LANGUAGE:
(Mark 1:39-45)
Greetings in the name of our Lord and Savior to all the Saints who are part of the Bensenville Bible Church internet family. For those of you who might be joining us for the first time, we are a multi-national bi-lingual community of believers on the West side of Chicago, near O’Hare. We offer postings each week in English and Spanish.
Today we resume our study of the gospel of Mark that we had started before COVID-19 interrupted our lives.
Mark’s Gospel is the shortest of the 4 Gospels in the New Testament. It is like an emotional rollercoaster, capturing the highs and lows of the disciples as they followed Jesus around Judea. It is fast paced, filled with gripping drama. Take your Bibles and open them to Mark’s Gospel, chap 1, vs39-45.
In chapter 1 of Mark’s Gospel there are 6 gripping dramas.
That brings us to vs. 39-45(The Message). I’m reading from The Message translation. 39 ’Jesus’ went to their meeting places all through Galilee, preaching and throwing out the demons. 40A leper came to him, begging on his knees, “If you want to, you can cleanse me.” 41Deeply moved, Jesus put out his hand, touched him, and said, “I want to. Be clean.” 42Then and there the leprosy was gone, his skin smooth and healthy. 43Jesus dismissed him with strict orders: 44“Say nothing to anyone. Take the offering for cleansing that Moses prescribed and present yourself to the priest. This will validate your healing to the people.” 45But as soon as the man was out of earshot, he told everyone he met what had happened, spreading the news all over town. ‘Because of this’, Jesus kept to out-of-the-way places, no longer able to move freely in and out of the city. But people found him ‘anyway’, and came from all over.
Let’s pause here for a moment of prayer:
“Heavenly Father, thank you for this time you’ve given us to open your Word and discover who Jesus is. Thank you that you don’t leave us in the dark about who He is. Lord, we need wisdom as we read your Word. You promise us in James 1:5 that we only have to ask for wisdom to receive it. And so we ask, give us Your wisdom now as we approach Your word. Help us discern the truth of this text. Help us to not rely on our own understanding. Thank you Heavenly Father for the clarity, encouragement and hope your Word brings. In Jesus’ Name I pray, Amen.”
A. The drama in these verses surrounds a man with leprosy.
Leprosy is a horrored disease. It is a chronic infectious disease that affects the skin, the peripheral nerves (nerves outside the brain and spinal cord), and the mucos membranes of the nose, throat, and eyes. It damages nerves, resulting in an inability to feel pain, which in turn can lead to the loss of fingers, toes, etc.
In the book, Pain: The Gift Nobody Wants, Dr. Paul Brand, a missionary doctor, tells about his first encounter with the horroredness of leprosy. Tanya was a seventeen or eighteen month old child, and this is the story told to Dr Brand by Tanya’s mother: Usually I kept Tanya by my side, but that day I left her alone in her playpen while answering the phone. Tanya stayed quiet, and so I decided to begin dinner. For a change Tanya was playing happily by herself. I could hear her laughing and cooing. I smiled to myself, wondering what new mischief she had gotten into. “A few minutes later I went into Tanya’s room and found her sitting on the floor of the playpen, finger painting red swirls on the white plastic sheet. I didn’t grasp the situation at first, but when I got closer I screamed. It was horrible. The tip of Tanya’s finger was mangled and bleeding, and it was her own blood she was using to make those designs on the sheets. “I yelled, “Tanya, what happened!’ She grinned at me, and that’s when I saw the streaks of blood on her teeth. She had bitten off the tip of her finger and was playing in the blood.” Imagine . . . there was no pain.[i]
In addition to the shame of disfiguration, people with leprosy were quarantined for for life.[ii] Imagined having to live out your days socially and physically isolated, a prisoner to loneliness. Dr Brand writes: The loneliest people of all are the ones for whom leprosy has also destroyed their sight. Like many others in the world, they are blind, but unlike most of the blind they can't use their hands to bring them the sensations that their eyes are denied because they can't feel either. They are really alone.[iii]
In an article entitled The History of Loneliness, Jill Lepore writes, Loneliness lies behind a host of problems—anxiety, violence, trauma, crime, suicide, depression, political apathy, and even political polarization.[iv]
As leprosy advances, the leper hardly looks human. No fingers. No toes. Skin rubbed off of face and arms. No one wants to draw near, no one wants to touch. Isolation is the norm. They cannot feel another person.[v] This man of leprosy must have been a horrored sight. Kent Hughes writes: We can hardly imagine the humiliation and isolation of this leper’s life. He was ostracized from society because it was thought at that time that leprosy was highly contagious (which it is not). When people drew near, he had to cry, “Unclean! Unclean!”.
