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A Man with a Need

Truth for Life / Alistair Begg
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April 26, 2025 3:56 am

A Man with a Need

Truth for Life / Alistair Begg

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April 26, 2025 3:56 am

Jesus didn’t come into a broken world to make sure we’re happy; He came to address our essential need. Find out what that is and how Jesus dealt with it. Study along with Truth For Life as Alistair Begg begins a series called An Extraordinary Encounter.



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This listener-funded program features the clear, relevant Bible teaching of Alistair Begg. Today’s program and nearly 3,000 messages can be streamed and shared for free at tfl.org thanks to the generous giving from monthly donors called Truthpartners. Learn more about this Gospel-sharing team or become one today. Thanks for listening to Truth For Life!









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Welcome to Truth for Life Weekend, where we are beginning a series called, And over the next few weekends, Alistair Begg will be exploring stories about face-to-face encounters with Jesus.

He did not come into our broken world to make sure we're happy. He came to address our most essential need. Today we'll find out what that is and how Jesus deals with it. And he was preaching the word to them. And they came, bringing to him a paralytic carried by four men. And when they could not get near him because of the crowd, they removed the roof above him.

And when they'd made an opening, they let down the bed on which the paralytic lay. And when Jesus saw their faith, he said to the paralytic, Son, your sins are forgiven. Now some of the scribes were sitting there questioning in their hearts, Why does this man speak like that?

He is blaspheming. Who can forgive sins but God alone? And immediately Jesus, perceiving in his spirit that they thus questioned within themselves, said to them, Why do you question these things in your hearts? Which is easier, to say to the paralytic, Your sins are forgiven, or to say, Rise, take up your bed and walk?

But that you may know that the Son of Man has authority on earth to forgive sins. He said to the paralytic, I say to you, Rise, pick up your bed and go home. And he rose and immediately picked up his bed and went out before them all, so that they were all amazed and glorified God, saying, We never saw anything like this. We've turned to these familiar verses for those of us who know our Bibles, because here we have Jesus dealing with one man's brokenness.

Not, of course, the brokenness with which he was preoccupied, as we're about to discover. Now, if you have your Bible open, I'll just walk you through it. Mark describes the scene for us. In verse 2, he tells us that the crowds are flocking to Jesus, that there are so many people who are coming that there is now no longer room inside, nor is there room outside.

And therefore, anyone else who wants to come has an immediate problem. The crowds are flocking to Jesus, and what is Jesus doing? Well, I think it's very important that we notice that little sentence at the end of verse 2. And he was preaching the word to them. He was preaching the word to them. That had really caught his followers off guard when they had announced to him—you'll see this towards the end of chapter 1—when they had announced to him, when they discovered him in the early hours of the morning, out by himself in a solitary place and at prayer, when they told him that everything had gone terrifically well on the previous evening. The crowds had come, and folks were set free from demons, and others were healed. And the inference in the expectation of the disciples is that Jesus, having begun in such a wonderful way, should just keep this going. And Jesus had rocked them on their heels when he said, Let's get out of here. We're going to go to another place. We're going to go to villages around here, so that I can preach the gospel to them, for that is why I have come.

That's very, very important. Jesus is involved in the ministry of the Word. Jesus is involved in proclaiming the Word. He is the living Word. He proclaims the Word of God. And in this crowd that has gathered in this home on this particular day, he is doing what he said he had come to do, teaching them the Word, explaining to them what the prophets were saying, bringing them forward in their understanding of things. He wanted them to understand what it meant to repent and to believe the good news, to turn around, to stop going in their own direction, to be in in his direction, to leave a broad road that is full of people and leads to destruction, and enter through a narrow gate into a narrow road that leads to life, which few people actually find. I wonder, have you entered through that gate?

