John 9:1-41 Man Born Blind (Wigmore) – Bible study
Sermon John 9:1-41 Man Born Blind
By Fr. Bill Wigmore
(This sermon was delivered to a group recovering from alcohol and drug addiction.)
Every so often, the AA folks in New York publish a new edition of the Big Book. And an important thing to notice about each new edition is this:
That the first hundred and sixty-four pages of the book never change But in the back new stories are always being added; and some old ones are taken away.
It seems the Big Book publishers want us to know
that their book is never really complete
without a few dozen stories attached
Stories that tell how men & women put those first 164 pages
to work in their lives and how whenever they do
then, like our first reading says:
still another generation comes to find that:
The age of miracles is still with us and their own
stories are there to prove it.
Skip the stories and you miss seeing the miracle lived out in the flesh.
Skip the stories and AA and CA and NA become just so much theory & head stuff
I doubt if the Program would have the power to change any of us
if we couldnt see with our own eyes
that it was being lived out and changing the lives of
people just like us.
And some of thats what I think is happening here in tonights gospel.
Johns gospel is sort of like the fourth edition of the Good Book.
Matthew, Mark and Luke wrote the first three editions
But a little later, when John comes along and he writes the fourth edition he wants his to be a little different from all the others.
And so in Johns gospel, we hear more stories
Sometimes like tonight we hear much longer stories!
Stories of the difference Jesus made in the lives of the people he met along the Way
How he came into their towns, found them living in darkness and brought them the Light they needed to see.
Several years ago, when this gospel rolled around,
I invited a blind man to come and deliver the sermon here.
I figured if us drunks & addicts understand about addiction
and we get to tell our stories,
then why not have a blind guy come and talk about his?
It was Blind Dave, from the Program and some of you probably know him.
And one of the things that Blind Dave picked up on in this reading
was something that – as a guy with sight – Id missed out on
seeing completely
And that was the way in which John always described the main character in his story.
John never once calls him the BLIND MAN
But every time John mentions him – hes always: The man born blind.
Blind Dave didnt think that was by accident.
Dave was sensitive to his own blindness
and he loved the fact that John first saw a Man
before ever noticing that the man was also blind
John first saw human dignity present –
He saw past the mans blindness and first saw his humanity.
I loved that insight!
And thats a lesson maybe we all need to be reminded of sometimes.
Were all alcoholics & addicts but before that,
were all Gods children.
We cant ever forget our addictions;
But we need to be reminded that were far more than our addictions as well.
Were Gods kids kids who happen to have addictions and
need to find the Light that can lead us
to our own spiritual solution.
Of course another lesson I learned from having Blind Dave give
the sermon is that, being blind,
Dave couldnt see the clock!
And so his sermon seemed to go on forever
And thats when I learned that Dave was not only
a man born blind but he was also a man born Baptist!
And Baptists when they get to preaching dont even
believe in clocks!
How do you signal a blind Baptist TIME IS UP? (Hand gesture time out)
Im not a Baptist and I know that some of you are men and women Born Smokers
and as a recovering one I try to have compassion on you too –
so I like to get us out of here in an hour before that craving kicks in too bad!
But, if youll allow me – just three quick points about this story and the first one is this:
Notice the way in which Jesus restores the mans sight.
He does it in a way that seems pretty strange to us
and perhaps in a way thats not particularly hygienic!
Jesus picks up some dirt from the earth and he spits in it
Then he makes a little pile of mud
and he covers the mans eyes with it.
Now that can all sound a little disgusting to us
And if he did it in Austin, the Board of Health would probably
issue Jesus a citation haul him down to Community Court!
But to the people of his day,
thats one of the ways that healings happened.
I suppose Jesus could have cured the guy on the spot
but he chose not to
Instead, he chose to use a way that the people already knew.
And the lesson we can draw from that is this
As addicts in need of our own miracle
we might want to try following the directions weve already been given!
Try doing it the way a couple of million other people have already done it successfully –
The man born blind did as he was told.
