The Power of Being Healed

“And he said to her, ‘Daughter, your faith has made you well; go in peace, and be healed of your disease.’” – Mark 5:34

In the blink of an eye, a woman who’d been suffering for 12 years was instantly healed, simply because she touched Jesus. Her physical ailment was healed. In that healing, she was also healed spiritually. No longer was she “unclean” and therefore cut off from the religious life of Israel. Her faith had truly made her well.

This miraculous moment reveals the healing power of Jesus as well as His divine power to make clean those who are unclean. It points us toward Christ’s power of healing and restoration that’s freely offered to every man, woman, and child. All of us suffer from a terrible disease called sin. It has plagued us since birth. All of us are unclean by the fact that we rebel against God’s good design, plan, and will for our lives. All of us exclude ourselves from fellowship with holy God. However, faith in Christ makes us well, just as it made that woman well!

When we believe in Jesus, believing that He’s the Son of God who sacrificed Himself on the cross to pay the penalty for our sins, dying, being buried, and rising from death on the third day, we too are made well. By God’s grace, through faith in Jesus Christ, we are saved. Our sins are forgiven. We’re able to go and live in peace with God for the first time in our lives. We’re truly made well spiritually and we’re healed of our worst sickness – our bondage to sin, evil, and death.

If you’re a believer in Jesus, then your faith has already made you well in the most important ways possible. If you aren’t, are you ready to believe, be healed, and live in peace with God?

For the Sake of the Lost

“If others share this rightful claim on you, do not we even more? Nevertheless, we have not made use of this right, but we endure anything rather than put an obstacle in the way of the gospel of Christ.” -1 Corinthians 9:12

This could be the greatest challenge for Christians in this present age of radical autonomy, independence, preference, comfort, and self-concern! Will we endure ANYTHING rather than put an obstacle in the way of the gospel of Christ? Do we love the lost more than we love ourselves? Paul certainly did!

To really answer these questions, we need to recognize how many obstacles we can inadvertently put in the way of the gospel. Things we don’t think about, things we think “everyone” knows or does, things we know to be our right to do our way. They certainly are our right, but in Christ, we have the strength to forgo our rights for the sake of lost souls! Let that soak in…

We must learn to think outside ourselves, our preferences, our traditions, our experiences and consider things from the viewpoint of unbelievers of different faiths (or no faith), cultures, ethnicities, ages, and experiences. We must recognize where many of the things we prefer or enjoy in our Christian life can actually prevent people from really listening with an open mind and believing the Gospel.

Anything that isn’t biblically mandated, we must be willing to set down for the sake of the salvation of those currently facing an eternity apart from God. Our love for those currently under God’s wrath must be greater than our love for having our way. As much as we might like our patterns, habits, preferences, politics, and traditions, if they aren’t mandated by the Bible, we should be willing to be quiet about them for the sake of saving others.

Take time to reflect on things in your daily life, your character, or your practice of your faith that discourage people from believing in Jesus. Can you endure changing those rather than putting an obstacle in the way of the gospel?

Stronger Than the Strong Man

“But no one can enter a strong man’s house and plunder his goods, unless he first binds the strong man. Then indeed he may plunder his house.” – Mark 3:27

There’s a lot of good news packed into this verse! The context is Jesus casting demons out of people, which He often did. The Pharisees accuse Jesus of doing this by the power of Satan. That’s absurd, as Jesus points out. Rather, Jesus makes it crystal clear that the meaning of all this is that He’s vastly more powerful than the devil!

Satan is the strong man Jesus refers to in this verse. Jesus is the one plundering the household of Satan by overpowering him. With the inbreaking of God’s Kingdom, Jesus made evident to the devil and the world that Satan’s time of power was nearing its end. Though Satan had authority over this fallen world, Jesus came to earth and started rescuing precious human souls from the clutches of the devil.

With each person who puts his or her faith in Jesus Christ, another soul is taken from the devil’s grasp and relocated into God’s Kingdom. Each believer is part of the treasure Jesus plunders from Satan’s house! Satan can rage about it. He can attack. He can tempt. He can undermine. He can’t win, though. One infinitely greater and more powerful has come!

There is no power of the devil that isn’t broken and overcome by Jesus. Praise God that when we trust in Christ, we are sealed by the Holy Spirit. Our souls are made secure in Christ and we become God’s treasure, rather than Satan’s trophy!

A Tremendous Freedom

“‘All things are lawful for me,’ but not all things are helpful. ‘All things are lawful for me,’ but I will not be dominated by anything.” – 1 Corinthians 6:12

In Christ, we enjoy tremendous freedom! Jesus died on the cross so that through faith in Him, we are forgiven our sins and reconciled to God, not by rule-following and good behavior but by God’s abundant, overflowing, amazing grace. We aren’t constrained by the over 600 laws of the Mosaic Law but that doesn’t many anything goes.

Our freedom in Christ isn’t an excuse to abuse our liberty or waste our lives in pursuit of trivial things. Christ died to set us free from sin’s power, so we can become like Him in the power of His Spirit. We must not rush back to being dominated by anything (food, drink, pleasure, power, phone, career, money, fame…) other than God. We must recognize where the exercise of our freedom hurts us and reject such indulgence. We must recognize when the exercise of our freedom hurts others and reject such selfishness.

Our true freedom is in Christ. We’re only completely free when we submit to His Lordship. We must not surrender our blood-bought freedom back to any habits, pleasures, or preferences that don’t glorify Christ. He alone must be Lord of our lives.

Missing the Blessing

“In spite of all this, they still sinned;
despite his wonders, they did not believe.”

– Psalm 78:32

The Israelites saw the mighty work of God firsthand. They saw Him in a cloud, heard Him speak out loud, and witnessed His wrath for sin. Yet they sinned and struggled with real faith. They didn’t yield to Him as Lord of their lives, clinging stubbornly to their demands, agendas, preferences, and priorities.

Their experience in the wilderness is a vivid reminder that it isn’t enough to know a lot about God and the Bible. James reminds us that demons know a lot about God and the Bible! The Israelites had more firsthand, eyewitness knowledge about God than most of us will ever have in this world, yet they consistently failed and suffered for that failure.

Seeing extraordinary miracles isn’t a guarantee we’ll get things right. They might excite us about God for awhile but they don’t sustain us. Instead, we must submit to God in order to experience His blessing and salvation. We must choose daily to submit to God, to pursue Him, to walk in step behind Him. We must diligently seek Him in prayer, study, meditation, and worship. We must truly make Jesus the Lord of our lives, with absolute authority over every aspect of them. We must submit our work and our leisure, our family and our friends, our health and our wealth. All our time, talent, and treasure must be managed as a gift from God to be used for God.

If we simply profess to love Jesus and enjoy weekend worship without letting God rule every aspect of our heart, mind, and life we aren’t different than the Israelites. Like them, we’ll continue to struggle with sin and idolatry. Like them, we’ll still miss out on the full blessing and joy of a life lived in God’s will. Have you truly submitted to God?