Physical and Spiritual Blindness; Healing; John 9:1-12
We need to note some contrasts between chapter eight and chapter nine; in chapter eight Jesus is in the temple where He is reacted to. The religious leaders are in reaction to Him because religious leaders are always in reaction to grace. In chapter nine He is outside the temple where He has a greater ministry and a greater response. In chapter eight He is inside the temple where He claims to be the Light of the world; in chapter nine He is outside the temple where He is the communicator of light to the world. In chapter eight He is inside the temple and He is rejected by the religious leaders; in chapter nine He is outside the temple where He is received and worshipped. In chapter eight Jesus refutes the religious crowd; in chapter nine this unsaved man who is blind from birth and is given sight refutes the religious crowd. The religious crowd is always antagonistic to grace because they are arrogantly committed to their own righteousness. This is the essence of religion: that people think there is something about them that will gain God's approval. So there is always an antagonistic reaction against grace from the religious crowd. In chapter eight it began with the woman taken in adultery. There Jesus leaned over and wrote in the dirt. In chapter eight we have the blind man, and Jesus leans over and spits in the dirt, and he mixes it with the dirt to make soft clay to put on the man's eyes, and He heals him.
In the first twelve verses of chapter nine we have the miracle of giving sight to the blind man. In verses 13-34 we have the blind man and the Pharisees; in verses 35-38, the blind man and the Lord. It is not until the end of the chapter that this man accepts Jesus as his saviour. The principle of this whole chapter is that religion, the religious activity of the Pharisees leads to greater blindness. They are in spiritual darkness and they are spiritually blind. We see the contrast between the man who is physically blind and the Pharisees who are spiritually blind. We see the arrogance that underlies religiosity. In this chapter we have the religious Pharisees who in spite of all the evidence in front of them continue to deny it. We see how destructive religion can be. The only solution that can ever turn a nation around is the spiritual solution, not the religious solution. Religion never helps. In fact religion is destructive to a nation. It is the arrogance of the religion of the Pharisees that caused them to reject Jesus as Messiah. Only Christianity, which emphasises a change from the inside out, is the solution to man's problems. Christian activism is not a solution to anything. Christian activism, because it flows from arrogance, is only going to intensify the problem, it is never going to resolve the problem.
Now Jesus leaves the temple and as He is going down the stairs He encounters this man who is congenitally blind. John 9:1 NASB "As He passed by, He saw a man blind from birth.
The verse begins with the present active participle of parago [paragw] which is an adverb of time, and because it lacks the definite article it is an adverbial participle of time. There is process, movement here. While He is walking down the steps He suddenly looks over and sees, the aorist active indicative of horao [o(raw]. He sees this man who is blind from birth. The man doesn't see Jesus and doesn't know what is going on. When Jesus looks at this man He looks at him in terms of his soul. Jesus sees the man for who he is from the inside but all the disciples can see is the man on the outside. We learn from this that we need to learn to look at people in terms of their soul, not in terms of their physical appearance. Being congenitally blind affects the make-up of a person's face. Everything is out of kilter, they don't look normal. They are not attractive at all. Furthermore, this man is a beggar. He can't work for a living, he is dressed poorly, he is generally offensive, and he represents the way you and I look to God. We are offensive to God, all our righteousnesses are as filthy rags. Yet, when Jesus looks at this man He sees something the disciples don't see. Jesus looks on the inside and sees that this man is positive to God at God-consciousness.
What we see here is the contrast between the blind man who was born physically blind from birth but has genuine humility from his positive volition and the Pharisees who have had all this light from their knowledge of God's Word and yet because of their arrogance are in spiritual darkness. Spiritual darkness is much worse than physical darkness.
John 9:2 NASB "And His disciples asked Him, 'Rabbi, who sinned, this man or his parents, that he would be born blind?'"
This reflects one of the perennial problems that people have: why is there evil in the world and why is there suffering? Thinkers have come up with three basic solutions for why evil exists. First, evil is inherent; it is therefore normal. This is the position underlying the theory of evolution. The problem with that is if evil was normal and suffering was normal then ultimately there is no basis for distinguishing between good and evil because both are of an eternal existence. The second solution is to deny the existence of evil: it is not really there, it is just an illusion. This is the solution that was offered by Christian Science. The third solution that human viewpoint comes up with is that evil is really good. This is the existentialist response. So human viewpoint can't handle the problem of suffering and the Bible says that suffering and all evil is the result of the introduction of sin into the universe.
Why we suffer
1) Because when Adam sinned the entire created world fell under the curse of sin, and that introduces the basis for all sickness, suffering and misery. The same application goes for birth defects and congenital problems. We all go through suffering simply because we live in a fallen world.
2) We are associated with people who make bad decisions.
3) We suffer because we personally make bad decisions, and this is the law of volitional responsibility.
4) God allows suffering to come into our lives to give us the opportunity to utilise Bible doctrine, to apply it in our lives, so that we can grow and advance to spiritual maturity. James 1:2-4.
5) We suffer because of divine discipline.
6) We need to recognise that a lack of suffering or a lack of sickness is not an indication of spirituality or salvation.
John 9:3 NASB "Jesus answered, "{It was} neither {that} this man sinned, nor his parents; but {it was} so that the works of God might be displayed in him.
The doctrine of healing
During the first advent healing was used to verify and establish that the Messiah had come to Israel. It was His calling card, His credentials. Healing was no used merely to alleviate suffering but to present the Messianic credentials of Jesus Christ. Cf. Isaiah 42:7; 29:18; 35:5. The interesting thing about this miracle of giving sight to the blind is that Moses never did this, Elijah never did this, Elisha never did this, John the Baptist never did this. No one other than the Lord Jesus Christ gave sight to the blind because He alone is the Light of the world. In the life of Christ healings were never performed merely for their physical benefit. Cf. Matthew 8:17, His miracles fulfilled the messianic fulfilment of Isaiah 53. Matthew 9:6, Jesus healed in order to demonstrate that He had the authority to forgive sins. In Matthew 11:2-19 Jesus healed in order to confirm His identity to John the Baptist when John was in prison. In Matthew 12:15-21 Jesus healed to foreshadow the fulfilment of Isaiah 42:1-4. In John 9 Jesus healed in order to demonstrate that he was the Light of the world. In John 11:4 He will heal to demonstrate the glory of God. In John 20:30, 31 we see that all of these healings were signs that gave evidence that Jesus was the Messiah. Furthermore, Jesus miracles were not performed at random or indiscriminately. He did not heal on demand, Matthew 12:38-40. He healed in order to fulfil the plan of God. And there were an abundance of healings, Matthew 5:31. Not all who were healed either expressed faith or were saved.
John 9:4 NASB "We must work the works of Him who sent Me as long as it is day; night is coming when no one can work.
John 9:6 NASB "When He had said this, He spat on the ground, and made clay of the spittle, and applied the clay to his eyes,
The man is still not a believer but he has been healed, so this shows once again that the purpose for healing was not an evangelistic tool. Signs and wonders are not a tool for witnessing, they were to give credentials.
John 9:8 NASB "Therefore the neighbors, and those who previously saw him as a beggar, were saying, 'Is not this the one who used to sit and beg?'"