Chapter
27 -
Thou Canst Make Me Clean
Listen to Audio
OF all diseases known in the East the leprosy was most dreaded. Its
incurable and contagious character, and its horrible effect upon its
victims, filled the bravest with fear. Among the Jews it was regarded as a
judgment on account of sin, and hence was called "the stroke," "the finger
of God." Deep-rooted, ineradicable, deadly, it was looked upon as a symbol
of sin. By the ritual law, the leper was pronounced unclean. Like one
already dead, he was shut out from the habitations of men. Whatever he
touched was unclean. The air was polluted by his breath. One who was
suspected of having the disease must present himself to the priests, who
were to examine and decide his case. If pronounced a leper, he was isolated
from his family, cut off from the congregation of Israel, and was doomed to
associate with those only who were similarly afflicted. The law was
inflexible in its requirement. Even kings and rulers were not exempt. A
monarch who was attacked by this terrible disease must yield up the scepter,
and flee from society.
Away from his friends and his kindred, the leper must bear the curse of his
malady. He was obliged to publish his own calamity, to rend his garments,
and sound the alarm, warning all to flee from his contaminating presence.
The cry, "Unclean! unclean!" coming in mournful tones from the lonely exile,
was a signal heard with fear and abhorrence.
In the region of Christ's ministry, there were many of these sufferers, and
the news of His work reached them, kindling a gleam of hope. But since the
days of Elisha the prophet, such a thing had never been known as the
cleansing of one upon whom this disease had fastened. They dared not expect
Jesus to do for them what He had never done for any man. There was one,
however, in whose heart faith began to spring up. Yet the man knew not how
to reach Jesus. Debarred as he was from contact with his fellow men, how
could he present himself to the Healer? And he questioned if Christ would
heal him . Would He stoop to notice one believed to be suffering under the
judgment of God? Would He not, like the Pharisees, and even the physicians,
pronounce a curse upon him, and warn him to flee from the haunts of men? He
thought of all that had been told him of Jesus. Not one who had sought His
help had been turned away. The wretched man determined to find the Saviour.
Though shut out from the cities, it might be that he could cross His path in
some byway along the mountain roads, or find Him as He was teaching outside
the towns. The difficulties were great, but this was his only hope.
The leper is guided to the Saviour. Jesus is teaching beside the lake, and
the people are gathered about Him. Standing afar off, the leper catches a
few words from the Saviour's lips. He sees Him laying His hands upon the
sick. He sees the lame, the blind, the paralytic, and those dying of various
maladies rise up in health, praising God for their deliverance. Faith
strengthens in his heart. He draws nearer and yet nearer to the gathered
throng. The restrictions laid upon him, the safety of the people, and the
fear with which all men regard him are forgotten. He thinks only of the
blessed hope of healing.
He is a loathsome spectacle. The disease has made frightful inroads, and his
decaying body is horrible to look upon. At sight of him the people fall back
in terror. They crowd upon one another in their eagerness to escape from
contact with him. Some try to prevent him from approaching Jesus, but in
vain. He neither sees nor hears them. Their expressions of loathing are lost
upon him. He sees only the Son of God. He hears only the voice that speaks
life to the dying. Pressing to Jesus, he casts himself at His feet with the
cry, "Lord, if Thou wilt, Thou canst make me clean."
Jesus replied, "I will; be thou made clean," and laid His hand upon him.
Matt. 8:3, R. V.
Immediately a change passed over the leper. His flesh became healthy, the
nerves sensitive, the muscles firm. The rough, scaly surface peculiar to
leprosy disappeared, and a soft glow, like that upon the skin of a healthy
child, took its place. Jesus charged the man not to make known the work that
had been wrought, but straightway to present himself with an offering at the
temple. Such an offering could not be accepted until the priests had made
examination and pronounced the man wholly free from the disease. However
unwilling they might be to perform this service, they could not evade an
examination and decision of the case.
The words of Scripture show with what urgency Christ enjoined upon the man
the necessity of silence and prompt action. "He straitly charged him, and
forthwith sent him away; and saith unto him, See thou say nothing to any
man: but go thy way, show thyself to the priest, and offer for thy cleansing
those things which Moses commanded, for a testimony unto them." Had the
priests known the facts concerning the healing of the leper, their hatred of
Christ might have led them to render a dishonest sentence. Jesus desired the
man to present himself at the temple before any rumors concerning the
miracle had reached them. Thus an impartial decision could be secured, and
the restored leper would be permitted to unite once more with his family and
friends.