Think about how you would feel shouting this while entering a grocery store or a mall—the pervasive sense of worthlessness and despair.[vi] Josephus, the famous Jewish historian, writes that lepers were treated “as if they were, in effect, dead men.”[vii]
News of Jesus’ abilities to rid people of disease and demonic domination was spreading(vs29-34). The news of healing put a spark of hope in a life where there was no hope. Disenfranchised because of the leprosy, in desperation, our leper plows through the crowd surrounding Jesus with his eyes fixed on Him. Luke, the physician, describes him as “covered with leprosy” (Luke 5:12). The disease had run its course. The crowd must have scattered like balls on a pool table hit by a master pool player. But that spark of hope was enough to push him to encounter Jesus. V40, exhausted, he fell in a mass of rotting flesh at the feet of Jesus.
B. The Bible describes Leprosy as being Synonymous with Sin
Let’s stop here for a moment. This is really a hugh moment in the opening weeks of Jesus’ ministry. In the Bible leprosy and sin are synonymous.
Sin, like leprosy, slowly eats away at the inner soul of a person. At first, behaviors and attitudes that seem innocent, numb us to God, filling us with guilt, and disfiguring our inner selves, bringing about a sense of lostness.
The less we know that there is anything wrong with us, the more full-blown the darkness within. On national news it was reported of a young man who died because of COVID-19. . Apparently there are people holding COVID-19 parties, daring to defy the disease. In this gathering there was someone with the virus. This young man didn’t know how sick he was until the emergency room. He didn’t know his full blown condition until he was admitted to the ER, it was then too late. He died. His last words were, I wish I had known.
In the book entitled David Martyn Lloyd-Jones, Iain Murray tells us that Dr. Lloyd-Jones, pastor of London’s Westminster Chapel, insisted that there must be a spiritual sense of sin if change is to come. Until you realize that you are a sinner, you cannot possibly feel the need of Christ; you may have felt the need of help and advice and comfort, but until you awake to the fact that your nature itself is evil, until you realize that your trouble is that you yourself are wrong, and that your whole nature is wrong, until you realize that, you will never have felt the need of a Saviour. Christ cannot help or advise or comfort you until He has first of all saved you, until He has changed your nature.
Oh, my friends, have you yet felt this? God have mercy upon you if you haven’t. You may have been inside the church all your life and actively engaged in its work, but still I say (and I am merely repeating what is said repeatedly in the Bible) that unless you have at some time or other felt that your very nature itself is sinful, that you are, in the words of St. Paul, ‘dead in sin’ then you have never known Jesus Christ as a Saviour, and if you do not know Him as a Saviour you do not know Him at all.[viii]
C. The Expression Of Hope
Let's now return to the story in Mark. Note that the leper comes to Jesus. V40, falling on his knees before Jesus, begs him to heal him--‘If You are willing, You can make me clean.’. This leper knew he was a leper, that he could never ever enter the temple to worship, he could never ever be in a crowd. But he believed that somehow, if he could only get to Jesus, his leperosy would be taken away. His actions tell us that he knows four important facts:
D. Jesus Response
Notice Jesus response. V41, Moved with compassion, Jesus stretched out His hand and touched him, and said to him, ‘I am willing; be cleansed’. The people grow silent as they watch Jesus break with protocol, and stretch out His hand and touched him. There is nothing like the personal touch. Listen to Paul Brand again: "More than any other person in the world the person with leprosy needs to be treated by somebody who will reach out his hand . . . and touch him. . . . I have seen men break down into tears at that time because they have found someone who would touch them.[ix]
Often all the person suffering from the effects of sin is looking for, is for someone to deal tenderly and lovingly toward them. Sin is a cruel and dangerous, leaving deep scars. But where Christ’s true followers are, where His true disciples live, work, and worship, should all be places of healing, where the members reach out with love, mercy and kindness, helping all that are suffering under the burden of sin.[x]
The simple touch offered with love and sympathy can do so much to heal the sin sick soul. Kent Hughes writes: Since this man was full of leprosy, we can reasonably assume that he had not been touched by a soft, healthy hand in years. If he had a wife, he had not known her touch, much less her embrace for many long years. If he had children there had been no kiss, no touch, not even once—and now they were adults. Whatever his family status, he must have longed for a touch.[xi]
Once I read that there was a man who went to the barber daily, whether he needed a hair cut or not, just so that he could feel the touch of another person.
