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All throughout this gospel of John, we have seen Jesus Christ making His
claims to be the Son of God, to be the Messiah, to be the Savior of the world,
to be the Christ of Israel. We have seen Him make those claims and verify them
by miracles and by His own teachings and things. And then we have seen how men
responded to them. And in this particular passage, this morning, we are going
to see the ultimate end of the miracle that Jesus performed on the man born
blind whom He met just outside the temple.
Now the whole subject of blindness is a very important subject in the
Bible. All through Scripture, blindness is a spiritual metaphor. And it is
used to represent the spiritual inability to see God's truth. As a man is
physically blind, he cannot see God's visible revelation. That is he can't see
the trees and the earth and the sky. But as a man is spiritually blind, he
cannot see God's invisible revelation; love, truth, holiness, forgiveness,
blessing, eternal life, grace, joy, peace, etc. As the blind does not see the
vast blue of the clear sky, so the blind spirit does not see the vast holiness
and purity of God. As the blind eye does not perceive the blanket of green
that covers the earth, so the blind spirit cannot see the grace of God. As the
blind eye does not see the immensity of creation, so the blind spirit does not
see the limitless power of God. And as the blind eye sees no rainbow of colors
that speckles the earth, so the blind spirit sees not the love of God which
colors every revelation. As the blind eye cannot see light, so the blind
spirit cannot see the light, the light of the world, Jesus Christ.
And so, blindness becomes scripturally a metaphor for spiritually being in
the dark, unable to discern God or God's truth. And sadly but truly, spiritual
blindness is the norm; spiritual sight, the exception.
Now, the subject of spiritual sight and spiritual blindness is then the
theme really of chapter 9 of John's gospel. And I believe one of the reasons
that it is included here, as I mentioned to you last week, at least the lengthy
story is included, is because it so clearly portrays by analogy and metaphor
the character and the nature of spiritual blindness and spiritual sight. And
the whole area of darkness, or of spiritual blindness, is emphasized throughout
Scripture as typical of this situation of not recognizing sin and seeing God.
In fact, in 2 Corinthians chapter 4, the Apostle Paul characterizes the
whole scheme of salvation by making a comparison to blindness. In verse 3 of 2
Corinthians 4, Paul says, "If our gospel be hidden, it is hidden to them that
are lost." In other words, if as we preach the gospel of Jesus Christ it is
hidden, the ones to whom it is hidden will be those that are lost. Why?
Because they are those in whom the God of this world has blinded the minds.
The reason men do not understand God or God's truth is because they are
spiritually blinded by the God of this world, lest the light of the glorious
gospel should shine unto them.
Later on in verse 6, Paul says it is we Christians who have seen the
light. God has commanded in us that light should shine out of darkness. But
in the case of unbelievers, they are in darkness, their minds blinded by the
God of this world to prevent the light of the gospel from shining unto them.
And thus it is hidden to them. When salvation comes along, it opens the eyes
of the soul or the spirit to understand light and to comprehend God's truth.
This is clearly illustrated by Paul when he was talking to Agrippa in the
twenty-sixth chapter of Acts. He says this, "I came to open their eyes and
turn them from darkness to light." That was Paul's mission, to take
spiritually blind people and give them spiritual sight. Now the scriptures
teach us that it is only those who know and love Jesus Christ who have
spiritual sight. There are a lot of people in the world who are religious and
think they see. The Pharisees did. They were super religious. And they
thought they had everything pigeonholed. They thought they could see and
comprehend every spiritual truth in existence. They thought they knew
everything. And in fact they knew nothing. They were totally blind. And it's
a kind of a strange thing, paradoxical perhaps, but blindness is bad enough, but
when you add to natural born blindness spiritually the blindness of a false
system of religion, then you have a double blindness and a difficulty in
penetrating that double blindness. It's bad enough to try to communicate the
truth of light to someone whose just born blind by sin nature, but then to try
to confront someone who is doubly blinded in some systematic religious Satanic
devise makes the blindness even more impenetrable sometimes. And so rather
than people being in religion finding light, they veil themselves with a double
darkness and we find it even more difficult to bread through, we cannot--apart
from God--commanding the light to shine out of that darkness. And we'll see
how that works in a few minutes.
But, basically, get this in your mind, the only people in the world who
see truthfully are those who know and love Jesus Christ. You say that's very
narrow minded. You're right, absolutely the most narrow minded possible
conception, it just so happens it's also the truth. Now if you want, I'll be
broad minded but it won't be the truth. The truth is, only those who know
Jesus Christ can see. People say to me, "Well, that Jesus is the most
narrow-minded individual I ever saw." That's right, He was narrow minded cause
He was always right and was never wrong. "And the Bible's the most narrow
minded book I ever read." Absolutely correct, it is absolutely the most narrow
minded book ever written. "And God is the most narrow minded God I ever heard
about." That's right, He is absolutely and stands no competition. After all,
who's there to argue with Him?
