Opening Preamble
Before Jesus tells a wounded man to pick up his mat,
Torah teaches Israel not to pick fruit too soon.
Before the man at the pool learns how to walk,
the people in the land must learn how to wait.
Before John shows us healing on the Sabbath,
Leviticus shows us fruit that must become holy before it becomes useful.
Because God does not only heal bodies.
God orders appetites.
God does not only give increase.
God teaches restraint.
God does not only say, “Rise.”
He also says, “Wait.”
Kedoshim means holy ones.
It is spoken to the whole community:
parents and children, workers and neighbors, farmers and strangers, elders and the poor at the edge of the field.
Holiness is not a private glow.
It is public order.
It is how we handle fruit, hunger, time, mercy, anger, and the person we would rather not see.
And tucked inside this holiness chapter is a quiet command:
When you enter the land and plant a tree,
do not eat its fruit for three years.
In the fourth year, let the fruit be holy.
Let it become praise.
In the fifth year, then you may eat freely.
That is a strange word to hurried people.
We live in a world that says:
If it grows, grab it.
If it opens, enter it.
If it shines, chase it.
If it feels good, claim it.
But Torah says:
Not yet.
Not because the fruit is evil.
Not because God is cruel.
But because some blessings must pass through praise before they pass through appetite.
Some fruit is real, but it is not ready.
Then John brings us to a man who has been lying beside a pool too long.
Jesus sees him.
Jesus speaks to him.
Jesus commands him:
Stand up.
Pick up your mat.
Walk.
And immediately the man is healed.
But the miracle happens on the Sabbath,
and the argument begins.
Not over the man’s restored body.
Not over the mercy standing in front of them.
Not over the long years he spent lying down.
The argument begins over the mat.
They noticed what he carried
before they celebrated that he could walk.
That is where the text starts telling on us.
Because Jonah could pity a plant and resent a city.
And here, religious eyes can notice a mat and miss a man.
The danger is ancient, but it is still alive:
we can love order more than restoration,
rules more than people,
and our own comfort more than God’s compassion.
Leviticus says:
Do not consume the fruit too soon.
John says:
Do not reduce the miracle to the mat.
Leviticus teaches holiness before possession.
John teaches holiness after healing.
The fruit must become praise.
The healing must become a walk.
And Jesus seals the whole matter with one sentence:
“My Father is always working, and so am I.”
So this Sunday, we stand between a tree and a mat.
The tree asks:
Can you wait before you consume?
The mat asks:
Can you walk after you are healed?
The Sabbath asks:
Can you recognize the Father’s work when mercy does not fit your schedule?
And holiness is learning how to live faithfully between all three.