There were other objects which Christ had in view in enjoining silence on
the man. The Saviour knew that His enemies were ever seeking to limit His
work, and to turn the people from Him. He knew that if the healing of the
leper were noised abroad, other sufferers from this terrible disease would
crowd about Him, and the cry would be raised that the people would be
contaminated by contact with them. Many of the lepers would not so use the
gift of health as to make it a blessing to themselves or to others. And by
drawing the lepers about Him, He would give occasion for the charge that He
was breaking down the restrictions of the ritual law. Thus His work in
preaching the gospel would be hindered.
The event justified Christ's warning. A multitude of people had witnessed
the healing of the leper, and they were eager to learn of the priests'
decision. When the man returned to his friends, there was great excitement.
Notwithstanding the caution of Jesus, the man made no further effort to
conceal the fact of his cure. It would indeed have been impossible to
conceal it, but the leper published the matter abroad. Conceiving that it
was only the modesty of Jesus which laid this restriction upon him, he went
about proclaiming the power of this Great Healer. He did not understand that
every such manifestation made the priests and elders more determined to
destroy Jesus. The restored man felt that the boon of health was very
precious. He rejoiced in the vigor of manhood, and in his restoration to his
family and society, and felt it impossible to refrain from giving glory to
the Physician who had made him whole. But his act in blazing abroad the
matter resulted in hindering the Saviour's work. It caused the people to
flock to Him in such multitudes that He was forced for a time to cease His
labors.
Every act of Christ's ministry was far-reaching in its purpose. It
comprehended more than appeared in the act itself. So in the case of the
leper. While Jesus ministered to all who came unto Him, He yearned to bless
those who came not. While He drew the publicans, the heathen, and the
Samaritans, He longed to reach the priests and teachers who were shut in by
prejudice and tradition. He left untried no means by which they might be
reached. In sending the healed leper to the priests, He gave them a
testimony calculated to disarm their prejudices.
The Pharisees had asserted that Christ's teaching was opposed to the law
which God had given through Moses; but His direction to the cleansed leper
to present an offering according to the law disproved this charge. It was
sufficient testimony for all who were willing to be convinced.
The leaders at Jerusalem had sent out spies to find some pretext for putting
Christ to death. He responded by giving them an evidence of His love for
humanity, His respect for the law, and His power to deliver from sin and
death. Thus He bore witness of them: "They have rewarded Me evil for good,
and hatred for My love." Ps. 109:5. He who on the mount gave the precept,
"Love your enemies," Himself exemplified the principle, not rendering "evil
for evil, or railing for railing: but contrariwise blessing." Matt. 5:44; 1
Peter 3:9.
The same priests who condemned the leper to banishment certified his cure.
This sentence, publicly pronounced and registered, was a standing testimony
for Christ. And as the healed man was reinstated in the congregation of
Israel, upon the priests' own assurance that there was not a taint of the
disease upon him, he himself was a living witness for his Benefactor.
Joyfully he presented his offering, and magnified the name of Jesus. The
priests were convinced of the divine power of the Saviour. Opportunity was
granted them to know the truth and to be profited by the light. Rejected, it
would pass away, never to return. By many the light was rejected; yet it was
not given in vain. Many hearts were moved that for a time made no sign.
During the Saviour's life, His mission seemed to call forth little response
of love from the priests and teachers; but after His ascension "a great
company of the priests were obedient to the faith." Acts 6:7.
The work of Christ in cleansing the leper from his terrible disease is an
illustration of His work in cleansing the soul from sin. The man who came to
Jesus was "full of leprosy." Its deadly poison permeated his whole body. The
disciples sought to prevent their Master from touching him; for he who
touched a leper became himself unclean. But in laying His hand upon the
leper, Jesus received no defilement. His touch imparted life-giving power.
The leprosy was cleansed. Thus it is with the leprosy of sin,--deep-rooted,
deadly, and impossible to be cleansed by human power. "The whole head is
sick, and the whole heart faint. From the sole of the foot even unto the
head there is no soundness in it; but wounds, and bruises, and putrefying
sores." Isa. 1:5, 6. But Jesus, coming to dwell in humanity, receives no
pollution. His presence has healing virtue for the sinner. Whoever will fall
at His feet, saying in faith, "Lord, if Thou wilt, Thou canst make me
clean," shall hear the answer, "I will; be thou made clean." Matt. 8:2, 3,
R. V.
In some instances of healing, Jesus did not at once grant the blessing
sought. But in the case of leprosy, no sooner was the appeal made than it
was granted. When we pray for earthly blessings, the answer to our prayer
may be delayed, or God may give us something other than we ask, but not so
when we ask for deliverance from sin. It is His will to cleanse us from sin,
to make us His children, and to enable us to live a holy life. Christ "gave
Himself for our sins, that He might deliver us from this present evil world,
according to the will of God and our Father." Gal. 1:4. And "this is the
confidence that we have in Him, that, if we ask anything according to His
will, He heareth us: and if we know that He hear us, whatsoever we ask, we
know that we have the petitions that we desired of Him." 1 John 5:14, 15.