But listen, God doesn't tell us all these things to be narrow minded, He
tells us these things to be true. And if two and two is four, it's not narrow
minded to say it's four, it's stupid to say it could be three, five, six or
thirteen and a quarter. If it's true, let's be true. And if the only way to
have spiritual light is through Jesus Christ, if the only way to God is through
Jesus Christ, if the only way to understanding is through Jesus Christ, then I
am compelled to tell you that and not to water it down and say something else
that is not the case. Peter says this, emphasizing the same point, in chapter
2 of his first epistle in verse 9, listen to it, "Ye are a chosen
generation--talking to believers--a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people
of His own--I like that, belong to God--that you should show forth the praises
of Him--watch this--who hath called you out of darkness into His marvelous
light."
Listen, did you know that light is the possession of God? God
is..what?...light. And in Him there is no darkness at all. And the Apostle
Paul carefully points this out, 1 Thessalonians 5, "But of the times and the
seasons, brethren, you have no need that I write unto you." You got your
eschatology in the right brackets, you know when Christ is coming. "For you
yourselves know perfectly that the day of the Lord comes as a thief in the
night when they all say peace and safety, then sudden destruction cometh upon
them, there's travail upon a woman with child and they shall not escape. But
ye, brethren, are not in darkness that the day should overtake you as a thief,
you are sons of light and sons of the day." You who know Christ, you are the
sons of light.
And then the Apostle Paul also writing to the Colossians said this,
"Giving thanks unto the Father who hath made us fit to be partakers of the
inheritance of the saints in light, who hath delivered us from the power of
darkness and hath translated us into the Kingdom of His dear Son." The only
people who know light are those who know Jesus Christ, for His is the kingdom
of light.
So, the world is divided into two groups: those that are in darkness, the
spiritually blind and those that have sight, the spiritually seeing. There are
only two kinds of people. There's no half sight. There are no partially
blind. You either see or you are totally blind. My dad told me that my
grandfather used to say there's only two kinds of people in the world, the
saints and the ain'ts, and that's all. Now this entire issue of blindness and
the entire issue of sight is really what governs chapter 9 of John.
Just to review so you know where we are in John 9. As we come to verse 35
which is where we'll begin our discussion today, we have already seen several
things take place. Jesus, back in chapter 8, confronted the Pharisees, He
incensed them so much by His claims that they finally grabbed stones to stone
Him. And since the temple was usually in repair somewhere, they probably had
access to stones lying around, it was built of stones. And so they grabbed
these stones and Jesus just vanished out of their sight. And on His way out of
the temple He saw a blind beggar. The blind beggar didn't ask any favors, just
sitting there blind begging. Jesus decided by sovereign divine initiative to
heal the man and He did.
The man having been healed went to his neighbors to show them what had
happened and to his home. They were astounded. They took him right away to
the Pharisees and said, "Hey, what's going on here? How did this all happen?"
And besides that, it happened on the Sabbath and that's a no, no. So they
reported it to the Pharisees for a judgment on the part of the Pharisees to see
what they could possibly bring to light in this particular case.
Well, the blind man finally was sought by the...was questioned by the
Pharisees. Then his parents were questioned. Then he was questioned again.
And they refused to believe that Jesus had done it because the Pharisees had
already concluded that Jesus was a sinner. How did they know that? They just
decided it, they didn't have to be told. They knew everything. So they had
decided that Jesus was not the Son of God, He was a fake and that He couldn't
have done this miracle. So they denied the testimony of the blind man and they
kept harassing the blind man. The more they harassed him, the stronger his
testimony became till finally they had deteriorated to the lowest levels of
conflict. They started calling him names, cursing him. And then they picked
him up bodily and threw him out of the building they were in and unsynagogued
him. Which means they put him out of the life of Israel. They eliminated him.
They wouldn't tolerate his testimony for Christ. They would not tolerate it
because they said...they made a rule: if anybody said Christ is the Messiah,
they're out of the synagogue...aposunagogos, unsynagogued. And they did it to
him. His testimony was clear and concise and they rejected it and threw him
out.
Well, they had just cast him out, verse 34 ends and they cast him out.
