Monday, March 16, 2026


On Sunday, March 15, 2026 it was my privilege to be the Guest Preacher at The Outer Banks Presbyterian Church in Kill Devil Hills, North Carolina.  The sermon was dealing with the story found in John 9. 1-41

Beware of the Illusion of Sightedness 

You may have seen it as the happy story on the evening news-- the one shown just before signing off. It featured a young boy, who was colorblind. Thanks to a pair of special lenses he was able to see colors for the first time in his life.  What his eyes suddenly saw was so over-whelming that he turned around and hugged his father who was sharing the moment with him.

Can you imagine what it must be like to suddenly see today’s bluebird sky and the variety of greens worn by the grass, pine, spruce and cedar?  An algae covered turtle climbing onto a log bleached gray by sun.  A squadron of brown Pelicans winging over a beige sand beach. What a sensory overload it must be to take a walk down the cereal aisle of a grocery store or stroll through The Elizabethan Gardens at the height of summer!

            Now imagine what it must have been like for that man in Jerusalem after his soak in the pool at Siloam discovering he could see muddy drops of water dripping back into the pool from his fingers and face.  Can you picture the expression of wonder as he notices the circles made as drops splash into the still water?  Watch him retrace his steps to the place where he had been sitting before, eyes darting this way and that taking in sights he passed all his life but now could see for the first time.  See his face light up with recognition when the voices of his neighbors begin their wondering.  “Is that him?” “No, just someone who looks like him.”  Did you notice his eyes get big as saucers when they looked perplexed each time he repeated “I am the man?”

            This very long story found in the Gospel of John is one in which we are invited to see ourselves in each of the people who spend a few moments at the center of the action.  As the disciples, the neighbors, the Pharisees, the parents, the formerly blind man and Jesus speak, we are invited to hear ourselves.  In doing so we may not like what we see or be pleased to hear an echo of our own voices.  Yet we might find incentive to examine ourselves and leave behind all the ways in which we blind our own eyes to the work of God occurring right under our noses.

            Let’s start with the disciples.  Their only contribution to the story is to ask a question prompted by the sight of the blind man begging.  “Rabbi, who sinned, this man or his parents, that he was born blind?”  We do not fault them for their inquiring minds or their need to know. The question asked grew from the prevailing view of the time, that there was a connection between suffering and sin.

            If you were suffering, you must have sinned.  It was the same reasoning that Job’s friends used.  The Old Testament story debunked that worn out way of thinking, but that didn’t mean it had been put to rest. It rears its ugly head even today every time someone asks: “What sin did I commit that caused me to be brought low by cancer? What offence of mine is being repaid causing me to watch my child get lost in a drugged-out haze?  Did our communal iniquity ignite the fire that burned our beloved church to the ground? 

            Some lessons each generation must learn for itself. Some pay attention to history and avoid repeating the mistakes of the past…but most of us learn the stove is hot, not because our parents said so, but because we ignored what they said and found out the hard way.

            We stand with the disciples in needing to hear again (and again, and again) the answer Jesus offered: “Neither this man nor his parents sinned: he was born blind so that God’s works might be revealed in him.”

            Don’t be stymied by that answer, however. Don’t get the idea that God relegated this poor soul to a life of dark-ness just so the light of the world could chance upon him one day and make his useless orbs function. Take it as the teachable moment it was meant to be. God is all about bringing light where there is darkness; God is all about chasing us with goodness and mercy; God is all about inviting us to dwell in his house our whole lives long. So feed on the food fit for children of light found “in all that is good and right and true.”

            When we turn our attention to the neighbors in the story, the first question that arises is: why didn’t they know it was him? Did he look so different without his white cane and dark glasses? Or was it that he had blended into the scenery so well that they had never really looked at him before…you know, the way we avert our glance from the girl on the streetcorner playing her flute, with the case open at her feet to receive coins; or the dude with the cardboard sign at the intersection who walks past each driver’s window until the light turns green.

            If nothing else, their puzzled reaction to the suddenly sighted man leads us to question who we might be ignoring in our daily rounds. Who sits beside the roads we travel with needs we might meet, in need of love we’ve been called to share? Is the astonishment of the neighbors John’s version of Matthew’s “when did I see you hungry” revelation of when one did or did not respond to the least, the last of the lost? It leads to yet another question to ponder in these remaining Lenten days: what might we do to open our eyes so we might see and respond to those loved by Jesus?

            Sandwiched between the two interrogations of the man is the questioning of his parents by the Pharisees.  The authorities appear to be determined to show the healing to be a hoax, and to have their opinion of Jesus as a fake confirmed. The man’s parents, however, are only able to speak of what they know. There are only two facts they can verify: “Yes, this is our son. Yes, he was born blind.”

            They cannot, or perhaps, will not, say anymore. As John tells it, fear of losing their own standing in the community is the reason. The man’s parents stand before us as a reminder that even those closest to us are unable to speak for us about the gifts God has given us.

            Additionally, their part in the story allows us to ponder how much or how little we know about our children and grandchildren and the lives they lead. One writer points to “the paucity of intergenerational conversation.”[i] With the increase of time staring at little handheld screens, and the decrease of banter around the dinner table or in the car, the depth of our knowledge of those with whom we share life suffers. It leads us to wonder what we might do to foster communication, so we don’t find ourselves able to answer only: “we do not know, ask them.”

