Healing on the Sabbath

Open Your Bible

John 5:1-30, Exodus 20:8-11, Luke 6:1-11

I’ll never forget the day I sat down to study my Bible and discovered my toddler had beaten me to the pages. Scribble marks adorned two chapters in Luke—big loopy scribbles in permanent blue ink. “Oh, no!” reverberated within. This was my favorite Bible, the one I spent time with daily over a hot cup of coffee. I was learning to do inductive study with this Bible and marking keywords with care. I’d cringe if I had to erase a bit of colored pencil, knowing it wouldn’t be clean. But this was more than a smudged word. Two entire pages had been ruined.

I sat my little girl on my lap to explain gently that she couldn’t color in mommy’s Bible. She’d meant no harm, of course, but this was a teachable moment. She couldn’t go around taking pen to paper in books around the house.

But in that moment, the Lord graciously spoke to my heart. My daughter hadn’t taken a pen to any other books, only this book. She was modeling what she’d seen.   

“Sweetie, were you ‘studying’ like Mommy?”

She smiled, nodding her head big.

It became my teachable moment. Instead of focusing on “the rules” or my angst over the pages, I could see the bigger picture. God had been moving in my little girl’s heart, drawing her to His Word. She wanted to interact with it in the only way she knew how. Lifting my focus helped me to see God at work, which changed everything.

It’s often easy to miss God’s hand at work, just as many did when Jesus walked the earth. I’m astounded when I read of the man Jesus healed by the pool of Bethesda because of the scene afterward. People had seen this man lying around for thirty-eight years, and suddenly he was walking. Yet, no one asked, “Wow! What happened? How were you cured?” No one praised God that he’d been delivered from decades of infirmity. Instead, the healed man is chastised for carrying his pallet on the Sabbath. And the Jewish leaders want to know, not who cured him, but who had the audacity to tell him to pick up his pallet and walk with it (John 5:12).  

Jesus, the Son of God, was there among them. A miracle had been done in their midst. Yet, focusing on the rules of the Sabbath, they missed the Lord of the Sabbath.  

How often do we do the same? How often are we so focused on one side of a circumstance that we miss God’s purposes altogether?

Jesus is the author of life. And He brings not only life but also light, grace, and glory into that which seems dead, dark, and overwhelming (Acts 3:15, 2Corinthians 4:6). We’re told to walk by faith and not by sight (2Corinthians 5:7) because when our eyes are faith-filled, we see the divine. We see God. 

Jesus is always working in every facet of our lives and the lives of those around us. Let’s pray to keep our eyes fixed on Him so that we can behold every moment.

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126 thoughts on "Healing on the Sabbath"

  1. Sarah Morrison says:

    Question!!
    Something vexes me. When Jesus told him

  2. K D says:

    This was so so good. Thankful for this word today.

  3. Lesya Purshaga says:

    Truly , Lord open our eyes so that we don’t miss to see that very miracle taking place in our lives today

  4. Lauren Sleewa says:

    My husband and I don’t have children yet, but I am tucking Kim’s words away for when we do (Lord willing!) I am so the person who would initially see those blue lines as a disappointment instead of a chance for a child’s heart to grow closer to our Heavenly Father’s own heart.

  5. Gina C says:

    Oh God, give me your eyes! This devotional really spoke to my heart today. Brook P praying for your upcoming appointment and keeping you in prayer Victoria E! That you continue to feels Jesus’ peace. We lost 2 angel babies before having our healthy boy who is about to turn 5! Praying God continues to help me raise him in the Word and in goodness.

  6. Janice says:

    I loved this. How God spoke to your heart in that moment, that your daughter was drawn to God’s book. Helps me remember this teaching point.

  7. Carley Massey says:

    Such a good reminder today! Thank you for sharing ❤️

  8. Shelby Arsenault says:

    Soooo good!! “ people had seen this man lying around for thirty-eight years, and suddenly he was walking. Yet no one asked, ‘wow! What happened? How were you cured?’ No one praised God that he’d been delivered from decades of infirmity. Instead, the healed man in chastised for carrying his pallet on the Sabbath”. Is that not us Christian at some (or many) points in our walk? We totally miss the miracle, or the opportunity, or the encouragement, etc, because we are so wrapped up in something else. Such a conviction for me today.