John 9:1-12 · Jesus Heals a Man Born Blind
The Insight of Eyesight
John 9:1-12
Sermon
by Leonard Sweet
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In the northeast February is still winter. Regardless whether that scruffy little groundhog gets a glimpse of his shadow or not on February 2nd, the rest of the month is distinctly dark and dreary. It's too early for any but the most foolhardy of crocuses, and yet really too late for any long lasting deep snowfalls. What snow there is comes and goes, and so always appears in that grimy, mud-spattered, grey incarnation, not the bright glistening pristine white of January.

But this February in New York City the normally drab Central Park suddenly burst into color. A twenty-three mile long river of brilliant saffron color snaked its way around and through, meandered back and forth by the barren trees and beaten pathways of the park. For only sixteen days, from February 12-28, this orange-yellow exotic flora bloomed in the midst of winter's greyness. This was no natural phenomenon. It was the latest piece of artwork erected by the [1]artist Christo and his wife Jean-Claude.

Every few years it seems, this artist unveils another gargantuan exhibit, wrapping (or surrounding) open spaces, buildings, even islands. Christo's projects call attention to environments, buildings, spaces and enclosures by swathing them in gigantic curtains of fabric. Some of Christo's more famous creations:

the 1976 Running fence (24 miles of champagne-colored fabric crossing through acres of Marin and Sonoma counties);

the 1983 Surrounded Islands (floating pink circlets enclosed the waters around two neighboring islands);

in 1995 the Wrapped Reichstag (cocooning that dour German edifice in white fabric).

The artist's intention, in part, is to cause us to look at everyday images with new eyes. Art historian Robert Rosenblum, commenting on Christo's 1985 Pont Neuf Wrapped project in Paris, exclaimed, "It was breathtaking . . . Something you took for granted had suddenly been transformed by some magic wizard and the whole city looked different" (Smithsonian Magazine, February 2005, 87).

Christo has wanted to place one of his creations in Central Park for years. Finally he gained permission for the exhibit (paying NYC 3 million dollars for the use of the space) and began the long process of creating "The Gates, Central Park, New York, 1979-2005." Once completed, 7500 gates or frames were erected. This creation took 15,000 steel bases (to hold the frames steady); 315,491 linear feet of saffron colored vinyl tubing (to construct the 7500 16 feet high archways); 1,092,200 square feet of saffron colored rip-stop nylon to flutter down from those tubing archways (sewn into 8 ? foot long fabric panels); and 165,000 matching bolts and self-locking nuts to hold them all together.

So, all that work, all these materials, all the labor hours . . . what did all that create for those sixteen short winter days? Gordon Davis, the NYC parks commissioner claimed the Gates project "Will make us stare, laugh, gasp, prance, gawk, and say to no one in particular 'Isn't the park wonderful?'" (Smithsonian, page 87).

As overblown and outrageous as Christo's huge projects may seem, they do succeed in calling our attention to places and spaces we've allowed to become invisible, shrouded in mundane everydayness. He refocuses our vision. He lets our eyes both sweep along the huge scale of his projects, and at the same time encourages them to hone in on single, small details caught in the immense canvas of his creation. We see bigger. We see better. We see differently.

The world is still the same. But our perception of it is dramatically altered.

In today's gospel text John's long, intricately woven story is all about vision. On a simple, physical level there's the miracle of the restored vision to the blind-since-birth beggar. But John's story isn't just about sight regained. It's also about sight lost, blindness descending on those Pharisees, on those whose presuppositions and presumptions couldn't let them see the presence of the Son of Man in their midst.

The beggar Jesus heals is described by John's text as having been blind from birth (verse 1). He had never had an opportunity to see. His blindness had kept him from some wage-earning activities, but it was simply that man's normal experience of life. Having never seen he couldn't really understand what he was missing.

When Jesus gives him vision, for the first time his eyesight clears up immediately. But his insight into what had happened to him took longer for him to process. Although the healed man could now see, he couldn't yet quite comprehend what had been revealed to him.

Only after the healed man is forced first by his neighbors, then on two different occasions by the Pharisees, to scrutinize what has happened to him, does he really begin to take in the magnitude of his experience.