Verse 35 begins and Jesus found him. And that's where we pick up the
narrative. Jesus has already healed his physical sight and now He's about to
heal his spiritual blindness. He's about to give him spiritual sight. The
passage divides into two parts, if you have an outline in your bulletin you
might want to follow along and take some notes.
First of all, spiritual sight, verses 35 to 38. Then spiritual blindness,
39 to 41. And incidentally, in each of these categories, spiritual sight and
spiritual blindness, they are characterized...there are some details given as
to what they really are and what they result in. Now spiritual sight is
illustrated by the beggar. Spiritual blindness illustrated by the Pharisees.
First of all, let's notice spiritual sight, verses 35 to 38. There are
four features of spiritual sight that I have seen in this passage. They may
not be all there are in all of the revelation of God, but they're all that we
see right here. Four things characterize spiritual sight. A person who can
see spiritually really has these four features involved in that sight. Number
one, spiritual sight rises in divine initiative. Secondly, it requires faith.
Thirdly, it recognizes Christ. Fourthly, it results in worship. Now those
four things we want to consider.
First of all, spiritual sight rises in divine initiative, verse 35. Now
just mark this in your mind, giving sight is God's work. Now look at verse 35.
"Jesus heard that they had cast him out." Now how He heard it I don't know
and I don't particularly care, it's enough to know that He heard. "And when He
had found him," Jesus actually went after the man. That, my friends, is divine
initiative. It does not say, "And when they cast him out he found Jesus."
Jesus found him. Jesus went after him, sought him and found him and confronted
him with a question: "Dost thou believe on the Son of God?"
Now, sight results from divine initiative. It rises out of divine
sovereignty. Jesus sought that man. Even that man's physical sight was purely
an act of divine sovereign grace. He was blind sitting by the temple, begging.
Jesus walked by, bent down, put clay in his eyes, said go wash and he saw and
he never said a word and he never asked to be healed and he never ran after
Jesus to find Him and he never sought anything. Christ sought him out, healed
him physically. Turned right around, sought him out, healed him spiritually.
It was all divine initiative.
In Luke 19:10, Jesus says, "For the Son of Man is come to seek and to save
that which was lost." John 15:16, Jesus said to His disciples, "You have not
chosen Me, I have chosen you and ordained you." In Matthew 18:12, the Bible
says, "For the Son of Man," the words of Jesus, "is come to save that which was
lost. How think ye? If a man have an hundred sheep and one of them be gone
astray, doth he not leave the ninety and nine and go to the mountains and seek
the one which is gone astray?" All throughout the life of Christ, He is ever
and always the seeking Savior. He is always seeking the lost. It is divine
initiative that brings spiritual sight. And the miracle of the beggar's
spiritual sight depended on a seeking Savior.
Remember back in chapter 5, the man 38 years lying by the pool and was
impotent, having a disease for 38 years? Jesus healed him, said rise up, take
up your bed and walk. He walked, he ran into the Pharisees...they said, "Wait
a minute, you can't carry your bed on the Sabbath, drop your bed. Who told you
to carry your bed?" They couldn't have cared less that he was healed, all they
cared about was some of their ridiculous little traditional rules that they had
on the Sabbath. Oh the pain of legalism.
A little while later the Bible says, "And Jesus found him in the temple."
Jesus went after the man because He had only begun the work with the physical
healing, He went to the temple and met him and talked to him about his soul.
And He does the same thing right here. By divine initiative He healed the
blind man. By divine initiative He sought him out. Jesus does the seeking,
not you, not me. You can't begin to seek God until God has already sought you
and revealed Himself to you. Then when you seek, you only seek to experience
all that He has already sought and revealed to you. The physical miracle and
the spiritual miracle were both divine initiative.
You see, in the physical sense, a blind man has no capacity to give
himself sight. The impotent man has no resource to cure his own disease. The
water has no power to make itself into wine. The dead pickled fish from the
Sea of Galilee don't have the ability to reproduce so they can feed 15 to 20
thousand. Barley cakes don't reproduce to feed that many either. Spiritual
sight depends on God's initiative and God's power offered in divine and
sovereign grace. And it's interesting that no amount of light effects
blindness. A blind man in a dark room is a blind man as well as a blind man in
daylight. You can pour light into blind eyes and that's not the cure. All the
light in the world doesn't make blind eyes see.
Boy, the Pharisees illustrate that spiritually, don't they? Jesus gave
them every bit of light they had, every bit of light He had. They saw
everything from the external. They saw all His miracles, heard all His words,
watched His person, had all the light He could give and they never saw
anything. You see, the only thing that can cure blindness physically is not
light, but the surgeon's scalpel or maybe some kind of a transplant and that,
of course, would be another kind of operation or a miracle. And spiritually it
is a miracle. The only thing that can change spiritual blindness is a
miracle...a divine miracle. Man had no capacity. Paul says no man seeks after
God, God does the seeking, divine initiative. So, spiritual sight then begins
in divine initiative.
