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Sunday of the Paralytic 4th Sunday after Easter by the
V. Rev. Archimandrite Panteleimon P. Lampadarios
Patriarchal Vicar of Alexandria |
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The
life of the Paralytic, who waited at the sheep pool, which in Hebrew is
called Bethesda, was dramatic. For thirty eight years he was paralized
and abandoned. Alone, amongst so many ill people and fellow country men,
waited with patiently the miraculous movement of the waters, which cured
the first person to fall in. In this environment Christ meets with the
paralytic. God meets with His creation. The God-man with man. Christ approached with philanthropic intentions
the Paralytic and asks him: Do you want to be sound?
The Lord with discretion asks, in order to cure; with love He seeks, in
order to save. The Paralytic waited patiently for thirty
eight whole years and his hopes were never wear down, he never disbelieved,
he never drew back. He awaited, although all his friends and relatives
had abandoned him. Everyone returned back to their homes, works, families,
because they saw that nothing is happening. In vain they were trying to
help their relative, to throw him in the pool. Meanwhile others, more
advance, were healed and he remained ill. Their faith and hopes had wear
away and they abandon him. The paralytic expressed his complain to Christ
by saying, Lord, I have no one to assist me. Lord, I have no one! I have no relatives! I have no
friends! I havent any fellow man, who would like to stay with me!
I remained alone, in the loneliness of my illness and my sufferings, and
no one is found to offer me help! Every day, the five galleries of the pool
of Bethesda were full of crowds and invalid, but nevertheless no one was
willing to share the Paralytics sufferings. As, today, millions
of people suffer from different bodily or spiritual diseases, and all
with one voice cry out: Lord, we have no one! Diseases,
which torment man and deliver him to depression and affliction; to isolation
and loneliness; and man cries out with a loud voice: Lord,
we have no one! Affliction and pain are interwoven with our life. Wealth
and material goods do not prevent their invasion into our life. They are
brought in by the malaises and sicknesses of our beloved ones. They are
brought in by the ingratitutes of friends and relatives. They are brought
in by the slanders and mucks. They are brought in by suspiciousness and
misunderstandings. They are brought in, when our work and services are
not recognized; by feelings, which were rebuted and hopes, which were
never fulfilled. Affliction and pain stand before mans life and
knock the door of all. They do not know anyone or any society, conditions
or positions. They do not distiguish between poor and rich, learned or
illiterate. The Paralytic of todays Gospel reading,
followed a programme of a sinful way of life. The Lord, is not satisfied
to cure him. The sins of the paralytic had ruined him. It would be worthy
to cure him, but under the precondition, that he will sin no more. Sin and the prodigal way of life are the
reasons of mans different tribulations. Our moral and family sufferings
have their roots in our own desires. We cause them with our own foolish
behaviour and sinful deeds. And because of this reason, our Lord commended
the Paralytic, You have become well; sin no more, so that
nothing worse happens to you in other words, now you have
been heeled, be careful not to practice a sinful life, in order that nothing
worse happens to you. Unfortunately, although all of us know that
this advice is so logical and true, we tend to violate it. We allow our
pride to overrule our logic. We run the risk of participating in mischievously
amusements, irrational alcoholism, paranoid smoking, unnecessary vigils
when playing cards, unlawfully sexual relationships, and calamitous companies
with evil men. How many times, although we had promise,
that we shall not sin, we had found ourselves in the mortal tentacles
of sin? How many times, although we had the will to withstand to our sinful
desires, we had from the first moments surrendered to the passions of
the flesh? How many times we felt strong, but have been proven weak? If the soul is not under Gods Grace,
sin will always prevail. Sin drags and humiliates man. The Prophet David
says, If the Lord has not built the city, in vain the builders
labour. If the Lord has not protected the city, in vain the guards watched
all night. When man sins, he sins with a ill will, without
moral strength. Thus man, who becomes a slave to sin, is compared to an
ungovernable ship, which has no helm, neither compass nor anchor. This
condition makes man paralytic spiritually and bodily. At the end he is
dragged to death itself. St. Paul, the Great Apostle of the Nations, says,
The bread of sin is death (Rom. 6:23). How miserable
am I who will deliver me from this body of death? and
he answers, through our Lord Jesus Christ (Rom. 7:24-25),
because the grace of God is eternal life (Rom.
6:23). And truly, my beloved friends, sin can be overcomed
only with the assistance of Gods Grace. Our Lord has assured us
saying, that without Me you can achieve nothing (John
15:5). My beloved friends in Christ, Today, we cannot find the proper words to describe the theology of St. Paul who proclaimed, God has shown His love to us, that when we were still sinners Christ died for us (Rom. 5:8), in order that He offers us the adoption (Gal. 4:5) and to be inheritors of God, co-inheritors of Jesus Christ (Rom. 8:17). Let us then struggle to shake off the paralytic sinful life and the spiritual mortification, and with the Grace of the Resurrected Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ to receive the health of our soul and body; to become a whole personality in Christ; and generally for our whole life to be a doxology of Gods glory. Amen.
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