{"id":29674,"date":"2023-04-12T15:00:53","date_gmt":"2023-04-12T21:00:53","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/baonline.cog7engage.net\/?p=29674"},"modified":"2023-08-29T11:36:12","modified_gmt":"2023-08-29T17:36:12","slug":"will-you-be-made-well","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/baonline.cog7engage.net\/will-you-be-made-well\/","title":{"rendered":"Will You Be Made Well?"},"content":{"rendered":"
We are a society in trauma, in desperate need of the healing Jesus offers.<\/em><\/p>\n We read in John 5:6: \u201cWhen Jesus saw [the man] lying there and knew that he had been there a long time, he said to him, \u201cDo you want to be made well? ‘\u201d<\/p>\n John\u2019s parenthetical note in verse 5 that the man had been in that condition for 38 years underscores that suffering a debilitating condition over a long period of time can make healing seem out of reach.<\/p>\n As Katherine Wolf<\/a> writes, \u201cThis may be the ultimate struggle of our humanity. Knowing we have this glorious welling up of possibility in us, of golden dreams, but finding it all, more often than not, just out of our reach.\u201d<\/p>\n Jesus\u2019 question to the invalid man is therefore an invitation to imagine healing and wholeness<\/a>. And it\u2019s a question for today\u2019s wounded, disabled, and grieving generation, an invitation to be made well.<\/p>\n We all need healing, thanks to the increasing frequency of violence and mass shootings, political divisions, and racial tension in our society. The pandemic was to be a masterclass on our common humanity and how to protect the most vulnerable among us, but it has been politicized and has served instead to exacerbate the brokenness<\/a>.<\/p>\n [bctt tweet=”We all need healing. \u2013 Whaid Rose” via=”no”]<\/p>\n Even as I write, our national conversation is about double mass shootings in Asian American communities, and shocking police brutality resulting in the death of an African American young man.<\/p>\n Add similar incidents such as Newtown, Uvalde, Charlottesville, and many in between, and the long-term psychological effect is a nation in trauma.<\/p>\n If that sounds too stark, consider the veterans who are taking their lives at an alarming rate due to the trauma of war. Consider also the mental health crisis<\/a> which has grown to epidemic proportion, not to mention the stats on physical and sexual violence and much more.<\/p>\n As Katherine Wolf rightly observes, \u201cWe are wounded. We are disabled. We are grieving. We are in pain. We are lost. And the juxtaposition between what could be but is not yet, and may never be, is almost too much to bear.\u201d[ref]Becker, Amy Julia. To Be Made Well: An Invitation to Wholeness, Healing, and Hope,<\/em> Foreward, page 9.[\/ref]<\/p>\n So, what do we do? Where does healing begin? How does healing even happen, and what would it look like?<\/p>\n Amy Julia Becker<\/a> helps us with these questions in her book, To Be Made Well: An Invitation to Wholeness, Healing, and Hope<\/em><\/a>.<\/em> Growing up in an affluent social setting in America\u2019s South, Becker came face-to-face with the plight of marginalized people when she gave birth to a Down Syndrome child.<\/p>\n Becker began to recognize the similarities in the ways her daughter and marginalized people are treated. She started connecting the dots between social isolation and social inclusion and their accompanying harm. She says, \u201cI lived in a bubble of homogeneity that isolated me from the beauty, goodness, and diversity of humanity. I failed to understand the value of the people outside my own social world.\u201d[ref]Becker, Amy Julia. To Be Made Well: An Invitation to Wholeness, Healing, and Hope<\/em>,<\/em> by, Herald Press, Harrisonburg, Virginia, 2022.[\/ref]<\/p>\n Becker suggests that healing begins by removing the barriers\u2014distraction, fear, shame, anxiety, and status, and she holds up Jesus\u2019 healing ministry as the model for overcoming these barriers.<\/p>\n She illustrates by weaving her book\u2019s storyline around the double narrative in Mark 5:21-34. This is an example of a writing technique for which Mark is known, in which one narrative is inserted in between two parts of a larger one.<\/p>\n In this instance the larger story surrounds Jairus, the rich synagogue ruler whose daughter is gravely ill. As Jesus is on His way to heal Jairus\u2019 house, he encounters the woman with the issue of blood, a separate story inserted to make an important point.<\/p>\n What\u2019s the point? Healing is for everyone, as the difference between Jairus and the bleeding woman shows. Jairus has status and influence, the woman does not; Jairus is referred to by name; the woman is known only by what\u2019s wrong with her; Jairus openly invites Jesus\u2019 intervention; the woman secretly touches Jesus, hoping no one would notice.<\/p>\n The need for healing transcends socio-economic boundaries, and the healing Jesus gives goes deeper than the physical. This affirms the meaning of \u201csozo,\u201d the word used in the Greek text, or \u201chealed,\u201d which means to save, preserve, to make well.<\/p>\n For the invalid man, this kind of healing includes a new sense of meaning and purpose in life.<\/p>\n For Jairus and his family, it includes a wonder and amazement that money cannot buy.<\/p>\n For the bleeding woman, healing includes a new dignity and restoration to communal life. Jesus took delight in the woman, calling her \u201cDaughter\u201d (akin to Jairus\u2019 affection for his little girl), and gave her the gifts of shalom and freedom from suffering (verse 34).<\/p>\n Therefore, the question, \u201cWill you be made well?\u201d is an invitation to all God\u2019s people, not just the sick. It is both an invitation to healing and wholeness, and a call to care and compassion.<\/p>\n Becker cites Dr. Martin Luther King\u2019s assertion in his sermon on the Good Samaritan that by acting across the boundary lines of his ethnic and religious categories, the Samaritan is participating in his own healing, and the mutual healing of their respective communities. As King says, \u201cIn the final analysis, I must not ignore the wounded man on life\u2019s Jericho Road, because he is a part of me and I am a part of him. His agony diminishes me, and his salvation enlarges me.\u201d[ref]p. 162[\/ref]<\/p>\n So as the all too familiar ritual of brokenness and grief continues in marginalized communities across our land, Christians have the privilege of creating circles of healing that encompass everyone. In so doing we might discover that the real existential question isn\u2019t Hamlet\u2019s \u201cTo be or not to be<\/em>?\u201d but Jesus\u2019 \u201cDo you want to be made well?\u201d <\/em><\/p>\n [bctt tweet=”Christians have the privilege of creating circles of healing that encompass everyone. \u2013 Whaid Rose” via=”no”]<\/p>\n We are a society in trauma, in desperate need of the healing Jesus offers. We read in John 5:6: \u201cWhen Jesus saw [the man] lying there and knew that he had been there a long time, he said to him, \u201cDo you want to be made well? ‘\u201d John\u2019s parenthetical note in verse 5 that […]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":641,"featured_media":29678,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"sync_status":"","episode_type":"","audio_file":"","castos_file_data":"","podmotor_file_id":"","cover_image":"","cover_image_id":"","duration":"","filesize":"","filesize_raw":"","date_recorded":"","explicit":"","block":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[560,70],"tags":[105,718,2446,2447],"yoast_head":"\nWho Needs Healing?<\/h3>\n
Where Does Healing Begin?<\/h3>\n
When People Are Marginalized<\/h3>\n
Healing Is for Everyone<\/h3>\n
An Invitation to All God\u2019s People<\/h3>\n
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