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Unbelief Investigates a Miracle
by
John MacArthur
All Rights Reserved
(A copy of this message on cassette tape may be obtained by calling
1-800-55-GRACE)
John 9:13-34 Tape GC 1526
At the same time it is tragic that in Israel when Messiah came, they did
not see Him as Messiah. Jesus Christ, the Son of God, asks that not only
Israel but that the whole world believe His claims. And they didn't and they
don't today. People today don't believe the claims of Christ anymore than they
did when He came first of all. And in our study of John's gospel, we have seen
this particular thing recurring all through the gospel. Jesus makes a claim
and the people don't believe. And we've seen all different reactions that
unbelief takes. Unbelief is interesting. It has all different facets. And
this morning we're going to talk about a particular interesting aspect of
unbelief on the subject "Unbelief investigates a miracle." We're going to see
what willful ignorant unbelief does with a miracle that Jesus performs.
Now we've already seen a lot about unbelief. We saw, for example, the
bewildered unbelief of Nicodemus to whom Jesus had to say, "If I told you
earthly things and you believe not, how shall you believe if I tell you
heavenly things?" And then we saw the demanding unbelief of the nobleman from
Cana who came to Jesus and to whom Jesus said, "Except you see signs and
wonders, you will not believe." And then we saw, also, the self-centered
hypocritical unbelief of the scribes and the Pharisees and the Jewish leaders.
Back in chapter 5 Jesus spoke to them and said this, "How can you believe who
receive honor one of another?" You're so busy patting each other on the back
you couldn't believe anybody else. All truth resides in you. No one could
tell you anything.
And then we saw the blind unbelief of the Galileans who saw the miracles
which Jesus did and to whom Jesus said, "You also have seen Me and believe not,
even in view of the miracles." We saw also the mysterious unbelief of Jesus
own brothers of whom John says, "For neither did His brethren believe in Him."
We saw also the willful truth-rejecting unbelief of the scribes, the chief
priests and the Pharisees to whom Jesus said, "And because I tell you the
truth, ye believe Me not."
Now we have seen unbelief on all those angles and we could really build a
theology of unbelief from the gospel of John. But before we would build our
theology of unbelief, we would have to carefully consider chapter 9 because
chapter 9 classifies for us in great detail the characteristics of willful
ignorant unbelief. Now there are two kinds of unbelief, at least, at this
point. There is the unbelief of the searching heart, that heart is unbelieving
only because it hasn't heard the truth. The unbelieving searching heart is one
thing. The closed minded willful truth-rejecting, that kind of unbelief is
something else all together for the honest heart that says I'm willing to
believe if I can see the truth, God reveals the truth. To that that says I do
not want the truth, I reject the evidence, I am willfully ignorant, I am
statically unbelieving, God has nothing to say. And that's the kind of
unbelief we see in chapter 9. And can you imagine of all things that kind of
unbelief trying to be objective in examining a miracle performed by Jesus
Christ.
Now this passage then shows us some key characteristics of willful
unbelief. And one by one as the chapter unfolds, we're going to see these
characteristics. Now we've already considered the first 12 verses which was
the miracle of Jesus healing the man who was born blind. Now we're going to
see the results of it. And as we watch the investigation as the Pharisees dive
into this thing to try to figure out what happened when Jesus made this man to
see, we're going to see one by one the characteristics of willful unbelief as
they unfold before our eyes. Jesus has just given sight to the man born blind.
He put clay on his eyes mixed with saliva, told him to go wash in the pool of
Siloam. The man obeyed and he received his sight.
He went immediately to his neighbors and they were astounded, just
astounded because here was this congenitally blind man with sight. They
grabbed the beggar, he was a blind beggar, and they whisked him off to the
Pharisees and that's where we begin in our passage this morning, as the
neighbors have the blind man and they escort him to the Pharisees.
Now as I studied this, I began to wonder in my mind why the Holy Spirit
designed to take a whole chapter on this little dialogue...why He bothered with
all of this investigation which goes nowhere. And I got a twofold answer.
Number one, this is all here, I believe, because it so carefully shows us the
character of willful unbelief. I have no doubts from now on what willful
unbelief is really like, it's all right here and how it operates. And from now
on when you go to witness for Jesus Christ to share your faith, you're going to
find out that when you meet this kind of unbelief it will be classified for you
just immediately because you'll reflect back on it from chapter 9. This is a
very important chapter.
The second reason I believe it's here is not only to declare unbelief's
characteristics but secondly, this becomes the fist great schism, the first
great division, the first great fractioning between the synagogue and Christ's
new organization soon to be called His church. This is the first person that's
thrown out of the synagogue. And that begins the cleavage that finally comes
in a full cleavage between Christ and Israel. And so it's an important
passage.
Now I want to show you five characteristics of willful unbelief. And
these five render an unbeliever incompetent to judge a divine miracle. Now I'm
going to say that again because it's important. These characteristics of
unbelief make an unbeliever incompetent to evaluate God's acts. Since when can
an unbelieving willfully ignorant individual come and competently judge the
activity of a God He doesn't believe in? And yet that's exactly what you have
here, investigating a miracle from the standpoint of unbelief.
