The Power to See Anew
Vision: Christ-empowered living provides for Jesus-followers the astonishing power to see anew as they expectantly wait and receive a second touch healing from God.
This Lenten message series continues to focus upon the transformed life from the Gospel of Mark. Lent is not about drudgery; it’s about drama—the drama of bonding with Christ on the Calvary road toward a spiritually empowered encounter with God. It is a three-act drama of remembrance, release, and renewal. The Christian life is about Christ at work in the Jesus-follower. The Holy Spirit lives inside all Jesus-followers and causes them to be set apart for God’s use. The Holy Spirit empowers Jesus-followers for righteous living. The Christ—empowered life is more than seriousness and solemnity. Like faith itself, it’s a journey from sacrifice to celebration—an adventure beyond the ordinary!
There are times when we sense that we are raising a generation who is unwilling to work for and wait for the important things in life. The reason why we sense this is because we see in our generation an unwillingness to wait as well. Perhaps we are the product of our culture in this regard. The technologies of western culture certainly influence how we view life. And they have certainly made life at the beginning of the twenty-first century significantly different than at any other time in history.
What has happened to “time”? Perhaps the following illustration will be helpful:
When as a child I laughed and wept, time crept.
When as a youth I dreamed and talked, time walked.
When I became a full grown man, time ran.
And later as I older grew, time flew.
Soon I shall find while traveling on, time gone.
Our technology has fostered upon us what may be called an "instant age." Today, we are able to have what we want in short order. From instant coffee, to instant-on TV's, to microwave ovens that cook our food in minutes, to laser printers and copiers, to a variety of other conveniences, we have come to expect not simply to have what we want, but to have it now. To have to wait for things has become a burden to many of us. And if it has become a burden to us, it will be intolerable to younger generations.
Now this is unfortunate, because generally, the best things in life take time. Our relationships are like that. In order to have a meaningful and lasting relationship, we must spend time building that relationship. We can't get to know someone overnight. We must invest the time if we would reap the dividends. Other important things, like education for our career and skill in the creative arts also take time to be done right. Faith can be like that as well. Not all of us have instant faith. Sometimes faith must grow. But it certainly is a faith worth nurturing and worth anticipating.
God always deals with his people on the basis of faith. And that means we do not always get what we need from God instantly. Sometimes things come gradually as our faith grows. But that's OK. Sometimes it takes patience to see what God will provide. This too is OK.
There is a saying that goes like this: “patience is a virtue, possess it if you can. Found seldom in a woman, never in a man!”Men pray for patience and we want it now!
We will see in the text of this message, how the blind man of Bethsaida received his sight through the second touch of the Savior's hand. What he got he did not get instantly. But he did get it. It came, not all at once, but gradually. He needed not merely a first touch, but a second touch. We also need the first and second touch. Sometimes, we must come to God again and again. The encouraging news is that God is a God of the Second Touch.
SPIT MEETS SPECTACLE —MARK 8:22-26
22 They came to Bethsaida, and some people brought a blind man and begged Jesus to touch him. 23 He took the blind man by the hand and led him outside the village. When he had spit on the man's eyes and put his hands on him, Jesus asked, "Do you see anything?" 24 He looked up and said, "I see people; they look like trees walking around." 25 Once more Jesus put his hands on the man's eyes. Then his eyes were opened, his sight was restored, and he saw everything clearly. 26 Jesus sent him home, saying, "Don't even go into the village."
Mark continues to demonstrate an action-oriented Jesus. The incident of the blind man of Bethsaida is only recorded by Mark. It is a wonderful story of how God deals differently with different people. It is the story of healing. But unlike many of Jesus' healings, this one did not occur instantly. There is a process involved in this healing. This story communicates to us an essential truth that God deals with each of us on the basis of what we need. Just as we are not all stamped out of the same mold, so God's miracles do not come in "cookie-cutter fashion." Just as we are not a mechanical system, so God does not deal with us with a scheme. God meets each of us personally, where we are, and deals with us as individuals.
Receiving a Second Touch
When Jesus comes to Bethsaida, he is met by a group of people with a blind man in tow. These people want to see the blind man healed. But perhaps they may want to see this miracle worker perform, more than they have a desire to see a blind man healed. And so they begin to ask Jesus to touch him. What we see here are the expectations of people, as those expectations relate to God and his work. No doubt, the people expect a first touch miracle. However, Jesus gives the blind man a second touch healing. It’s a focus on faith.
Let’s observe here the process of faith Jesus leads this blind man through in order to restore his sight.
1. We see the uniqueness of Jesus’ compassion
23 He took the blind man by the hand and led him outside the village.
Blindness was, and still is, one of the great curses of the East. It was caused partly by ophthalmia [acute conjunctivitis, an inflammation of the eyes], and partly by the harsh glare of the sun. It was greatly aggravated by the fact that people knew nothing of hygiene and of cleanliness. It was common to see a person with matter-encrusted eyes on which the flies persistently settled. Naturally this carried the infection far and wide, and blindness was a plague.
Jesus takes the blind man out of the crowd and out of the city that he might be alone with him. Jesus is sensitive to this man’s dilemma. If this blind man would suddenly be given back his vision among the crowd, there would have flashed upon his newly-seeing eyes hundreds of people and things, and dazzling colors, so that he would have been completely bewildered. Jesus also knows this man’s faith. It would be far better if he could be taken to a place where the thrill of seeing would break less suddenly upon this man, physically and spiritually.
That is always the focus of what God does in our lives. God is not only interested in our physical needs, but also our spiritual needs. God is excited by our faith. God acts on the basis of our faith. What concerns Jesus is the faith of the blind man. God is far more interested in developing faith in us than he is in our physical healing. Jesus is willing to heal this blind man, but he is more interested in developing faith in him.