With surprising swiftness, however, this simple beggar, whose life had been spent in darkness, is able to clearly see the miracle before him. Not the miracle of his new eyesight, but the miracle of Jesus as the Son of Man, the Messiah, now present on earth and bringing God's presence directly to all the world.

At first this newly-sighted man can only name Jesus' name. Later he becomes sure that the one who effected his healing was a prophet. Finally, the Pharisee's repeated needling prods the healed man into recognizing that Jesus must be from God for without God's presence he could do nothing (verse 33). With his new vision now fully focused Jesus himself returns to the healed man and reveals that in Jesus the man has seen the Son of Man. Demonstrating 20-20 faithfulness and 20-20 vision, the healed man instantly exclaims "Lord, I believe" and he worshiped Jesus. (verse 39). The vision blessing opened the eyes of the blind man. But it was the man's response to that blessing which opened his heart to God's presence. Once he experienced eyesight this man's world was so completely changed that he allowed his mind and heart to be equally opened to new sights and new insights. He allowed his new eyesight to grow into new insight, new outlooks, new vision. His own blessing turned into a blessing for others, as he confessed the name of Jesus and witnessed to the healing power of Jesus the Christ.

How many of us have had our eyes opened to a new reality and then used that fresh vision to change our old habits, our old expectations, our old convictions.

We hold our new baby and know our perspective on everything will now be through our child's eyes.

We come back to our childhood home after a long absence and realize it wasn't the center of the universe that we thought it was.

We visit a country where fresh water is a luxury and death and disease an everyday companion.

Yet how many of us have also glimpsed tremendous truths, mind-altering insights, and yet chosen to blink them away, preferring to remain in the safe surroundings we've built around ourselves and our lives.

We turn off the commercials that implore us to save the children.

We hurry past the street-people littering our sidewalks with their misery and despair. "

We black-out the sounds of abuse that drift from a neighbor's window.

Instead of keeping our eyes focused on the future we prefer blinders that keep us narrowly trained on our present plodding path.

Real discipleship costs. The price? Giving up our own visions and agendas and securities for the visions and agendas of God. To those given the gift of sight, there's a requirement attached. The blessing of eyesight requires we pass on the wisdom of divinely gifted insight. In other words, we're BLEST TO BLESS. "To whom much is given . . . much is required" (Luke 12:48 NKJV).

This "Blest to Bless" principle is so important in the Scriptures that God swore so that we could see and hear this Blest to Bless principle. The Bible says that God Swears 2 Things. God swore to Abraham: "By myself I have sworn, declares the Lord . . . indeed I will greatly bless you, and . . . in your seed all the nations of the earth shall be blessed, because you have obeyed my voice" (Genesis 22:16-18).

God's sworn promise was reiterated in Hebrews 5:13-14: "When God made the promise to Abraham, since he could swear by no one greater, he swore by himself saying, 'I will surely bless you and I will surely multiply you." And again in Hebrews 6:17-18: "In the same way God, desiring even more to show to the heirs of the promise the unchangeableness of his purpose, interposed with an oath, so that by two unchangeable things in which it is impossible for God to lie, we who have taken refuge would have strong encouragement."

The blind man didn't believe God would come through for him. Ever wonder whether God will come through for you? To be sure, God won't always do what we think God should do. But God will always do exactly what God says God will do. God's won't always heal every hurt. But God always heals. God always does what God says God will do.

And what does God say God will do? God swore he'd do two things.

The first thing God swore was that God would bless Abraham. The second thing God swore was that God would bless every people group on the planet through Abraham's promise (heirs).

Gates are meant to be opened. Christo's Gates were meant to open our eyes to the blessings of Central Park. Jesus' opening the eyes of the blind man were gates meant to open for the King of Glory:

Lift up your heads, O gates, And be lifted up, O ancient doors, That the King of glory may come in! (Psalm 24:7).

Have you opened your eyes for the insight of truth? Have you opened the gates of your heart for the King of Glory to come in? God's sworn promise is first that God wants to bless you. But God's sworn promise has a second clause: God blesses you . . . so that you can be a blessing to others. You are blest to bless. That's the insight of eyesight.


1. http://www.christojeanneclaude.net/

ChristianGlobe Networks, Collected Sermons, by Leonard Sweet