Now I want to show you these five things...five characteristics of willful
unbelief. Number one, unbelief sets false standards. And these are universal,
they operate today. Number two, unbelief always wants more evidence, but never
gets enough. Number three, unbelief does biased research purely subjective.
Number four, unbelief rejects the facts. And number five, unbelief is totally
ego centric.
First of all notice this, unbelief sets false standards. Now as we pick
up the narrative, the neighbors who brought the blind man to the Pharisees and
the trouble begins, verse 13. "They brought to the Pharisees him that formerly
was blind." Now the Pharisees were a sect in Israel and they were legalistic.
They were oriented around the law of Moses. They adhered to the law of Moses
and they added to the law of Moses. In fact, they added and added and added to
the law of Moses until they had built up a legalistic system and it had just
become vast in its bondage over them and they tried to push this legalistic
bondage on the people of Israel as well.
Now it's very likely that they brought this blind man to the Pharisees
after the Sabbath. The miracle had occurred on the Sabbath, and we'll get to
that problem in a minute. But they brought him likely after the Sabbath
because the Pharisees wouldn't have been convening on the Sabbath, that would
have broken every standard that they had. So it's very likely a day or so
later. And they bring them...they bring him to the Pharisees.
Now the question arises immediately: why would they bring this blind man
to the Pharisees? Well, what's the point of that? Why do they scoop him up
and drag him off to the Pharisees?
Well, commentators and biblical scholars disagree at this point and run
the gamut of ideas. Let me give you three basic possible answers and the one
which I prefer and you can take your choice. Number one, some say that they
were in confusion. The neighbors didn't understand this, they were confused
and they wanted to go to the Pharisees to get the Pharisees to determine for
them what really had happened because the Pharisees were assumed to be the
final authority on everything. Whenever you had a legal problem, whenever you
had a spiritual problem, whenever you had a biblical question, you go to the
Pharisees. They were the final authority. And so some say that these people
were in a state of confusion and they did not understand what had happened.
They did not know how to evaluate it. They did not know how to fit it into
their theology. And so they brought the blind man to the Pharisees for the
Pharisees to make a judgment on it and determine what happened. Now that is
possible...that's possible.
Some say that it was a formal court that the Sanhedrin had set up. In
other words, that they had assigned the Pharisees to meet as a body in a
certain hall and the blind man to be brought, it was formal. Others say it was
informal. Whichever, both are immaterial. The only point is they brought him
to the Pharisees.
Personally I think it was informal. The reason I think it was informal
was because of the results that took place and the character of the hearing
which was completely non-formal. It was just the very opposite of that.
Now that's the first option that they were in a state of confusion and
they wanted an answer. That's possible. The second one is that they brought
him for a positive reason, that these neighbors had been hearing the Pharisees
continually knocking Jesus, continually saying Jesus is a fake, Jesus is a
fraud and they'd even called Him a dirty demon-possessed Samaritan. And they
had really let Him have it. And they had been trying to stone Him and all of
this for a long time. And that these neighbors knew this and so now they were
ready to slap it on the Pharisees by confronting them with what was going on.
As if to say you've been saying Jesus is a fake and Jesus is a fraud, well what
are you going to do with this, fellas...and shove the blind man right up there
and say, "Now, look at him, he sees, what's going on? Is this what your fraud
did or your fake?"
In other words, some feel that they were trying to push the Pharisees into
a corner where they would have to reject what they had been teaching.
Personally, I think that's highly unlikely. The people were so afraid of the
Pharisees anyway that I doubt very seriously whether they ever would have come
in direct confrontation, they would have been afraid of being thrown out of the
synagogue. In verse 22 of the same chapter it says right there that if any man
confess that He was Messiah, that's Christ in the Greek, anybody said that He
was Messiah, why he'd be thrown out of the synagogue. And they weren't about
to put themselves on that spot. So it's very unlikely that they were trying to
corner the Pharisees.
The third option, and the one that I prefer, is that they felt a negative
thing here, that they were just a part of the whole bandwagon thing as well and
that they knew this miracle had happened on the Sabbath and they knew how the
Pharisees dealt with people who violated the Sabbath. And so they were
bringing the blind man to the Pharisees to see what the Pharisees would do
about this violation of the Sabbath because it was illegal according to them to
heal on the Sabbath. And so they were bringing him for the sake of letting the
Pharisees do what they would do to somebody who broke the Sabbath. It says
nowhere in my Bible that these neighbors were defenders of Jesus at all,
rather, I'm convinced, that they would have been part of the mainstream of
Israel and they would never have confronted the Pharisees except to agree with
them because they were afraid of them. And I think that's doubly indicated by
the character of verse 14 which immediately jumps in and says, "And it was the
Sabbath day when Jesus made the clay and opened his eyes," see.
