John 9:1-12 · Jesus Heals a Man Born Blind
You Have a Story to Tell
John 9:1-41
Sermon
by King Duncan
Loading...

Here’s a story from the headlines that all of you will remember. In March 2019, the FBI announced the completion of “Operation Varsity Blues,” a nationwide scam in which wealthy parents paid outrageous bribes to get their children into prestigious colleges like Yale and Stanford. Fifty people were charged in the scandal, including parents, test administrators for the ACT and SAT, and college coaches who all collaborated in getting unqualified students admitted to big-name schools.

In addition to the bribes, the folks involved in this scandal falsified test scores on the ACT and SAT exams, made up fake awards and honors on the students’ college applications, paid professionals to take tests or attend classes for the students, and put the students on college athletic teams for which the students had no actual athletic experience. Some parents even photoshopped their kids’ faces over the bodies of professional athletes to make it look like their kids had real athletic experience. (1)  

Comedian Trevor Noah from The Daily Show had one of the best jokes about this scandal: “Some of these parents allegedly paid up to $6.5 million,” he said. “Which is insane. Honestly, for that amount of money, just buy a smarter kid!” (2)

It’s easy to make fun of people who seem to have many privileges. Did they earn them? Do they deserve them? Are they just slackers with more money than brains? Because we obviously deserve all the blessings we have in our lives, don’t we? We’ve worked for them. We’re good people, and that earns us some good karma, right? 

Former Texas governor Anne Richards once remarked about President George Bush Sr., “He was born on third base and thought he hit a triple.” (3)

We really hold tight to this idea of being a self-made man or woman. We get angry if people suggest that we benefit from some unearned privilege. But we do.

Let’s change the conversation for a minute. What do you think would be the most difficult aspect of being born blind? What would you miss out on? What would you need help with? How do you think other people would treat you?

I want you to think about that as we read again the opening words to today’s Bible passage: “As (Jesus) went along, he saw a man blind from birth. His disciples asked him, ‘Rabbi, who sinned, this man or his parents, that he was born blind?’”

There it is again. This issue of earning our privileges, deserving our blessings, has been around a long time. The underlying belief here is that all of life should be just and happy and under our control, so injustice and suffering must have a root cause. We must deserve it in some way. Because if the blind man didn’t deserve his disability, then we don’t deserve our ability. We don’t deserve our blessings and comfort and safety and health and happiness if he didn’t deserve his blindness. And if none of us deserves our lot in life, then none of us can boast or complain if our lot in life changes. Whether we win or lose, we don’t deserve either state.

Nancy Eiesland, Associate Professor of Sociology of Religion at Emory University has written: “Growing up with a disability, I could not accept the traditional interpretations of disability that I heard in prayers, in Sunday school, and in sermons. ‘You are special in God’s eyes,’ I was often told, ‘that’s why you were given this painful disability.’ Or, ‘Don’t worry about your suffering now—in heaven you will be made whole.’  This confused me. My disability had taught me who I am and who God is. What would it mean to be without this knowledge?

“My family frequented faith healers with me in tow. I was never healed. People asked about my hidden sins, but they must have been so well hidden that even I misplaced them. The theology that I heard was inadequate to my experience.” (4)

Sometimes our ideas about what makes life worthwhile, about what we “deserve,” about what constitutes a blessing from God, stand in the way of us understanding God and living a life of meaning and purpose.

I mentioned this a few weeks ago, and I want to mention it again. Usually, when someone comes to Jesus with a question, Jesus answers with another question, or with a parable or a challenge. In fact, author Philip Yancey says he once heard a theologian say that Jesus was asked 183 questions in the Bible, and he only answered three of them directly. Three out of one-hundred-eighty-three. (5)

So sit up and pay attention. This is one of the most important questions of human existence. And it’s one of the few instances when Jesus answers a question directly. Why was this man blind? “Neither this man nor his parents sinned,” said Jesus, “but this happened so that the works of God might be displayed in him . . .”

After saying this, he spit on the ground, made some mud with the saliva, and put it on the man’s eyes. “Go,” he told him, “wash in the Pool of Siloam.”  So the man went and washed, and came home seeing.

Notice that there are two acts of healing in these four verses. There is, of course, the physical healing. What a great joy and blessing this man received because he stepped out in faith. He received his sight!

