that would have been an effective way of shutting him up. “Look, I’m clean!” … “Ahhggghh! No you’re not mate!”

Of course, maybe you think that Jesus wasn’t being serious when he asked the formerly-leprous man to keep quiet about his healing.

Yes, if it was me who had done the healing, I could see myself saying (half seriously), “Oh, there’s no need to thank me. No. Please, there’s no need to go and tell everybody about what I did for you. What … put on a party for me? Oh, that’s so unnecessary …”

The difference, in Jesus’ case, is that Jesus really did want the guy to keep quiet!

Now you might think that Jesus made the situation impossible for the man as He insisted that he go and show himself to the priest. How is the guy supposed to go looking for the priest and not be noticed by anybody on the way? Surely at the very least, people are going to ask him why he is looking for the priest? What is he supposed to say when they ask him why he wants the priest? “I can’t tell you?”

It would seem odd in our context, but in the New Testament context, keep in mind that the priest is not waiting in the local church at the centre of the village. The priest is on duty at the temple, which is in Jerusalem. This guy is in Galilee. Maybe he has a donkey, but as a leper, most likely he is on foot, and the estimate I read said that a round trip to the temple and back would be around 386 kilometres (240 miles)!

At the temple, Jesus further tells this guy that he should carry out the ritual proofs that Moses commanded, to show that he was clean. This was an elaborate set of rituals (outlined in Leviticus 14) that would involve you in making a sacrifice of a couple of birds and then shaving all the hair off your body, after which you have a great bath!

Now I’m not suggesting that Jesus was simply trying to get rid of the guy, but if the man had followed Jesus’ instructions, there’s no way they would have seen him again for at least a week, and probably longer!

Jesus was making a serious effort to keep this whole incident quiet. He ‘charged the man sternly’, “Say nothing to anyone”. But the man apparently completely disregarded Jesus’ stern words and told everybody!

Why does the man show so little respect for Jesus command? That’s a good question. But there’s another even more perplexing question here: ‘Why was Jesus so concerned to keep the man quiet?’

Was it that Jesus did not want to be misunderstood?

Was it that Jesus didn’t want people to see Him as a simple miracle worker, so he preferred to keep this side of his work out of the papers? We do see Jesus frustrated at other points because people just keep coming along for the show. ‘You people are only here because you want to see another miracle’ (eg. John 6:26).

We sense in the Gospel of Mark from the beginning that Jesus seems to want to give priority to his preaching ministry - announcing the coming of the Kingdom of God - and we can appreciate that it must be hard to get people to take you seriously when you’ve attained celebrity status as a magician! Is that what it was?

Was it something more subtle than that? Was the problem rather that Jesus knew that once he started doing miracles publicly that this would be the beginning of the end?

That seems to have been the problem with the first miracle we’re told about, at Cana in Galilee. Jesus’ mother pushed him to help out with the wine shortage, you may remember, and Jesus is harsh with her: “woman, what have you to do with me. My time has not yet come” (John 2:4).

Copy Sermon to Clipboard with PRO Download Sermon with PRO
Talk about it...

Nobody has commented yet. Be the first!

Join the discussion
;