So, it seems to me to be that the Sabbath day was the issue. And Jesus
had truly broken the Sabbath, not God's Sabbath but the Sabbath that the Jews
had added all the rules to. He broke it two ways. Number one, you couldn't
make clay on the Sabbath and He had spit on the ground and mixed it with His
saliva and made clay and that was strictly a no, no...according to the
traditional law.
Some of the traditions that had built up at that time were very, very
interesting. For example, I read a couple of them. A man may not fill a dish
with oil and put it beside a lamp and put the end of the wick in it. Another
one, if a man extinguishes a lamp on the Sabbath to spare the lamp or the oil
or the wick, he is culpable. That means he's guilty, can't even turn out the
lights. And even today that's why many orthodox Jewish homes still have an
electrical system on a time clock that turns their lights on and off on the
Sabbath because they are still adhering to these kind of traditions and these
kinds of laws. And these are the things that God's Son Jesus Christ came to
liberate Israel from. This is the message we preach to Israel that they might
see that they're free through Jesus Christ from the bondage of law.
Another thing that they said is this, a man may go not out on the Sabbath
with sandals that are shod with nails. You had to wear your nail less sandals
or go barefoot because walking around with sandals with nails in them
constituted carrying a burden. Also, a man might not cut his fingernails or
pull out a hair of his head or beard on the Sabbath. Now obviously, these
rules were not biblical. They had grown up to kind of orient around a
legalistic system because people were trying to please God by the do's and
don'ts. And in the light of such laws, obviously making clay would be work.
And so, Jesus had broken the Sabbath by that.
It was also, another interesting rule, you couldn't heal on the Sabbath.
Medical attention could only be given if life was in actual danger...and mark
this one...and even then it only could be the medical attention that kept the
patient from dying while at the same time it didn't make him any better. Now
you try to figure out how to operate that balance. One of the rules that
illustrates this was that if a man had a toothache he couldn't pull the tooth
but he could such vinegar through his teeth. He couldn't get rid of the
problem but he could at least pacify it until the next day.
And since the blind man was in no danger of losing his life, and since
Christ clearly made him better and since He made clay, He had broken their
Sabbath. And, you see, it was one of these petty rules and these little
details that the scribes and the Pharisees sought to honor God. But to Jesus,
these rules were fantastic, they were irrelevant and they were inane. They had
no point at all. And so it seems likely to me that they brought the man to
inform the Pharisees that Jesus had done this on the Sabbath. And as I say,
that's supported by verse 14, immediately it qualifies it by saying it was a
Sabbath day when Jesus made the clay and opened his eyes. That's the point.
In fact, a rabbinical statement recorded by Mimonades(?) many many centuries
back says this, "It is prohibited to put saliva on the eyes on the Sabbath."
You say, "Well, who would ever make a rule like that? Who would bother to put
saliva on somebody's eyes?" Well, you see, saliva was thought to have some
kind of a medicinal quality and it was used as a healing agent. I don't know
how they justified it after years of trying it and nothing ever happening. But
nevertheless they did. And so they had a rule that prohibited that. So he had
broken the law every which way, one of their little rules.
Now you say, "Well, why would Jesus do this? I mean, it just seems to
irritate them every time He does it. Why does He always confront them and just
smash right into them headlong? I mean, can't He just kind of put His arm
around and say--Hey, fellas, I really like you a lot, but you got a lot of
weird things? Why doesn't He sort of sneak in?"
Listen, my friend, if we don't understand this yet, we'll never understand
it. Jesus always confronted somebody at the point of their error and He did it
face to face with them. He never backed off and went into a dialogue about
their good qualities. Whenever there was a flagrant violation of God's truth,
Jesus went straight at it, not indirectly but right straight at it directly and
confronted it. And if you're ever going to communicate truth with somebody
you've got to hit them at the point of their error and make them realize it.
Jesus did it because He cared about them. Jesus kept on relentlessly pounding
these truths into the heads of the Pharisees in hopes that some time they would
open up and understand. They were following the traditions of men and He was
hitting at those legalistic hypocritical traditions. And they were the wall,
you see, that kept out the truth. He couldn't get past that legalism to get to
them. And He had to smash it and so He constantly attempted to do that. They
had perverted the law, twisted the Sabbath which had been meant for man's good,
they had turned it into man's bondage.
For example, in Luke chapter 6, I think it is, that important
passage...right, "It came to pass," verse 6, Luke 6, "on another Sabbath, He
entered in the synagogue and taught. And there was a man whose right hand was
paralyzed." It's on the Sabbath again. "And the scribes and Pharisees watched
Him whether He would heal on the Sabbath day that they might find an accusation
against Him." See, this was illegal. "He knew their thoughts." So you know
what He did because He knew their thoughts? He didn't heal him. No, wrong, He
healed him...He confronted them absolutely direct. He said to the man with the
paralyzed hand, "Rise up and and get over here in the middle of the crowd,
right here where everybody can see you...no secret miracle, got the man right
in the middle...Then Jesus said unto them," that is all the religious leaders,
"I'll ask you one thing, let's talk about the primary law of the Sabbath, is it
lawful to do good on the Sabbath or to do evil?" It's a good question. To
destroy life or to save life? "And looking round about upon them, He said unto
the man, Stretch forth your hand. And he did so and the hand was restored just
like the other and they were filled with fury and discussed with one
another...with one another what they might do with Jesus." He had broken their
law flagrantly and right in front of their faces He did it because He wanted to
confront them, you see, at the problem. Constantly He did this...constantly,
relentlessly.
