Ten Minute Bible Talks Devotional Bible Study - You Are Sick | The Gospels | Mark 2:13-17
Episode Date: January 7, 2026Who did Jesus come to save? Do you feel like an outcast? Will you admit your sickness? In today's episode, Jensen shares how Mark 2:13-17 encourages us to humble ourselves before the Great Physician... who can heal us. Read the Bible with us in 2026! This year, we’re exploring the Gospels—Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John. Download your reading plan now. Want to learn even more about the Gospels? Tune into Not Just Sunday. Your support makes TMBT possible. Ten Minute Bible Talks is a crowd-funded project. Join the TMBTeam to reach more people with the Bible. Give now. Like this content? Make sure to leave us a rating and share it so that others can find it, too. Use #asktmbt to connect with us, ask questions, and suggest topics. We'd love to hear from you! To learn more, visit our website and follow us on Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter @TenMinuteBibleTalks. Don't forget to subscribe to the TMBT Newsletter here. Passages: Mark 2:13-17
Transcript
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Welcome to 10-minute Bible Talks, where we connect the Bible to your life.
And the time it takes to get to work.
I'm Jensen Holt McNair.
Have you ever felt like an outcast?
Have you ever wondered if the promises and things that you read in Scripture are for you?
Could Jesus really be talking to you?
Well, if you've ever felt those kinds of things, then today's passage, it's for you.
We're going to just go ahead and jump right into Scripture.
Jesus has begun his teaching ministry. He's started to call his disciples. He's a respected rabbi. But he's now also
begun to clash heads with the Pharisees, the spiritual leaders of his day. And that's where we're
going to pick up today. Jesus is traveling and calling a new and unexpected disciple.
Mark 2, verse 13. Once again, Jesus went out beside the
the lake. A large crowd came to him, and he began to teach them. As he walked along, he saw Levi,
son of Alpheus, sitting at the tax collector's booth. Follow me, Jesus told him, and Levi got up
and followed him. Okay, I want to know a few things about this exchange. First, Levi is most likely
just another name that the disciple Matthew went by. Two names for the same person. Okay.
Second, notice that Jesus is not alone. He's surrounded by people, and he is not shy about what he does.
Third, Levi is a tax collector. That means that he's employed by the Romans, the oppressors of the Jewish people, but he himself would be Jewish.
See, tax collectors were hated, both because they sided and worked for the Romans, but also because it was just well.
well known that they used their position of authority to cheat the Jewish population out of more
money than was necessary. They were greedy, traitors, sinful, despised, outcasts.
Now fourth, let's notice that surrounded by a large crowd, Jesus boldly invites a despised outcast
to follow him in the exact same way that he called his other disciples.
There's no stipulation, there's no shaming, there's no nuance, and there's no explanation.
A clear call exactly as we see him call the previous disciples.
And fifth, Levi, the sinful tax collector, rejected by his people, shamed, looked down upon,
gets up and leaves behind his way of life and follows Jesus with the same faith as the other disciples.
Okay, so what can we learn?
from these five observations. Well, first, we can easily recognize the tendency of humanity to compare,
specifically for the religious to judge, to partition off certain groups of people as good and bad,
insiders, outsiders, accepted, rejected. Second, we can easily see that Jesus does not follow the same
standards and rules by which the religious often judge, and he is not shy about his rejection
of these rules. And third, the requirements necessary to follow Jesus have nothing to do with moral
standards or societal acceptance and everything to do with humility and faithfulness.
Let's continue. Verse 15.
While Jesus was having dinner at Levi's house, many tax collectors and sinners were eating with him and his disciples, for there were many who followed him.
When the teachers of the law who were Pharisees saw him eating with the sinners and tax collectors, they asked his disciples, why does he eat with tax collectors and sinners?
Okay, so this reaction to the Pharisees, it's not surprising. If the call of a tax collector wasn't enough, now Jesus, Jesus,
Jesus is openly entering into the home of Levi, a tax collector, for a feast.
He is reclining at the table with not just one, but many people that society deemed as
outcasts and sinners. He's associating himself with these people. He's accepting them to sit
and to dine with them wouldn't have just been a social faux pa. It was a religious statement.
The Pharisees would have seen this as Jesus making himself spiritually underage.
clean. But clearly, Jesus does not see it this way. Instead of following the path of religiosity,
Jesus remains pure by extending a hand of mercy. His response to the Pharisees makes this clear.
He goes on to say, on hearing this, Jesus said to them, it is not the healthy who need a doctor,
but the sick. I have not come to call the righteous, but sinners.
Jesus is reminding the Pharisees of his mission. He likens righteousness to health and sinfulness to sickness.
