Lent 5
March 15, 2026
Jesus heard that they had driven him out, and when he found
him he said, “Do you believe in the Son of Man?” He answered, “And who is
he, sir? Tell me, so that I may believe in him.” Jesus said to him, “You
have seen him, and the one speaking with you is he.” He said, “Lord, I
believe.” And he worshiped him. Jesus said, “I came into this world
for judgment, so that those who do not see may see and those who do see may
become blind.” Some of the Pharisees who were with
him heard this and said to him, “Surely we are not blind, are we?” Jesus said to them, “If
you were blind, you would not have sin. But now that you say, ‘We see,’ your
sin remains.”
It’s a long story, but it reminds us of what we already know. People see what they want to see. People hear what they want to hear. People convince themselves they are right.
The basketball team is down, 120 to 63. The coach calls a time out to give them a pep talk in the final minutes of the game. “Come on, team! We are the champions. We are going to win this game.” Well, no. Not today. But you can’t tell him otherwise.
The business executive is told by her team that pursuing a certain direction would be a catastrophic mistake. “Thank you,” she says, “but you are wrong. I know what I’m doing.” Guess what happens. The company gets sold off for parts. The executive gets a pay-out and flies off to Tucson. And she was right. Just ask her.
And then, there is the fateful story of Captain Edward Smith. They warned him there were icebergs in the North Atlantic. Another ship sent a message, “Just saw an iceberg. Watch out.” He shrugged it off, declaring, “Our ship is unsinkable.” Famous last words from the captain of the Titanic.
Self-deception seems to be woven into our genetics. We are born with information filters. We act out of our opinions and convince ourselves they are facts. We reinforce what we are predisposed to already believe. And praise the Lord, there are hundreds of cable channels to tell us what we already think we know.
The ninth chapter of the Gospel of John is the story of a man born without his sight. He cannot perceive colors, recognize faces, or predict the pitfalls right on his path. The more I think about it, this is more than the story of a single beggar on the street corner of Jerusalem, banging his offering plate, and dependent on passersby. Oh, this is a story of the whole human race.
Everybody in this story is without sight. Everybody except Jesus. He’s the One who came for those who cannot see. John tells us how he spotted a man who could not see. The twelve disciples believed he must be a sinner, and if not him, then his parents. “Nope,” says Jesus, “it doesn’t work that way. No, look at him. Take a good long look: he is here for God to work in him.” Then Jesus gives him sight. The blind man doesn’t ask for it. He doesn’t expect it. Jesus takes the initiative and just does it. Then Jesus disappears. He doesn’t stick around. He goes out of sight. All that, by the middle of verse six.
The next thirty-five verses are a reaction to what Jesus did for the man. And you heard how everything unravels. The religious experts interrogate the man. They argue with him. Jesus gave him the ability to see – and that stirs up trouble. The religious experts interrogate the man’s parents. They are too frightened to stand up for their son. So, the experts drag him in for more questioning. “Who did this? Why did he do it on the sabbath when he should be sitting still?”
Back and other, bickering, arguing, until they throw out of the synagogue. When John wrote down this story, some sixty years after it happened, a number of people had been thrown out of the synagogue. You want to guess why? Because Jesus also gave them the ability to see. That became the crisis – the division of the house! Some could see. Some refused to see.
And see what? God has come into the world through Jesus of Nazareth. Jesus has come to help and heal, to restore what is broken, to lift up what is diminished. He has come to reveal the kind of God we truly have.
And the Pharisees say, “No, that can’t be right. God doesn’t let anybody get healed on the wrong day of the week. There are six days to do all your work, and we rest on the Sabbath.” Well, just like another Sabbath healing that Jesus did in chapter five, God is not limited by the weekly calendar. God is free to come, to heal, to bless.” But they couldn’t see it. They didn’t want to see it.
That seems to be the human dilemma. Like those Pharisees in the story, who are overdrawn caricatures of actual historical Pharisees, we can be so careful to determine where God can act and where God cannot act that we miss seeing God acting right in front of our noses. Like John tells us: people see only what they want to see.
And do you know what it’s called when people won’t see what God is doing in Jesus? In the fourth Gospel, that is the definition of sin. Jesus does something, like heal a man born blind, or feed a multitude with a few fish, and the reaction is, “Well, that wasn’t God at work. That was something else. We don’t know what it was, but it wasn’t God. Jesus can’t really be God.” The Gospel of John says, “That is what sin is all about.”