And He had a higher law than any Sabbath law. And so do you. First
Corinthians 10, "Whatever you do, whether you eat or drink or whatever you do,
do all...what?...to the glory of God." That, my friend, is the highest law and
if it's glory to God to heal a paralyzed hand on the Sabbath, then heal it.
That supercedes any legalism. And besides that, Jesus said in Mark 2:27 that
the Sabbath was made for man, not man for the Sabbath. We're not supposed to
restrict ourselves on the Sabbath, we're supposed to have rest and the bondage
of the Sabbath was worse than the rest of the days. Besides that, in verse 28
of Mark 2, Jesus says that I am the Lord of the Sabbath. I'll do what I want
on the Sabbath. In fact, in John's gospel earlier, you remember, He said, "I
work and My Father works." We work on the Sabbath, we don't rest. The Lord is
Lord of the Sabbath. They had made a fetish out of the Sabbath. And He knew
its purpose and He confronted their misuse of it and used it rightly to heal,
to do good, to give glory to God. And they were using it to give glory to man
so they could go around and say, "We keep the Sabbath, we keep the Sabbath, see
us over here with the stuff on our heads, we keep the Sabbath." And Jesus says
that's not keep the Sabbath, keeping the Sabbath is giving glory to God not
yourselves for your legalism.
Verse 15, "Then again the Pharisees asked Him," evidently they had asked
him before and his neighbors had also asked him back in verse 8 and following.
"Then the Pharisees asked him how he had received his sight? He said unto
them," simple answer, I like this fella and you're going to like him a lot
better as we go, "He put clay on mine eyes and I washed and do see." That's a
terrific answer. Just plain ole simple I was there and He put clay on my eyes
and I washed it off and I can see. It doesn't give you a whole lot of
information about how he did it in terms of the power. But isn't it
interesting that they ask him this question again? The question has already
been asked, but they don't care about the man, they're not even...they don't
even...you don't hear them say, "Oh, isn't it wonderful, you can see after all
these years," they could care less about him. They don't care one thing about
that blind man, they're after Jesus. They hate Him.
And, you know, isn't it an interesting thing that this is always the way
Satan works? And remember back in chapter 8 how He said to them, the
Pharisees, "You are of your father the devil," and they act like it cause
that's exactly what the devil does. He doesn't care about anybody, he only
cares about getting God, doesn't he? He's after God. He's after Jesus Christ.
He only uses people as dupes to fight against God. When he's done with you,
he'll chew you up and spit you out, a roaring lion seeking who he may devour,
an eternity in hell. He doesn't care at all about you. He doesn't care about
any of us. But he'll use us to get at God and Christ if he can.
And so the Pharisees begin their investigation and they have a false
standard. Their standard is..."Well, first of all, we could start this
investigation by saying this, He did it on the Sabbath and if He did it on the
Sabbath He's not of
God cause God's people don't break the Sabbath." See, that's their false
standard. Unbelief always has a false standard. Look at it in verse 16.
"Therefore said some of the Pharisees, This man is not of God because He
keepeth not the Sabbath day."
Now there they start their investigation with that bias, with that false
standard. They use a syllogism. Major premise, all people from God keep the
Sabbath. Minor premise, Jesus didn't keep the Sabbath. Conclusion, Jesus
isn't from God. That's their syllogism. They've identified their own trifling
hair-splitting Sabbath regulations with obeying God. Unbelief is like that.
You know, it always sets false standards. It says, "Well, now this is true and
this is true and here are the rules and I'm sorry, all that Christianity stuff,
all that Jesus...ah, it doesn't make it, here are the rules." Who set the
rules? "I did." Who gave you the right? "It's just innate within me."
Foolish, foolish. "I set my standards. Sorry, Christianity don't make it, you
don't fit. Jesus, You don't make it into my little thing." That's the way
unbelief is. Always false standards...He couldn't be God because He didn't
qualify. Who set the standards? They did. That's backwards, folks, that's
backwards. My friend, you don't judge Jesus Christ and you don't judge God,
they judge you.
But I like what happens now. Some of the Pharisees are pretty sharp. And
some of them disagreed, verse 16 in the middle, "Others said," this is Group B,
"How can a man that is a sinner do such miracles? And there was a division
among them." Every time you see division in the New Testament, it's a good
thing, terrific...except in the letters to the churches, then it's a bad thing.
