Mark 2:3-5
3 Then they came to Him, bringing a paralytic who was
carried by four men. 4 And when they could not come near Him because of the
crowd, they uncovered the roof where He was. So when they had broken through,
they let down the bed on which the paralytic was lying.
5 When Jesus saw their faith, He said to the paralytic,
“Son, your sins are forgiven you.”
Mark 5:25-34
25 Now a certain woman had a flow of blood for twelve years,
26 and had suffered many things from many physicians. She had spent all that
she had and was no better, but rather grew worse. 27 When she heard about
Jesus, she came behind Him in the crowd and touched His garment. 28 For she
said, “If only I may touch His clothes, I shall be made well.”
29 Immediately the fountain of her blood was dried up, and
she felt in her body that she was healed of the affliction. 30 And Jesus,
immediately knowing in Himself that power had gone out of Him, turned around in
the crowd and said, “Who touched My clothes?”
31 But His disciples said to Him, “You see the multitude
thronging You, and You say, ‘Who touched Me?’”
32 And He looked around to see her who had done this thing.
33 But the woman, fearing and trembling, knowing what had happened to her, came
and fell down before Him and told Him the whole truth. 34 And He said to her,
“Daughter, your faith has made you well. Go in peace, and be healed of your
affliction.”
Contained within these two passages are the stories of a
desperate man and a desperate woman: The first is the story of a man who had
been paralyzed his entire life, and the second story is about a woman who had
been dealing with a medical condition for several years, had spent all her
money trying to find relief, but the doctors had no cure. There is absolutely
no doubt that these two individuals who, though their situations were extremely
different, their desperation led them to the same place.
People become desperate when they reach a point where all
hope of resolving their situation on their own is gone, and they are forced to
seek a solution outside of themselves. I know what this kind of desperation
feels like, because I’ve been there. You
reach the point where you realize that none of your efforts to change your
current situation have worked and you are willing to try just about anything. You
no longer care what anyone thinks or says, you are willing to be ridiculed if
it can bring you peace. You will go where you never thought you would go, you
won’t allow anything or anyone get in your way, because you’re desperate and
you’re are ready to take desperate measures.
Desperation is the condition that exists when a recognized
need is present and we have no way of meeting it on our own. God’s people are needy, every last one of us, but many are
stubborn, and few are willing to acknowledge their need. Desperation only comes
when there is a recognized need that is beyond our own ability to meet.
Webster’s Dictionary defines desperation as: feeling, showing,
or involving a hopeless sense that a situation is so bad, as to be impossible
to deal with.
Contrary to the way that most people traditionally view
desperation, I want to enlighten you today of the truth, desperation is not a
bad thing. The world has taught us that the last thing we want to be is
desperate. It is looked upon as a sign of weakness to ask for help. But from
God’s perspective, desperate people are those who are willing to acknowledge
that there are some circumstances that only He can rescue us from. God loves it when we are desperate, because in
our desperation we are forced to acknowledge that we need Him. There are many
promises contained in the pages of His Word that only come to those who are
desperate.
I believe the will of God is that every one of us would
reach some measure of desperation. I believe His message to us all is that we
have been examined by the great physician and diagnosed, “weary and heavy-laden.”
When I see in the pages of His Word the life that is
available to us, and then I see in my own life, in other believer’s lives and
in the church, the low level of spiritual life and the absence of spiritual
power, it creates a sense of emptiness in me, a recognition that we are many
times falling short of the glory that has been prepared for us, and it stirs in
me a feeling of desperation.
I am desperate today because I recognize the need for
spiritual power to reach the lost, to heal the sick, and to help set free those
in bondage, and because I know that only God can give us what we are lacking.
The desperate will receive their blessing from God because they
absolutely will not be kept from the presence of their healer by physical
boundaries! They are willing to press through hopeless circumstances just to
touch Him for a moment! They are willing
to shout out His name when the world around them discourages them and tries to
quiet their cries! They are willing to rip off a roofs to obtain an audience
with the Lord, push their way through the crowd, they won’t be offended – “even
the dogs eat the crumbs.”
Desperate people happily let go of their dignity for
an opportunity to be touched by deity. I don’t know about you, but I’m desperate for more than a
simple, basic Christian existence, I want to go beyond just getting by with the minimum requirements. I want to fulfill Christ's command to "go and make disciples of all nations." I want "these signs" to follow and His Spirit to flow in my life. I am desperate for, as the modern worship song proclaims, "more love, more power, more of you in my life." I am desperate for just a touch, just a glimpse of His glory, just a moment in His presence, so that I might receive the power promised to those who, in desperation, cry
out for more!
And I this morning feeling that very same hing before getting up. Thank you for helping put into word and prospetive. May we each identify with our own desperate need to be in His presence, receive His power, and do His bidding...why with all that we will be compelled to act, being so full of wonder and grace. Thank you, and bless you
ReplyDelete