We appeal to God for the healing of our souls and bodies only as a
last resort. God’s healing is always a miraculous act, and we are afraid
of facing the manifestation of the almighty power of God. Although the
healing we receive from God is a gift, we also know that its
implications are many and everlasting.
There is a price tag on divine healing, and the price is a complete
change of life. It is indeed a serious price – for change does not come
easily. For this reason, divine healing can only take place when it is
really wanted. It also requires a total submission and a full commitment
to the relationship of faith with God’s divine power.
In order to understand this process, we can look closely at the
healing performed by our Lord, Jesus Christ at the pool called Bethesda
by the Sheep Gate in Jerusalem. An angel of the Lord would come down at a
certain time and stir the waters of the pool. Then, “whoever stepped in
first, after the stirring of the water, was made well of whatever
disease he had” (John 5:4).
At the pool, there was a man who had suffered from an infirmity for
thirty-eight years. “When Jesus saw him lying there,” says the Gospel,
“and knew that he already had been in that condition for a long time, He
said to the him, ‘Do you want to be made well’ ” (complete, whole)?
At first, this question seemed superfluous to the sick man as
suggested by his answer: “Sir, I have no man to put me into the pool
when the water is stirred up, but while I am coming, another steps down
before me.”
But the Lord’s question had a deeper meaning. The Lord asked the sick
man if he really wanted to be made well and if he were ready to pay the
price of the divine healing that the Lord was about to perform. Was he
committed to the relationship that would be established by the divine
intervention about to take place? Was he ready to submit totally to the
will of God?
Divine healing would not only take away the man’s infirmity, but
would also change his life forever. It would change his heart and his
mind. It would also make him spiritually well. So, in other words, the
Lord was asking the sick man, “Are you ready to be touched by God in
this special way?”
When he agreed, Jesus commanded him, “Rise, take up your bed, and walk.”
The man obeyed the Lord, even though he knew it was the Sabbath day.
Those who saw him carrying his bed, reminded him, “It is the Sabbath
day, and it is not lawful for you to carry your bed.” Showing his
complete submission to the Lord, he answered them: “He who made me well
said to me, ‘Take up your bed and walk.’ ”
After the healing, the Lord disappeared among the multitudes of people.
The Gospel says that, at this point, the healed man did not know who
Jesus was. It was only after awhile that the Lord met him in the temple
and said to him, “See, you have been made well. Sin no more, lest a
worse thing will happen to you.”
First of all, in the healing process, the sick man obtained the
forgiveness of his sins. Secondly, the healing that he accepted changed
his life so much that he could not go back to his old ways of
understanding or leading his life. In fact, it was as if the sick man
was arraigned and placed on divine parole. “If you break your parole,”
the Lord seemed to say, “you will not only go back to your old
situation, but to an even worse one.”
Divine healing as a gift from God, still has a spiritual price. When
we pay it, however, we help ourselves. It changes us more drastically
then anything before has ever changed us.
It calls us to a new life, a renewed relationship with our fellow
man, and a total submission to God. That’s why it often seems much
easier to take a pill and go to bed, or to see a doctor and then
complain about the bill.
Nonetheless, have courage my friends. Don’t be afraid to appeal to
God’s healing and to accept His purifying power that changes everything
within you. Divine healing erases our sinful past, makes well of our
present and helps save our souls. We must also remember that His healing
will place us on divine parole, and that we must sin no more.