I want to add a footnote here. I like this man because he got cast out.
He really stood his ground. He isn't even a disciple, you know. He doesn't
even know who Christ is yet. He doesn't even know who the Son of God is. All
he knows is Jesus healed my eyes and He must be something and I'm going to
stick up for Him. And you know what it does? It cost him everything. They
threw him out of the life of Israel. He couldn't attend any religious
functions. He had no economic power to buy or to purchase things. He was
ostracized from all the social life of his country. His parents didn't want a
thing to do with him. This guy paid the supreme price to stay true to a man
named Jesus that he didn't even know was the Son of God. Now that is some kind
of loyalty.
And as I began to study over that, I thought to myself, "Boy, does that
put most Christians to shame." We who have received the full revelation of who
Christ is, who know every single thing about Him, who have received all of His
blessings and all of His mercies and all of the things that He could give us,
we have totally revelation, we have so-called total commitment to Christ and
yet we aren't even willing to make such an uncompromising stand that it would
cost us something. And this blind man was when he didn't even know that Jesus
Christ was the Son of God. I like him because he doesn't compromise. I like
him because he's got some character. He's got some courage. And even though
he doesn't understand all of who Christ is, he is willing to pay whatever cost
there has to be paid to be fair and to be true to the one who gave him his
sight. Boy, there's no place for compromise in the life of a Christian...no
place at all for compromise with the world. How can I expect God to honor me
if I dishonor Him?
And so, the man was thrown out. It shows the depth of his commitment and
puts us to shame as Christians who have far more revelation than he does and
not any of that kind of character so often.
Well, Christ asked him an important question. He said, "Dost thou believe
on the Son of God?" Now he didn't really know who the Son of God was, and
Christ doesn't really tell him now. He just says do you believe on Him? Do
you believe on the Son of God? The man had shown boldness. He had shown
courage. He was really a tough guy to tangle with. He had declared that his
teacher was from God. He had declared that his teacher was a prophet. He had
declared that Jesus was doing God's will and that He couldn't be from anywhere
but God if He did the things He did. He really stood up for Christ.
And now Jesus says, "Do you believe on the Son of God?" And right there
Jesus is beginning to give him revelation. He's beginning to unfold full
revelation of who He is. Although He doesn't give the final thing, He starts
it. Christ sovereignly, divinely initiates spiritual sight. The man didn't
say, "Who are You? Who is the Son of God?" Jesus says, "Do you believe?" He
took the initiative on the Son of God. Christ has the initiative. Sight,
spiritual sight, begins in divine initiative. And so we see it in that verse.
But then the other side of the coin is in verse 36. Sight not only rises
in divine initiative, but it requires faith. It's not all of God. We're
involved. And verse 36, there's the human side of it. Sure, salvation comes
from divine initiative. Spiritual sight comes from divine initiative and God's
ability to give it. But we must respond. That's the balance of salvation.
Look at it, verse 36. "He answered and said, Who is He, Lord, that I might
believe on Him?" Boy, I like that, that is really terrific. That is
outstanding. That man is really right there. He is one of the most prepared
people I've ever met. That guy is so ready for salvation, it's just a matter
of "Lord, what do I do now?" he is literally a little ball of faith waiting to
stick somewhere. He just wants to know where do I attach. That's all. I
believe, I'm ready, point it out. Listen, he had so much confidence in Jesus,
he would...if Jesus said, "There's the Son of God," whish...he'd be there. If
Jesus said, "There's..." swish...he'd just...whatever you say....where? I'll
go.
You say, "Well, how come he had so much confidence in Jesus?" Well,
before he said He's a prophet, didn't he? He said He came from God. Add those
two to the third one, He made me see, and you've got a good reason why he
thought Jesus Christ could be trusted. He believed Him. He believed He could
be trusted. He said, "You just show me where to stick and I'll stick, I need
an object for my faith." He was just a bundle of faith that needed an object.
"Lead me to Him, where is He? I'm ready." What a beautiful illustration of a
prepared heart. I don't know if in your witnessing you've ever run into one of
these kind of prepared hearts, but it's shocking...really shocking.
I was in South Carolina one night witnessing. I started out preaching on
a street corner at the bus depot and I had to do it as my assignment. And I
had to preach on this bus depot corner every single weekend. And it was very
difficult. Makes a lot of noise with buses and no one ever listened anyway.
