Today,
Saint John speaks of the parable of the pool of Bethzatha. It rather
looked like the waiting room of a traumathology hospital. «There
lay a multitude of sick people-blind, lame and paralyzed» (Jn
5:3). Jesus went up there.
It's
rather curious!: Jesus manages to be found always in the middle of
some problem. Wherever He goes, there is always somebody to be
“liberated”; there He is when it comes to making people
happy. The Pharisees, instead, were concerned only over the fact it
was Saturday. Their bad faith was killing their spirit. Sin's nasty
features were showing through their eyes. There's no worse deaf
man than he who does not want to hear.
The
protagonist of the miracle had been disabled for thirty eight long
years. «Do you want to be healed?» (Jn 5:6), Jesus
says to him. He had since long ago been struggling in the void for he
had not found Jesus. At long last, he had found the Man. The five
galleries of the pool of Bethzatha boomed out upon hearing the
Master's voice: «Stand up, take your mat and walk» (Jn
5:8). It was just a matter of an instant.
Jesus Christ's voice is
the voice of God. Everything was anew with that old disabled man,
spent by dejection. Much later, Saint John Crisostom will say that in
Bethzatha pool sick people cured their bodies, while in the Baptism
those same sick cure their soul; over there, one only sick could
eventually be cured, every now and then. Baptism, however, cures
always and everybody. In both cases God's power is evidenced through
water.
That helpless disabled
man, close to the water, does not remind you of our own helplessness
to do good? How can we dare solving by ourselves that which has a
supernatural scope? Don't you see, every day, around you, a big crowd
of disabled ones that are “moving” themselves a lot,
while being totally unable to get rid of their lack of freedom? Sin
paralyzes man, grows him old, kills him... We have to fix our eyes in
Jesus. We need him —his Grace— to plunge us into the
waters of prayer, of confession, of the opening of our spirit. You
and I may be eternal disabled persons, or, on the contrary, bearers
of his light instruments.