Have you ever witnessed a “mic drop” moment? Jesus had many of them. Here is one.
For 38 years, the lame man sat by the pool of Bethesda, watching, waiting, and hoping. Thirty-eight years of seeing others step into the water while he remained confined to his mat.
Thirty-eight years of disappointment rehearsed into belief: If only I could get into the pool, then I would be healed. The problem, he thought, was access. The solution, he believed, was the water.
However, Jesus saw something deeper.
When Jesus asked him, “Do you want to get well?” it was not because Jesus lacked compassion. It was because 38 years of long-term brokenness can quietly reshape our expectations. After decades of pain, the man no longer imagined wholeness. He only imagined better odds. His answer revealed where his faith had settled, not in God’s power, but in a process. Not in a Person, but in a place. And yet, Jesus did not correct him with a sermon. He healed him with a word.
“Stand up. Pick up your mat. Walk.”
No water stirred. No ritual followed. No assistance arrived. The healing did not come from the pool he had trusted for nearly four decades. It came from the voice standing right in front of him. In an instant, muscles strengthened, bones aligned, and hope was restored. What 38 years could not fix, Jesus resolved in a moment.
Then comes one of the most striking “mic drop” moments of the story: Jesus turned around and walked away.
Wait. What?
Multitudes had gathered, waiting and hoping Jesus would heal them, knowing death was likely imminent if He did not. Yet Jesus healed this one man, turned around, and walked away.
I can only imagine the anger, confusion, frustration, and disappointment that countless people felt in that moment. Why only that one man? Why not me?
Listen closely. Jesus leads under priority. He never leads under pressure. The same holds true for your life today. Jesus does not need optimal conditions to work. He does not need you to be first in line, strong enough to move, or articulate enough to explain your pain. He only asks that you listen when He speaks and respond in obedience when He asks, even when it feels impossible.
The man stood up before he had proof. He carried the mat that once carried him. His obedience became the evidence of his healing.
Jesus still walks into crowded places today. He still sees individuals overlooked by systems and worn down by waiting. And He still speaks life with authority, power, and compassion.
The question is not whether Jesus can heal what you are currently going through, but whether you are willing to release the false sources you have trusted in and believe that Jesus alone is all you need.
Love God. Love People. Live Sent.