E. Results of Jesus Touch
V42, “And as soon as Jesus had spoken, Immediately the leprosy left him, and he was cleansed.” Note that there are two results: Jesus heals the disease and He cleanses the leper. These are two, separate results, not two ways of saying the same thing.
Don’t miss the moment. “Immediately the leprosy left him and he was cured.” The healing was sudden and complete. His feet—toeless, ulcerated stubs—were suddenly whole, bursting his shrunken sandals. The knobs on his hands grew fingers before his very eyes. Back came his hair, eyebrows, eyelashes. Under his hair were ears and before him a nose! His skin was smooth and soft. Can you hear a thundering roar from the multitude? Can you hear the man crying not, “Unclean! Unclean!,” but, “I’m clean! I’m clean!”[xii]
That is what Jesus Christ can do for you, for anyone in an instant, in a split second of belief. As he transformed the leper, because of the Cross, if you’ll ask, he’ll release you from the horror of sin.
F. Jesus Instructions
Vs43–44 (NASB95) 43And Jesus sternly warned the man and immediately sent him away, 44and He said to him, “See that you say nothing to anyone; but go, show yourself to the priest and offer for your cleansing as Moses commanded, as a testimony to them.”
Ray Stedman helps us pull this together. He points out for us that there was more to the miracle of cleansing this leprosy man than meets the eye. Jesus zeros in, V44, when He says to the leper, go show yourself to the priest and offer for your cleansing as Moses commanded . . . don’t miss this line . . . as a testimony to them. This indicates that there was ‘another’ purpose to this miracle . . . a witness to the priests.
This was a hugh moment. The last time something like this happened was roughly 900 years in the past with Elijah and Naaman in 2 Kings 5.
Isaiah had predicted that when Messiah came, he would do certain physical miracles. The eyes of the blind would be opened, the lame would leap like the deer, the tongue of the dumb would sing, and lepers would be cleansed and healed. Now here is one of the signs of the Messiah, which our Lord intended the priests should see, as a testimony to them of His identity, a testimony as to who he was. Here was One who had power to cleanse the leper.[xiii]
Let’s stop here and reflect for a moment. What does this mean for us today?
A. First, The power of the Kingdom of God
In vs14–15 we read . . . Jesus came into Galilee, preaching the gospel of God, 15and saying, “The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God is at hand; repent and believe in the gospel.”
Now in vs39-45 we are invited to face the issue of the Kingdom of God and the matter of uncleanliness. It is not about cleansing and power in general, but about the power to make "me" clean. Think about this: Mark is giving us clear insight in regards to the ‘good news’ of the Kingdom of God—the question upper most in our minds is, does the Kingdom of God have the power to effect dramatic change in my life and yours?
The leper's question recognizes that if there is to be healing, it will be dependent on a God who "wills" it be so. In Jesus’ response to the leper, I will, is the power of the good news to change lives, and that in Jesus the power of God is clearly revealed, ie., demonstrated. James Boyce sums up Mark 1: hugh boundaries are crossed; issues of power are addressed; unclean becomes clean; the sick become whole. And Jesus gets into trouble for this![xiv]
Putting into perspective for us, The leper's story makes it clear that God's will in Jesus to touch, to cleanse, and to make whole is not just imaginary or wish.
