In
our house we have a problem with mold on our doors. No matter how
often we clean; it keeps come back. It’s frustrating, especially since half our
family has breathing issues. Our verses for today are found in a large section
in Leviticus focused on what’s unclean and how to deal with it. Mold, mildew,
sores and diseases can harm our health, this is where God’s concern over these
things becomes clearer, because God also uses these things as images of the
pervasiveness and danger of sin in our lives and hearts and how it creates
heart and soul sickness. Mold, mildew, diseases are all signs that there’s
something wrong; that health and wholeness are at risk and can easily infect
others too. Sin brings unhealth too.
During
the Old Testament,
God shows Israel a way of being that ranges from being unclean, to clean, and
finally to holy. These stages are about how close or far from God a person is,
how fit something is to be in God’s presence. A person or thing could move back
and forth along this line. Something clean could become unclean by touching
something unclean, but things or people who were unclean could become clean or
holy again through bathing or offering sacrifices.
Using
mold and disease as an image for sin points to how the brokenness brought in
by sin affects us right down to our DNA, leading to death. This helps us see
why John points to healing as a sign of Jesus’ return in Revelation 21:3–4, “And I heard a loud voice from the throne saying,
“Look! God’s dwelling place is now among the people, and he will dwell with
them. They will be his people, and God himself will be with them and be their
God. ‘He will wipe every tear from their eyes. There will be no more death’ or
mourning or crying or pain, for the old order of things has passed away.” This is a hope-filled picture of Jesus’ return; death
and disease will be no more; disease is not part of creation and the “very good” of God’s creating work, but the result
of Adam and Eve’s choice to follow their own desires rather than God’s.
Leviticus
is all about cleanliness, purity, and holiness, and about how close to God
God’s people could come. Mold, mildew, sores, infectious diseases are signs
that something’s, no longer healthy, and can be passed on to others and make
them sick and unacceptable; in the same way sin infects us and makes us unclean
and impure, making us able to infect others, and making us unable to be in the
presence of a holy God.
If
you ignore mold, mildew, or infectious diseases, they just keep
on growing and digging in their roots, spreading their spores over larger
areas. The longer you allow it to grow, the harder it is to get rid of. This is
just like sin; give it a little room in your heart or mind and it will slowly
but surely spread until it impacts more and more of your thinking and acting.
Sin is often hidden, we can act in ways at look holy, but they’re done to hide
what’s really going on inside; diseased ways of thinking that slowly reshapes
your relationship with God and others. Sin is a spiritual disease because it
corrupts our mind, soul, and moral foundation and is rooted in our hearts. Yet
it can go unnoticed for a long time before it raises its ugly head. Like a
physical illness, it’s seen as a fatal condition causing internal damage and
separation from God.
Holiness
covers all of life,
it’s not something that we keep only for Sunday morning or special occasions,
there’s nothing that’s left outside of God’s call to holiness. Jesus gets at
this in Mark 7:20–23, “What comes out of a person is what defiles them. For
it is from within, out of a person’s heart, that evil thoughts come—sexual
immorality, theft, murder, adultery, greed, malice, deceit, lewdness, envy,
slander, arrogance and folly. All these evils come from inside and defile a
person.” All these things begin quietly inside us until they
grow strong and begin to seep out. Sin begins small, maybe it begins as envy,
it may then move into fear that maybe you don’t measure up, so you begin to
undermine the other person, or make what they have that you want seem somehow
wrong, that maybe they don’t deserve it, and slowly your envy and fear turn
into hatred and bitterness. Sin begins as gossip, injustice, greed, pride, lust
for power, hatred, disdain for others, and any other sin that lives in our
hearts. The results of sin, our own or others against us bring hurt,
brokenness, rejection, abandonment, mental, emotional, spiritual, and even
physical illness. Disease, infection, mold used to describe how sin works in
our hearts also points to the fact that it can be healed, it can be cleansed,
there is hope.
