‘Your sins are forgiven’
[Matthew 9:1-8]
How do you view The Problem of Pain and Suffering? The Bible Isaiah 38:17 talks about pain and
suffering like this: “Surely it was for my benefit that I suffered such
anguish. In your love you kept me from
the pit of destruction; you have put all my sins behind your back.” The Bible says that the great pain and
suffering that God allows us is to give us peace. I don't quite understand. How can we find peace through great pain and
suffering? It is none other than that,
God makes us to repent all our sins through great suffering (vv. 2-3, 5) so
that He can put all our sins behind His back and gives us peace. Why is God doing this? The reason is because God loves us (v. 17). C. S. Lewis, in his book “The Problem of Pain,”
says that the problem of pain is deeply related to the problem of permanent
(continued) human sin. At the same time,
he says that human beings are freed from the illusion that everything is going
well through pain, and this is the primary spiritual legacy of suffering. And the ultimate goal of human beings through
suffering is to break all subjective wills that humans can do as they please. At this time, God's will is for humans to
realize that they lack through suffering and to seek better things to discover. The important thing is that the complete
surrender of self to God is painful (Internet). What do you think of this C. S. Lewis
statement? What I agree with with
regards to today's text is that the problem of pain and suffering is deeply
related to the problem of our continued sin.
In today's text, Matthew 9:2, we see Jesus speaking to a paralytic who was
lying on the bed like this: “Some men brought to him a paralytic, lying on a
mat. When Jesus saw their faith, he said to the paralytic, ‘Take heart, son;
your sins are forgiven.’” Focusing on this
word today, I would like to receive a lesson from God by thinking of the three
types of people who appear in today's text under the title, ‘Your sins are
forgiven.’
The
first people I
want to consider are the people who brought to Jesus the paralytic who was
lying on the bed.
In today's text, Matthew 9:2, the author Matthew said that they were “Some
men” who brought to Jesus a paralyzed man lying on a bed. If we go to Mark 2:3, Mark explains in more
detail by saying that “Some men” were “four of them.” So, how does the Bible say that these four
men brought the paralytic to Jesus? In Matthew
8:2, the author Matthew says that some men brought the paralytic who was lying
on the bed. In Luke 5:18, the author Luke
says that the four men carried the paralytic on a mat and tried to take him
into the house to lay him before Jesus. Further,
Luke says that the four men tried to bring this paralytic man on the mat before
Jesus, but could not find a way to carry him “because of the crowd” (v. 19). The word “because of the crowd” here can be
understood a little bit better by looking at Mark 2:2 – “So many gathered that
there was no room left, not even outside the door, and he preached the word to
them.” In other words, even though the
four men, carrying the paralyzed man lying on the bed, brought him to the house
where Jesus was (Mk. 2:1) and wanted to bring him and lay him before Jesus (Lk.
5:18), they could not because there was no room left due to so many gathered (Mk.
2:2). What these four men did at that
time was that they went up to the roof, removed the tiles, and lowered the
paralyzed man on the bed in front of Jesus in the midst of the crowd (Lk. 5:19). This is what Mark says in Mark 2:4 – “Since
they could not get him to Jesus because of the crowd, they made an opening in
the roof above Jesus and, after digging through it, lowered the mat the
paralyzed man was lying on.” What kind
of roof did the house where the Jews lived, so that the four men could take the
roof off and digged through it and let the paralytic go down? When laying the roofs of Jewish houses, it is
said that the first girders were arranged at regular intervals. It is said that small pieces of wood were
placed densely on top of it, and the tangled thorns were thickly laid on top of
it. It is said that after plastering it
and covering it on thorns, it was compacted flat with soil again. It is said that because the roof was made in
this way, people could easily tear it off by hand (Internet). At that time, Jesus saw the faith of these
four people (Mt. 9:2; Mk. 2:5; Lk. 5:20).
Perhaps these four men as well as the paralytic had the same faith. What kind of faith did these four people
really have? We can think of it in three
ways:
(1) The faith of these four people was the faith that the
Lord's power to heal was with Jesus.
