Sabbath Day Healing
Bible Reading
Introduction
The Setup (v.1-2)
The Challenge (v.3-4)
Our Lord’s meaning appears to be this: “If any one having it in his power, omits to do an act of mercy on the sabbath day for one grievously afflicted, as this man is, if he is able to cure him, as I Christ am able, he does him a wrong; for he denies him that help which he owes him by the law of charity.”
The Healing (v.5)
Here is the difference between the anger of fallen man and the anger of the sinless One. With fallen man, anger is the desire of retaliating, of punishing those by whom you consider yourself unjustly treated. Hence, in other men, anger springs from self-love; in Christ it sprang from the love of God. He loved God above all things; hence he was distressed and irritated on account of the wrongs done to God by sins and sinners. So that his anger was a righteous zeal for the honour of God
The Plot Thickens (v.6)
Application
Conclusion
Common to each of the five stories in 2:1–3:6 is the showcasing of Jesus’ authority: to forgive sins (2:1–12), to eat with sinners and tax collectors (2:13–17), to dispense with fasting (2:18–22), to supersede the Sabbath (2:23–28), and to heal on the Sabbath (3:1–6). Parallel to the authority of Jesus is the opposition of the authorities, which begins with silent accusation (2:6–7), intensifies to questioning (2:16; 2:24), and concludes with a plot against his life (3:2, 6).