Wednesday, November 25, 2020

What Does the Bible Say?

 This is the questions I always like to start with when I'm working on a blog series. I think it's the best place to start. After all, the Bible is our authority on how to live as Christians.

So, what does the Bible say about physical touch?

I'd never read any of my Bible looking for references to physical touch before. It was a different study with this topic in mind.

The first place I looked was probably one the more obvious places. Jesus' life and ministry.

It didn't take long to see that Jesus regularly touched people when He ministered to them. Often when He healed people, but also the children who were brought to Him (Mark 10:13-16, Luke 13:10-17)

It was Jesus' healing of people by touching them that most caught my attention. Jesus could have healed them with a word - something He did on many occasions. Yet, there are occasions when the gospel writers were very clear that Jesus touched those He healed.

As I looked at those times Jesus touched someone to heal them, they were people who wouldn't ben used to being touch. Some because the law actually said they couldn't be touched without making someone unclean, as the person in need of healing was considered unclean. Others because they're reality made it unlikely they would be touched by others, at least not in healthy ways.

So, what did physical touch look like for Jesus?

Jesus touched a man with leprosy to heal him (Matthew 8:1-4, Mark 1:40-45, Luke 5:12-14)

Leprosy made the man unclean. Being unclean excluded him from daily life interactions that were normal. It excluded him from going to the temple. And people would have gone out of their way not to touch him so they didn't also become unclean.

Even in the man's words to Jesus, there is a sense of his desire to be included and be able to be touched by others again. Matthew 8:2 records his question: "Lord, if you're willing you can make me clean." Yes, being clean implies being healed of leprosy, but I think the desire to be clean goes beyond just the healing. Jesus was willing and He reached out to touch this man. In doing so, healing his leprosy and restoring that healthy physical touch for the man.

We also see Jesus touch those who were deaf or blind to heal them (Matthew 9:27-31, 20:29-34, Mark 7:31-37, 8:22-26, John 9:1-12)

In that day, those who were deaf or blind would have had no choice but to beg from others for daily necessities. While times change, not everything does and I don't imagine beggars in Jesus' day were treated much different than today. Largely ignored or seen as a nuisance. And definitely not touched by those who passed them by. Yet, Jesus chose to touch them in His healing of them.

When I look at Jesus' example, I see somehow who was not afraid of physical touch. And not with just a few people. Jesus accepted it all from anyone who gave it and He gave it to many - often to those on the outside.

There is more to discuss about what the Bible says about physical touch to come.

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