A man blind from birth.
A seemingly hopeless condition. Forced
to depend on others. Enduring shame as people
assumed that sin was the culprit. (John
9)
Because bad things don’t
happen to good people, right? Wrong.
Did he live in fear or worry? Was he lonely? Had he lost all faith and hope? Or had his condition become so normal that he
didn’t even think about a cure? We don’t
know any of this, we can only assume. But one thing we do know is that everything
changed the day he met Jesus…
Jesus explained that sin
didn’t cause this blindness, but that God would use it to display His works in
this man’s life. Next Jesus made mud
with His spit, rubbed it on the man’s eyes, and told him to wash in the pool of
Siloam. “So the man went, washed, and
came home seeing.” (John
9:7) A miracle happened that day! And now this man had an incredible testimony
about the working of God in his life!
When I’ve studied this passage before, I’ve been touched by
the man’s faith – how he believed what Jesus said, obeyed, and how his faith
healed him. Maybe this is where the term
“blind faith” came from. But today, I was impressed more so with his
condition. Obviously he was blind. Everyone knew it. More so, he had nothing to lose in obeying
Jesus.
Later in John 9 Jesus is defending himself against the
Pharisees (religious experts) who, upon hearing about the incredible miracle,
were more concerned that Jesus healed on the Sabbath and was claiming to be God
than about the man’s incredible testimony.
Physical blindness is
obvious. The bumps and bruises are
visible and painful. Spiritual blindness, not so much. While the bumps and bruises of life still
occur, and hurt, they can be reasoned away, coped with, or ignored. Blinded to the root cause. And blinded to the cure – Jesus Christ as the
light of the world.
Unlike the blind man,
the Pharisees had everything to lose in following Jesus. Power, influence, lifestyle, possessions, self-importance,
independence, being accountable to no one…
Plus they reasoned that they already knew God.
And ultimately we all worship
the same God, Jesus isn’t the only way to eternal life, right? Wrong.
Therefore, they didn’t
want or need Christ. Their questions
went in circles. Their stubbornness prevented
Truth from getting a foothold. Then they
turned to downright insults. Jesus did
the best He could, but even He couldn’t penetrate their defenses.
People think the work
we do in South Africa is noble and needed.
The blind, sick and poor need Jesus - they have nothing else, nothing to
lose. But lately the Lord has been
breaking my heart for those who feel they have everything to lose and nothing
to gain. Those who know Christ get
what I’m saying. Unfortunately, those
who don’t think I’m a judgmental fanatic.
Except that I’m not the one judging here…
Jesus said, “For judgment I have come into this world, so
that the blind will see and those who see will become blind.” (John
9:39)
Born with sinful
natures, we are all spiritually blind – by default. Jesus came to set us free from the
penalty of sin. We can’t do that for
ourselves. When we recognize our
blindness and accept Christ as our Lord and Savior, we are born again in the
spiritual sense. On the other hand, if
we think we can save ourselves, if we think we can already see, then the
opposite is actually true.
How do you reach a
person who feels they have everything to lose and holds on with white-knuckled
determination?
Honestly, I don’t have easy answers or deep spiritual
insight here. But this is something I’ve
been reflecting on, praying about, even grieving over, during my time here in
the US. People have so much, do so much, and want so much that they become
blinded to life’s greater meaning, missing out on God’s greater blessings. That was me. I was also blind, but now I see, and for that
I am grateful. I’m by no means perfect,
but I don’t need to be with my trust in Christ.
Jesus didn’t give up,
but he did move on…and the Pharisees remained blind, for eternity. And while that breaks my heart, it doesn’t
erode my faith or trust in Him.
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