            With the disciples, neighbors, and the man’s parents out of the way, we’re left with the Pharisees in whom we may hear echoes of our own voices or see glimpses of our own behavior. The religious authorities in the story are prime of examples of what another writer calls “the illusion of sightedness.”[ii] Operating under what I call the curse of certainty, their view of Jesus is summed up in one sentence.  Speaking of Jesus they say: “This man is not from God, for he does not observe the Sabbath.” (v. 16) It is confirmed in the second interview when they begin by trying to coach the man to say what they want to hear: “We know that this man is a sinner.” (v. 24)

            One hardly needs 20/20 vision to see how the visual acuity of the Pharisees decreases as the focus of the healed man increases. Anchored to their position that making a little healing mud on the Sabbath was work, and therefore, prohibited; bound by their view that any healing not a matter of life and death should wait for another day; they close their eyes in order not to affirm the miracle that should have led to celebration not condemnation.

            One doesn’t need progressive lenses to recognize how often the sin of certainty and the illusion of sightedness is found among us. “The leopard can’t change its spots,” we say of those about whom we have reached an irreversible verdict. “It is what it is and always will be,” we declare when unwilling to acknowledge it is possible for there to be a before and an after with a God-inspired change in the middle. And consider how often we’ve been asked to pretend we don’t see what a video clip clearly shows.

            The Pharisees in the story stand before us like a caution sign reading “Beware of the Illusion of Sightedness.  Each time with eyes clenched closed, they speak with such certainty, they remind us to reevaluate those opinions and positions we have taken that eliminate the possibility of God doing something new, different, amazing and graceful.

As the story of the man born blind begins, we see in the actions of Jesus the creative power of God. As in the creation story in Genesis, the dust of the earth and the water of life are combined. Darkness is overpowered in a “let there be light” moment.  The formerly blind man is a new creation by story’s end, a child of light able to “try and find out what is pleasing to the Lord,” as our reading from Ephesians urges us all to do.

 As the story comes to its end, we also see the shepherd’s heart revealed. Jesus seeks and finds the formerly blind man after he has been put out of the synagogue. Were we to read into the next chapter, we would discover that Jesus has much to say about what makes a good shepherd, and what a good shepherd does.  Put the two chapters together and you realize at the end of the blind man’s story we see the good shepherd at work bringing the newly sighted man into the fold.

 In between, as the formerly blind man tells and retells his story the Gospel writer allows us to see how faith grows gradually in the heart of a person on their way to becoming a believer. At the beginning, all he can tell his neighbors is “the man called Jesus” healed him. The first time the Pharisees challenge him after he tells them his story he identifies Jesus as “a prophet.”

            Each time he tells the story his spiritual vision gets clearer.  In the longer interchange with the Pharisees, after his parents confirmed he was really and truly, cross-our-hearts-and-hope-to-die—born blind, he has put two and two together. He tells the blind guides before him: “If this man was not from God, he could do nothing.”

Finally, when the Pharisees send him away and the Good Shepherd finds him and reveals himself to him, the formerly blind man takes the final step and says, “Lord, I believe,” and worshiped the source of his sight, and his whole new life.

The contrast between his sight, both physical and spiritual, and the blindness of the Pharisees leads the eagle eyed among Gospel readers to realize the story was summarized on the very first page of John’s Gospel where it said: “He was in the world, and the world came into being through him; yet the world did not know him. He came to what was his own, and his own people did not accept him. But to all who received him, who believed in his name he gave power to become children of God...”  (John 1. 10-13)

            The progression of the formerly blind man’s observations offer us the opportunity to contemplate our own journeys of faith. How is your view of Jesus today different from the first time you sang “Jesus Loves Me” in Sunday School? When you hear a pastor ask new members, “Who is your Lord and Savior?” do you silently answer along with them, “Jesus Christ is my Lord and Savior!” Trace and celebrate the way your own relationship to the Lord has deepened over time. Consider how Jesus has opened your eyes to the blessings God sends your way every day.

            Each time the man at the center of the story tells his story there is a reaction. The neigh-bors are confused; the Pharisees are resistant; his parents are fearful. Did you notice what is missing through it all? No one reaches out to celebrate with him the gift he has received. No one does anything other than question how he got from his lonely before to his new after. No one attempts to help him navigate the world he can finally see.

            No one, except Jesus, who seeks him out at the end. Jesus searches and finds him, offers him a new family, a new relationship with the one who gave him the twin gifts of physical sight and spiritual insight.

            What Jesus did for that man he has done for many and continues to do, which is why we’ll sing now the musical prayer with fervor:

                        Open my eyes that I may see

                        Glimpses of truth thou hast for me...

                        ...Silently now I wait for thee

                        Ready my God Thy will to see.

                        Open my eyes, illumine me, Spirit divine.[iii]

 



[i] Gary V. Simpson, Feasting on the Gospels, John, Vol. 1, Chapters 1-9, (Louisville: KY: Westminster John Knox Press, 2015), p. 298

[ii] Cynthia A. Jarvis, Feasting on the Gospels, John, Vol. 1, Chapters 1-9, (Louisville: KY: Westminster John Knox Press, 2015), p. 286

[iii] from the hymn, Open My Eyes That I May See


On Sunday, March 15, 2026 it was my privilege to be the Guest Preacher at The Outer Banks Presbyterian Church in Kill Devil Hills, North Car...