Living
in God’s presence is not an on-again, off-again relationship, it’s all in all
the time. “Be holy as I am holy” is not an
option, it’s the call for our lives. Unholiness grows by not really caring
about holiness, or ignoring it, or by believing that small acts of uncleanness
in our hearts and minds aren’t all that bad. One sign of unholiness or disease creeping
into your life is when who you are in public becomes different from who you are
in private; when your public words are different from your inner thoughts. This
creates a disconnect inside that Satan will take advantage of to draw you away
from God. God’s calling us to take impurity seriously, taking the necessary
steps to remove it. In the end, we also need to realize that holiness isn’t
something we earn through our own efforts, ultimately God provides holiness and
healing to us, applying it to us through Jesus. Then, out of gratitude for what
Jesus has done, out of our love for God and a desire to be close to him, we
work at identifying those things in our hearts and minds that are unclean, that
need the work of the Spirit to help in our transformation and sanctification,
in becoming more like Jesus in every part of our being.
We
find healing and cleansing when we turn to Jesus. You need to
choose to be healed though, Jesus will not force healing on you, but you are
invited to come to him. Jesus healed those who came to him, even physically
touching those with leprosy, we see how disease and sin cannot touch Jesus,
rather, Jesus’ touch brings healing. Jesus doesn’t fear disease, sin, or brokenness
because the entire creation was created through him. He has the power to
restore everything to “good” and “very good” again, to make us holy as God is holy. Jesus
brings healing through touching lepers, revealing that his holiness is more
powerful than our sin and disease. Jesus brings healing through words, showing
he is the renewer of all things, including our sicknesses, whether physical,
emotional, mental, or spiritual. Jesus brings healing through forgiveness,
offering forgiveness with a spirit of grace. In his healings, Jesus brings hope
and tears of joy rather than tears of hurt and brokenness. I remember hearing
the bell in the hospital rung as a person, healed from cancer, rang it. The
joy, the peace that radiated from his face is still with me; this can be you
when you experience the healing that only Jesus can bring.
Healing
is found in Jesus, Isaiah 53:5 “But he was pierced for our
transgressions, he was crushed for our iniquities; the punishment that brought
us peace was on him, and by his wounds we are healed.” As we’re healed from our sin, choosing Jesus and his way flows out of
our gratitude for him, bringing healing to all areas of our lives. Colossians 3:12–17, “Therefore, as God’s chosen people, holy and dearly
loved, clothe yourselves with compassion, kindness, humility, gentleness and
patience. Bear with each other and forgive one another if any of you has a
grievance against someone. Forgive as the Lord forgave you. And over all these
virtues put on love, which binds them all together in perfect unity. Let the
peace of Christ rule in your hearts, since as members of one body you were
called to peace. And be thankful. Let the message of Christ dwell among you
richly ….” Forgiveness,
grace, love, worshipping together, clothing ourselves in Christian virtues
brings healing; healing in our lives, in our relationships, healing brokenness,
pointing us to how Jesus forgives us, loves us, offers us grace, and calls us
to imitate him in working towards reconciliation and renewal with others.
Healing
is found in knowing who you are as a precious, redeemed, renewed child of
God, created in the image of God, it’s found in the presence of the Holy
Spirit, and in the Scriptures, and in the Body of Christ and the fellowship and
encouragement of fellow believers, found in forgiveness and grace, found in
prayer and time spent with God, found on the cross, at the foot of the cross,
in Jesus’ blood and love and how these make us holy.
The grace of Jesus is given freely; repent and believe, and healing flows from Jesus. There’s nothing that is beyond Jesus’ grace-filled healing. No matter what you’ve done or who you’ve been, the cure is offered to you by grace. Trust in Jesus alone. The healing of sin is found in intimacy with God; drawing close to Jesus makes healing possible. If you're experiencing sickness in your soul, Jesus calls you to come to him, he can bring you healing and wholeness, he wants you to come to him!