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Scriptural Insights with Chuck Swindoll – Disease and Desperation

The scene by the Pool of Bethesda must have been a soul-rending experience for any visitor with the capacity for empathy. Thanks to modern medicine, these horrific collections of desperately infirm people no longer exist … almost.


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When I served on the island of Okinawa, I played in the Third Division Marine Corps band. On one occasion, we were invited to a leprosarium on the north end of Okinawa to play a concert. The memory of those men and women will never leave me. Mangled bodies stumbled and pushed and pulled themselves along, each one bearing remnants of a human face. They sat in neat rows of chairs provided for them and they listened in rapt attention to our music. I could barely play my instrument through the sadness weighing upon my heart, seeing bodies horrifically distorted by the disease we now call Hansen’s disease. I’ll never forget the sound of their applause, which they offered by banging stumps of limbs together or tapping their crutches on the floor or against their chairs.

I would have given almost anything to have the power of healing that day. What a joy it must have been for Jesus to reach down into the sea of human depravity and snatch a soul from the clutches of disease! I sometimes wonder why He didn’t empty the asklempieion in Jerusalem instead of choosing just one man. Because He is good and infinitely wise, I trust His judgment. After all, He left the pristine realm of heaven to become one of us, to share our suffering, to experience death, and ultimately to end the tyranny of evil through His own sacrifice.

One day soon, Jesus will empty the hospitals, the leper colonies, and even the graveyards of the world. Then we will live in a world without darkness, sin, suffering, disease, and death. We have His promise on that. And I, for one, passionately anticipate that glorious day!

Here a great number of disabled people used to lie—the blind, the lame, the paralyzed. One who was there had been an invalid for thirty-eight years. When Jesus saw him lying there and learned that he had been in this condition for a long time, he asked him, "Do you want to get well?"

"Sir," the invalid replied, "I have no one to help me into the pool when the water is stirred. While I am trying to get in, someone else goes down ahead of me."

Then Jesus said to him, "Get up! Pick up your mat and walk." 9At once the man was cured; he picked up his mat and walked.  – John 5:3-9a

Read more from Chuck Swindoll at www.SwindollInsights.com

 

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Scriptural Insights with Chuck Swindoll – No Good Deed Unpunished

I landed at a packed airport. Claiming my luggage was more tedious than usual and I dreaded the shuttle ride to the car rental lot. As soon as the little bus arrived, I took a seat behind the driver as a small army crammed in after me. I quickly noticed that some women were left standing in the center, holding a strap in one hand and steadying their luggage with the other. I thought, What a shame. So I stood up to offer my seat to the closest lady.


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I met her eyes and said, “Would you li–”

“What’s wrong?” she snapped.

“Nothing. Would you like–”

“No, I can stand!”

I need to mention that the year was 1974, not long after Bobby Riggs lost “the battle of the sexes” tennis match to Billie Jean King.

I glanced toward another woman for a moment, but when she gave me the evil eye, I decided to sit down and shut up. That’s the day I learned that with some people, you can never win. Even the kindest deed done with the purest motivation can blow up in your face. Don’t take it personally; most of the world is braced for impact and just doesn’t know what to do with a simple act of kindness.

Read the story of the Samaritan woman at the well in John 4:1-26.
Read more from Chuck Swindoll at www.SwindollInsights.com

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Scriptural Insights with Chuck Swindoll – God with Us

The truth of Christ’s dual nature—His unblemished deity and His complete humanity—is vitally important theologically, but it’s crucial in a practical sense as well. When I feel tempted to shake a fist at the heavens or wonder if God is being cruelly indifferent while I suffer down here on earth, John’s gospel reminds me of an important truth. When Adam brought sin into the world, and death with sin (Rom. 5:12), the Lord could have incinerated the world as just punishment and He would have been no less holy or righteous. But He didn’t. Furthermore, when we sin—as individuals and collectively as humans—God has every right to turn His back and say, “Fine. Run the world your way. The mess you make of it is yours to bear.” But He doesn’t.