I wonder, have you done that turnaround? I wonder, are you here this morning, just as somebody who is interested in these things, involved, perhaps, tangentially with the affairs of Christianity, and yet yourself, never touched and changed by the power of Christ? C. S. Lewis was actually like that. C. S. Lewis was brought up within the framework of orthodox Christian faith, turned his back on it around the ages of 12 or 13, decided that he had enough for a lifetime and moved on. And then, in his little autobiography, Surprised by Joy, he describes that wonderful occasion, when the penny dropped, and when the understanding dawned, and when he knelt by his bed in Cambridge and declared himself, presumably at that time, to be the most reluctant convert, he said, in all of England. Later on, in writing, he described how when he arrived in Oxford, he got off the train and he turned the wrong way. And as a result of turning the wrong way, he was walking out of Oxford rather than walking into Oxford. And he describes how, as he walked away, he was saying to himself, this isn't much of a place at all. He was unimpressed by the buildings, they were getting worse rather than better, and the shop fronts didn't look much to him, until he said, I stopped and turned around. And when I stopped and turned around, then I saw the magnificence of Oxford, then I saw the spires, then I saw the towers, then I knew where I was. And on making that observation, he says, and this little adventure was an allegory of my entire life.

Have you ever stopped and turned around? Jesus gathers this crowd and speaks to them the word. The crowd gathers, Jesus preaches, and a paralyzed man appears. Verse three, and they came bringing to him a paralytic carried by four men, four of his friends, clearly determined that they will get him in to see Jesus, and encountering the circumstances, determined there is only one solution, and that is they should go through the roof.

They are presumably watching eagerly to see what will happen. They have brought the man there so that Jesus might do for them what they anticipate, but none of them could have been ready for what they heard. None of them would anticipate the first words from the mouth of Jesus. They made the opening, they let down the bed on which the paralytic lay, and when Jesus saw their faith, he said to the paralytic, Son, your sins are forgiven you.

What? The man had an obvious problem. They believed that Jesus had the answer to his problem, but what a strange response. They had brought this man there for a visible change, not for an invisible forgiveness. Surely, for Jesus to react in this way was inappropriate, if not entirely irrelevant. After all, there's nothing to suggest that there was any correlation between the man's illness and his sinfulness, as if he was a paralytic because he had sinned badly. The book of Job warns us against equating someone's sin with their suffering. So why does Jesus say your sins are forgiven?

The answer ought to be obvious. Because he's putting his finger on the man's greatest need, that is, the need for forgiveness. Jesus wasn't disinterested in the man's physical condition.

As we're going to see, he heals him. Nor is Jesus unconcerned about your health or your marriage or your relationships. But listen to me carefully and check in the Bible to see if you don't discover that Jesus did not come to add to the sum of our total happiness. He didn't come simply to repair superficial relationships. He didn't come simply to make our lives a little better as we went our way through this weary tale of our existence.

No, he didn't do that. He came to restore us to a relationship with the living God for whom we were created. After all, as the Scottish catechism reminds us, the chief end of man, the reason for man's existence, is to glorify God and to enjoy him forever. But man has turned his back on God.

We enjoy ourselves more than we enjoy pleasing him. And so Jesus puts his finger on the man's essential need. Well, you might expect with a phraseology like that that the religious establishment that was present would immediately say, Now we're going.

That's the kind of thing we should be dealing with. But the reverse is the case. Verse five, now some, or six, now some of the scribes were sitting there questioning in their hearts. Now Jesus has already been opposed. You only need to go back to chapter one and you discover that he is immediately opposed by the devil in the wilderness. He's then opposed by the demons in the synagogue. But now in this particular house, in the context of compassion and forgiveness, we might have expected that the religious establishment would have been on his side. It's not so much that their theology is horrible, it's quite good, but their deduction is off.

What do they say? Well, listen, who can forgive sins but God alone? Well, the answer to that is nobody. So they're perfectly right on that one. But they then say, But this man must be blaspheming.

Why? Because they assume that Jesus Christ is a mere man. They assume that Jesus is not the Messiah. They assume that Jesus cannot be God.

It is impossible for them to conceive of such a thing. And therefore, for an individual, not least of all a Galilean carpenter, to show up in this kind of context, no matter what he'd been doing the previous few days, and to make a pronouncement like this is absolutely wrong. So Jesus, perceiving what is in their hearts, says, Well, I've got a question for you. Which is easier, verse 9, to say to the paralytic, Your sins are forgiven, or to say, Rise, take up your bed, and walk? It's a great question. Jesus is masterful when he turns the tables on the religious establishment.

He does it with consummate skill, doesn't he? Just twist their nose just a little bit, just to make them go, ooh, and sometimes worse than ooh. So what are they going to say for this? Which is easier, to say, Your sins are forgiven, or to pick up your mat? Well, from one perspective, it is far easier to say, Your sins are forgiven, isn't it?