And I was yelling at the top of my voice, preaching away, you know. Finally
decided it's kind of dumb to do this. And so I decided I'd just go around and
do some personal witnessing instead. And I, you know, it was much more
effective. It took me about a month to learn this and a lot of people thought
I was really crazy. But anyway, I met this one guy in a storefront and I just
went back in the store, I said, "Can I talk to you for a minute?" And he was
kind of a little guy and he looked at me and said, "Yeah," you know, he thought
I was going to mug him, you know. So we went in the little storefront and he
just was kind of real shy. He was on his way to a dance at the Y.M.C.A. which
was next door and it was blasting out with noise. And he was on his way to
this dance. And I pushed him in a corner and I said, "I'd just like to talk to
you a minute."
He said, "You would?" I said, "Yeah," I said, "I just want to tell you
about Jesus Christ."
"You do?"
I said, "Yeah, I just.." and I stood there for about five minutes to tell
him about Jesus Christ. And I said, "Would you like to receive Jesus Christ
into your life?" He said, "Yes." I said, "You would?" Wait a minute, I
didn't get to the fourth one yet, you know. I mean, this guy was so prepared.
I said, "Really?" He said, "Yeah." He said, "I've been praying that somebody
would come along to share with me these things."
Right there he invited Jesus Christ into his life. He looked at me and
said, "I don't think I'm going to go to the dance," he said, "my mom's got a
Bible at home, I think I'm going to go home and read it." He was gone, it was
the last I ever saw him. I mean, talk about a prepared heart. You run into a
prepared heart and you just don't know what to do with it, see.
But this man was just faith walking around looking for somewhere to stick.
And he said, "Where, Lord, just show me, I'm ready." You contrast that kind
of attitude with the Pharisees, see, who didn't want...they knew it all. Their
kind of unbelief was willful, his unbelief was unwillful. He wanted to
believe. He just wanted to know in what to believe. See, there's different
kinds of unbelief. There's that kind of unbelief that's hard, cold, dead,
willing, ignorant unbelief. And then there's that kind of searching hungry
unbelief that God meets every time. And so, he said, "Show me, where do I go?
My faith is ready, just point the object." And he trusts whatever Jesus says.
You know, his faith is the necessary complement to the sovereignty of God.
Even though divine initiative brings spiritual sight, even though Christians
are elected, predestined, chosen before the foundation of the world, even
though your name was written in the lamb's book of life before the foundation
of the world was ever laid, even though every bit of that is true and in the
Scripture, it is still true that you must respond by personal faith to Jesus
Christ. Why Romans 10:9 and 10, the Apostle Paul says that we must believe in
our heart and confess with our mouth the Lord Jesus Christ and thou shalt be
saved. For with the heart man believeth, with the mouth confession is made
unto righteousness. That's the human side, see. That's the balance of
salvation. It's all in the divine initiative but it demands a response from
us, doesn't it?
Jesus clearly indicates that. Chapter 6, verse 38, look at it...chapter 6
verse 38, "For I came down from heaven not to do Mine own will but the will of
Him that sent Me." Jesus says I came to do the Father's will, that's why I'm
here, that's why I came to do My Father's will.
Now, verse 39, look at it, verse 39, "And this is the Father's will who
hath sent Me, that of all that He hath given Me, I should lose nothing." Now
there you see a very interesting principle. Salvation happens as a result of
God granting certain people salvation. Jesus says the Father has given Me
certain ones, that's election, that's predestination. The Father has given
them to Me and I will lose none of them but raise them all at the last day.
That's the election side.
Now look at verse 40. That's the will of God, to give Me these and I'll
keep them. But look at 40, "This also is the will of Him that sent Me, that
everyone who sees the Son and believes on Him may have everlasting life and
I'll raise Him up at the last day." You see? Now there's the human side. Not
only given of the Father but everyone who believes. So you have those two
things, they exist together in Scripture, they're never harmonized, they're
both sides of salvation. God's will sovereignly and man's response. And so
spiritual sight, comprehension of all God's mercies, rises in divine
initiative, requires faith.
Thirdly, and rapidly...third thing about spiritual sight, it recognizes
Christ. It recognizes Christ. Verse 37 and the first part of 38, verse 37,
"And Jesus said unto him, Thou hast both seen Him," remember he just said who
is it? Who is this Son of God? "You've seen Him and it is He that talketh with
thee." And he said, "Lord, I believe." No hesitation. "Oh, Lord, how do I
know? Oh, prove it, Lord. Oh my goodness, how can I be sure?" None of that.