Jesus came for the sick, not the healthy. Now, for a long time when I heard this verse, it always made me feel a little nervous.
Like as someone who had grown up in the church, who had considered themselves a Christian as long as they could remember, who was maybe even like part of a religious.
crowd who tried to do the right thing and not live a sinful life, did this mean that Jesus
didn't come for me? Didn't come to call me? That when he became man and began his mission,
his sights were set on just the outcast, the rejected. That if I wanted to really see myself
in this story, that maybe I needed a rebellious phase, needed to achieve the outsider,
outcast label in order to be number one on Jesus's priority list.
And maybe you've wondered the same thing.
But to think this way is to play by the rules of the cultural narrative of insiders and outsiders
based on religiosity, morality, outward perception.
Remember what we saw from Jesus, the same call to all people, regardless of status or morality.
follow me. And then the requirements to be disciples, well, that was humility and faithfulness.
Humility to recognize that you need help. You need someone to follow. You need a doctor.
And the faith to get up and follow the one who can help you, lead you, heal you. So there's an
episode of Bluey. Sorry, I am a mother to toddlers. But in this episode, her little sister Bingo is
sick in the hospital. And she's sad. She feels lonely because she has to stay at the hospital while
everyone else is at home. So Blue tells her a story of Bumpy, the puppy who is sick. And in order to
get better, he needs to find someone who has never been sick to help heal him. Now Bumpy searches
and searches, but everyone he asks has been sick before. In the end, Bumpy has to realize that
being sick is a part of life, that everyone gets sick.
And bingo learns the same thing. She isn't alone. Everyone gets sick.
And it's the same lesson that we all need to learn, the outcasts and the insiders.
Everyone is sick. Everyone needs a doctor.
See, the difference between the Pharisees and the tax collectors in this story isn't that the Pharisees are healthy and right.
and the tax collectors are sick and sinful, it's that the Pharisees don't have the humility to recognize
that they are just as sick as the tax collectors. They are no better off. And without that recognition,
they'll never realize they need to put their faith in Jesus. They need a doctor. See, Jesus isn't
saying that he only came for the outcast. He came for every.
because everyone is sick, everyone is sinful, everyone is in need. The thing about the outcast
is that it's not as hard for the outcast to believe that they need help, believe they're sick
and in need of healing. Society has made that clear to them. See, Jesus came for the societal insider
just as he came for the outsider, because the labels that society place on people have nothing
to do with the rules that Jesus follows. The invitation to follow Jesus is the same for every person,
because each and every one of us is in need of healing. We are all sick. The question is whether you are
willing to humble yourself enough to recognize it, to see yourself inside of the true story,
to play by Jesus' rules to faithfully follow him, to give up everything to chase after him
because you recognize the incredible gift that it is for Jesus to welcome you, a sinner, into his fold,
for Jesus to join you at a table, to want you and his family to accept you and love you.
There is no one righteous, no, not one.
We all need healing, religious or not.
when you realize this, that is when you will find true healing. It's when you will start to see the world the way that Jesus does.
Not with people to be parsed apart and judged, some to be accepted, some to be unclean, unworthy, some who we spend our time with, associated with, some we avoid.
Now, imagine a world where followers of Jesus actually followed the rules he played by, actually followed.
him, looked like him, loved like him, welcomed the sinner like him. Not because they thought they
were better than the sinner, but because they saw themselves in them, equally in need of Jesus,
desperately wanted every person to receive that same welcome, the same healing, the same redemption
that they have received from Jesus. I just want to end today asking a few questions.
Where do you see yourself in this story?
What rules are you playing by?
Are you tempted to split the world into outcasts and insiders, good and bad, sick, and healthy?
Who are the people that you might be looking down upon?
Avoiding, judging, ostracizing, because you think they're too sick, too simple.
Will you humble yourself today?
to recognize that you are just as sick, just as sinful, and just as in need of a good doctor.
God, would you humble our hearts? Would you make us see ourselves with the eyes of reality,
within your story, sick in need of healing from the good doctor?
Jesus would you heal us? Help us to be a people of God who know our need and who run to you for healing,
run to you in faith.
Give us the courage to welcome all people, no matter their religious status, race, ethnicity,
gender, sexual orientation, or immigration status.
God tear down the pride in our hearts that allows us to break people up into groups of
worthiness.
Instead, open our eyes to reality.
Make us the kind of people that replicate the same love, same words,
welcome and acceptance of Jesus.
Everyone is welcome at your table, God.
Everyone is welcome to follow you, to be like you, to live in your ways.
May we be a church that reflects that truth to the world.
May it start in our own hearts and lives today.
Amen.