I could say to you, Your sins are forgiven. That's unverifiable. How would you know whether they were or whether they weren't?

There'd be no way to tell. But if I were to say to you, paralyzed, lying on the floor, pick up your bed and go home, then immediately someone's going to find out whether I know what I'm doing and whether I have the power to bring about the transformation. So says Jesus, since I've done the easier part, from your perspective, to say, Your sins are forgiven, and in order that you might know who I am, then I'll just say, Take up your bed and walk. Actually, he says more than that. He says, In order that you may know that the Son of Man has authority on earth to forgive sins. Now, that was a very important little piece of the puzzle for the Jewish mind. They knew the Son of Man. They knew what that meant.

They knew the prophecy of Daniel. And behold, with the clouds of heaven there came one like a Son of Man, and he came to the Ancient of Days and was presented before him, and to him was given dominion and glory and a kingdom that all the peoples, the nations, and the languages should serve him. His dominion is an everlasting dominion which shall not pass away, and his kingdom one that shall not be destroyed. That's the terminology Jesus uses. He says, You don't know who you're talking to. So in order that you might know that the Son of Man—which is his favorite personal designation—in order that you might know that the Son of Man has authority on earth to forgive sins, let's just have this fellow take his bed and go home and see his wife.

Stand up, take up your mat, and go home. No, you see, the authority of Jesus to forgive sins is on the basis of his identity. On the basis of his identity. When we as Christians say to our friends, Look, Jesus Christ came to save sins. We have to talk, first of all, about sins, about our embracing of that which is opposed to God or disinterested in God. But when we then say that Jesus has authority to forgive sins, we're not being proud, we're not being presumptuous. Jesus is the only one in the entire universe who can forgive sins. Jesus is the only Savior because he is the only one who is qualified to save.

There is no one else can do it. These fellows regarded it as blasphemy. Some of our friends regard it as ridiculous. On what basis can he make such a statement? Because as Jesus looks into the eyes of that man whom he addresses in this way, he realizes where he's heading. He's going to the cross. And the forgiveness that he proffers, which is free to all who believe, comes at great cost to himself. Because in the cross, Jesus was going to bear the punishment that sin deserves in order that men and women who trust in him might enjoy a forgiveness that by nature we don't deserve. Pharisees who are trying to work their way to heaven will never understand this.

Our contemporaries, who if they have any notion of God, believe essentially that a good God will reward nice people if they simply do their best. They have no place then for a cross which stands before them at the very crossroads of life. This is why, loved ones, the cross of Jesus is absolutely central to our proclamation of what we do. It's possible for me to do Mark chapter 2 and say, I talked to you this morning about four men who were very nice to their friend, and they wanted him to meet Jesus so badly that he even tore a roof off, and they dropped him down, and then to lay a big guilt trip on you, which goes like this. And how many roofs have you torn off recently in order to bring your friends to Jesus? So get out here and bring your friends to Jesus.

And the person says, I just taught the Bible. No, you didn't. No, you absolutely didn't. There is a subpoint in passing, but it is not the emphasis of the passage. It can't possibly be. No, because the whole Bible is a book about what God has done for us in Jesus. It's not ultimately a book about what we do for Jesus in order to please God.

You can't put the cart before the horse. I love it when I find stories about people in Scotland, and in my notes, I was thinking that since we've come to the cross, it makes me think of hymns about the cross, and then it made me think of a verse from a hymn, which goes, O safe and happy shelter, O refuge tried and sweet, O tristing place where heaven's love and heaven's justice meet. Tristing place. T-r-y-s-t-i-n-g. Exam. Trist, colon, define.

What is a trist? I shall tell you, because I can see you're staring at me. An appointment to meet at a certain place or time, especially one made somewhere secretly by lovers.

An appointment to meet at a certain place and time, especially one made secretly by lovers. I just said, now that is interesting. I've got to find out about the lady that wrote this hymn.

So I checked. I found out that her name was Elizabeth Clafine. She lived her life in the borders of Scotland in Melrose. She died at the age of 39 unmarried. She had two sisters.

She was known affectionately in the small town as Sunbeam. She should have written, Jesus wants me for a Sunbeam, but that is not what she wrote. She wrote this. So I thought to myself, isn't it quite remarkable that a lady who presumably had seen her friends engaging in trists in the beautiful, lush, sheep-filled landscape of the borders should have said to herself, you know, here is my tristing place. Here is the place of appointment where someone has loved me with an everlasting love.