He got up from his begging spot and he went to a meeting
he went over to the Siloam Group
And theres where he brought his eyes –
And theres where his eyes were opened
And theres where his miracle happened!
He was sent — And he went!
And another lesson to draw from this story is that
just as soon as the man born blind gets his miracle
notice how everyone around him tries to take it away from him.
The Pharisees say:
Maybe this guy was never really blind in the first place
Maybe hes a fake a fraud – not even the same man we used
to see down there on Rundberg begging for a handout.
And the crowds join in and they say:
How can this be a miracle from God
Jesus hangs out with sinners! –
And he did his healing on the Sabbath!
Thats the one day God wants us all to take off!
Even his parents try to cut and run from him as they say:
Dont ask us if he was born blind ask him!
The poor blind-guy seems like the only one in the crowd
who had both his sight and his sanity restored that day
So he wonders whats all the fuss about?Its me all right! he says
Im still the same guy
but I was blind! (or in our story:) Maybe I was blind drunk
but now Im not.
Something happened to me he says –
Exactly what it was Im not really sure All I know is this:
I was blind but now I see!
And here some of us addicts can also relate to this story:
cause not only can this guy see
but the whole point of Johns story is that
now he has the faith by which to see
And because he now sees his life & see his world through the
eyes of faith
now he can see better than all the people in that village who
have 20/20 vision
All those people can see; but they havent a clue as to what they ought to be looking for.
But were blessed! Just like the man born blind was blessed
And thats cause for years & years, we couldnt see either
We couldnt see our illness
Couldnt see what it was doing to us & to those around us
And we sure couldnt see a way out!
And then, one day, we could!
If we dont see every day sober from that day forward as a real gift from God
as something that ought not to be
If we cant see recovery as a miracle, then were still just as blind as the Pharisees.
And then lastly, in the final scene,
when the mans been tossed out of the temple
notice how Jesus comes back for him again.
It seems, Jesus is always coming back for us when we get into trouble.
Hes always coming after the ones the worlds looked at with its own distorted vision
and seeing no value in them, it throws em away.
Sometimes I still do that to myself
I forget that Im one of Gods kids too
and so he has to come
or he sends one of you to come and remind me again & again of who I am
and of how much he cares.
This learning how to see isnt just a one-time deal.
It seems to go on as long as were alive and living in this world!
So Jesus finds his man in a back alley there behind the temple –
and he asks him:
Do you believe in the son of man the messiah?
Do you believe that hes coming into your world?
That Gods sent him to search for the lost?
Master, who is he? the guy says
Tell me so I can believe in him too?
And now John writes into his story
the faith of his own fourth edition community,
He writes it right onto the lips of Jesus when he has him say:
Look no further youre speaking with him
you can see him now I am he.
Bill Wilson tells his story in the Big Book.
(His story is printed in the first 164 pages
so I guess itll always be there.)
And theres a part in there
when Ebby comes into Bills kitchen
and he brings him the Good News of his own recovery.
Ebby had gotten sober and now hed been sent to tell his story to Bill.
And because all he did was tell his story
and because he didnt try to preach to him Bill was able to hear
and it was that day also that Bill began to see.
He began to see that if this simple God-program
could work for his once-drunken-friend
then maybe there was a chance itd work for him too.
Maybe the Light of God really was powerful enough to overcome his darkness
Bill says in his Big Book story:
It melted the icy intellectual mountain
in whose shadow I had lived and shivered many years.
I stood in the sunlight at last.
Bill writes:
It was only a matter of being willing to believe in a Power greater than myself.
Nothing more was required of me to make my beginning.
I saw that growth could start from that point.
Upon a foundation of complete willingness I might build what I saw in my friend.
Thus was I convinced that God is concerned with us humans
when we want Him enough.
At long last — I saw I felt . I believed.
Scales of pride and prejudice fell from my eyes.
A new world came into view.
And so it has been ever since.
Then Bill adds: How blind I had been.
Werent we all?
Amen.
Copyright 2008 Bill Wigmore. Used by permission.