But I think the first act of healing occurred when the blind man heard Jesus say, “Neither this man nor his parents sinned, but this happened so that the works of God might be displayed in him.” Jesus’ statement gave the man hope and healed his sense that his disability was somehow a curse that made him a lesser man. And this hope is evidenced by the fact that the blind man got up and went to the pool of Siloam to wash the mud off his eyes. Have you ever tried walking across your bedroom in the dark? Most of us are reluctant to do that. So can you imagine how far that man had to walk in the hopes that this stranger wasn’t lying to him, wasn’t tricking him, but actually had the power to heal him? We don’t know for sure where the blind man was when Jesus healed him. But one commentary writer says, “A trip to Siloam and back from the nearest wall of the temple, for example, would be about 1,300 yards.” (6)

Would you walk blind even half that distance on the word of a stranger? Jesus’ words gave this man so much hope that he was willing to take that risk.

A well-known professor in the field of management has said something profound about suffering: “There’s some pain that needs a solution, and some pain that needs a story.” (7) In this moment, Jesus gave the blind man both a solution—physical healing—and a story—that he was not disabled by some sin that either his parents or he had committed. I want us to focus on that fact today because most of us know what it is to carry around certain pains in life for which there is no solution. An unanswered prayer. An undeserved burden. We beg God for a solution. What if God gives us a story instead?

I think the first part of this story would be that God can use every part of your life for His glory.  Many of us settle for a wimpy calling. We are content if we are just good people who go to church and help our neighbor occasionally. We are not a shining example of the love, the strength, the power and the grace of Almighty God. Part of the reason for that is because we hide our suffering and questions and pains from each other. We think that our weakness makes us less of a witness for Christ. Instead, it’s walking in faith through our pain that causes others to see God’s glory in our lives. Let me give you an example of a woman who discovered God in her weakness.

Sheila Walsh is a best-selling author, Christian singer and former co-host of The 700 Club. She struggled with depression for years but tried to deny it. She had spent her adult life in a very public ministry role. She couldn’t dare let down her guard and admit how hopeless and sad and burned out she was. One day, a guest on The 700 Club said, “Sheila, you ask us every day how we’re all doing, but how are you doing?” And this question broke through Sheila’s carefully curated image. She began to cry uncontrollably, right there on air. By that evening, she had checked herself into a psychiatric hospital. She gave up her co-hosting job. She took a step back from her ministries. And she admitted that she didn’t know who she was anymore.

Today, Sheila Walsh is back in ministry, speaking and writing and sharing her struggles with depression. Instead of being rejected or put to shame for her condition, she discovered thousands of women who struggled with the same issue and needed to know they weren’t alone. God did not miraculously heal her of her depression; instead, God has used her depression to draw her into a deeper relationship of trust with Him and increase her ministry to hurting people. As Walsh says, “The Good News will never be good news until you know that God knows all of your bad news.” (8)

And not only does God know all your bad news. God can use all your bad news. God is most glorified in the way we handle our suffering. Our blessings don’t draw people to God. No one is in awe of a healthy, smart, wealthy person who achieves great things. We are in awe of those who overcome hard times, who choose joy in the face of sorrow, who choose love in the face of betrayal or hatred.

So every blessing and every hardship, every strength and every disability, every joy and every sorrow in our lives is an opportunity for God to work out His plan through us. Does that mean that God plans everything that happens to us? No, I don’t believe so. There is suffering that comes from the sins of others, like abuse or neglect or divorce. There is suffering that comes from impersonal forces outside our control, like dividing cancer cells or drought or recession. God did not intend for us to endure this suffering. He does intend to work through this suffering to strengthen us and make us better able to demonstrate His glory in all circumstances. People need to see the character and power of God in how you handle your suffering.

The second part of our story is that you don’t have to understand everything about God; just share what you do know about Him. When the formerly blind man is questioned by his neighbors about his healing, he says, “The man they call Jesus made some mud and put it on my eyes.” A few verses later, the Pharisees interrogate the man harshly. But this man turns his hard time into an opportunity to share the truth of Jesus. He still doesn’t know who Jesus is or why Jesus healed him. He thinks Jesus might be a prophet. He didn’t let what he didn’t know prevent him from sharing what he did know. It doesn’t stop him from speaking truth to power.

There are some wonderful lyrics to a song titled “My Story” by Big Daddy Weave. The song begins, “If I told you my story You would hear Hope that wouldn't let go  . . . And if I told you my story You would hear Love that never gave up . . . And if I told you my story You would hear Life, but it wasn't mine . . . If I should speak then let it be Of the grace that is greater than all my sin . . . Of when justice was served and where mercy wins . . . Of the kindness of Jesus that draws me in Oh to tell you my story is to tell of Him. “(9)

The formerly blind man’s story is a story of hope and love and life and grace. It’s the story of what Jesus did in him. And he refused to be silenced by the fear tactics of the Pharisees. The next time they interrogated him, they accused Jesus of being a sinner. And the formerly blind man said, “Whether he is a sinner or not, I don’t know. One thing I do know. I was blind but now I see!”

