Jesus said “I am willing. Be clean.” Did you realise that this applies to you and your situation too? Whatever the nature of your ‘uncleanness’, Jesus is willing and able to cleanse you and change your life.
Luke 5:12 begins “And it came to pass, when he was in a certain city, behold a man …”
This is a distinct change in language. Before this it was pure narrative, telling the story of the call of Peter, James and John. This change in style is meant to capture our attention. This is something different. It contains a story but it’s more than a story. It’s a teaching story, what would be called a ‘Maschil’ in the Psalms. It is a type, an example, a template. What we learn from this story applies not just to this instance but to all instances. That’s why the details don’t matter. It does not tell us when it happened or where it happened or the name of the man concerned. As to when, “it came to pass”; as to where “in a certain city”; as to whom “behold a man”.
This is deliberate, intentional. We cannot say that what happened here applies only to that particular time or place or person. Pause, and think about that, or, as the psalmist would say “selah”.
Now, to the story.
Jesus was in a city. Why does it tell us this? The difference between a village and a town or city is the number of people. A city speaks of lots of people. Among all these people there must have been many lepers yet we focus on one, behold a man. This man was full of leprosy. I love the way the author does not say “behold, a leper” but “behold, a man, full of leprosy”. I am not my sickness, I am not my sin, God does not see me that way.
Leprosy is a progressive disease, it eats your body little by little. It is a slow and lingering death as more and more of your body decays. Here was a man in the final stages because he is not simply described as having leprosy but being full of leprosy. Here is a man at the gates of death, hopeless and helpless who sees Jesus and reacts in an amazing way.
This man falls on his face, an attitude of absolute worship and calls Jesus “Lord”. He did not see just a man but he saw God in human flesh and worshipped Him.
There are many questions we could ask here. How did he recognize Jesus as God? Why did not other lepers come with him? Why was it that this man approached Jesus rather than Jesus approaching him?
When Peter recognized Jesus for who he was Jesus said that Peter was blessed because flesh and blood did not reveal that to him but His father in heaven. Seeing Jesus for who he is remains a gift from our Father in heaven, a gift He would gladly give to all for God is not willing that any should perish but that all should find salvation in His son.
Jesus was famous. What He did and what He said were spread abroad by one person telling another. It was gossip, it was news, it was a verbal report. As Isaiah has said “Who has believed our report? And to whom has the arm of the Lord been revealed?” There was no proof, it was a question of faith, you either believed the stories or not. This man obviously did and recognized that this was the promised Messiah, God in human flesh, Emmanuel.
We do not know who or what the man was before he became a leper, perhaps he was a priest or some other student of the scriptures. Once you become a leper your former profession or standing counts for nothing. Kings and priests become simply lepers.
Perhaps others believed but did not think God would be interested in helping them. No doubt, many of them believed that God was in some way responsible for their disease in the first place. We think God makes people sick either for punishment or as a blessing in disguise. The bible does not support this view.
Here, as in other parts of the gospels, we see that the people came to Jesus for help and Jesus healed all who came. We do not read that Jesus went into the hospitals or the leper colonies and healed all the people there. At the pool of Bethesda where many were waiting to be miraculously healed Jesus asked only one man “Do you want to get well?” Conversely, we do not read that any of those who came to Jesus were turned away; we read again and again that He healed all who came to him. We also read that again and again Jesus urged all the people to believe and to come to him for salvation.
It seems impossible to conclude from these facts that God chooses who gets healed and who doesn’t or that God chooses who gets saved and who doesn’t. From the facts we must conclude that God makes the offer to all but there must be a response from man in order for God to heal or to save. With this the scriptures agree. “For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son that whosoever believeth on Him should not perish but have eternal life.”
This man, full of leprosy, recognized Jesus as the messiah. He knew that God could heal him if he wanted to but had no idea whether God would want to or not. How many millions of people believe the same thing? This is a very common theology and it is this very question that the story before us addresses.
His request to the Lord was clear and unambiguous. “Lord, if you are willing you can make me clean.” Jesus does not hesitate, He does not explain that in some cases he would be but in other case he would not. Jesus makes an instant and amazing response. “He put forth his hand and touched him…” Nobody touches a leper, in those times everyone believed that that’s how you get leprosy. There was no other person in the world who would touch a leper but Jesus put forth his hand and touched him saying, “I will, be thou clean.” And immediately the leprosy departed from him.
We know that God is the same yesterday, today and forever, unchanging, eternally the same. There was an old and a new covenant in His relations with men but God remains constant. Why then do we believe that God’s will is variable and beyond knowing? When Jesus said “I am the Way, the Truth and the Life” he was always those things and will always be those things. When Jesus says “I am willing” does he mean that he is willing sometimes?
There are many who believe that healing is dependant on God’s varying will. If God wants you healed you will be healed and if God does not want you healed then you won’t be. This helps us make sense of our lives but it cannot be supported from scripture. If it was God’s will to heal the leper (specifically) we would read of Jesus approaching the leper but it was the leper who approached Jesus. If it was purely an affair of God’s will we would not read of Jesus saying to another who was healed “Your faith has made you well” because it would not be their faith but God’s will that effected the healing.
What the scriptures reveal to us is a willing God who requires a willing and believing human being to work through. The only time God plans to enforce His will is in judgement. In this age of grace it is not just up to God, we play a part in seeing God’s will come to pass.
In the story before us it was a city or town, lots of people, there must have been other lepers. If it was just up to God surely Jesus would have healed others there too.
We should let this story answer this question for us. Is God willing to cleanse us, heal us, save us? The answer is always yes. Knowing that God is willing should give us confidence to find a way into His presence and receive his touch and hear His voice. As long as we question his willingness we accept our sickness as His will for us and take a passive stance. If God wants to heal us He will. Why do we wait until we are in extremity, until we are ‘full’ of our sickness or problem before we press into God?
We have an enemy who is a deceiver, in fact, deception is his only real power and he is very good at it. That’s why we need to base our faith not simply on our experience or the common doctrine of others but on our study of the bible. We may interpret our experience to conclude that God sometimes heals and sometimes doesn’t and that the variable is God’s will at that particular time.