In the gospel, it's a good thing cause it means somebody's cutting loose from
the world and getting attached to Jesus Christ. And that's good. Some of them
began to say, "Hey, wait a minute. This is Group B and we have a syllogism.
Our syllogism is this: major premise, only people from God can open eyes that
were born blind. Number two, Jesus opened eyes that were born blind.
Conclusion, Jesus must be from God." Now I like that syllogism. I'm in Group
B.
But Group A is unmoved. Group A is unmoved. Group A doesn't even listen.
They don't even hear. Jesus is a fake and they don't hear anything else. And
the division stands and holds. And the rest of this passage is Group A trying
to prove to themselves, Group B, and everybody else that they are right.
They're trying to prove that Jesus is a fraud and no miracle worker at all.
So, they start out with their false standard. He couldn't be from God
because He did it on the Sabbath and you don't break the Sabbath if you're from
God. Now the second characteristic of unbelief, unbelief always wants more
evidence. Interesting thing about unbelief. It always wants more evidence but
it never has enough, right? It never gets enough. You just keep giving more
evidence, more evidence, more evidence and they always want more evidence.
Never enough. The blind man had just told them exactly what happened. And the
proof was literally staring them in the face. But it's the nature of
determined willful unbelief that it always wants more evidence but it never
ever ever has enough. No amount of evidence can reach these apostates because
there's no faith there, see...no faith.
You know, Moses said this so well...so well. Deuteronomy 32:20, Moses
talked about apostates who see the truth and reject it willfully, blind
willfully. You know what he said about them? Fantastic statement, he said
this, Deuteronomy 32, "They are children in whom there is no faith." Oh, what
a statement. No capacity to have faith. They are faithless. There doesn't
even exist the option of believing. They have determined and set themselves in
a static pattern of unbelief and they have not the option of believing. They
are children in whom there is no faith. They...they have no capacity to
apprehend the truth. And here they are and they're groping around trying to
investigate a miracle without a capacity to see it or believe it.
And Jesus dealt with them. You remember how many times this willful
unbelief has come up and Jesus could have given them more evidence but doesn't?
Back in chapter 7, they're all arguing and saying, "Well, this can't be the
Messiah because, you see, the Messiah has to come from Bethlehem, but this one
came out of Nazareth." And Jesus is standing right there and He could have
said, "Hey, men, you just don't know. I was born in Bethlehem." But He
doesn't say it, you know why? It doesn't do any good to give more evidence to
that kind of unbelief. All it would want would be more evidence. So Jesus
doesn't even entertain it. He just backs off. See, willing apostate ignorant
self-imposed unbelief, Jesus never even deals with...just walks away. That's
the difference between the willing heart that's seeking to know the truth, that
kind of unbelief that wants to believe, God meets and communicates to.
But they had no capacity and so they demand more, verse 17, "They say unto
the blind man again." They never give up. "What sayest thou of Him since He
hath opened thine eyes?" Very profound question and I'm sure he said, "He's a
prophet, what do you expect? What do you think I'm going to say?"
"What's your evaluation there, blind beggar?" "It's pretty obvious, man,
He's a prophet. I mean, a prophet's one sent from God. Obvious...see."
He's kind...I like this guy even better now. He's got a little
character...got some courage. He's going to stand up to them and say this is a
prophet. He knows what the Sanhedrin has declared in verse 22 has already come
to pass, he knows that he can get put out of the synagogue. He's aware of
that. But his own heart has been convinced and even though he tells them the
truth and gives them the evidence they want, their brains can't shift...there's
no belief gear, you know, they can't shift into belief, it isn't there. They
are statically lost in their unbelief. And so they hear the evidence but
attempt to find the fakery, rather than believe the truth.
Then the progression of their ignorance is all through this chapter. Now
you'll notice also verse 18, "But the Jews did not believe concerning him that
he had been blind and received his sight until they called the parents of him
that had received his sight." Listen, we cannot accept the evidence just from
you, see. That's unbelief, right? Got to have more evidence. So the blind
man gives them the evidence. Now that's not enough evidence, got to have more
evidence...let's go get the parents, boy, we want to get this thing settled
right here.
Notice this interesting footnote. The word "Jews" there, John uses the
word Jews to characterize unbelief. Whenever you see in John's gospel the word
Jews, it represents the hostility against Jesus. Now there were some in Israel
that weren't hostile, some who loved Him and there still are today. And for
the others we pray. But for these who were hostile, they are called Jews.
That seems to be John's term of hostility. And it's interesting note that
he...you originally had Pharisees, right? Just one group of Pharisees, but
when the Pharisees split, see, and Group A went over here and Group B went over
here, this group couldn't be called the Pharisees anymore because some of them
were over here. So John gives them a new name, the title of hostility and
calls them the Jews, but they are a portion of the Pharisees.
Okay, the Jews didn't believe, let's get the parents, let's get to the
bottom of this thing. Interesting thing is they weren't looking for truth at
all, they already knew truth. They knew everything. They only wanted support
for their already...already made conclusions. So they want more of it...get
the parents. Let's get all the evidence we can get, and it never does any
good. So unbelief always wants more evidence but never has enough.
