- Jul 12, 2004
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In another thread the healing of the cripple at the pool of Bethesda came up. It caused me to think ...
For years, this passage troubled me. It seemed more superstition than truth and, in fact, contrary to the manner of healing in the Bible. In the story, the lame man lay at the poolside waiting for an angel to come down an trouble the water so that the first one in the pool would be healed and all others, I guess, would have to carry their illness home. The problem with this is that those least needing healing (e.g., the guy with the sniffles) would always beat the person most needing healing (e.g., the lame man) into the water. Seems rather unfair and unlike God to me.
Then, as I purchased newer, more modern translation of the Bible I discovered that this account has a parenthesis at the last part of vs.3 and all of verse 4 in post-KJV Bibles—the part that says, “waiting for the moving of the water. For an angel went down at a certain time into the pool and stirred up the water; then whoever stepped in first, after the stirring of the water, was made well of whatever disease he had” (see footnotes in these translations).
Since verse 4 is absent from older manuscripts (i.e., the ones closer to the original), it is generally believed that the verse was an explanatory footnote by a later copyist to explain the phrase “waiting for the moving of the water” (vs.3) that somehow crept into the text which may have added to explain been a superstition that was attached to the pool of Bethesda.
So, what do you think? Did an angel really come down and trouble the waters of the pool so that the first one in (and only the first one) would be healed or does that account as related in the good old KJV sound a little suspect to you?
~Fletcher Biceps
A candle loses nothing by lighting another candle.
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