"If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins, and
to cleanse us from all unrighteousness." 1 John 1:9.
In the healing of the paralytic at Capernaum, Christ again taught the same
truth. It was to manifest His power to forgive sins that the miracle was
performed. And the healing of the paralytic also illustrates other precious
truths. It is full of hope and encouragement, and from its connection with
the caviling Pharisees it has a lesson of warning as well.
Like the leper, this paralytic had lost all hope of recovery. His disease
was the result of a life of sin, and his sufferings were embittered by
remorse. He had long before appealed to the Pharisees and doctors, hoping
for relief from mental suffering and physical pain. But they coldly
pronounced him incurable, and abandoned him to the wrath of God. The
Pharisees regarded affliction as an evidence of divine displeasure, and they
held themselves aloof from the sick and the needy. Yet often these very ones
who exalted themselves as holy were more guilty than the sufferers they
condemned.
The palsied man was entirely helpless, and, seeing no prospect of aid from
any quarter, he had sunk into despair. Then he heard of the wonderful works
of Jesus. He was told that others as sinful and helpless as he had been
healed; even lepers had been cleansed. And the friends who reported these
things encouraged him to believe that he too might be cured if he could be
carried to Jesus. But his hope fell when he remembered how the disease had
been brought upon him. He feared that the pure Physician would not tolerate
him in His presence.
Yet it was not physical restoration he desired so much as relief from the
burden of sin. If he could see Jesus, and receive the assurance of
forgiveness and peace with Heaven, he would be content to live or die,
according to God's will. The cry of the dying man was, Oh that I might come
into His presence! There was no time to lose; already his wasted flesh was
showing signs of decay. He besought his friends to carry him on his bed to
Jesus, and this they gladly undertook to do. But so dense was the crowd that
had assembled in and about the house where the Saviour was, that it was
impossible for the sick man and his friends to reach Him, or even to come
within hearing of His voice.
Jesus was teaching in the house of Peter. According to their custom, His
disciples sat close about Him, and "there were Pharisees and doctors of the
law sitting by, which were come out of every town of Galilee, and Judea, and
Jerusalem." These had come as spies, seeking an accusation against Jesus.
Outside of these officials thronged the promiscuous multitude, the eager,
the reverent, the curious, and the unbelieving. Different nationalities and
all grades of society were represented. "And the power of the Lord was
present to heal." The Spirit of life brooded over the assembly, but
Pharisees and doctors did not discern its presence. They felt no sense of
need, and the healing was not for them. "He hath filled the hungry with good
things; and the rich He hath sent empty away." Luke 1:53.
Again and again the bearers of the paralytic tried to push their way through
the crowd, but in vain. The sick man looked about him in unutterable
anguish. When the longed-for help was so near, how could he relinquish hope?
At his suggestion his friends bore him to the top of the house and, breaking
up the roof, let him down at the feet of Jesus. The discourse was
interrupted. The Saviour looked upon the mournful countenance, and saw the
pleading eyes fixed upon Him. He understood the case; He had drawn to
Himself that perplexed and doubting spirit. While the paralytic was yet at
home, the Saviour had brought conviction to his conscience. When he repented
of his sins, and believed in the power of Jesus to make him whole, the
life-giving mercies of the Saviour had first blessed his longing heart.
Jesus had watched the first glimmer of faith grow into a belief that He was
the sinner's only helper, and had seen it grow stronger with every effort to
come into His presence.
Now, in words that fell like music on the sufferer's ear, the Saviour said,
"Son, be of good cheer; thy sins be forgiven thee."
The burden of despair rolls from the sick man's soul; the peace of
forgiveness rests upon his spirit, and shines out upon his countenance. His
physical pain is gone, and his whole being is transformed. The helpless
paralytic is healed! the guilty sinner is pardoned!
In simple faith he accepted the words of Jesus as the boon of new life. He
urged no further request, but lay in blissful silence, too happy for words.
The light of heaven irradiated his countenance, and the people looked with
awe upon the scene.
The rabbis had waited anxiously to see what disposition Christ would make of
this case. They recollected how the man had appealed to them for help, and
they had refused him hope or sympathy. Not satisfied with this, they had
declared that he was suffering the curse of God for his sins. These things
came fresh to their minds when they saw the sick man before them. They
marked the interest with which all were watching the scene, and they felt a
terrible fear of losing their own influence over the people.
These dignitaries did not exchange words together, but looking into one
another's faces they read the same thought in each, that something must be
done to arrest the tide of feeling. Jesus had declared that the sins of the
paralytic were forgiven. The Pharisees caught at these words as blasphemy,
and conceived that they could present this as a sin worthy of death. They
said in their hearts, "He blasphemeth: who can forgive sins but One, even
God?" Mark 2:7, R. V.