Third characteristic of unbelief...unbelief does biased researched. It
not only sets its own standards, which are false, but it wants more and more
evidence and never gets enough, but it also does biased subjective researched.
Absolutely amazing. When unbelief investigates a miracle, you can present all
the facts, all the evidence and still the conclusion will be what it was before
they began the investigation because it's subjective. We want to do the
research, verse 19. Parents are there. They ask them saying, "Is this your
son who ye say was born blind? How then doth he now see?"
Oh, you've only heard it about five times. Two questions. Is this the
man? Is this the one that was born blind? Second question, how did he get his
sight? The parents answer question number one, here's the more evidence they
wanted. "His parents answered them and said, We know that this is our son and
that he was born blind," that's the guy right there. That's him.
But these are really...these parents make the biggest cop out. Verse 21,
"But by what means he now seeth we know not." That's a lie. "Who hath opened
his eyes, we know not." Now you know that that man told his parents what
happened. You know that. He is of age, ask him. He shall speak for himself.
Verse 22, you want to know why they lied? Look at this, "These words spoke
his parents because they...what?...feared the Jews." We don't want to get
excommunicated. We don't want to get... "They feared the Jews for the Jews had
already agreed, Sanhedrin directed it, if any man did confess that He was
anointed, He was Messiah, He was Christ, he should be put out of they
synagogue."
Now these were really wonderful parents, weren't they? Really standing up
for their son. No wonder he was a beggar. They probably wouldn't even let him
around the house. They couldn't care less about him. And they were most
afraid of social problems. They were afraid of being put out of the synagogue.
That's a fabulous word in the Greek...fabulous. And they were afraid of the
Jews, Jewish leaders...the people were really afraid of the leaders. You know
what the word is for being put out of the synagogue? It's one word in the
Greek, it's aposunagogos. You know what it means? It means to be
unsynagogued. Anybody who claimed Jesus as Messiah would be immediately
unsynagogued.
Now the synagogue was the place where they met together for fellowship and
everything else. And if you got unsynagogued, that means socially you were cut
off from the life of Israel, no social relations at all. Economically you
couldn't buy...you were really in bad shape, and religiously you had no rights
at all. Now there were three kinds of unsynagogued, three kinds of
excommunication, all of them called shamitah(?) which is the Hebrew word for
destroy. The first kind was nesifah(?). Nesifah shamitah which was type
number one meant that you got unsynagogued for 7 to 30 days and you got a good
lecture with it. It was kind of a bawling out and the 7 to 30 day deal where
you were cut off from the life of Israel.
Then if you really did something very bad you were needwi(?) which is 30
days and over unsynagogued which means no social relations, no economic
relations and no religious relations. You were just cut off from the life of
your nation.
But the worst kind was cherem(?) Cherem shamitah was permanent. And in
any of the other kind, if you happen to die at the time you were under those
sentences, you would have no funeral, put in the ground, covered up and that
was it. So this was a very serious thing to be cut off from the life of Israel
and they were hiding behind these lies because they were afraid of this.
And so they say, ask him, verse 23, you see it again, "Therefore said his
parents, he is of age, ask him...ask him." Now they've got evidence. They
know it's the right child. They know he can see. They know Jesus put the clay
on his eyes. He went to the pool, he washed his eyes. He came out of there
and he could see. They know all the evidence there is to know. And they're
going to take all those facts and do their research.
Now watch the conclusion. Verse 24, "Then again called they the man that
was blind and said unto him, Give God the praise, God did it. We know that
this man...who?...Jesus is a sinner." Listen, we've taken all the facts into
account, we've done all our research, give God the praise, we know Jesus is a
sinner.
How do you know? It's innate. See...stupid. What kind of research is
that? All the evidence...He's a sinner, we know it, evidence aside, witnesses
aside, seeing eyes aside, we know...hmmph. Boy, that's hard to believe.
That's unbelievable unbelief. And Moses was right, they were children in whom
there was no faith. All the evidence in the world and we know...that's like
the math student, you know. The math student who decides that four and four is
not eight, four and four is thirteen and a quarter. And then spends all his
life researching it and every research project comes out eight, but he is
unmoved. It is thirteen and a quarter. How do you know? I know...
And that's the way unbelief is, see. Unbelief exposed to all the facts
and all the evidence comes up with unbelief, that's the way it is. That's
subjective research. That's the worst kind of research there is. Start with
some great big conclusion and then disregard the facts. Personal statement
that then does research to confirm that statement is backwards. Objective
research is the only kind that starts with nothing, takes the evidence and
comes to a conclusion. But the Pharisees did their bias subjective research to
find evidence to support their preclusion. And even though they couldn't
support it it didn't change them cause they didn't believe it anyway. That's
the way unbelief is.
