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Without the personal touch, full healing never comes
.
Jesus was a toucher. He allowed people to
touch him — like a sinful woman of the city and a woman with a flow of blood
who pushed through the crowd - He offered to let his apostles touch His wounds
received during His crucifixion. Jesus touched and was touched by the mess of
our humanity. He didn't run away - He didn't jump up and wash his hands - He
stayed - He touched - He healed - He made whole. He allowed himself to be
soiled by the very dust of our existence. God comes to earth in Jesus. Jesus is
born as one of us - Jesus lives as one of us - Jesus touches the worst of us
and the worst that life throws at us
by Phil Ware
The
Jesus Window
Touch
has always been important to me.
As a
boy with a touch of ADD — or maybe a lot more than a touch of ADD — I was never
good at sitting still.
Some
people believe I became a preacher because I had such a hard time being still
in church during the sermon.
However,
when I was a little boy, my dad would set me on his lap, and I would be still
for 5 or 10 minutes at a time.
His
secret? He would lightly stroke the lines on my hands.
His
gentle touch would calm me. I would gladly be still, sit quietly, and sometimes
go to sleep feeling his loving touch on my hands!
Years
later, nothing calms my soul quite like my wife, Donna, gently stroking my back
or tousling my hair as I go to sleep.
I
feel loved. I feel safe.
I
feel relieved of my problems, responsibilities, and deadlines. I fall fast
asleep, joyous and unburdened from the world and its pressing demands.
Jesus was a toucher.
When you read the stories of his life in Matthew, Mark,
Luke, and John, you see him touch all sorts of people — like a dead little girl
to raise her from the dead, a blind man's eyes, and the dirty, stinky feet of
the apostles.
He also allowed people to touch him — like a sinful woman
of the city and a woman with a flow of blood who pushed through the crowd.
To validate his physical resurrection, he offered to let
his apostles touch his wounds received during his crucifixion.
John, the beloved disciple, speaks beautifully of Jesus'
ministry of touching and being touched with these words:
“We want to tell you about the One who was from the
beginning. We have seen Him with our own eyes, heard Him with our own ears, and
touched Him with our own hands” - (1 John 1:1 The Voice)
Jesus
is our tactile Savior; he touched and was touched by the mess of our humanity.
He
didn't run away. He didn't jump up and wash his hands. He stayed. He touched.
He healed. He made whole.
He
allowed himself to be soiled by the very dust of our existence.
Once
I realized that Jesus was a toucher, I was totally captured by Mark's story of
Jesus touching a man with leprosy:
Jesus:
“’It's time we went somewhere else — the next village,
maybe — so I can tell more people the good news about the kingdom of God. After
all, that's the reason I'm here.’
“So He traveled to the next village and the one after
that, throughout the region of Galilee, teaching in the synagogues and casting
out unclean spirits.
“A leper walked right up to Jesus, dropped to his knees,
and begged Him for help.”
Leper:
“’If You want to, You can make me clean.’
“Jesus was powerfully moved. He reached out and actually
touched the leper.”
Jesus:
“’I do want to. Be clean.’
“And at that very moment, the disease
left him; the leper was cleansed and made whole once again”
He allowed himself to be soiled by the very dust of our existence.
.
I cannot over-emphasize the profound impact this event had on my heart when I heard it clearly for the first time.
.
I cannot over-emphasize the profound impact this event had on my heart when I heard it clearly for the first time.
Jesus
touched the man with leprosy BEFORE he healed the man.
Jesus
did what he was prohibited from doing; he touched a leper.
He
became unclean.
He
willingly exposed himself to a man and his illness even though the man was
shunned and feared because of his illness.
Jesus
entered into the world of ostracism, brokenness, illness, isolation, and death
to rescue a person and make that person fully whole again.
Jesus
never saw a leper. Instead, he saw a man with leprosy who needed to be loved
and healed.
He
loved this man personally — a man who had been pushed to the brink of survival
and isolated on the outskirts of humanity by his own religious laws.
.
Jesus' humanity and compassion, Jesus placing human need above the religious law, stirs something deep inside me.
.
Jesus' humanity and compassion, Jesus placing human need above the religious law, stirs something deep inside me.
We
see the gospel demonstrated; the truth of God's grace told beautifully, simply,
succinctly, and fully in a touch.
God
comes to earth in Jesus.
Jesus
is born as one of us. Jesus lives as one of us.
Jesus
touches the worst of us and the worst that life throws at us.
Jesus
brings us back to God cleansed, whole, and holy (Colossians 1:15-23).
The
example of Jesus beckons us to join our Lord and Savior in touching the
unlovable, the marginalized, the sinful, the forgotten, the isolated, and the
sick.
We need to ask ourselves each morning, "Who am I
going to touch with the grace of Jesus today?"
For this series, unless otherwise indicated, the Bible
verses will come from The Voice translation. The references are also linked to the
NIV for comparison.
This post is the final part of a series focused on
learning to touch the broken and impact their lives in ways similar to Jesus'
ministry to the man with leprosy (Mark 1:35-45). Here are the six parts in the series and
links back to those posts: Look — Pray — Purpose — Touch — Raised — Proof
Phil
Ware
has authored 11 years of daily devotionals, including VerseoftheDay.com,
read by 500,000 people a day. He works with churches in transition with Interim Ministry
Partners and for the past 21+ years, he has been editor and president
of HEARTLIGHT Magazine, author of VerseoftheDay.com, God's
Holy Fire (on the Holy Spirit), and aYearwithJesus.com.
Phil has also authored four books, daily devotionals on each of the four gospels.
(Visit the
Author's Website)
Heartlight Provides Positive
Resources for Daily Christian Living.
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