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On the contrary, the Creator voluntarily became one of us in the person of Jesus Christ, who suffered as we suffer, who was tempted as we are tempted, and who endured injustice as we will never know—yet without sin. I am comforted to know that God understands and empathizes. Through His incarnation, we can appreciate His compassion more fully. Because he lived and died as a man, we can more easily accept that, in His resurrection, the Son is for us even while we feel abandoned, mistreated, or punished by God.

The Word became flesh and made his dwelling among us. We have seen his glory, the glory of the One and Only, who came from the Father, full of grace and truth. – John 1:14

Read more from Chuck Swindoll at www.SwindollInsights.com

 

About Charles Swindoll

Charles R. Swindoll has devoted his life to the clear, practical teaching and application of God’s Word. He currently pastors Stonebriar Community Church in Frisco, Texas, and serves as the chancellor of Dallas Theological Seminary. His renowned Insight for Living radio program airs around the world. Chuck and Cynthia, his partner in life and ministry, have four grown children and ten grandchildren.

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Scriptural Insights with Chuck Swindoll – Innocence Lost

When you become a grandparent, you cannot help but see things differently. Our first step on the road to maturity is a sudden awakening to the fact that the world is not always a good place. Then, after decades of trying to get a handle on the presence of evil in a universe over which God is sovereign, a grandchild brings you full circle again. As you gather that little one into your arms, suddenly glimmer s of something you lost a long time ago flicker in the corner of your mind’s eye. And if you don’t look too hard, you’ll discover it’s the precious, fleeting quality of childlike wonder.

Remember childlike wonder? Puppets really talk. The department store Santa travels all the way from the North Pole just to visit your town. Uncle Bob truly ca n pull a quarter from someone’s ea r and Daddy is, in fact, larger than life. And God really did create the universe, which He continues to watch over wit h fatherly interest. But something sad, yet necessary happened. We grew up to see the world as it really is. We learned the u n happy truth behind puppets and cheap Santa costumes. Sleight of hand tricks no longer mesmerize and Daddy came down to size all too quickly. And, then . . . what of God? In the process of g rowing up, have we abandoned the very quality that Jesus said we must have if we are to embrace His kingdom (Matt. 18:4; Mark 10:15; Luke 18:17)?


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In the early 1920s, humanity enjoyed a few fleeting moment s of childlike wonder when Edwin Hubble pointed the world’s largest telescope toward a dim portion of the sky and made a startling disc over y. Until then, everyone thought the universe was limited to our own Milky Way galaxy. Hubble’s research proved otherwise. What were once thought to be distant stars turned out to be galaxies, many thousands of them. Suddenly, the universe was a great deal bigger, humankind looked a great deal less knowledgeable, and, for a moment — a precious, fleeting moment — humankind gazed with childlike wonder at the magnificence of God’s creation.

Unfortunately, our brush with innocence did not last. As humankind has done for countless millennia, we traded childlike wonder for something easier to manage: the visible for the invisible. And, all at once, our fleeting encounter with truth gave way to a long series of big bang theories and something-from-nothing speculations.

“For since the creation of the world God’s invisible qualities – his eternal power and divine nature – have been clearly seen, being understood from what has been made, so that men are without excuse. For although they knew God, they neither glorified him as God nor gave thanks to him, but their thinking became futile and their foolish hearts were darkened.” – Romans 1:20-21

Read more from Chuck Swindoll at www.SwindollInsights.com

About Charles Swindoll

Charles R. Swindoll has devoted his life to the clear, practical teaching and application of God's Word. He currently pastors Stonebriar Community Church in Frisco, Texas, and serves as the chancellor of Dallas Theological Seminary. His renowned Insight for Living radio program airs around the world. Chuck and Cynthia, his partner in life and ministry, have four grown children and ten grandchildren.

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