Look at Luke 5:17 – “One day as he was teaching, Pharisees and teachers of
the law, who had come from every village of Galilee and from Judea and
Jerusalem, were sitting there. And the power of the Lord was present for him to
heal the sick.” There is no record in
today's Gospel of Matthew, but in Luke 5:17 it is written, “the power of the
Lord was present for him to heal the sick.”
Of course, there is no record in the Bible that these four men who came
to Jesus with the paralyzed man on a bed directly witnessed Jesus healing the
sick people. But at least we can guess
that they had heard that Jesus had healed many sick people, so they came to
Jesus with the paralytic on a bed. Matthew,
Mark, and Luke all say that these four men did not only hear the word of Jesus
and brought the paralyzed man to Jesus, but Jesus clearly saw their faith. This means that the four men did not only
bring the paralyzed man to Jesus after hearing about him, but because they believed
that the Lord’s power to heal was also with him (Lk. 5:17).
Shouldn't we have this kind of faith? Maybe now, many Christians who hear a rumor
that a pastor who leads a revival meeting has the gift of healing, then they
are eager to attend that meeting. To be
honest, I wonder if those people come to Jesus with faith in the Lord's power
to heal just like the four people in today's text, or they just have earnest
hope that the person they love will be healed.
Also, I don't know whether they believe in the healing power of the Lord
or the power of the pastor who leads the revival meeting. We need to ask ourselves the question: 'Do I
really believe that the power of the Lord to heal is with Jesus, or do I know
that the Lord will heal my loved one who is suffering from an illness?’ Although the two questions look similar, they
are different. The focus of the first
question is on Jesus, who has the Lord’s power, and the focus of the second
question is on myself, longing for my loved one to be healed. Think about it. When we pray earnestly for a loved one who is
suffering from a disease, we do not know whether the will of the Lord is healed
or not when we pray, ‘I believe He will heal you.’ So, while earnestly praying for healing, we should
pray, 'Not my will, but Your will be done' and pray, 'Whether it is healed or
not, only God's glory will be manifested'.
(2)
The faith of these
four men was faith in the word of Jesus.
Look at Mark 2:2 – “So many gathered that there was no room left, not even
outside the door, and he preached the word to them.” When they heard the news that Jesus had come
to Capernaum and he had come home (v. 1), a large crowd had gathered and there
was no place to even enter the front door (v.2). Here, what is “the word” that Jesus preached? Presumably, “the word” that Jesus spoke to the
large crowd in that house is “the gospel of God” and “the kingdom of God”
(Black). Look at Mark 1:14-15: “After
John was put in prison, Jesus went into Galilee, proclaiming the good news of
God. ‘The time has come,’ he said. ‘The
kingdom of God is near. Repent and believe the good news!’” These four people believed this very gospel
of God and the word of Jesus about the kingdom of God, so by faith they came to
Jesus with the paralytic on a bed.
What does it mean to believe in the word of the kingdom of God? What was the concept of the kingdom of God
that Jesus had in mind when he spoke about the kingdom of God? A Bible verse that explains the concept is
found in Luke 10:9 – “Heal the sick who are there and tell them, 'The kingdom
of God is near you.'” Also, look at Luke
9:2 – “and he sent them out to preach the kingdom of God and to heal the sick.”
When we look at these words, we cannot
help but get the impression that they have to do with the kingdom of God and
healing the sick, as Jesus had envisioned.
In other words, the concept of the kingdom of God that Jesus had in mind
had the work of healing the sick and making them whole. Therefore, when these four men came to Jesus
with the paralyzed man on a bed, they not only believed that the power of the Lord
to heal the sick was with Him (Lk. 5:17), but they also believed that Jesus,
who was speaking the gospel of God and the kingdom of God was the King in the
kingdom of God. How precious is this faith?
Shouldn't we also have this faith in
Jesus as the King in the kingdom of God?
When we praise our God, the King, with faith, and come to the King in
faith, shouldn't we also believe that God will heal us and make us whole?
(3) The faith of these four men was a faith with works and
a living faith.
As we had already thought, these four men, carrying the paralyzed man lying
on the bed, brought him to the house where Jesus was (Mk. 2:1) and wanted to
bring him before Jesus (Lk. 5:18). But there
was no room to even enter the front door (Mk. 2:2). So they went up to the roof, made an opening
in the roof above Jesus, made a hole (the tiles were removed) and lowered the mat
the paralyzed man was lying on into the midst of the crowd before Jesus (Lk.
