“A leper came to Jesus, beseeching Him and falling on his knees before Him, and saying, “If You are willing, You can make me clean.” 41 Moved with compassion, Jesus stretched out His hand and touched him, and said to him, “I am willing; be cleansed.” 42 Immediately the leprosy left him and he was cleansed. 43 And He sternly warned him and immediately sent him away, 44 and He said to him, “See that you say nothing to anyone; but go, show yourself to the priest and offer for your cleansing what Moses commanded, as a testimony to them.” 45 But he went out and began to proclaim it freely and to spread the news around, to such an extent that Jesus could no longer publicly enter a city, but stayed out in unpopulated areas; and they were coming to Him from everywhere.”
Mark 1:40-45
These verses constitute one of my favorite pictures of the heart of Jesus in the gospels. Imagine the scene; Luke 5:12 tells us that a multitude of people crowded in on Jesus as he taught that day. From the back of the crowd, a commotion begins to stir. A leper, one who was afflicted with the most feared communicable disease of his day, begins to make his way through the multitude.
This was not his usual behavior, because of his condition he was literally deemed untouchable. He was forced to live and remain outside the gates of the city. The law required him to cry

out the words, “Unclean!” everywhere he went to prevent accidental human contact. As for intentional human contact, that meant the death penalty. No doubt those words became his identity to the people who looked down upon him with pity.
“Unclean!” He had said those words so many times in his life that they became the very image he held of himself. How miserable and hopeless the future would be for one feeling as unclean on the inside as others made him feel on the outside; it was not his way to press through a crowd.
In and around Jerusalem these days, everyone is talking of the teacher who claimed to be the very Son of God. With all the stories that his touch healed the sick and gave sight to the blind, it was all too much to ignore. Hundreds crowded Him everywhere Jesus went. Therein lay the leper’s problem; he remained untouchable to the crowd, which was like a wall between him and the One whose touch was his last chance.
The leper knew if he didn’t make it through, he’d be stoned for trying. He also knew that if he did make it through to Jesus, there was a chance that He might not be willing to risk His own “cleanliness” to touch him. The risks were many, as many as the years he’d spent with no human contact. Today, we’d maybe say, “I’m going for it,” but what were his words to himself just before he started pressing into the crowd? We’ll never know; but as if being drawn by God Himself, his feet began to move towards Jesus. Every step closer was more desperate than the last. His heart was pounding at the walls of his chest. His throat felt as if he swallowed a whole orange. Would he even be able to speak once he got there?

He had to be surprised at what happened next. It was nothing less than God parting the sea for him. The crowd began to open before him as he pressed forward and it closed in behind him as he passed. Coming within proximity of the feet of Jesus, the Bible says, “He fell on his knees before Him.” The only words he could muster were, “If You are willing, You can make me clean.” He hung his head, it was all he could say, it was the most he could do for himself. It was impossible for him to know that in that very moment, Jesus was in the process of feeling everything this man felt. The Son of God was acquainted with rejection; He knew the loneliness of being separated from those you love; Jesus knew the scorn of the crowds. Mark wrote, “He was moved with compassion” for this leper, meaning Jesus’ guts wrenched for this man.
As if it were one of his dreams, or a distant memory, the leper finally felt the touch of another. He opened his eyes in disbelief to see the hand of Jesus on his shoulder as Christ said the words, “I am willing; be cleansed.” The words sent a shock wave penetrating every fiber of the leper’s being. His skin regained its color, the bumps and lesions that covered his body disappeared, and feeling came back to his fingers. He could once again feel the cool breeze on his face. He was clean! What happened? Why? How? The answer was more simple than he would have imagined in that moment; the Lord had compassion on his condition, and desired to touch his life.
Why is this such a remarkable story to me? Because it’s been repeated thousands of times since the remarkable day it happened, but more importantly, I’ve witness the same type of compassion repeated in my own life. You see, Jesus looked on me and felt my pain, He identified with my trials and He saw me in all my “Uncleanness.” With that same compassion for me and my condition, he reached out from the cross, into my life, with a touch and the words, “Be cleansed.”
In His Grace,
Pastor Glenn