One of the greatest classic examples of that in modern day writing is The
Passover Plot, have any of you seen that book? And in The Passover Plot the
author starts with a supposition. His supposition is this, "I reject Jesus
Christ. Jesus Christ is not the Son of God. Jesus Christ was a phony
religious leader who planned His whole big life deal was a big fake, a big deal
off...pawning Himself off on the world. He planned the whole deal." That he
begins with and then he grabs all the twisted evidence from history to
corroborate it. Foolishness. That is subjective research, invalid.
What do they stand? They stand this way, we hate Jesus. Now looking at
the evidence, we conclude Jesus didn't do it. It's obvious he's going to say
that because you hate Him to begin with.
So, unbelief sets false standards, wants more evidence but never gets
enough and then it does subjective biased research which comes to no conclusion
but which was the conclusion to begin with. Fourth thing, and very obvious,
unbelief rejects the facts. Facts mean nothing to unbelief. It has no
capacity to accept them.
Verse 25, "The blind man tells them again," and, you know, they're in the
category of "my mind's made up, don't confuse me with facts." Verse 25, here's
the blind man talking, "He answered and said, Well, whether He's a sinner or
not, I know not. One thing I know that whereas I was blind, I now see." What
a put down, see. They're saying, "He's a sinner." The blind man says, "Well,
I don't know about that, but I do know one thing, I used to be blind, now I can
see," see. They are...we know. He says, "I know I can see." So he puts his
"I know" against their "we know." And they're lost now. There's no argument
left, see. There's no argument. What are they going to say now? There's all
the evidence. All they can say is, "Give God the praise, that man's a
sinner...we know He is." No reason, rhyme or anything except their own
unbelief. And so what can they do? They can't argue with the blind...the
blind man has got them. He's one up on them. There's nothing to do.
So you know what they do? They fall to the low levels of conflict.
Remember we talked about those a few weeks ago? Look at verse 26 and 27, "Then
said them to him again, What did He to thee? How opened He thine eyes?" You
know, the blind man must have gone...Uh, uh, uh...you know, I've told you so
many times. Here they are...how did it happen? How did He do it, see? For
the seventeenth time, see. And so, "He answered them," and Oh, this answer is
fabulous, listen, "He answered them, I've told you already and you did not
believe." Didn't even hear, didn't even hear. He says, "Why would you hear it
again?" Watch this one, "Will you also be His disciples?" Oh, sarcasm...will
you also be His disciples? I like this blind man...he's forthright and he just
fires right away, no regard.
No, they weren't about to be His disciples. But I'll tell you one thing,
they didn't know how to handle that man. And they lost themselves to the
lowest level of conflict, four levels of conflict that I showed you. Number
one, the intellectual level, right? You meet mind to mind when you have a
problem. Then you deteriorate to the emotional level where you get really
involved. The next level is the verbal abuse level where you start calling
names when you've lost the argument. And the bottom level is you start beating
them up, see. That's the four levels of conflict. You start intellectually
and you end up on the ground, see, pounding each other.
And that's true of every kind of argument. It's true of the household.
You start out talking with your wife, pretty soon you're shouting at your wife
and the next thing you know you hit your wife...somebody does. It's just this
constant progress. And every conflict takes it. You've seen it in politics.
You've seen it where you stand there and you reason and then you shout and then
you take your shoe off and you beat it on the table. You do all these things.
I mean, in other words, there's a progression to the bottom level of conflict.
And here they are at the bottom, verse 28, they don't know what to say. The
man has defeated them. There's no...the evidence is all in. And verse 28,
"Then they...what?...revile him." They started cursing at him. See, I don't
know what they said, I don't particularly care to know. But I have a vivid
enough imagination to determine the nature of their reviling. They called him
names. They started the verbal abuse. And that only lasted till verse 34, at
the end of verse 34 it says they gave him the physical. They got to the bottom
level of conflict, picked him up and threw him out of the building.
You see, that's a great sign of mental bankruptcy. Did you know that?
When you have lost the argument, you resort to that. And there they are
throwing names at him. And this is terrific. They revile him and said, "Thou
art His disciple but we are Moses' disciple," and immediately they sucked their
Mosaic thumb because they've got to grab security, see. They have to find
security somewhere and they found their security in Abraham in chapter 8 but
Jesus exploded that. They said, "We're the children of Abraham." Jesus said,
"If you were the children of Abraham you'd do the works of Abraham, you're of
your father the devil." So Abraham is no security for them anymore and so they
grab Moses. We're the children of Moses...great Mosheh, and he is, no question
about the greatness of Moses. But, you see, they're leaning on their
relationship to law cause Moses was the one who brought the law from God, see.
They're leaning on their "We're the legalists, we are disciples of Moses," and
then in verse 29, "we know that God spoke unto Moses." They're right, He did.
"As for this fellow--that is Jesus whom they won't name, His name is poison to
them--this fellow, we know not from where He is." See, they're starting to
call Him names, too, without naming Him...this fellow. His name became poison.
