Tag Archive | The man born blind BELIEVES

Reading the Gospels in 2026 (7/17) John 9:35-41

Read and believe in Jesus

“Lord, I believe, and he worshiped Him.” John 938

The Gospel according to John

REVIEW – The Jewish leaders found the man that Jesus cured from congenital blindness, and accused him of letting Jesus heal him “on the Sabbath.”

The more they questioned the man, the stronger and clearer became his testimony. “This Jesus is a Prophet; He ‘opened’ my eyes; He healed my blindness from birth (unheard of in the history of man); He worships God; He does God’s will; and God listens to Him. If He were not from God, He could do nothing.” And, “Do YOU want to be His disciples too?” Their response; Grrrrr!

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(NOTE: I’m trying a larger font. My glaucoma eyes struggle to see the small ones. No comments, so I guess I’ll keep it.)

(Part Three of three, Jesus heals the blind man and makes him one of His own.)

John 9:35-38.

When the authorities heard this (and had no answer), they used the only power they had. They excommunicated the former blind man, now turned a disciple of Jesus.

This was harsh. It meant no one in this synagogue/Temple (or any other synagogue in Israel) could eat with this man or trade with him. Of course, as a former beggar, he didn’t have “a trade” anyway. THIS was what his parents feared when the Pharisees questioned them.

(The “casting out” of the ex-blind man actually foretold the greater separation of the synagogues from the followers of Jesus that was coming.)

Jesus had been following what was happening to the man, and after his excommunication, “found” him.

“Do you believe in ‘the Son of Man’?” Jesus asked him.

“Who is He, sir, that I may believe in Him?”

And clearly, openly (as He had revealed to the Samaritan woman), Jesus told him WHO He was. “You have seen Him, and it is He who is speaking to you.”

Lord, I believe,” said the new believer in Jesus the Christ, and he WORSHIPED Jesus.

(I wonder what that looked like? We’ve seen people who have been healed (or had a loved one healed) and especially those to whom Jesus revealed Himself, fall on their knees and “thank” Jesus. We’ve seen them immediately testify to others about who Jesus is. But to “worship” Him….? I imagine he must have fallen on his knees and thanked the God of Heaven for sending the Messiah of Israel, and praised Jesus for WHO He was.”

How do YOU picture it?

Jesus accepted the worship. Note that.

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.John 9:39-41

Then He said a mini parable. “For judgment I came into this world, that THOSE WHO DO NOT SEE may see, and… THOSE WHO SEE… may become blind.” (Thinking of Isaiah 6:10 and 42:19, no doubt.)

Whoa, what did Jesus mean?

Those who do not see, and yet think they do” are the ones who think they are “enlightened” and have great insight, but in reality cannot see the Messiah of God when He is standing before them. In judgment, God blinds their eyes and stops their ears so they “cannot” see and hear.

Yes, it’s a hard concept. God IS sovereign. He opens some spiritual eyes and closes others. And He gets glory from both.

“Are WE also blind??” asked some of the Pharisees standing near and hearing Jesus’ words to His new disciple.

Well, “Yes,” you and I might say. “You can’t SEE that Jesus is the Messiah!

It was their UNBELIEF that made them blind; that is the sin that kept them in darkness. But, in a twisted way, they were satisfied that their darkness WAS light, and continued in their rejection of Jesus as Christ. If they had only come humbly to Jesus…..

John 3:18-20. “Whoever believes in Him is not condemned, but whoever does NOT believe is condemned already, because he has not believed in the name of the only Son of God.

And this is the judgment: the light has come into the world, and people loved the darkness rather than the light because their works were evil.

For everyone who does wicked things hates the light and does not come to the light, lest his works should be exposed.

But whoever does what is true comes to the light, so that it may be clearly seen that his works have been carried out in God.

See also 1 John 1:5-7.