Instead, it is the promise that has the power to bring transformation to brokenness, and suffering brought about by the god of this world, Satan himself.
B. Second, The Hopelessness of Healing
The tragedy with the leper is that the law of Moses gave no cure. The leper knows that there is no hope for him. With the presciptions of the law there was nothing he could do to make himself acceptable to God or man. His only hope was that desperate plea, If you are willing . . . But then he hears that Jesus can command the demonic world, and that Jesus can heal the sick. Could Jesus make an unclean clean? That question burned deep into his pyshic. Remember, this is an extreme case of leprosy. He pushes thru the shame and heckling and asks Jesus to make him clean.
What Mark is wanting us to get a grip on is what Paul said in Romans 8:3, what the law . . . could not do, (God) sent his own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh and for sin” has done. Such is the surpassing greatness of salvation for all men who call out to God for salvation. In Matthew 5:3-4, Jesus said ‘How’ blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven. Blessed are those who mourn, for they will be comforted.
Are you caught in sins leprosy imprisonment? As this man acknowledge his leprosy entrapment, can you acknowledge your sinfulness? Like the leper coming to Jesus to be set free from its contamination, you can be set free from sin’s contamination by coming to Jesus.
Let’s close in prayer:
Heavenly Father, Sovereign Lord, Your hope arises for us with each dawn, pushing back the rubble of our lives. Each new day reminds us of your grace, you paint hope across our skies. Into the deafening cry of hopelessness you whisper love. Love that catches us, holds us. There is no end, just new beginnings. No finish, just new starts. Into your resurrection we follow you to bathe in hope. You are alive! Not only in the world but in us. And so we carry your hope within our souls. Help us to lift our eyes, and feel resurrection hope and power arise in our lives. Amen
What Jesus did for the leper He can do for you today. He took your place on the cross, paying the full penalty for all your sins. Friend, nothing is too gross, ugly, dirty or shameful for the Savior to cleanse! Nothing is beyond the scope of Jesus’ compassion. The leper had a transforming moment with the Master. This could be yours right now if you would turn to Jesus to be saved!
In Brown County, Indiana, there is a T-shirt store. On one of the T-shirts are these words: Lifetime vaccination is Jesus Blood, 100% guaranteed.
Like the leper in Mark 1, fix your eyes on Jesus . . . and let his royal power and his priestly forgiveness and his ancient wisdom and his fiery hope fill you with confidence afresh for this week
That’s real. Until next time, remember God’s Got This.
[i] Dr. Paul Brand with Philip Yancy, The Gift Nobody Wants, (Grand Rapds, MI: Zondervan, 1993), p4.
[ii] Leviticus 13-14
[iii] http://expository.org/mark1c.htm
[iv] Jill Lepore, The History of Loneliness, https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2020/04/06/the-history-of-loneliness
[v] http://expository.org/mark1c.htm
[vi] R. Kent Hughes, Mark: Jesus, Servant and Savior, vol. 1, Preaching the Word (Westchester, IL: Crossway Books, 1989), 55.
[vii] Ibid.
[viii] Iain H. Murray, David Martyn Lloyd-Jones, The First Forty Years, 1899–1939 (Edinburgh: Banner of Truth, 1982), p. 207.
[ix] http://expository.org/mark1c.htm
[x] Lester Leprosy and Sin, https://pastorlesterbentley.com/2017/09/21/leprosy-and-sin/
[xi] R. Kent Hughes, Mark: Jesus, Servant and Savior, vol. 1, Preaching the Word (Westchester, IL: Crossway Books, 1989), 58.
[xii] Ibid., 59.
[xiii] Cf., Ray Stedman, The Healer of Hurts, https://www.raystedman.org/new-testament/mark/the-healer-of-hurts
[xiv] James Boyce, Commentary on Mark 1:40-45, https://www.workingpreacher.org/preaching.aspx?commentary_id=240