5:19; Mk. 2:4). They not only believed
that Jesus had the power of the Lord to heal (Lk. 5:17) and that Jesus was the
King in the kingdom of God (Mk. 1:14-15, 2:2; Lk. 9:2, 10:9), they acted
according to that faith. To bring the
paralyzed man on a bed before Jesus, they climbed up to the roof of the house
where Jesus was staying, tore the roof down, made a hole in the roof, and lowered
the paralyzed man on the bed in front of Jesus.
This reminds me the Bible James 2:14 and 17: “What good is it, my
brothers, if a man claims to have faith but has no deeds? Can such faith save
him? …
In the same way, faith by itself, if it is not accompanied by action, is
dead.” Obviously, the Apostle James said
that faith without works is itself dead. If we only say we have faith and do not act by
faith, our faith without works is dead faith and not the faith that can save
us. However, the faith of these four men
in Matthew 9:1-8 was by no means dead. Rather,
their faith was a living faith and a faith with works. The Apostle James describes their faith in
James 2:22 – “You see that his faith and his actions were working together, and
his faith was made complete by what he did.”
In other words, the faith of these four men was the faith that was
perfected by works. I hope and pray that
we can have this kind of faith too. I hope
and pray that we have this faith that is perfected by works so that we can be
healed by faith and that we can be victorious through faith.
The second person we would like to consider is the
paralytic lying on a bed.
In today's text, Matthew 9:1, it is said that Jesus got into the boat and
crossed over and came to his own town.
Here, his town is Capernaum (Mk. 2:1).
In Mark 2:1 Mark says, “A few days later, when Jesus again entered
Capernaum.” Why did Mark use the word
“again” here? This is because, as we
have already meditated on in Matthew 8:5-13, Jesus was already in Capernaum
before, the place where he healed the beloved servant of the Roman centurion
who was dying of paralysis. But now,
Jesus came to Capernaum again. And
there, Jesus met another paralytic. When
I think of these two encounters, it seems that there were many paralytics even
in Jesus' day. But I wondered what was
the cause of the paralysis and why there were so many paralytics. The paralytic disease, as we know it, is a
brain disease. In other words, it is a
disease that causes paralysis of the body because an abnormality occurs or
bursts in a blood vessel in the brain, preventing it from performing some
functions of the brain (Internet). We
mainly understand this disease as a state of paralysis of the body due to
cerebral hemorrhage or cerebral infarction. In modern medical science, there are three
causes of cerebral hemorrhage/cerebral infarction: (1) When a blood vessel in
the brain is blocked due to arteriosclerosis, (2) Cerebral blood vessel ruptures due to high
blood pressure, stress, etc., (3) A
blood clot from another part of the body travels into the bloodstream and
blocks a blood vessel in the brain (Internet).
Among these three causes, for some reason, the second cause comes to my
mind: “Cerebral blood vessel ruptures due to high blood pressure, stress, etc.” Perhaps the reason is that one of my friends had
two cerebral hemorrhages due to high blood pressure and stress. Interestingly, the Bible does not say that
the cause of the paralytic's illness in Matthew 9:2 is a medical reason, but a
spiritual reason. What is that spiritual
reason? It is because of his sins. Look at the second half of Matthew 9:2 – “… Take heart, son; your sins are forgiven.” Isn't that a bit strange? When Jesus healed the sick, He said this. When Jesus healed a leper, he reached out and
touched him, and said, “I am willing,” “Be clean.” Immediately the leper was cleansed of leprosy (Mt.
8:3). And when the Roman centurion's
servant was healed of paralysis, Jesus said, “"Go! It will be done just as
you believed it would.” And immediately
the servant was healed (v. 13). Also,
the Bible records that when Peter's mother-in-law was sick with a fever, Jesus
touched her and the fever went away (v. 15).
And even when people brought many demon-possessed people, Jesus drove
out the spirits with a word and healed all the sick (v.16). However, while healing the paralytic in
Matthew 9:1-8, Jesus said that the paralytic's sins were forgiven. Isn't that a bit strange? As Jesus said in verse 5 of today's text,
Jesus could have said, "Get up and walk," but why did he say,
"Your sins are forgiven"? (v. 2)
The reason is because the paralytic's sickness was acquired through his
sin. So, before Jesus healed the
paralytic, he forgave the sin that was the cause of the paralytic.
