You see them, right? Our brothers and sisters having to panhandle, often in the city, sometimes on the side of the street. In Boston, New York, and similar cities, you can find them sitting, standing, and living in groups, seemingly nowhere else to go.
We generally avoid such situations, hoping our absence is filled in by professionals and others more compassionately called than us (whatever that means).
We might imagine this is the kind of scene Jesus walked into at the Sheep Gate. John tells us there was a crowd of people in need.
So enters Jesus into such a space…
John 5:1-18
After this there was a Jewish festival, and Jesus went up to Jerusalem. In Jerusalem near the Sheep Gate in the north city wall is a pool with the Aramaic name Bethsaida. It had five covered porches, and a crowd of people who were sick, blind, lame, and paralyzed sat there. A certain man was there who had been sick for thirty-eight years. When Jesus saw him lying there, knowing that he had already been there a long time, he asked him, “Do you want to get well?”
The sick man answered him, “Sir, I don’t have anyone who can put me in the water when it is stirred up. When I’m trying to get to it, someone else has gotten in ahead of me.”
Jesus said to him, “Get up! Pick up your mat and walk.” Immediately the man was well, and he picked up his mat and walked. Now that day was the Sabbath.
The Jewish leaders said to the man who had been healed, “It’s the Sabbath; you aren’t allowed to carry your mat.”
He answered, “The man who made me well said to me, ‘Pick up your mat and walk.’”
They inquired, “Who is this man who said to you, ‘Pick it up and walk’?” The man who had been cured didn’t know who it was, because Jesus had slipped away from the crowd gathered there.
Later Jesus found him in the temple and said, “See! You have been made well. Don’t sin anymore in case something worse happens to you.” The man went and proclaimed to the Jewish leaders that Jesus was the man who had made him well.
As a result, the Jewish leaders were harassing Jesus, since he had done these things on the Sabbath. Jesus replied, “My Father is still working, and I am working too.” For this reason the Jewish leaders wanted even more to kill him—not only because he was doing away with the Sabbath but also because he called God his own Father, thereby making himself equal with God.
Prayer
God,
Your church is gathering to worship you today, to give you praise from the fullness of our heart to yours. I pray for those present therein and all their needs. And I pray for those who cannot find themselves to be there, for whatever reason, and all their needs.
As your church worships, receive us, fill us, and then send us: Let our worship shape our lives according to your loving will for the world.
By your spirit & in Christ,
Amen.