"Lord, I believe." All he wanted to do was know. He was so
ready. The initiator of sight is Christ. The object of faith is Christ. So
obviously, anybody who is going to come to Christ has to recognize Him.
Anybody who is going to have spiritual sight must recognize Christ. Christ
said, "I'm the one." He said, "That's right, You are, I believe." He
recognized Christ right off.
You say, "Well, how did he do that? I mean, how could he just (snap)
recognize Christ? I mean, how could he...right out of the blue...You're it, I
know?" You know how? Divine miracle, that's right, divine miracle. Is
salvation a divine miracle? You better believe it. Listen to this one. Jesus
talking to the disciples in Matthew said, "Who do men say that I am?" They
said, "Oh, some say You're Elijah, Jeremiah, one of the prophets." "Who do you
say I am?" Peter answered, listen to what he said, "Thou art the Christ the
Son of the living God," right? How did he know that? Jesus said, "Flesh and
blood did not reveal that unto you but My Father which is in heaven." You know
who you can recognize Jesus Christ? One way and one way alone, by divine
miracle. You know how that blind man could say, "I believe"? God showed him
that that was Christ. Removed every trace of doubt in his brain.
Listen, you come to Jesus Christ with that kind of faith and in no case will He
cast you out. He'll reveal Himself to anyone who comes with honest eager
faith.
And so He says, "You see Him," which is kind of a little thing thrown in
there because the blind man hadn't seen all his life. He says, "You've seen
Him and it's He that talks with you." Tremendous revelation. He is saying in
effect, I am the Son of God. I am the Son of God. What a claim. Four times
in John's gospel, 5:25, 9:37, 10:36, and 11:4, those four times Jesus says I'm
the Son of God. And you better know that John put it down every time cause
that's what John's trying to get across to us that He's God. He is the Son of
God and the man who comes in honest faith recognizes that and receives
spiritual sight.
And I love the fact that he says, "Lord, I believe." A poor beggar, poor
beggar who saw nothing all his life clearly recognized the Son of God and a
whole lot of religious leaders who thought they saw everything couldn't
recognize their own Messiah. And the reason is spiritual sight is a gift from
God given to willing faith, not to static determined ignorant willful unbelief.
And what a blessing, to first see Christ is to become like Him. Did you know
that? Did you know that's...you knew that, that's what the Christian's life is
all about, becoming like Jesus, isn't it? Just to see Him is just to begin the
process to become like Him. That's 2 Corinthians 3:18, one of my favorite
verses. See, what it says is we behold His glory looking into the Word, we are
changed into His image by the Holy Spirit. That's what the Christian life is.
It's becoming like Christ as the Spirit changes us as we gaze into His glory.
So, spiritual sight rises in divine initiative, requires faith, recognizes
Christ. Fourthly, spiritual sight results in worship. Just quick, verse 38,
look at it, the end of the verse, "And he...what?...worshiped Him." Just fell
on his knees, worshiped Him. Beautiful....spiritual sight, he just fell down
and worshiped. What a...what an interesting thing that is in comparison with
verse 59 of chapter 8 where the Pharisees pick up stones to stone Him. Boy,
Jesus drives men to the poles, doesn't He? One group's got rocks in their
hands and the other one's kneeling at His feet.
Beautiful climax to the history of the blind beggar. And it isn't a
tremendous truth that what God begins, He completes? God started with that man
and followed him around until He found him again and completed His work. He
was sought by the Lord, he was given sight, he went and testified to his
friends. Pharisees got him. They turned him out, threw him out of their
country. And Jesus found him and he fell at His feet and worshiped Him. You
know, that could be a spiritual biography for any saved believer, any person
who knows Christ. Sought by the Lord, given spiritual sight, went to witness
and share it, thrown out of the world, ostracized from the world, sitting at
the feet of Jesus Christ. That's really what ought to be our spiritual
biography.
So, we see the man receive his sight spiritually. What a glorious thing
and all the world of God and Christ and all the glorious truth opened up to
that blind mind. And he could see the inner revelation of God with his spirit
and he could see the external revelation of God with his eyes...full sight.
Then Jesus contrasts with it spiritual blindness and this we're going to
look at and plan to very briefly because it's so obvious. Verse 39 to 41,
spiritual blindness, and it has four features: it receives judgment, refuses to
admit its blindness, rejects the sight when it's offered and results in doom.
We'll look at them one at a time.
First of all, the man who is spiritually blind, Jesus says receives
judgment, verse 39, "And Jesus said, For judgment I am come into this world
that they who see not might see and they who see might be made blind."