There is a connection between our sickness and our sins. Of course, we cannot say that all diseases are
due to our sins. But the Bible clearly
states that certain diseases are related to our sins. A good example is the story of the
38-year-old sick man in John 5. After
healing the 38-year-old sick man (Jn. 5:8), Jesus met him in the temple and
said, “Behold, you have become well; do not sin anymore, so that nothing worse
happens to you” (v. 14). What does it mean?
Isn't this saying that he should never
sin again so that he doesn't get more serious? It is taught that the 38-year-old sick man's
illness was the result of his sin. Dr. Yoon-sun
Park said: ‘The ultimate cause of disease is sin. Without sin, there would be no disease in the
world. In some diseases, sin may be the
direct cause. Because of God's mercy,
every sin does not directly cause a new illness. But if the same sin is piled up, it becomes
the cause and disease occurs’ (Park). Of
course, not every sin directly causes disease.
But if we keep committing the same sin and accumulate sin, disease will
occur. Do you think the bitter fruit
should be removed first or the bitter root should be removed first? We already know the answer. We know that no matter how much we remove the
bitter fruit, unless we remove the bitter root, the bitter fruit will
inevitably bear again and again. It
reminds me of Hebrews 12:15 – “See to it that no one misses the grace of God
and that no bitter root grows up to cause trouble and defile many.” When a bitter root develops within us, we can
not only trouble ourselves, but also defile many people. To that extent, the evil influence of sin can
spread like an epidemic. Therefore, we
first get rid of the root of bitterness in us. In doing so, the bitter fruit can also be
automatically removed. For the paralytic
in Matthew 9:1-8 in today's text, the root of bitterness was his sin. And his bitter fruit was paralysis. So, looking at the paralytic and the four men
carrying him on a bed with faith, Jesus said, “Take heart, son, your sins are
forgiven” (Mt.9:2).
After Jesus forgave the paralytic's sins (v. 5), He said to the paralytic,
“Get up, take your mat and go home” (v. 6).
Then the paralytic got up and went home (v. 7), the Gospel of Matthew
says. The Gospel of Mark says that he
got up, took his mat and walked out in full view of them all (Mk. 2:12). The Gospel of Luke says that the man
immediately stood up in front of them, took what he had been lying on and went
home praising God (Lk. 5:25). After all,
Jesus first forgave the paralytic's sins and then healed him. Therefore the paralytic was made whole, took
his bed, and went back to his home, praising God in the presence of all men. The Bible James 5:16 says, “Therefore confess
your sins to each other and pray for each other so that you may be healed. The
prayer of a righteous man is powerful and effective.” We must pray for each other so that we may be
healed of our sickness. But before that,
we must first solve the problem of our sins. We must confess our sins and repent. We must humbly repent of our sins by faith,
relying on the death and shed blood of Jesus Christ on the cross. Then, God will not only forgive our sins, but
will also heal our sickness.
The
third and last people we want to consider are the scribes and the Pharisees.
