Trusting a Promise: John 4:46-54


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Following Jesus’ trip through Samaria and His encounter and conversation with a Samaritan woman, Jesus heads to Galilee, and specifically to Cana. While there, Jesus has the opportunity to help someone else while also challenging that individual’s faith.

Let’s read about what happened. Our passage is found in John’s gospel, chapter 4, and we will read from the New Century Version of the Bible. Starting in verse 46, John tells us that:

46 Jesus went again to visit Cana in Galilee where he had changed the water into wine. One of the king’s important officers lived in the city of Capernaum, and his son was sick. 47 When he heard that Jesus had come from Judea to Galilee, he went to Jesus and begged him to come to Capernaum and heal his son, because his son was almost dead. 48 Jesus said to him, “You people must see signs and miracles before you will believe in me.”

49 The officer said, “Sir, come before my child dies.”

50 Jesus answered, “Go. Your son will live.”

The man believed what Jesus told him and went home. 51 On the way the man’s servants came and met him and told him, “Your son is alive.”

52 The man asked, “What time did my son begin to get well?”

They answered, “Yesterday at one o’clock the fever left him.”

53 The father knew that one o’clock was the exact time that Jesus had said, “Your son will live.” So the man and all the people who lived in his house believed in Jesus.

54 That was the second miracle Jesus did after coming from Judea to Galilee.

While reading this event just now, I find it interesting what the man’s request is to Jesus, how Jesus responds, how the man replies to Jesus’ response, and what ultimately happens.

First, the man comes from the nearby town of Capernaum to ask Jesus to come and heal his son. This official wants Jesus to physically travel with Him to Capernaum so that Jesus can personally heal his son.

In response, Jesus makes an insensitive remark towards this official and to whatever stereotype we might want to group this official into. It is likely Jesus was speaking towards this entire generation, including everyone within earshot. It is also likely that Jesus was speaking to every single person in sinful humanity. The temptation for every single person at every point in history is that we must see a sign before we belief in Jesus.

However, like I probably would have done if I was in this official’s place, this official ignores Jesus’ insensitive response and asks for help a second time.

Jesus then tells the official that his son will live. The official’s big worry was that his son’s illness would end his son’s life, and Jesus reassures him that this illness will not end in his son’s death.

The official then leaves without Jesus, taking Jesus at His word, and ultimately discovers after meeting the messengers that were coming to find him, that at the exact point when Jesus told him that his son would live, his son’s fever left and that his son was recovering.

This event is amazing in my mind because of how everything takes place. While there likely were different ways Jesus could have said what He said about people needing to see in order to believe, and perhaps some of the other ways would have been more sensitive, I wonder if this was a challenge directly to this father who earnestly wanted help for his son. I suspect that this father only knew of miracles where Jesus had laid His hands on people to heal them, and if this is the case, I wonder if that was as far as this man’s faith in Jesus had grown.

However, Jesus pushes this man’s faith by pressing him to believe Jesus’ words without seeing them directly come to pass. With what happens, the man must believe Jesus and begin to head home before finding out whether Jesus’ promise would happen. In some ways, having faith stretched in this way is one of the most emotionally challenging things for us, because there is a period of unknown and a period of time when doubt like to crowd in.

From the point when this father leaves Jesus and up to learning the news about his son, I’m certain that Satan threw as much doubt his way to try to discourage him that his trip to Jesus was a failed trip where Jesus insulted him rather than helped him.

However, any doubts Satan threw this man’s way were lies and at the moment the servants met the man on his way home, all the doubts running through this man’s mind were exposed as lies in the face of the truth.

To contrast this miracle, we have a miracle in Matthew and Luke about a centurion who has almost the exact opposite conversation with Jesus. In that miracle, Jesus offers to come and lay His hands on the centurion’s servant to heal him, and the centurion pushes back saying that all he needs is Jesus’ word that his servant would be healed. These two miracles are the perfect opposites in many ways because each man requesting the miracle had Jesus respond in a way that he was not expecting.

This mirrors what we may face in our own lives.

When looking at Jesus’ miracles, sometimes Jesus personally goes to touch the person, while other times, Jesus says the word and we are called to have faith in Jesus’ promise. This is powerful for us to keep in mind, because when we pray and ask Jesus for help with something, sometimes we will directly see Jesus’ answer to our prayers, while other times the answer might be a long time in coming.

Know that just like the official in our passage had a period of time between leaving Jesus with a promise, and then receiving confirmation that his request had been answered, we also will have a period of time between our request and seeing confirmation of a response. We can claim Jesus’ promises in our own lives, but often there is a period of time after we have claimed God’s promise before we see confirmation of His response.

The challenges every one of us face when in this waiting period are to trust God during this period of unknown, to push back against the doubts Satan pushes at us, and to press forward knowing that God will reveal His answer to our prayer when the time is right for us. While all this takes trust, we can look to all of Jesus’ promises in the Bible and realize that no word from God will ever fail. If God has promised something, it will come to pass. We might not know when or how, but we can trust that God’s promises are solid and trustworthy because He has never failed those who place their trust in Him!

Just remember that when we trust God, we trust that He knows best and we understand that His perspective and goal for our lives are bigger than we can comprehend, and His desire for us extends beyond what we can even being to imagine.

As we come to the end of another podcast episode, here are the challenges I will leave you with:

As I always challenge you to do, intentionally seek God first in your life and choose to trust His promises and His perspective over what Satan tries to doubt us into believing. Satan’s doubts are lies, and we can trust God because God’s promises will never fail us from eternity’s perspective. With God, we will outlast sin, Satan, and whatever challenge that is prompting us to doubt.

Also, continue praying and studying the Bible for yourself to keep your personal connection with God strong. While pastors or podcasters can give you ideas to think about, never let your relationship with God rest on someone else. Always take what you learn, see, or hear and test it personally against God’s Word. Discover in the Bible the truth about a God who gives everything to redeem humanity from sin and a God who wants you saved out of sin for eternity!

And as I end every set of challenges by saying in one way or another, never stop short of, back away from, chicken out of, or doubt yourself out of where God wants to lead you to in your life with Him!

Year in John – Episode 9: When an official comes to Jesus with a request for help, discover how Jesus pushes this man’s faith while also not directly answering His request. Discover how this event teaches us about faith in God more than 2,000 years after it happened!

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