Sermon Tone Analysis

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SERMON~/PREDIGT WORKSHEET
Date: Jan 24, 1999  Where: SHMC Words:
Sermon Title: Stirring of the Healing Waters
Text: John 5:1-9a
W. L: H. Sawatzky  Invocation~/Einleitung:                                                                                                                                                    
·        People are often immobilized~/paralyzed by life experiences.
·        E.g.
Recent congregational survey – “How many friends do you have ?
·        Response from an elderly person: “Really no one!”
·        Towards the end of life – stuck away in a seniors home – away from friends & loved ones.
·        Loneliness, despair, fear of the unknown future.
·        A young child traumatized by school mates or teachers at school.
·        E.g.
too big for his age; not the right perfect Barbie shape; difficulties keeping attention;
·        Paralyzed by the labels people put on them: stupid slow learner; and all sorts of other things I can’t repeat from the pulpit.
·        Take a teenager coming up for graduation, or a young adult - paralyzed by choices:
·        Education & career; dating, sexuality & marriage; faith & friends; thousands more…
·        Middle aged spouse & parent in a mid-life crisis – paralyzed by a feeling of unfulfillment about his career and family life.
·        Times in everyone’s life – when we are temporarily paralyzed and unable to move forward in our life.
·        A person embittered & stuck because of an ugly event that took place many years ago.
·        Maybe a church fight, or a disagreement over some insignificant thing.
·        If these examples describe your life situation then you have come to right place today.
·        Today Jesus is walking down this stretch – and maybe – just maybe he will take notice of your state in life.
·        A few years ago I had a real teacher who helped me to identify some deeply rooted issues in my life that go all the way back to my early years, and I always blamed a number of other people for my misery.
·        My teacher was very gentle and patient with me – until I finally drove him to the edge & he said something that sounds very much like something that Jesus would say:
·        “You really seem to enjoy your misery!
The way I see it, you have a decision to make: do you want to keep blaming everyone else for your misery all the time?
Or are you going to get off it and move on?”
·        We sometimes have all the right intentions:
·        We want to have more friends; we want to be treated with dignity and respect – already in our early years on the school ground; we want so badly to make the right educational & career choices;
·        But so often we trip ourselves up by placing the responsibility for our success and well-being in the hands of those around us.
 
·        The issue is that we waste so much energy waiting for  someone else to make us happy.
·        We wait for the angel of the Lord to stir the healing waters for us.
·        Patiently!
Day after day, year after year we wait.
Maybe the next time someone will help me into the pool, and I will be healed.
·        Maybe tomorrow someone will remember me and come for a visit and cheer me up.
·        Maybe this weekend my prince charming or the girl of my dreams will come and bring me roses & sunshine for the rest of my life.
·        Maybe, if I act a little more like a bully the other kids will stop calling me four-eyes or bean-stalk, or whatever.
·        Maybe – just maybe – someone else will smile on me…
 
Let us look at the text one more time.
/The Healing at the Pool// /
*5*/     /Jesus went up to Jerusalem for a feast of the Jews.  2 Now there is in Jerusalem near the Sheep Gate a pool, which in Aramaic is called Bethesda and which is surrounded by five covered colonnades.
3 Here a great number of disabled people used to lie—the blind, the lame, the paralyzed.
(waiting for the stirring of the water; 4 for an angel of the Lord went down at certain seasons into the pool, and stirred up the water; whoever stepped in first after the stirring of the water was made well from whatever disease that person had.) 5 One who was there had been an invalid for thirty-eight years.
6 When Jesus saw him lying there and learned that he had been in this condition for a long time, he asked him, “Do you want to get well?”
7 “Sir,” the invalid replied, “I have no one to help me into the pool when the water is stirred.
While I am trying to get in, someone else goes down ahead of me.”
8 Then Jesus said to him, “Get up! Pick up your mat and walk.”  9 At once the man was cured; he picked up his mat and walked.
·        This remarkable story of healing is found only in the Gospel of John.
·        The Pool of Bethesda was a pond or a reservoir for holding water.
·        Bethesda: “House of mercy”
·        In ancient times the spa was believed to have special healing powers
·        Even today many people go to the spa or the pool to relax, exercise and refresh their energies.
·        Located close to the Sheep’s gate on the North side of Jerusalem – close to the temple.
·        Sheep designated for the sacrifices were brought in to the temple through this gate.
·        Some scholars have speculated that the healing properties of this pool came from the blood of the sacrificial animals.
·        The pool stirred only at a particular time, and the healing extended only to the first person to get into the pool when it was stirred.
·        Jesus is going up to Jerusalem, perhaps to one of the three annual feasts.
·        Its on a Sabbath day, and he comes by this pool.
·        Jesus sees the great multitude of those who are sick: blind, lame, paralyzed
·                    Social outcast: enemies of society
·        Ritually impure: no one would touch them for fear of becoming impure
·        Of all these patients Jesus takes note of the helpless man on his mat
·        He has obviously given up on his chances for healing – no one is willing to help him.
·        After 38 years of paralysis and alienation from society – who could blame him.
·        … and Jesus helps him into the water… right?
·        Not quite!
He does some investigating.
·        He “learns” that this man has been in this condition for a long time.
·        And he asks him a strange question:
·        *“Do you want to get well?”*
·        “Do you want companionship & friendship?”
·        “Do you want the other kids in school to respect you for who you are?”
·        “Do you want to get a good education & career?”
·        “Do you want to find the right partner for your life?”
·        “Do you want enter your golden years fulfilled and with no regrets?”
·        “Do you want forgiveness & reconciliation?”
·        “Do you want to step confidently into a bright future?”
·        *Whatever is paralyzing you: “Do you want to get well?”*
·        This is where we usually start to think of all our good reasons – or shall we say excuses – why we can’t get well.
·        “I have no one to help me into the pool when the water is stirred.”
·        “While I’m trying to get in, someone else goes down ahead of me.”
·        “Nobody cares about me anyway – I’ll never have friends.”
·        “I can’t help it if all the other kids are mean to me.”
·        “It’s not my fault that my parents can’t pay for my expensive University education – and I can’t get a decent job.”
·        “I’m trying to make a difference in our church – but the Ministers and the leadership are never going to change.”
·        “You can’t change the mentality and attitude of our members anyway.”
·        And, as our well rehearsed excuses graduate into very believable reasons – we loose all faith and hope that we will ever get well.
·        Like the man on his mat we resign ourselves to the belief that we are dependent on someone else’s “mercy” for our happiness.
·        If they don’t want me to find wellness and joy, I guess I can’t do anything about it.
·        And so we vegetate away in a sad and miserable existence.
·        Until we finally hear the word of Jesus that commands us to “Get up! Pick up your mat and walk!”
·        Never mind the opinions and expectations of others – YOU get up and walk.
·        The merciful voice from beyond our human existence asks, “Do you want to get well?”
·        You see, this question demands our response.
·        Sometimes its so much easier to remain in the rut.
·        Its so much easier to look for excuses than to get off our tush and do something.
·        We can remain lazy and ineffective – paralyzed.
·        As long as we can blame someone else for making us miserable we don’t have to take responsibility for making any changes in our lives.
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