This is almost an ironic statement and I want to add some words to
give you the meaning of it. Watch it, verse 39, Jesus said, "For judgment I am
come into this world," now listen, "That they who know they can't see might see
and they that think they see might be confirmed in their blindness." You see
this? Jesus came to give sight to those who knew they couldn't see. If a man
won't recognize his blindness, Christ can't give him sight, is that right? And
that was the Pharisees problem. They would not admit their blindness. Jesus
says I came to give sight to those who know they need it and I came to those
who think they see to let them know they're really blind and if need be to
confirm them in their blindness.
When Jesus sees this man worshiping at His feet and He compares the humble
confiding heart of that beggar with the hostility and stubborn hatred of the
Pharisees, He admits that that's the way it's going to be when He comes. When
I come, there's going to be judgment...slash, right down the middle, this group
will believe and see, this group will be obstinate and will not see and will be
confirmed in their blindness.
I read that over and then I thought to myself, "For judgment I am come
into this world." And then I thought to myself, "That can't be," because I
remembered chapter 3 verse 17 and I went back to it and I read it and it said
this, "For God sent not His Son into the world to judge the world." Now wait a
minute. Jesus said I came to judge and God says I didn't send Him to judge,
what's the deal? Contradiction....no...Jesus didn't come to judge the world,
He came to do what? Save the world, but the other side of the coin is this, by
virtue of bringing salvation and by what men did with that salvation, judgment
resulted. And what Jesus is saying in chapter 9 verse 39 is just this, having
come to bring salvation instead of all men coming to salvation, it became
judgment to those who refused it. Jesus didn't come into this world to judge
men. You want to know something? If Jesus had wanted to judge men, He
wouldn't have had to come into this world, would He? He could have stayed
right where He was and judged them. He came to save them. But by virtue of
some men rejecting Him, they brought judgment on themselves. That's chapter 3
to the next verse. "He that believeth on Him is not judged," or condemned,
same word, "But he that believeth not is judged." Jesus says I didn't come to
judge, but if you don't believe you'll be judged by your own unbelief.
Did you know that by what a man does with Jesus Christ he determines his
own destiny? That's right. Simeon said as he held the baby Jesus in his arms,
"This child shall be for the falling the rising of many in Israel." This child
will put a slash through human society. Christ didn't come to judge men, that
wasn't the purpose of His incarnation. He came to save men but by the very
virtue of His coming to save, some men refuse it and consequently were judged.
I mean, if a man doesn't see in Jesus something to love, he's condemned
himself. If a man doesn't see in Jesus something to desire, to trust, to put
his faith in, he's condemned himself. If a man thinks that he knows it all and
he doesn't recognize anything in Christ at all, he sees no purpose or rhyme or
reason for Christ and denies His claims, that man has judged himself by his own
willful blindness. So though Jesus came not for the expressed purpose of
making people blind, the result of His coming was blindness to some, confirming
them blind, judgment condemnation.
Now I want you to notice two words at the end of verse 39: made blind.
That's a judicial statement. Do you know that Christ came into this world and
where He found willful blindness in its obstinance, it was confirmed as
judicial blindness? In other words, what starts out often as a willful
rejection of Christ becomes a judicial thing. The man who won't be saved can't
be saved. You say, "What do you mean?" I'll show you. Matthew 13, now don't
look it up, I'm just going to read it to you, but write it down...Matthew 13:13
to 15, and you can study it later. Listen to this. Describing Israel,
describing Israel, mark this carefully, Christ says, "I'm describing them as
Isaiah did, by hearing you shall hear and shall not understand, and seeing you
shall see and not perceive, for this people's heart is gross--that's fat--their
ears are dull of hearing, their eyes have closed lest at any time they should
see with their eyes, hear with their ears, understand with their heart, be
converted and I should heal them."
In other words, they've closed their minds, they've closed their eyes,
they've closed their ears. They cannot be converted. They've chosen to reject
Me. But then you get a shock as you go to John chapter 12, it hits like a
thunder bolt. Listen to the difference. John 12:37 to 40, here's the same
passage from Isaiah but look at the different emphasis, "But though He had done
so many miracles before them," same Israel, "yet they believed not on Him."
No, their ears were fat, their eyes were closed, they didn't see it, they
didn't believe.
Now, verse 39, "Therefore they...what?...could not believe." Verse 40, "He
hath blinded their eyes, hardened their hearts that they should not see with
their eyes, understand with their heart and be converted and I should heal
them." You see, what starts out as willful blindness becomes judicial
blindness and God made blind those who willfully were blind. Boy, that is a
serious, serious thing.