And she dies at the age of 39, gathered up into the arms of the only one who loves with an everlasting love, the one who makes an appointment to meet at a secret place. Have you ever carved your initials in a tree? Probably not. I did. My knife was no good.

It didn't work. But at least the desire was there. I wanted to leave it so that we might say, and in that place and at that tree, we said that about our love. It is at a tree, my friends, that Jesus has made the tristing place with us. There on that tree, he signs, as it were, his initials in an initiative taking love for those who have no interest in him, for those who are the least interested in him. Do you understand what an amazing thing it is? Do you understand why it is that Jesus says, hey, listen, give a guy his legs back?

What is that? I will forgive his sins. Because if he had his legs back for all of his life and still went into eternity without forgiveness, he would be lost forever, you see.

We don't believe that, many of us. I wonder, do you believe it this morning? I wonder, have you wondered, as I have done, and with this I will draw to a close, that means we're at least within, we're in sight of the airport. Have you ever wondered, and this is pure conjecture, but what did the fellow do with his legs when he got them? Well, he went home. What an event that must have been when one of the children said, hey, Mom, I think I saw Dad just coming up the path. She goes, what, with his friends? Oh, no, he just came by himself. It's not possible he couldn't have come by himself.

Oh, I'm sure he did. And into the house he came, and his wife said, what in the world happened to you? He said, well, you know, my friends took me to see that Jesus fellow. I thought I was just getting my legs back, but it's far better. He forgave my sins. Suddenly the sacrifices make sense to me. They're pointing forward to what this man is about to do.

I need to tell you all about this. You don't need your legs. You've got your legs, but you need forgiveness, and so do you, son, and so do you, daughter, and so do the people next door. I wonder, did he use his legs to make his way to the cross? Was he standing there at the crucifixion of Jesus, realizing in that moment at what great cost his forgiveness came?

Because after all, he'd gone to see Jesus in order that Christ might deal with his legs, only to discover that he came to deal with his heart. There is a very real danger in contemporary America, in Christian circles, that our churches are increasingly filled with people who have a genuine interest in Jesus taking care of their felt and superficial needs, but have never understood nor have been prepared to acknowledge that my greatest need is the forgiveness of my sins. Horace, the Latin dramatist, when he was encouraging his students to write, said to them, when you're writing a drama, do not introduce a God to the drama unless the plot demands it. Don't just put gods everywhere in your drama. Save a God for when you need one.

Well, into the drama of human experience comes God. Lennon and McCartney wrote so many songs, didn't they? We Can Work It Out.

In 1965, Lennon wrote Help. Maybe we can just end there. Here I am confronted by the great predicament of my life. You're here this morning.

God searches and knows your heart. What do you want to say? We can work it out.

I'll fix this. I can get by with a little help from my friends. Or do you want it from your heart? Say, Help.

Help. Christ responds to the cry of help, addressing not only what we find to be our superficial needs, but the deepest longings of our hearts. You're listening to Truth for Life Weekend with Alistair Begg. As we learned in today's message, many people had their own ideas and expectations of Jesus, which often muddled their understanding of his teaching. Even his disciples were confused until they were enabled by the Holy Spirit at Pentecost. And today we are recommending to you a book that takes a closer look at the work of the Holy Spirit in and through Christ's disciples as they took the gospel to the world. The book is titled Saved, Experiencing the Promise of the Book of Acts. This is a brand new release from author Nancy Guthrie, and she provides a helpful guidebook that leads us chapter by chapter through the Book of Acts, focusing on the work of the Holy Spirit as the story unfolds after Jesus' resurrection and ascension into heaven. As you read the book Saved, you'll learn about how the early church took root and grew as, through the enabling power of the Holy Spirit, the apostles gained a new understanding of Old Testament scriptures. Find out more about the book Saved when you visit our website at truthforlife.org. I'm Bob Lapine. Thanks for taking time out of your weekend to study the Bible with us. Next weekend we'll take a look at a good religious man who got it wrong before he got it right. The Bible teaching of Alistair Begg is furnished by Truth for Life where the Learning is for Living.
Whisper: medium.en / 2025-04-26 06:14:54 / 2025-04-26 06:24:06 / 9

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