Curious, isn’t it, that this long story offers a peculiar conversation about sin? The disciples said, “Who sinned, this man or his parents, that he was born without sight?” Jesus says, “No, you goobers. Sin has nothing to do with making somebody blind when they were born that way.” No, sin is refusing to receive and trust what God has come to do in Jesus. At this point in the larger story, the jury is still out whether the disciples can understand this.
The Pharisees, representing all religious professionals in all times and place, are also certain the man-born-blind had committed many sins. That’s why they investigated. They had to know what they did not know. What they cannot know. The man had not sinned, but they keep telling themselves he must have sinned. He must have done something wrong.
So, the Experts turn on Jesus. He must be the sinner. He healed on the Sabbath, so he broke the Sabbath. What they cannot see, of course, is that he’s the One who created the Sabbath. Back in chapter one we heard, “He’s the One through whom all things were made.” Even the Sabbath. Yet if they knew that verse, and they didn’t, they would not believe it because they would not believe that the living God was working in the life of Jesus.
This is the crisis, the present day of judgment. Either you see this or you don’t. Either Jesus is showing us the true nature of God or he’s just some other miracle guy. This one from Nazareth in the middle of nowhere, the one with a dirty tunic and carpenter splinters in his hands. Is this the prophet of God? The Messiah? Everybody has to decide.
This is John’s particularly unique understanding of sin singular (the refusal to accept who Jesus is) and sins plural, those infractions against religious law over which the Pharisees have appointed themselves as moral guardians. And it helps to clarify something Jesus will say later in the book, in chapter fifteen. As he sums up his ministry at the Last Supper, he says, “If I had not come, if I had not spoken to them, they would not have sinned.” (15:22)
The point is he has come; he has spoken, he has acted – and to dismiss him, to trash him, to push him away, that is the depth of human sin. And it wouldn’t have happened if he had not come into the world. In fact, if he had not come, the world would have remained a closed system, a death spiral of despair. And to quote an old phrase that becomes quite poignant, it would be “blind leading the blind.”
I reflect on these things as I listen to people out in public who talk as if they know what they are doing. Especially when it becomes painfully obvious that they don’t. And then they lie, or spin, or create new rationales, or say “Look over there!” to cover up a great deal of ignorance that ends up hurting a lot of people. It is a recurring human situation without a shred of humility or self-awareness.
And should anybody be called out for it, like the first century Pharisees, they defend themselves. “You’re not saying we are blind, too, are you?”
Jesus sighs once again. His retort is the same: “If you were blind, you would not have sin. But now that you say, ‘We see,’ your sin remains.”
Take a moment to look around. Go ahead, look. We find ourselves in the company of those who have had their eyes opened. Maybe not the whole way, maybe just wide enough to perceive God is real, Christ has come among us, and the Living Spirit continues to bless and challenge us; once again, grace and truth. The true Christ follower is the one who sings, “I was once was blind, but now I see.” (No, we are not going to sing that one today. We’ll sing another one in just a minute. But the sentiment is the same.)
Think about what we do, in the
light of the story John tells us. We keep coming together on Sunday mornings,
on Tuesdays and Thursdays and Wednesdays and whenever else, and the point of it
all is to keep looking for Jesus. To share field reports of when and where we’ve
experienced the grace and truth that come as gifts from heaven.
And it doesn’t come all at once, not for most of us. Like the man who had his eyes opened for the first time, the Christian life is one of growing clarification.
We study together, we serve the neighborhood together, we live our lives together, we pray for one another. And we do it because we know there is light that has come into the darkness. We keep at it because we are not alone. Never alone.
Without asking for it, a man is given his ability to see. For the first time, he can see. So, when Jesus finds him again and pops the question, “Do you believe in the Son of Man?” the man says, “Who is it?” And Jesus says, “You have seen him.” Your eyes have been opened. Your heart has been opened. He’s standing right in front of you – which is where he was always been.
Today we baptize a mom and her four kids. We tell them the truth about God’s grace: you all belong to God. Our task as the household of God is to celebrate the vision God has given to us and to help one another to see. We point to the promise of living with Jesus, and we welcome his life to live through us. We notice the things he cares about. We pay attention to those huddled on the street corners that others don’t see. We call out hypocrisy and do our best to live in humility. And we wait for him to show more and more of himself.
This is the trouble Jesus causes.
It’s good trouble, the best kind of trouble there is. And as we step into it,
we do so in the full assurance that we are not the people we once were. God is
at work among us.
(c) William G. Carter. All rights reserved.