26 March 2017 St. Athanasius Lutheran
Church
Lent 4
Vienna, VA
“Having Room for Jesus”
Text:
John 9:1-41 (Ephesians 5:8-14)
Grace, mercy, and peace to you from God
our Father, and from our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. Amen.
A
man blind from birth. He’s the next one to walk, after the
Pharisee and the Samaritan woman, not into a bar, but into Jesus. He’s the next
one to have his thinking changed and his life turned upside down. The Pharisee,
Nicodemus, learned about the gift of God. The Samaritan woman received a new
and greater Bridegroom and His love. And this man today, born blind, receives
his sight. And much more.
Like Nicodemus and the
Samaritan woman, this man, too, had been schooled to think in a certain way. That
because of some particular sin, some particularly heinous sin, some really, really bad sin committed by either him or his
parents, this man deserved and received the wrath and punishment of God and so
was born blind.
Imagine living your whole
life thinking that. That God is punishing you. No mercy. No compassion. Just punishment. For your whole life.
But it wasn’t only the
blind man who thought that way. Notice who asked Jesus that question: His
disciples. It was how people thought. It was the common way of thinking.
Blindness, deafness, leprosy, paralysis, some other disease . . . what did you
do? Why is God punishing you?
But that wasn’t just how
people thought then. It’s the way people think today as well. When something
bad happens, when tragedy strikes, when you get bad news, what’s very often the
first thought, the first words, out of someone’s mouth? Why is God punishing
me?
That’s how we’ve
been taught to think. If you do good you’ll be
rewarded. If you do bad, you’ll be punished. So if
something bad happens to you, you must have done something bad to deserve it.
And if something good happens to you, you must have done something good to
deserve that, as well. All very tidy. All very logical. We’ve got it all figured out.
But in such a system,
there is no room for mercy, no room for compassion . . . no room for Jesus.
So Jesus wants to help us
see things differently. To see not just according to the Law, but to see as He
sees, and think as He thinks, and so maybe even act and He acts.
And so, He says, It was not that
this man sinned, or his parents. Well, of course they
did, for no one’s perfect. This man and his parents sinned plenty, as do we.
But it was no particular sin. There is no one-to-one correspondence.
Sometimes there is. Sometimes
our sins cause bad things to happen - adultery causes marriages to fall apart,
promiscuity can lead to disease, mothers who use drugs while pregnant can cause
their children to be born with handicaps.
But
not always. People who eat right and exercise can still get
cancer. Mothers who take great care during pregnancy still have babies born
with problems or handicaps. All this, we can say, is a result of sin - but not
sin in a micro sense: this sin, that consequence; but because of
sin in a macro sense: because there is sin in the world and sin
in us, these things happen.
So while sometimes we may
know why things happen, often times we don’t. But today Jesus gives a whole new
reason, an additional reason, for why these things might happen; a new way of
thinking: that sometimes these things happen because He wants to use them for
His glory. And if for His glory, then for our
good.
So for this man, He was
born blind that
the works of God might be displayed in him.
That in healing him, Jesus be not just the light of the world,
but the light for him. Light in his eyes. Light in his mind. Light in his heart.
Light in all his life. And light for all who witnessed
what happened that day, and even for us who would hear about it later. That we might know Him as gift-giver, sight giver, and life giver.
Though not all want these
gifts or even see them as gifts. A controversy breaks out. And this man gets to
see something else - the ugly side of sinful men. Accusing
eyes. Faces twisted into anger. Fists clenched in rage. Tongues lashing. And then he is thrown out of the synagogue.
When he was blind he was welcome, but now that he can see, he is not. How can
that be? They called the man who healed him a sinner. But how could he
be, if he healed a man born blind? Could they be the real blind
ones? Not able to see who is standing right before their eyes?
Now realize, the blind man hadn’t yet seen Jesus. For Jesus had
anointed his eyes with mud and told him to go and wash. . . . And when he came
back to the crowd, the throng of people, who had done it? He didn’t
know. But then he heard the voice. The voice that had spoken
to him. The voice of the one who had healed him.
Living so long without his eyes had made his sense of hearing very good.
