I HAVE NO MAN
In Jesus' day, there was a pool in Jerusalem which in Aramaic was called Bethesda, meaning "house of mercy." Once in a while, an angel would enter the pool and stir the waters up so that they visibly moved. It was discovered that anyone who first entered into the pool after the water was stirred would be healed of whatever was afflicting them. For this reason there was always a large number of people who were blind, sick, crippled, etc. who would wait all around the pool for their chance to be healed.
A story like this may seem strange to us today. Many modern Christians and theologians would
rather dismiss what they don't understand than to believe the witness of God's
Word. Even several of the more popular
modern Bible translations have entirely removed the text of John 5:4 from their
editions, choosing to skip verse four altogether and go directly to verse five
from verse three! I say, let God be true
and every man a liar. God is a faithful
and loving Father, and even at times when His people turn their backs on Him,
He still moves in marvelous and unexpected ways in order to bless them, and
remind them that He is God.
A study of the history of the great revivals in America should be enough
to convince us that God still moves in strange and miraculous ways even down to
today. From the Great Awakening of
1734-43 with the powerful preaching of Jonathan Edwards and George Whitfield,
through the 2nd awakening of the early 1800's when Charles Finney alone was
instrumental in leading 500,000 souls to Christ, to the Businessmen's Revival
of 1857-58 where an estimated 2,000,000 were converted, God truly was stirring
the waters in miraculous ways. The Urban
Revival of 1875-85 led to the rise of Dwight L. Moody who brought God's Word to
millions during his ministry. Revival
broke out in 1904 among Welsh-speaking settlers in Pennsylvania and spread to
other parts of the country. A preacher
by the name of Billy Sunday preached to about 100,000,000 souls during this
time! In 1906, a move of God began on
the west coast with the Azusa Street Revival.
We could mention the Post-World War Awakening and the preaching of Bill
Bright and Billy Graham, the Charismatic Renewal and Jesus Movement of the late
1960's and early 1970's, the Asbury College Revival of the 1970's, the
Melbourne Revival, the Modesto Revival, the Brownsville Revival, and the
Promise Keeper's Revival which were all in the 1990's to 2000’s. During each of these times God manifested
Himself in some very unusual ways bringing spiritual awakening, physical
healings, gifts of the Spirit, and fresh anointing to hundreds of millions of
people. I was converted in 1971 during
the Jesus Movement, and later participated in the Promise Keeper's Million Man March
on Washington in October of 1997. During
these times I witnessed personally the "moving of the waters" among
God's people. I saw many lives
completely transformed by faith in the saving grace of the Lord Jesus
Christ. I saw drug dependencies
miraculously cured, sick bodies healed instantly by prayer, and works of the
Spirit that defied natural explanation. Clearly,
God still "troubles the waters" for the sake of His people today.
At a certain point in His ministry, Jesus was in Jerusalem and passed by
the pool of Bethesda where He found a man who had been infirm for 38 years. His infirmity was such that it apparently prevented
him from being able to walk on his own. This
man was waiting, along with all the other sick folks, for the waters of the
pool to be troubled so that he might be able to get in the pool first and be
healed. On seeing the man's need, Jesus
said to him, “Do you want to be healed?”
(John 5:6 ESV). The man's answer was very unexpected. Instead of crying, "Yes, what do you
think I'm here for?" he offered an excuse.
"Sir, I have no man to put me
into the pool when the water is troubled." (v.7). I
have no man!?
The trouble with much of modern religion is that it has become too dependent
on man, and not enough on God.
Jesus Christ is the answer to all of the world's needs. He is our Healer, He is our Teacher, He is our hope and help when we are
struggling with circumstances in this life for which we have no answers. In His sovereignty He can save and heal
without the help of angels, movements, or man.
Though God uses preachers, teachers, revivals, awakenings, and, yes,
even troubled waters to reach out to the lost and faltering; none of those agents
should ever distract us from God Himself.
They should, instead, point us toward our Lord Jesus Christ through Whom
we all find access to God. I've heard a lot of excuses over the years
that people use for not serving God.
They blame their parents, their spouse (or lack of a spouse), their
pastor, their Sunday school teacher, an evangelist, or just some Christian that
let them down somehow. They use someone
else's failures as an excuse not to serve God themselves. Instead of having their eyes on a man or even
a movement, they need to fix their eyes on Christ. The question needs to be whether or not they trust in Jesus Christ to
make them whole or not! He is able to
work outside all of our paradigms, traditions, expectations, and norms if we
will just believe. "The word is nigh thee, even in thy mouth, and in thy heart: that
is, the word of faith, which we preach; that
if thou shalt confess with thy mouth the Lord Jesus, and shalt believe in thine
heart that God hath raised Him from the dead, thou shalt be saved."
(Romans 10:8, 9).
Jesus ignored the sick man's excuses and said to him, "Rise,
take up thy bed, and walk.” (v.8).
Immediately, the man received faith to be healed, rolled up his bed, and
walked away under his own strength! God
is not looking for our excuses, but our obedience and faith. Faith is the thing that will fulfill God's
promises in our life. When we stop
substituting people and things in the place of Jesus, we will find joy and
victory overflowing. When we quit
saying, "I have no man,"
or, "I have no money," or whatever
we use as an excuse, then we will find that the Lord Himself will be everything
we ever need or want. We will find also
that salvation isn't just for the lucky few, but it is for all who hear God's
voice and respond in faith. Certainly
God can and does use His servants and His movements to reach out to the lost,
but those things should only serve as signposts that point us to the Savior of
the world and to a personal relationship with Him. They should never exalt man in the place of
Christ. The truth is God doesn't need to use any of those agents to reach
lost souls, but He does choose to. In His love and mercy He still moves in
unusual and miraculous ways. The point,
though, is that Christ is always standing before us asking, "Do
you want to be healed?" What
will our response be to our Lord and Savior? Will we respond with a resounding,
"Yes!" or will we make excuses and remain unchanged?
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