John 5:1-9
A man who has been ill for thirty-eight years lies by a pool that is believed to have healing powers. He’s been trying to make his way to the healing waters of the pool, but he can’t do it without help, and he has no help. Jesus asks, “Do you want to be made well?”
“Well, duh!” seems to be the obvious answer. Of course he wants to be made well. The question seems almost cruel. Is Jesus implying that the man isn’t well because he doesn’t want it enough? In Barbara Ehrenreich’s book, Bright-sided, she described her battle with breast cancer and the unrelenting message that you won’t recover unless you have a sufficiently positive attitude. It was made clear to her, she said, that “If I don’t get better, it’s my fault. … It’s a clever blame-the-victim sort of thing.” Given this message, we might wonder if the man’s response is defensive: “Sir, I have no one to put me in the pool when the water is stirred up; and while I am making my way, someone else steps down ahead of me.”
Some alternative Greek manuscripts for John’s Gospel explain that it was believed that these waters had healing powers only when they were moving, mysteriously stirred up, and only the first person in the pool when the water begins to move would be healed. This means every ailing person is competing with every other ailing person for a very limited opportunity. Not the best system, but it’s the only system the man knows. Of course he wants to be made well; otherwise he wouldn’t keep making regular trips to the pool.
Jesus is not telling the man that he just needs a sunnier outlook or that he needs to pray a little harder. It is cruel to tell people who are sick, or jobless, or unhoused, or refugees that they just aren’t thinking positively enough, they just aren’t trying hard enough, that whatever they are experiencing is their own fault. And one thing we can say for certain about Jesus is that he wasn’t cruel. Why, then, does he ask, “Do you want to be made well”?
Jesus spoke to people as though they could think, decide, make judgments. He knows the man wants to be made well, so in essence, he’s asking, “Is this working for you? Is sitting by this pool getting you what you want and need?” And if that’s what Jesus is asking, then the man’s answer makes more sense; it sounds less like a bundle of excuses and more like a thoughtful, if exasperated reply. I’m imagining he’s saying something like, “Does it work? Just listen to how much it doesn’t work,” and then he describes the tedious process he’s endured for years.
Jesus asks, “Is this really working for you? Or are you ready to try something else?” The closing verse of this passage points to this: “Now that day was a Sabbath.” The story continues beyond this passage to explain why that’s a problem. At this point in Christian history, it’s likely that both Jewish Christians and the traditional Jewish community intended to keep the Sabbath. The struggle was over how to apply this – what did it mean to remember the Sabbath day to keep it holy? So part of Jesus’ question, “Do you want to be made well?” includes, “Is this system working for you?” Not only the system that’s kept him coming back to this pool for years with no change in his condition, but the system that would prevent Jesus from healing him on the Sabbath, as well as preventing the man from carrying his bed away from the pool once he’s healed.
Is this really working for you? Ask anyone who’s been in a twelve-step group and they will tell you that Step 1 is honesty – honesty about your condition, honesty about the fact that what you’ve tried in the past isn’t working. It is the question that every one of us, every group and every institution needs to answer in the negative before we can begin to change. “Is this really working?” If you can’t say, “Well, no, now that you mention it, it isn’t working,” there’s no reason to try something else.
I believe we are to hear, first and foremost, Jesus asking us the question. “Do you want to be made well? Is what you are doing really working? Is it working to give you health and wholeness? Or are you ready to try something else?” Not so we can heal ourselves with the power of positive thinking but so we can let go of whatever system or whatever beliefs or whatever we’ve been doing that is not working. In our relationships. In our work. In our national life, in our economy, in our churches, in our care of creation and the climate, in our care of our fellow human beings. In our relationships with other nations. And in our health, and certainly in our health care delivery system, which is not so different from what existed back then in that it lets one person be pushed aside while another receives care. Maybe this story isn’t so much about one man as it is about a system of healing out of whack.
Jesus offers us another way. Let go of what isn’t working. Try something else.
© Joanne Whitt 2025 all rights reserved.
Resources:
Herman C. Waetjen, The Gospel of the Beloved Disciple (New York: T & T Clark International, 2005).
Patricia Cohen, “Author’s Personal Forecast: Not Always Sunny, But Pleasantly Skeptical,” October 10, 2009, http://www.nytimes.com/2009/10/10/books/10ehrenreich.html?_r=1&pagewanted=print.
Gerard Sloyan, Interpretation: John (Louisville, KY: John Knox Press, 1988).