Tag Archive | The pool of Bethesda

Reading the Gospels in 2026 (6/25) John 5:1-15

Read and believe in Jesus

“Do you want to be healed?” John 5:6b

The Gospel according to John

REVIEW – Jesus is back in Galilee, after an evangelstically refreshing two days in Samaria. Right away desperate people rush to Jesus to have their needs met, First is an important man with a seriously ill son. Jesus does heal the boy, but is disappointed with His own people for their fixation on signs and miracles and not on His Words of Eternal Life.

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John 5:1-9.

Again Jesus goes up to Jerusalem for a Feast.

(There are three Feasts (out of the seven festivities) that God required (able-bodied) Jewisih men to attend in Jerusalem. Deuteronomy 16:16 names them as 1) the Feast of Unleavened Bread and Passover, 2) the Feast of Weeks (or Pentecost), and 3).the Feast of Tabernacles/Booths. Two are in the first half of the year, one occurs in the fall. John does not name this one, and as his gospel is not always chronological, we can’t be sure. Many believe it is Passover when this incident happens.)

(Note: the other Holy Days are: the Feast of First Fruits, after passiver, the Feast of Trumpets (in the fall), and the Day of Atonement. There are also two Festivals that were man-initiated that were celebrated: Purim in the spring, to commermorate Queen Esther’s victory, and the Festival of Lights (Hannucha), in December, to celebrate the victory of the Macabees.)

ANYWAY….. Jesus went up to Jerusalem for a “feast of the Jews” when this incident of chapter five took place. And here we begin to really see open opposition to Jesus by the religious leaders increase (romorrow’s reading). And it has to do with the Sabbath.

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John describes a pool by the Sheep Gate. This small gate was in the northern part of the city and Temple mount where sheep could be brought in for sacrifice.

Nearby was the 5-sided pool called Bethesda. There was a story about this pool. As it goes, when the waters ruffled (probably from the underground sping thaf fed it), it was a sign of an angel’s presence, and the first invalid into the pool after it happened, would be healed. Many, many sick individuals lay around this pool for years and years waiting for that miracle.

One such man was approached by Jesus. “Do you want to be healed?” Jesus asked.

This seems peculiar. Why wouldn’t the man WANT to be healed? But Jesus knows all hearts. Perhaps he had gotten so used to lying there for 38 years. He had like-fellows around him that he knew, and perhaps chatted with. He collected a small amount of alms for food. He had no responsibilities. DID he really WANT to be healed and become a part of regular society?

Notice that his answer wasn’t “Yes!”

He said, “Sir, I have no one to put me into the pool when the water is stirred up. While I’m going,(crawling?) another gets there befre me.”

Enough with the nonsense. Jesus commands, “Get up. Take up your bed. And walk.” And he did. (No one refuses a command of hte Lord Jesus.) And he was healed.

AND… that day was the SABBATH.

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John 5:10-15.

Now, in the Old Testament, work was forbidden on the Sabbath day. (Exodus 20:8-11). It was assumed tht this mean one’s cistomary job (farming, teaching, selling, plumbing, computer repairing … etc.) Very easy to understand. Of course if emergencies came up (your cow fell in a well) it was okay to deal with it. BUT, through the years, the rabbis sought to “protect the law” by hedging it in with more and more details about what exactly “no work” meant. And by Jesus’ time, it had gotten ridiculous.

“It is the Sabbath. It is not lawful for you to take up your bed (a mat),” said the Jews to the man who had been crippled for 38 years and had just then been miracously healed.

Not willing to assume guilt for breaking the “law,” the healed man said, “The man who healed me, that man told me to take up my bed and walk.” WHERE was the exuberance at beeing healed?? Why wasn’t he “walking and leaping and praising God”?

Granted, the man did not KNOW who Jesus was. It was crowded and Jesus had withdrawn. But where was the gratitude?

Later, Jesus found him in the temple (He could now enter the temple for he was no longer crippled).

“See, you are well! Sin no more, that nothing worse may happen to you,” Jesus said befre slipping away again. Hmmm. What did THAT mean?

Well, the man then went to the religious leaders and told them that it was Jesus who had healed him.

And tomorrow, we will see what trouble for Jesus that “tattling” caused.