Fixing His glance upon them, beneath which they cowered, and drew back,
Jesus said, "Wherefore think ye evil in your hearts? For whether is easier,
to say, Thy sins be forgiven thee; or to say, Arise, and walk? But that ye
may know that the Son of man hath power on earth to forgive sins," He said,
turning to the paralytic, "Arise, take up thy bed, and go unto thine house."
Then he who had been borne on a litter to Jesus rises to his feet with the
elasticity and strength of youth. The life-giving blood bounds through his
veins. Every organ of his body springs into sudden activity. The glow of
health succeeds the pallor of approaching death. "And immediately he arose,
took up the bed, and went forth before them all; insomuch that they were all
amazed, and glorified God, saying, We never saw it on this fashion."
Oh, wondrous love of Christ, stooping to heal the guilty and the afflicted!
Divinity sorrowing over and soothing the ills of suffering humanity! Oh,
marvelous power thus displayed to the children of men! Who can doubt the
message of salvation? Who can slight the mercies of a compassionate
Redeemer?
It required nothing less than creative power to restore health to that
decaying body. The same voice that spoke life to man created from the dust
of the earth had spoken life to the dying paralytic. And the same power that
gave life to the body had renewed the heart. He who at the creation "spake,
and it was," who "commanded, and it stood fast," (Ps. 33:9), had spoken life
to the soul dead in trespasses and sins. The healing of the body was an
evidence of the power that had renewed the heart. Christ bade the paralytic
arise and walk, "that ye may know," He said, "that the Son of man hath power
on earth to forgive sins."
The paralytic found in Christ healing for both the soul and the body. The
spiritual healing was followed by physical restoration. This lesson should
not be overlooked. There are today thousands suffering from physical
disease, who, like the paralytic, are longing for the message, "Thy sins are
forgiven." The burden of sin, with its unrest and unsatisfied desires, is
the foundation of their maladies. They can find no relief until they come to
the Healer of the soul. The peace which He alone can give, would impart
vigor to the mind, and health to the body.
Jesus came to "destroy the works of the devil." "In Him was life," and He
says, "I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more
abundantly." He is "a quickening spirit." 1 John 3:8; John 1:4; 10:10; 1
Cor. 15:45. And He still has the same life-giving power as when on earth He
healed the sick, and spoke forgiveness to the sinner. He "forgiveth all
thine iniquities," He "healeth all thy diseases." Ps. 103:3.
The effect produced upon the people by the healing of the paralytic was as
if heaven had opened, and revealed the glories of the better world. As the
man who had been cured passed through the multitude, blessing God at every
step, and bearing his burden as if it were a feather's weight, the people
fell back to give him room, and with awe-stricken faces gazed upon him,
whispering softly among themselves, "We have seen strange things today."
The Pharisees were dumb with amazement and overwhelmed with defeat. They saw
that here was no opportunity for their jealousy to inflame the multitude.
The wonderful work wrought upon the man whom they had given over to the
wrath of God had so impressed the people that the rabbis were for the time
forgotten. They saw that Christ possessed a power which they had ascribed to
God alone; yet the gentle dignity of His manner was in marked contrast to
their own haughty bearing. They were disconcerted and abashed, recognizing,
but not confessing, the presence of a superior being. The stronger the
evidence that Jesus had power on earth to forgive sins, the more firmly they
entrenched themselves in unbelief. From the home of Peter, where they had
seen the paralytic restored by His word, they went away to invent new
schemes for silencing the Son of God.
Physical disease, however malignant and deep-seated, was healed by the power
of Christ; but the disease of the soul took a firmer hold upon those who
closed their eyes against the light. Leprosy and palsy were not so terrible
as bigotry and unbelief.
In the home of the healed paralytic there was great rejoicing when he
returned to his family, carrying with ease the couch upon which he had been
slowly borne from their presence but a short time before. They gathered
round with tears of joy, scarcely daring to believe their eyes. He stood
before them in the full vigor of manhood. Those arms that they had seen
lifeless were quick to obey his will. The flesh that had been shrunken and
leaden-hued was now fresh and ruddy. He walked with a firm, free step. Joy
and hope were written in every lineament of his countenance; and an
expression of purity and peace had taken the place of the marks of sin and
suffering. Glad thanksgiving went up from that home, and God was glorified
through His Son, who had restored hope to the hopeless, and strength to the
stricken one. This man and his family were ready to lay down their lives for
Jesus. No doubt dimmed their faith, no unbelief marred their fealty to Him
who had brought light into their darkened home.
|