I am re-reading Mark. John’s my favourite gospel
guy, followed by Luke, but the immediacy of Mark, our immediate immersion in a
fast-moving scenario of accelerating success grabs me every time.
Jesus issues his great call to repent and believe the good
news.
He heals most everyone, dramatically, and so “news about
him spread quickly over the whole region of Galilee.” He became the Obama or
Daniel Radcliffe of his day, “As a result, Jesus could no longer enter a town
openly, but stayed outside in lonely places. Still, people came to him from
everywhere.”
* * *
And then in Mark 2 1-12, so many gather to hear him preach
the word that there was no room left, not even outside the door.
(I have just been to hear some amazing speakers and
miracles workers, and I can testify there is the same spiritual hunger and
over-crowding today.)
And though it seems unfair, the pushy, the hungry, the
desperate are often rewarded. That’s one of Jesus’s puzzling sayings, “The Kingdom
of Heaven has been forcefully advancing, and forceful men lay hold of it.” Matt
11:12.
So instead of being polite, waiting their turn, which
surely seems to be the right thing to do, his friends cheekily dig though the
roof, and lower him in.
And, remarkably, and encouragingly for all those who pray
for their families, or do prayer ministry, Jesus heals him because of
the faith of his friends.
And—whoa!!—what interesting words of healing
“Son, your sins are forgiven.”
And those words, the forgiveness of sins, heals the man’s
paralysis.
*
* *
A river is a consistent Biblical metaphor for God—leaping,
rushing, dancing, forceful, iridescent, full of energy.
Never stagnant. Never “paralysed.”
Mental and emotional paralysis, or paralysis in any area
of one’s life, does not comes from God, in my opinion. The first chapters of
Genesis give us an insight into God’s nature—imaginative, fun, creative,
thinking, making, shaping, active—then punctuating six days of activity with a
day of complete rest, when “he rested from all this making.”
No paralysis there!!
* * *
When my daughter Zoe was born, I often wheeled her around
in her stroller to put her to sleep. (We never let our children cry themselves
to sleep—I considered that unthinkable—which, of course, meant hours of walking
or driving or holding them to sleep, or sleeping with them. Or vice-versa. Very
undisciplined.)
I had four major areas of need or “paralysis” which I used
to ask for God’s help with as I pushed Zoe in her pram.
1) My writing, in which I was paralysed
and perfectionistic, and worked with much painful second-guessing and
perfectionism, and without significant output.
2) Housekeeping. My house was messy, and
disorganized, and this upset me.
3) I was a night owl, and so woke late,
and this is not the most efficient thing.
4) I was overweight.
* * *
Over the last 18 years of following Christ with wobbles
and falls backwards, I am glad to report that my writing is flowing freely. The
house is no longer embarrassing. It’s not immaculate, but not messy either. We
tidy every room at least once a week (well, Roy does.)
I don’t wake early, but not ridiculously late either.
But weight! Alas, I am at my heaviest ever. I am failing.
And I don’t believe God intends this paralysis or failure.
* * *
And Jesus, mysteriously, heals the man’s physical
paralysis, by forgiving his sin, and he walks.
Is this a key? Repentance and receiving forgiveness
to break paralysis in any area of our lives. Paralysis like Paul describes in
Romans 7 when one knows and loves and desires what is good, but does not have
the power to pursue it.
* * *
Obviously, being overweight is not a sin, any more than
being paralysed is.
But, in my case, sin has led to it.
1) Using food as an all-purpose anaesthetic, when
sad, angry, stressed, depressed, low-energy, listless, bored, or fed-up.
2) Eating because I enjoyed the taste of good food, even
when not hungry. Eating foods not good for my body.
3) Putting off exercise because reading and writing were
more interesting.
And, so I spent some time today repenting of these
weaknesses, and asking for the blood of Christ to wash these sins away, and to
filled again with the spirit of Jesus, so that I remember to turn to him
instead of chocolate when sad, stressed, angry, bored etc.
That I remember to respect my body and not give it
excessive yummy stuff that is not good for it.
And the empowering of the spirit that I will make myself
exercise even when the laptop and books are more tempting.
Jesus, heal this paralysis.
* * *
I am reading The Anointing by R.T.
Kendall. The Anointing (among other things) is a divine enablement which makes
the difficult easy. Kendall stresses the need of getting a fresh anointing
every day, so that we do not continue using powerful spiritual gifts (preaching,
let’s say, or writing) in our own strength.
I think it’s the same when breaking free from an area of
paralysis in one’s life. You repent; God forgives you; gives you his Holy
Spirit on request, (Luke 11:13). But you are not yet home free. You need to
continue asking for fresh grace, fresh strength and enablement.
I have read testimonies of alcoholics and drug addicts or
heavy smokers who have been instantaneously healed from their addiction. I
myself have experienced a grace-enabled kicking of a coffee addiction.
Perhaps healing from something which has put tentacles
into the very way you function, such as emotional eating or using food as an
all-purpose anaesthetic can come all at once.
Or perhaps, step by step as the powerful waterfall of the
Holy Spirit and God’s grace breaks down the last filaments of bad habits.
Perhaps, it’s a daily process—just as acquiring knowledge or physical fitness
or a godly character is a long process. You sometimes tire, sometimes rest, but you
keep rowing.
But slow, or fast, Lord, heal me. Let there be no little
strongholds or holdouts to your full reign in me, body, mind, soul and spirit!
I should have said "Westerners" perhaps and not "Americans." So shameful to show my Ameri-centrism!
ReplyDeleteHi Charity,
ReplyDeleteLoved your blog and pictures. Yes, brain physiology (fat and sugar and carbs are addictive), means of production:added fat and sugar, and food de-nutrientized; and a food-everywhere culture make healthy, limited eating so much harder.
Hadn't thought of gratefulness as a way to counter emotional eating. Because, I guess, gratefulness fills the emptiness which one might otherwise try to fill with food.
Thank you, that was a v. useful insight for me:-)