Lucas 5:23

23 ¿Qué es más fácil, decir: "Tus pecados te son perdonados", o decir: "Levántate y anda"?

Lucas 5:23 Meaning and Commentary

Luke 5:23

Whether is it easier to say
Mark adds, "to the sick of the palsy"; to whom Christ had said that his sins were forgiven him, which had given offence to the Scribes and Pharisees, imagining that he had assumed too much to himself: wherefore he proposes the following case to them, which they thought was most easy for man, or more proper and peculiar to God to say,

thy sins be forgiven thee, or to say, rise up and walk?
Neither of them could be said by a mere man, with effect, so as that sins would be really remitted on so saying; or that a man sick of a palsy, by such a word speaking, would be able to stand upon his feet and walk; but both of them were equally easy to him, that is truly God; and he that could say the one effectually, could also say the other: or in other words, he that could cure a man of a palsy with a word speaking, ought not to be charged with blasphemy, for taking upon him to forgive sin: our Lord meant, by putting this question, and acting upon it, to prove himself to be God, and to remove the imputation of blasphemy from him; (See Gill on Matthew 9:5). (See Gill on Mark 2:9).

Lucas 5:23 In-Context

21 Entonces los escribas y fariseos comenzaron a discurrir, diciendo: ¿Quién es éste que habla blasfemias? ¿Quién puede perdonar pecados, sino sólo Dios?
22 Conociendo Jesús sus pensamientos, respondió y les dijo: ¿Por qué discurrís en vuestros corazones?
23 ¿Qué es más fácil, decir: "Tus pecados te son perdonados", o decir: "Levántate y anda"?
24 Pues para que sepáis que el Hijo del Hombre tiene autoridad en la tierra para perdonar pecados (dijo al paralítico): A ti te digo: Levántate, toma tu camilla y vete a tu casa.
25 Y al instante se levantó delante de ellos, tomó la camilla en que había estado acostado, y se fue a su casa glorificando a Dios.
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