The healing of the man with an infirmity occurred at the pool in Bethesda.
Jesus healed the blind man in Bethesda
Jesus healed the blind man as well as the lepers.
The pool at Bethesda is now known to have been part of an Asclepium - a temple to the Greek god of healing, Asclepius. Whenever the god came by and disturbed the waters, whoever then first entered the water would be cured. Because the man whom Jesus cured was lame, he was never able to get into the water first, so someone else always got the healing powers of the water. According to John 5:5 he had been there for thirty eight years.
Jesus healed a man who had been unable to walk for 38 years at the pool of Bethesda in Jerusalem. This miracle is described in the Gospel of John, Chapter 5.
If you are referring to the man with the withered hand, it was because Jesus did the healing on the Sabbath when no work (such as healing) was to be done. If you are referring to the man who was let down through the roof on a pallet, Jesus not only healed him but also told him his sins were forgiven. This was a claim to be divine, for they well knew that only God can forgive sins, and they thought that Jesus was only a man.
Jesus healed the blind man as well as the lepers.
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The main complaints the Jews had against Jesus were that he 1. healed the man on a sabbath day 2. claimed God was his father. (John 5:15-18)
Jesus told the man to show himself to the priest to be officially declared healed (a requirement of the Law according to Leviticus 13-14).
People can still be healed today by God through our faith in Jesus and our prayers.
Archaeologists have found the five-sided pool of Bethesda, in Jerusalem. Since the first century BCE, it had been associated with the local temple of Asclepius, the Greek god of healing. Evidence of its function is in a votive offering found near the pool, given to the temple by a woman who had been healed by Asclepius. Gentiles who needed healing powers would have gone to the pool. However, its location in Jerusalem suggests that even Jews, when all other avenues of cure had failed, would go to the pool and wait for the god to disturb the waters, providing a healing opportunity for one lucky person. The man said to have been cured by Jesus was a Jew.