Do you believe in the Son
of Man? Jesus asked him. He wanted to. Who is he?
he asked. You have seen him . . . now
there’s a line the blind man never thought he would ever hear! You have
seen him and it is he who is speaking to you, Jesus replied. And this
man, who just a short time ago had never seen anything, now saw his Saviour. And he fell down and worshiped Him.
Like the Samaritan woman
last week, we don’t hear any more about this man. But I wonder if this man who
was healed in Jerusalem, might also have been in Jerusalem a short time later .
. . and saw Jesus again . . . this time, not standing before him, but
now hanging before him. On a cross. They said
He was a sinner, and now they got Him executed as one. And I wonder if he
wished his eyes had never been healed . . . had never seen that.
But
seeing that made the news that spread like wildfire through Jerusalem
three days later that much sweeter. News
that Jesus’ tomb was empty. Rumors that He was alive;
that He had risen from the dead. St. Paul tells us in Corinthians that
after Jesus rose from the dead, He appeared to more
than 500 brothers at one time (1 Cor
15:6). How cool would it be if this blind man was one of
them . . . Or maybe the blind man never did get to see Jesus alive again. Perhaps - ironically! - he
remained one of those who, as Jesus told Thomas that night of His resurrection:
Blessed are those who have not seen and yet have believed (John
20:29).
But either way, blessed
was He. And blessed are you. For his story really is your story. You were born
blind spiritually, but Jesus anointed you and washed you in the waters of Holy
Baptism and gave you eyes to see Him by faith, to
know Him as your Saviour, and to worship Him. Or as
Paul put it when he wrote to the Ephesians: at one time you were
darkness, but now you are light in the Lord.
Yet like this blind man,
perhaps now that we can see, we don’t like what we see. The
sin and evil in the world. The sin and evil in us.
That how often we do not walk as the children of light
we are, but still indulge in those things we hope never come to light, but we
know God sees anyway. Things that are not good
and right and true and pleasing to the Lord. And then see Jesus hanging
on a cross, and know: I am the sinner, but He is executed as
one.
At that moment (or those
moments), what is good and right and true and pleasing to the Lord
. . . is to do and say what you have come here today to do and say: to repent
and once again receive the healing washing of your Saviour’s
forgiveness; to repent and receive the gift of His Body and Blood. For here is
Christ shining on you. Shining in your eyes, in your hearts,
in your minds, and in your lives. As He did for the blind man, so He
does here for you. Raising you from the death of sin to life
- a new life - in Him.
A new life you now get to
live. Perhaps, like the blind man, you will be met with rejection and
accusation. Maybe you will get thrown out of people’s lives for your faith. Maybe. Jesus said if it happened to Him it will happen to
you. But this, then, too: if they couldn’t overcome Him, they will not be able
to overcome you. For the risen one who raised you is with you still, no matter
what happens. And that’s not just a rumor, but promise; the reality we now live
in. The reality that because His grave is empty, He is with
us and heaven is full. Full of the dead who are raised, the blind who
can see, the deaf who can hear - full of sinners for whom Jesus hung to
forgive, and rose to take with Him to Paradise, where there is no darkness or
night, only light (Revelation 22:5).
So this blind man learned
quite a lesson that day. But received an even greater gift.
He learned a new way of thinking, and received a new way to live. He knew what
he deserved, but rejoiced in what God had come to give Him. And that sometimes
what seems like the absolute worst things to see are the best things that could
happen. Talk about getting your life turned upside down!
But this too: he learned
the importance of asking the right questions. For the wrong question was: Lord,
who sinned, this man or his parents, that he was born blind? The right
question is: Lord, who died, that this man and his parents may live? That I may live. That’s a new way of thinking.
In the way of the Gospel, not the way of the Law. The way of Jesus. The way of forgiveness.
The way of gift. The way of life.
That we may see right, think right, believe right, and live
right.
That’s what the blind man
learned that day. The best news of all. That was he
born in sin? Yes, as we all are. But it’s not how you start, it’s how you end. With eyes of faith
to see the light. With eyes of faith to see your
Jesus.
In the Name of the Father, and of the (+)
Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
Now the peace of God which passes all understanding, keep your hearts and minds through faith in Christ Jesus, our Lord. Amen.