Look at Matthew 9:3 – “And some of the scribes said to themselves,
"This fellow blasphemes.” When
Jesus said to the paralytic, “Your sins are forgiven” (v. 2), some scribes
thought to themselves, “This fellow blasphemes” (v. 3; Mk.2:6). Luke 5:21 explains it in more detail: “The
scribes and the Pharisees began to reason, saying, ‘Who is this man who speaks
blasphemies? Who can forgive sins, but
God alone?’” In other words, when Jesus
said to the paralytic at the house of Capernaum, “Your sins are forgiven,” not
only the scribes, but also the Pharisees who were with them thought in their
hearts, “Who is this man who speaks blasphemies? Who can forgive sins, but God
alone?’ (v. 21) In other words, the
scribes and Pharisees thought that there was no one who could forgive sins
except God. But when the carpenter's
son, Jesus of Nazareth, said to the paralytic, "Your sins are
forgiven," from their point of view, Jesus committed the sin of blasphemy. Knowing that they were thinking like this in
their hearts (Mk. 2:8), Jesus said to them, “"Why are you thinking evil in
your hearts?” (Mt. 9:4) What does it
mean? Now Jesus is saying that it was an
evil thought for the scribes and Pharisees to think in their hearts that Jesus
was blasphemy. Why were the thoughts of
their hearts evil in the eyes of Jesus? The
reason is because they are evil, and their mouths have spoken out of the
abundance of their hearts. Look at Matthew
12:34-35: “You brood of vipers, how can you, being evil, speak what is good? For the mouth speaks out of that which fills
the heart. The good man brings out of
his good treasure what is good; and the evil man brings out of his evil
treasure what is evil.” In other words,
the scribes and Pharisees were evil in the eyes of Jesus. So they think evil out of the evil stored up
in their hearts and speak evil things with their mouths. To the scribes and Pharisees who had such
evil thoughts, Jesus said, “Which is easier, to say, 'Your sins are forgiven,'
or to say, 'Get up, and walk'? But so
that you may know that the Son of Man has authority on earth to forgive sins”
(9:5-6a; cf.: Mk. 2:9-10a; Lk.5:23-24a). What this word of Jesus is telling us is that
the scribes and Pharisees, who thought in their hearts that Jesus had committed
the sin of blasphemy, did not believe that Jesus was the Son of God, so they couldn’t
believe that Jesus had power to forgive sins which only God had. In other words, since the scribes and
Pharisees said they believed in God, but did not believe that Jesus was God, they
thought in their hearts that Jesus blasphemed because Jesus said to the
paralytic “your sins are forgiven.” Isn't
that a bit funny? Isn't it a bit absurd
that they did not realize the sin of not believing that Jesus was the Son of
God and thought (condemned with their hearts) that Jesus committed the sin of
blasphemy out of such ignorance and unbelief?
That is why Jesus said to them, “But so that you may know that the Son
of Man has authority on earth to forgive sins” (Mt. 9:6). That is, Jesus said to the paralytic, “Your
sins are forgiven” (v. 2), and set him free from his sins, so that he might
know that he is the Messiah and God the Son, having the power to forgive sins. At the same time, Jesus was rebuking the
scribes and Pharisees for their unbelief, that is, the sin of not believing
that Jesus was God.
After that, Jesus said to the paralyzed man,
“Get up, pick up your bed and go home” (v. 6).
And the paralyzed man immediately got up before them, and picked up what
he had been lying on, and went home glorifying God (v. 7; Mk. 2:12; Lk. 5:25). He was not only forgiven of his sins, but his
sickness was also healed. What was the
reaction of the crowd when they saw it? Look
at Matthew 9:8, Mark 2:12 and Luke 5:26: “But when the crowds saw this, they
were awestruck, and glorified God, who had given such authority to men” (Mt. 9:8),
“… This amazed everyone and they praised
God, saying, "We have never seen anything like this!” (Mk. 2:12), “They
were all struck with astonishment and began glorifying God; and they were
filled with fear, saying, ‘We have seen remarkable things today’” (Lk. 5:26). In the end, many people who had gathered at
the Capernaum house were amazed by Jesus' power to forgive sins and to heal
people, and they glorified God.
O. J. Gibson, in his book
“Survey in Basic Christianity,” asks a self-checklist of seven questions
(Internet): (1) Have you always been unselfish?
(2) Were you always free from envy
and covetousness? (3)
Have you certainly done all the good you are capable of? (4) Have you always been kind to everyone? (5) Have
you always loved God with all your heart, soul, mind, and strength? (6) Have you always loved others as yourself? (7) Have you always been perfect like the Lord
Jesus Christ? And he says: 'If the
answer to any of these questions is "No," then the Bible says you are
a sinner. If you keep the whole law and
break one, you are guilty of the whole (Jam. 2:10). Even one defilement of the perfect holiness of
God makes him a sinner.’ God solved this
problem of sin in Jesus Christ. God
forgives all sins to those who believe in Jesus. If we come to Jesus by faith and realizing
our sins even through the pain of disease, the Lord will tell us, ‘Your sins
are forgiven.’ I hope and pray that all
of us will be forgiven of our sins by confessing our sins through faith in
Jesus and repenting.
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