Jesus
Wants You Whole
The book of John records the story of a man who suffered with
an infirmity for thirty-eight years. When Jesus saw him lie, and knew he had
been now a long time in that case, he saith to him,(The sick man) Wilt
thou be made whole? John 5:6. This man had spent practically his entire life
in a bedridden state, depending on others to assist him with the activities of
daily living. His only hope of a cure was to wait on the "moving of the
water" at the pool of Bethesda, and be the first one to step in. If he
succeeded, he was made whole of whatever disease he had (see John 4:4). After
thirty-eight years of repetitious failure, his journey to the pool had now
become a vain ritual. You see, it is impossible to jump in a pool when you can't
even get up.
Jesus asked the man, "Wilt thou be made whole"? I
believe that what Jesus was asking him and what he actually heard were two
different things. Jesus did not say, "Wilt thou be healed of thine
infirmity?" He did not try and point out how things could have been
different in his life if only he had handled things another way. He did not try
to give him a quick positive self-image lecture, or point out all of his
negative confessions. He did not say, "Do you want to walk?" He simply
asked him if he was willing to be made whole.
We modern day Christians have a real problem. Our
misconception of wellness versus wholeness has been a great hindrance to the
progress of our faith life. We define wellness as being healthy, wealthy, living
a long time and being happy. Suffering and adversity is for the sinner, not the
saints. Faith has become the great escape for the Christian. If you only have
enough faith or the right kind of faith, you can have anything you say. Just
claim it, and it's yours.
This sounds very enchanting, and it works well in "Wishland".
But in the real world, it will ultimately fail. You see, no person, no matter
how spiritual they are, can live beyond the sting of adversity. The heroes of
faith didn't, the Apostles didn't, Jesus didn't, and you won't either. You may
be the most holy person in your religious organization, but the day will come
when you may feel ill, or discouraged, or weak, or exposed to threat. The day
will come when you will have to admit that the answer to certain things
happening in your life are beyond your control, and that you need God's help.
I have petitions and requests before the Lord right now, and
many have not been answered. But that doesn't mean that my faith has failed or
that I have sin in my life. I simply live one day at a time, keep believing and
trusting that God is working on my behalf, and walk in the peace of God. That
way, I always maintain a consistent faith walk, and I always have the peace of
God in my life.
Jesus wants us whole, not just well. Wholeness has to do with
your body, soul and spirit. It focuses not only on the present life, but that
which is to come. It not only deals with how you feel today, but how you think
and act in the future. Being made whole deals with being connected to the
"True Vine", and producing the supernatural fruits of righteousness
which revolutionize your life. "And the very God of peace sanctify you
wholly; and I pray God your whole spirit and soul and body be preserved
blameless unto the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ 1 Thessalonians 5:23.
When Jesus later came across the man in the temple, he
encouraged him to change his lifestyle of sin (see John 5:14). Receiving healing
today is vain if it doesn't cause us to consider our eternal destiny. All
flesh is as grass, and all the glory of man as the flower of grass; the grass
withereth, and the flower thereof falleth away 1 Peter 1:24. Health and
wealth in relation to eternity is at best a temporary state. Whereas ye know
not what shall be on tomorrow. For what is your life? It is even a vapour, that
appearth for a little time, and then vanished away James 4:14.
Am I saying that Christians shouldn't enjoy health and
prosperity? Of coarse not. But I do feel that we shouldn't focus so intensely on
these issues that we miss the big picture. Jesus wants you whole, whether you're
healed or not. Jesus wants you whole regardless to which neighborhood you live
in or which model automobile you are driving. Just examine the secular thought
that is alive in our culture today. If man can stop pain and suffering, prolong
life and postpone death, they will do it without God. Therefore, if we embrace
wellness, yet miss out on wholeness, are we ultimately any different from the
world?
Although wellness may be a personal need of ours, true
wholeness is something much much greater. We cannot grasp any of the deeper
truths of scripture if we're not made whole. To be fully redeemed from the curse
of sin is an important aspect of being made whole. Jesus wants us whole because
there is no other way He can bring us into the fullness of joy He has planned
for us. "These things have I spoken unto you, that my joy might remain
in joy, and that your joy might be full" John 15:11
God's way to wholeness is simple, and you don't have to be a
millionaire or super saint to achieve it. Jesus' way to wholeness is given in
Matthew 22:37-39, "Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with
all your soul and with all your mind…Love your neighbor as yourself." Wholeness
is relational, not situational. Regardless to how you feel or what you possess,
keep growing in your love for God and others. If you do this, you will have a
peace and joy in your life that impacts your entire body, soul and spirit (your
whole person).
Wholeness is what we all long for. It is what Adam had before
the fall, and somehow, we seem to know in our hearts, that it belongs to us. And
though this life inevitably brings difficulties, through God's power and grace,
we can move forward. We do not have to live a fragmented life, confused by why
we didn't get this or that from God. We can be content to let God be God, and to
pursue wholeness even when our present situation isn't ideal.
By: Edmund Brown