March 26, 2017
Lenten Devotions – Lent 4A
As he walked along, he saw a man blind from birth. his disciples asked him, “Rabbi, who sinned, this man or his parents, that he was born blind?” 3Jesus answered, “Neither this man nor his parents sinned; he was born blind so that God’s works might be revealed in him. We must work the works of him who sent me while it is day; night is coming when no one can work. As long as I am in the world, I am the light of the world.” 6When he had said this, he spat on the ground and made mud with the saliva and spread the mud on the man’s eyes, saying to him, “Go, wash in the pool of Siloam” (which means Sent). Then he went and washed and came back able to see.” John 9:1-7
“The passage works to undermine simplistic understandings of sin. When the disciples voice a common view of the day — disability or hardship is the result of sin — Jesus disagrees. Similarly, when the Pharisees assume that knowledge of the law automatically grants righteousness, Jesus counters by saying that precisely because they deny their sin and claim to “see” they are in fact sinning. If they were able to admit their blindness, they would not be sinning and receive sight. In John’s Gospel, “sin” at its most basic is not recognizing Jesus as God’s messiah, the person through whom God is at work to save the world.
Q: How do we typically define “sin”?
How does this story broaden our understanding of both sin and grace?”(Now I See, March 27, 2011, David Lose, workingpreacher website)
How do we help others see – or how do we see more clearly ourselves? Well, I would say that it begins with learning to reframe what we see, and how we see. This is, you see, what causes a stumbling block for the Pharisees. They cannot “reframe” what they see – Jesus is too human, too much of a sinner to be the Messiah. A man born blind states that Jesus has healed him. And rather than congratulate him, or celebrate with great joy, or thank God for this miracle, they get hung up on the fact that Jesus healed him on the Sabbath. You see for Jesus to make mud, he needed to mix his saliva (which, by the way, it was believed that saliva had healing powers in the time of Jesus) he mixed his saliva with dirt. That required mixing, and kneading, like kneading dough to make bread, and that was a violation of the “Sabbath Rules”, which it seems to me is just ridiculous. But that is my 21st century understanding – which is different from a 1st century Jewish understanding. In their logic, Jesus is a sinner, and if a sinner, he could not be from God. It is a real conundrum. Could they reframe their vision, their view of how God wants to work in the world? Obviously not, because they will eventually put Jesus to death for sedition, insurrection – for claiming to be the Messiah, and threatening the good order of their established religious teachings.
Take time this Lent to Pray that your relationship with Jesus helps to move you from darkness to light, from blindness to sight, from confusion to insight. Jesus says “I am the light of the world”. Paul says as “Children of Light” we need to live that way – he actually says that if we are going to talk the talk, then we better “walk the walk”. In other words, we should use this time in Lent to understand what it means to live as Christ calls us to live: not in darkness, not in isolation, not looking to meet our own needs, but in the light of goodness, righteousness and truth. We can only discern that kind of living by discerning our own behaviors, priorities, and prejudices. We are called to see the light of Christ in everyone – EVERYONE. And if we live in the light of Christ, then we need to discern if we do see, really see the needs of our neighbors, our community, and our world? Jesus asks the man who was formerly blind this eternal question: “Do you believe”? If you and I do believe, then shouldn’t we seek to invite a friend to come and see – invite a stranger to come and see – because, you SEE, here the lost are found, and the blind, well now they can see…they can see the love of Christ in Word, Water, Bread, Wine, and loving, caring, joy-filled people.
Pastor Dave