And the final part of our story is that we never know who needs to hear God’s story through us. There is a beautiful story on the Divine Opportunities blog by a man named Larry. Many years ago, Larry was driving down Highway 240 in Memphis when he saw a car pulled off on the side of the highway. He felt strongly that God was leading him to stop and help. He pulled up behind the stopped car and saw a young woman standing by the side of the road, staring off into space. When he asked if she needed help, she began to cry. This young mother had just come from St. Jude Children’s Hospital where her two-year-old son was undergoing treatments for leukemia. Her husband had walked out on the family not long after their child’s diagnosis. And this flat tire on the side of Highway 240 in Memphis felt like the final straw for this young woman. She felt so lost and alone.

Larry didn’t have a solution for this woman. But he did have a story. He knew now why he had felt the urge to stop. Eight and a half years earlier, when Larry’s little son was just two years old, Larry’s wife had died of leukemia. He knew what it was to be grief-stricken and confused. He knew what it was to be a single parent. He knew what it was to feel alone and helpless and desperate. And he knew what it was to rely on God for his strength. And so Larry began sharing the story of how God worked through his grief and anger and loneliness. He shared how God had helped him to be a single parent to his little son. As Larry wrote on the blog, “It was a God thing. I don’t recall a lot of what I said—it’s like it came in and went out, a lot like a gift of the Spirit. It’s not necessarily something I thought about and said. It just flowed.”

Larry sat with the woman while she cried. Then he changed her tire and prayed with her. And when Larry drove away that day, he understood in a new way how God had used his pain to bring comfort and strength to someone else in need. (10)

As the professor said, “There’s some pain that needs a solution, and some pain that needs a story.” You may never get an answer to your “Why?” So change the question to “How can God use this?” We ask God for a reason; God gives us a purpose.

In this lifetime, you may never get a solution to your pain. You may never experience healing. You may never see how God is using it. But if you give your pain to God, you can have a new story. It will be the story of how God is glorified in our weakness, not in our strength. God is glorified in our perseverance more than our power. God is glorified more by our attitudes than by our achievements. And God is using our pain to grow us into people who reflect His glory and draw others to Him.

We ask God for a solution; God gives us a story instead. Someone needs to hear the story of God in your life. How can you share it? Not just the shiny, happy parts. God is glorified in the tough parts. The good news is that God can use your bad news to share the good news. Will you let Him?


1. “30 Fast Facts About The College Admissions Scandal” by Zack Friedman https://www.forbes.com/sites/zackfriedman/2019/03/18/30-facts-college-admissions-scandal/#3214093012a0.

2. “College Admissions Scandal Proves ‘Rich People Are Insane,’ Seth Myers Says” by Laura Bradley, March 14, 2019, Vanity Fair https://www.vanityfair.com/hollywood/2019/03/college-admissions-scandal-lori-loughlin-felicity-huffman-late-night.

3. https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Ann_Richards .

4. Lectionary Commentary: “Ray Charles and John 9 — Seeing for the First Time” (for Sunday, April 3, 2011) by Carl Gregg in Patheos March 26, 2011.  https://www.patheos.com/blogs/carlgregg/2011/03/lectionary-commentary-%E2%80%9Cjohn-9-seeing-for-the-first-time%E2%80%9D-for-sunday-april-3-2011/.

5. Philip Yancey, Prayer: Does It Make Any Difference? (Grand Rapids: Zondervan), 2006.

6. Biblegateway.com https://www.biblegateway.com/resources/commentaries/IVP-NT/John/Jesus-Light-World-Opens-Eyes.

7. Gianpiero Petriglieri in “The key to loving your job in the age of burnout” by Cassie Werber, April 7, 2019. Quartz. https://qz.com/work/1571065/how-to-love-your-job-and-avoid-burnout/.

8. “How Depression Brought Sheila Walsh Closer to God” by Brooke Obie Guideposts Feb. 26, 2015, https://www.guideposts.org/better-living/health-and-wellness/coping-with-illness/how-depression-brought-sheila-walsh-closer-to. Also excerpted from “A Prison to Set You Free: Sheila Walsh’s Journey Through Depression” Jesus Calling, https://www.jesuscalling.com/blog/sheila-walsh/.

9. “My Story” written by Michael Weaver and Justin Ingram, performed by Big Daddy Weave.

10. http://divineopportunity.com/stories-larry.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Dynamic Preaching First Quarter Sermons, by King Duncan