That's the
kind of conflict levels...that's the kind of levels conflict gets to. To
protect their ego they lash out at Jesus and they lash out at the beggar and
they convince themselves in a self-satisfied egoism that the facts don't
matter, they're irrelevant. What matters is we're disciples of Moses and we
know.
And then they add this ridiculous statement, "We know now from where He
is." He had told them so many times from where He was. They ought to have
known it from how many times He told them. And then the blind man adds a shot
that is devastating in verse 30, "The man answered and said unto them, Why here
is a marvelous thing that you know not from where He is and yet He hath opened
mine eyes." Terrific statement. Here is a marvelous thing, I could just see
him, kind of a smug look on his face. You know, there's only one thing more
amazing than healing blind eyes and that's this kind of unbelief. It's
amazing.
So, unbelief sets its standards falsely. Always wants more evidence and
never gets enough. Has no capacity for faith. Does subjective biased research
and rejects the facts. Lastly, and very obvious, unbelief is
egocentric...verse 31, the blind man continues. And he's dominating now, "Now
we know that God heareth not sinners," that's true, the Old Testament says if I
regard iniquity in my heart, Psalm 66:18, the Lord will not hear me. That's
right. The Lord doesn't hear sinners. You know what the blind man's doing
here? He's got his own syllogism. Listen to what he says. He's going to get
on their bandwagon. "Now we know that God heareth not sinners but if any man
be a worshiper of God and doeth His will, him He heareth." You know what his
syllogism is? Major premise, only people from God are heard by God so that
they could open blind eyes. Jesus opened blind eyes therefore He was heard by
God. If He was heard by God He's not a sinner. See, he says, if you're going
to add some syllogism, let me throw mine in. He's convinced Jesus is from God.
"If any man be a worshiper of God and doeth His will, him He heareth,
since the world or the age began was it not heard that any man open the eyes of
one that was born blind?" You know, in the whole Old Testament, there's never
a case of healing of congenital blindness? And do you know that congenital
blindness was a tremendously common problem, as I showed you last week, from
the effects of gonorrhea? And never a healing. But here's the first one. And
only God could do that. Only God can give eyes. The blind man was right.
Well, how they going to handle this guy? Verse 33 continues, "If this
man--that is Jesus--were not of God, He could do nothing." Boy, that blind
man's convincing himself along the line here. He's progressed right along.
And the more they get antagonistic toward Jesus, the more convinced he is that
this is somebody from God.
Well, they hit bottom again in verse 34. "They answered and said unto
him, Thou was all together born in sin, you reprobate, you were born in sin,
dost thou teach us?" You know, see...egocentric. What are you doing saying
this to us? So what do they do? "And they cast him out." That means they
threw him out of the building and unsynagogued him at the same time.
You see, with all the facts and with all the evidence, with all the
testimony involved, the willful unbelief is hopeless and it only resorts to the
lowest level of conflict. Starts calling names and bodily abuse. You see,
that's what they did to Jesus, too, wasn't it? They called Him dirty names and
then finally they nailed Him to a cross because they descended to the lowest
level of conflict, they couldn't handle Him anymore.
I want to close with two verses and I want you to write them down. Two
verses wrap up this whole thought for us and characterize unbelief as we've
seen it here in two thoughts. One is an illustration, the other is an
explanation. I want to show you the first one, Acts 7:57, this is summing up
this whole chapter. Are you ready for this? Listen...tremendous statement.
Stephen was preaching, tremendous sermon, powerful, dynamic, presenting Christ,
then they cried out...that's the audience that was hearing him...with a loud
voice and stopped their ears...just like that. That's real objective
research. They plugged their ears. And they ran upon him with one accord,
grabbed stones and killed him.
You see, that's how unbelief does. It isn't...willful unbelief isn't even
interested in the truth. It plugs its ears and descends to the lowest level of
conflict, physical abuse.
Now I want to show you the theology of it in Titus 1:15, the last verse.
"Unto the pure, all things are...what?...pure," watch this one, "But unto them
that are defiled, an unbelieving is nothing pure because their mind and
conscience is defiled." You know something? To an unbelieving and defiled
mind, you can present all the pure evidence in the world and it will still be
defiled because unbelief cannot be won by evidence, it can only be won by a
divine miracle from God to change that heart.
Listen, Jesus is Christ. He is the Son of God. He is the Messiah of
Israel, a blind beggar saw it. And next week we're going to see him as he
comes to full knowledge of Christ. A blind beggar saw that and the religious
leaders of Israel didn't. And I ask you this morning, what about you? Have
you seen who He is?
Our Father we thank You this morning for teaching us again through Your
Word, Your truth. And, Lord, if there are some here this morning who have
never invited this Christ into their lives, who have never opened their heart
to understand and know Him, that they might do it this morning. Father, as we
close our service this morning, we pray that You'll move by Your Spirit upon
hearts that we might recognize Christ in all His glory and that people might
give Him their lives, receive Him as Savior. We pray in His name, amen.
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