So, mark it. Spiritual blindness receives judgment by virtue of its own
choice. Willful judgment becomes judicial judgment.
Second thing about spiritual blindness, it refuses to admit its blindness,
verse 40, and this is very obvious, just a reference to it. But it won't
recognize its problem, verse 40, "And some of the Pharisees who were with Him
heard these words and said unto Him," and here's a question in the Greek that
demands a negative answer, "Are we blind also?" Do you get the implication?
"We...we, the super leaders of religious matters of Israel, we are not like the
accursed rabble who don't know the law, you mean, we learned spiritual folks
are blind? You don't mean that. We, the constituted, recognized guides of the
people are blind?"
Jesus says, "Yes, you're blind." But the saddest case is to be blind and
not know it. They did not know they were blind. Did not know. Tragic,
hopeless position, God can't do a thing with you if you don't know you're
blind.
Third thing about it, verse 41. Not only does spiritually, the
spiritually blind people receive judgment and refuse to admit their blindness,
but, thirdly, they reject sight even when it's offered. Of course they would
reject it since they don't know they're blind. Jesus said unto them, 41, "If
you were blind, you should have no sin." In other words, if you only knew you
were blind I could take care of your sin, see. If you just knew. If you knew
you were blind then I could take care of you, but you're stuck in your sin
because you think you can see. Oh, this is a tragic statement. They were so
blind to sin and they didn't know it and Jesus says I can't help you...I cannot
do a think with you if you don't recognize your blindness.
Well, it's a tragic thing to meet men and women and young people who don't
understand that they don't know God, who don't understand that they're in sin,
who don't understand that they're spiritually blind and you can't show them
sight because they don't even know they can't see. All the truth they've had
and they can't even see it.
So, spiritual blindness receives judgment, refuses to admit its blindness,
rejects sight. Lastly, at the end of verse 41, spiritual blindness results in
doom...results in doom, verse 41 in the middle, "But now ye say we see," ever
confident smug, what do you mean we're blind, we know it all, we see
everything. Then this doom, "Therefore your sin remaineth." Earlier He said
to them, "You shall die in your sins and where I go you'll never come." He
says you keep saying we see, therefore your sin remaineth.
Now if I can add an uninspired P.S., it would be this: good bye, you've
had it. You say, "That's a lot of liberty, MacArthur, what gives you the right
to say that?" Because I know what Jesus did with this kind of unbelief. What
started out as willful unbelief, this kind of obstinacy became judicial
unbelief and Jesus said good bye,...your sin remains, I'm through with
you.
I'll show you a verse that will shock you. Matthew 15 and this is the
last verse and we'll close. Matthew 15 verse 12, "Then came His disciples and said
unto Him, Knowest Thou that the Pharisees were offended after they heard this
saying?" Lord, You are really offending the Pharisees. "But He answered and said,
Every plant which My heavenly Father hath not planted shall be rooted up, let
them alone." The saddest words you'll ever read. Did you see that, verse 14?
Tremendous shocking statement. Forget them, let them go. That's
Jesus...loving, kind, saving, seeking Savior...let them alone.
What do You mean let them alone? Let them alone, they are blind willfully
and now judicially. They're confirmed in their blindness, they've chosen it,
they are kept in it...let them alone. They are blind leaders of the blind.
And if the blind lead the blind, both shall fall into the ditch.
I don't know about you, but those three words "let them alone" are
shocking words coming from Jesus Christ. But listen, my friend, that's how
Christ treats willful, obstinate, stubborn unbelief. He'll just turn away and
walk off, let them alone. Compare that with how He treats the eager heart of
the blind man who says, "I want to know, please show me." Light was come into
the world but men love darkness rather than light. And they went on in their
blindness.
You have a choice, spiritual sight or spiritual blindness. The result of
spiritual sight is worship. The result of spiritual blindness is doom. And I
trust that no one will leave this place this morning who does not see
spiritually.
Father, we thank You for Your truth this morning, for clarity with which
we see it in Your Word. Lord, we pray fervently with great concern that there
would be no people here who would go from this place with such obstinate, hard,
cold, prolonged unbelief that they would be in danger of judicial unbelief
where You would walk away and say, "Let them alone, they're blind leaders of
the blind." Father, work and by Thy Spirit convict, beseech and beg the hearts
of men to come to Christ to see the light. Meet the need of eager faith as You
promised by revealing the truth of Yourself to them. We pray, Lord, that each
heart right here in this place this morning shall be set right with You and
each spirit shall see Your truth and Your light, we pray it in Christ's
name...amen.
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