John 9:1-41
Today’s gospel…shows us…what Jesus said to correct the view…of many in his day…that the cause of physical disability was the sin of one’s parents.
- Jesus said…that the man’s blindness was not the result of sin…at all.
- It was not punishment.
- It was…in fact…a manifestation of grace.
- Through his blindness…this man would come to God…and others would follow Jesus.
- The Lord be with you.
This miracle story tells us something about the nature of faith.
- There is an idea floating about…that faith is warm and fuzzy…and naive.
- That people who have faith are susceptible to ideas which go against common sense.
- But here’s the thing:
- The healing of the blind man is showing us that faith is actually the result of accepting the facts of our own experience.
- Faith is the product of honesty…not being naive.
OK then… Jesus gives the blind man his sight.
- And then we see the inevitable reaction of the world:
- A person who has had a faith experience may assume that the world will be interested in hearing about it…and affirm it.
- More often…though…those around us move in to persuade him…or her…that they are mistaken.
- That they have misunderstood the facts.
- The world does not encourage spiritual awakenings.
And then…we see the man’s faith take shape…when he confirms his own experience…simply by refusing to lie about it to himself.
- The man who had been given his sight refused to be convinced that he was a victim of some kind of mirage/pink elephant.
- The man’s honesty enabled Jesus to reveal himself to him.
All of us…who have a faith relationship with Jesus…have a personal life-story…made up of significant experiences.
- Many of our experiences are so personal…that when they are told to others…they tend to lose their power.
- They may not be at all that dramatic to others.
- These experiences forge the facts upon which our relationship with Christ is based.
It was 1998…our son…Jason had just graduated from Luther College…in Decorah Iowa…
- Together…Jason and I drove his car out to Monterey California…
- Where he would be a graduate student at the Monterey Institute of International Studies.
- On our way…the car just stopped in the middle of the road…
- In the middle of Nevada…
- With absolutely nothing around…and absolutely no traffic…nothing.
- Not even a one-arm bandit.
- I mean…it was desolate.
We later found out we had burned out the alternator.
- In a state of utter helplessness…we sat in the meager shade of the car…and I thought to myself:
- Well God…how are you going to get us out of this one?
- No cell phone…not much food…not much water.
- OK God…You say you will always provide…but it looks like I’ve got you this time.
- In a strange way…I was enjoying the situation.
After about 20 minutes or so a lone car drove up…it was a Hispanic couple with their two children in the back seat.
- The father…apparently afraid of us…rolled down his window two inches and handed me his cell phone.
- I called Triple A…and thanked him for stopping to help us.
The tow truck came thirty minutes later.
- The driver was a young man and said this:
- After the war…my grandparents decided to move out to California to build a motel and service station.
- They were from Minnesota…Lutherans…of course.
- On the way out to California their car broke down right here…exactly where your car broke down.
- And in those days…there was nothing around here…it took them days to get back on the road.
- In fact…they never did get back on the road…
- You see…because there was no help available…
- They decided to stay and build their motel and service station right here…
- And today it has become a little town not far from here.
- The young man towed us to that little village where his motel and service station was to get the car fixed.
- And we were on our way the next day.
- To this day…and many years later…I remember this experience as a vicarious intervention of God on our behalf.
This experience is part of my own personal…spiritual…story.
- And if I were to agree that it was only a coincidence…I would be lying to myself.
- A moving forward of faith requires that we honor facts as we have witnessed them.
- It requires that we do not deny our own experience.
Here we go then…the Pharisees wanted the man who had received his sight to deny his experience.
- Their attitude shows us how people of the world…while claiming to respect facts and objectivity…
- Are in reality…highly prejudicial and subjective.
- They are only willing to integrate facts which accord with their prevailing bias.
Speaking personally for a moment:
- There have been those times in my life when I have experienced doubt and uncertainty.
- At such times faith has never been restored to me automatically.
- Faith has been restored to me by taking a survey of my personal life story with Christ.
- This has taken the form of a recounting…of all that has happened to me…in my faith relationship.
- Did I…in any way…invent the things that happened to me?
- Did I misguide myself…or were the feelings I had clear and definite…
- And as far as I could honestly say…not of my imagining?
So…thinking through my faith journey leads me to say this:
- I cannot prove the existence of God.
- But…because of my own experience…if I were to say: God does not exist.
- I would feel…deep down…in every fiber of my being…that I was lying.
So…like the neighbors and Pharisees in our story…the world will try to get us to lie.
- Not only the world…but our own worldly self…which is conditioned and socialized and trained to conform.
There is satire here:
- It is comical…the way the Pharisees insist on denying an undesirable fact…that has presented itself in an undeniable form.
- Jesus told his followers in various ways that the kingdom is not unknown or mysterious.
- But…that it remains invisible to us only because…deep down…we are determined not to see it.
- We see here that there are forms of willful blindness that result from basic dishonesty.
- Dishonesty of this kind comes because of having enough sight to see what we do not want to see.
- The blindness of being unaware.
Christ gave this man his physical sight.
- But it was his honesty that allowed Jesus to reveal himself to him as his Lord and savior.
- Faith does not ask us to believe the incredible.
- Faith asks only that we believe our own eyes…ears…and experience.
- If we have that kind of honesty…then…Jesus has a footing to communicate with us.
- He has a way of reaching us.
- He has a way of making himself real to us.
- To have faith then…is to open our eyes…to what is really going on.