Every great doctor and every great teacher have one outstanding characteristic. The great doctor is able to enter into the very mind and heart of the patient; the doctor understands the patient’s fears and hopes; the doctor literally sympathizes—suffers—with the patient. The great teacher enters into the very mind of the scholar. That is why Jesus is so supremely great. He can enter into the mind and heart of the people whom he seeks to help. Jesus has the gift of compassion, because he can think with their thoughts and feel with their feelings. May God extend to us this Christlike gift.
2. We see the matchlessness of Jesus’ methods
23 …When he had spit on the man's eyes and put his hands on him, Jesus asked, "Do you see anything?" 25 Once more Jesus put his hands on the man's eyes.
The ancient world believed in the healing power of spittle. The belief is not so strange when we remember that it is a first instinct to put a cut or burned finger in our mouth to ease the pain. Of course the blind man knew this remedy and Jesus uses a method of curing him which the blind man can understand.
Jesus is wise, but common in the use of his healing methods. Jesus does not begin with words and methods that are far above the heads of simple people. Jesus speaks to them and acts on them in ways that even simple minds can grasp and understand. There have been times when the need to be logical is accounted a virtue and a sign of greatness. Jesus has the still superior greatness—the greatness which even a simple mind can grasp.
Most of us today are considered well-balanced and simple-minded. However, do we realize that one in every four Americans is unbalanced? Personally, think of your three closest friends. If they seem OK, you're the one!
In Jesus’ healing methods, he is committed to staying in contact with us until we come to the place where we can receive the fulfillment of all he wants to do in our lives. He doesn't deal with all of us in the same way. He doesn't use the same methods and the same means. But Jesus does touch all of us by his power. Some of us have experienced dramatic identifiable conversions. We can identify the very hour and minute we were saved. We can tell what pew we were sitting in and what verse of what song we were singing when God spoke to us. Others, however, do not share such a dramatic conversion. Some, in fact, who were raised in Christian homes, cannot even tell you in what month they trusted Jesus. It was a process of taking one step after another closer to the Savior until those steps became a true conversion to Jesus Christ. The important thing is not that we were all converted the same way. The important thing is that we all experienced conversion. What is important today is that we know that we have surrendered our lives to Jesus no matter what method it takes to accept God’s gift of salvation.
3. We see the distinctiveness of Jesus’ miracle
23 …Jesus asked, "Do you see anything?" 24 He looked up and said, "I see people; they look like trees walking around." 25 Once more Jesus put his hands on the man's eyes. Then his eyes were opened, his sight was restored, and he saw everything clearly.
A sixth-grader gave the following description of a miracle. “A miracle is something extraordinary that happens without any strings attached.” It’s true; all miracles are instituted by God with no strings attached. Three Greek words are translated “miracle”: dynamis, “powers;” terata, “wonders;” and semeia, “signs.” A miracle is an action of God or his messenger that runs counter to observed processes of nature. The miracles of Jesus are central to understanding who he is, and to validating his claims as the conquering and suffering servant of God. Some modern theologians have tried to take the miracles out of the Bible in order to make its message “understandable” to the modern mind. But the message of the Bible is still and will always represent a great miracle.
This miracle is distinctive—it is the only miracle which can be said to have happened gradually. Jesus’ miracles usually happen suddenly and completely. In this miracle the blind man’s sight comes back in stages. This doesn’t suggest that it is too difficult for Jesus. Possibly Jesus wants to show his disciples that some healing would be gradual rather than instantaneous or to demonstrate that spiritual truth is not always perceived clearly at first. Before Jesus left, however, the blind man was healed completely—his sight fully restored.
We know by reading the Gospels that Jesus heals at least three blind men differently. In one case, he touches the blind man and he is healed. In a second, he spits on the ground, and makes mud and puts the mud on the blind man's eyes and he is healed. In this case from Mark, he spits directly into the blind man's eyes and he is healed. Now let’s suppose these three blind men meet one day and begin comparing notes. If they are like some Jesus-followers today, their sharing will degenerate into an argument over the proper method of being healed from blindness. And because each has experienced a different method, they will probably be polarized into three distinct sects.
Out of that meeting will emerge the "touchites," the "mudites," and the "spitites." And three new movements will be born. But they really miss the point. Sometimes we miss the point on equally trivial grounds. Jesus’ healing is distinctive no matter what the methods. The point is that we receive what God is trying to do in our lives. However God ministers this to us. We know this: that Jesus is interested in giving each of us what we need. Whether it comes instantly or takes a period of time, we submit to God. We trust God in the midst of our circumstances. God is working in them and through them to grow our faith. And as we trust God more fully, our faith will be fulfilled as God’s grace is applied to our lives.
There is symbolic truth here for Jesus-followers that deals with Christ-empowered living. It centers upon spiritual maturity. Jesus’ healing is unique, matchless and distinctive. No one sees all God’s truth all at once. Our salvation is instantaneous due to the completed work of Christ on the cross. But our sanctification is a progression of growing into the likeness of the person of Christ. We still have to grow in grace because the discovery of the riches of Christ are inexhaustible. We still need to see what it means to go on growing in grace, learning more and more about the infinite wonder and beauty of Christ.
Seeing God in All Things
The way we see things that happen in our lives have a great effect on our state of being. Seeing God in all things is healthy vision. If God is our hope, our salvation, our security, our peace, then God must be the one who has charge of everything.
Jesus said in Matthew 6:22-23…
"The eye is the lamp of the body. If your eyes are healthy, your whole body will be full of light. 23 But if your eyes are unhealthy, your whole body will be full of darkness. If then the light within you is darkness, how great is that darkness.”
If our eye is “single”, (Kings James Version), leaving no room to consider anyone or anything other than God being in control, we have the power to see anew. We have the perception to identify our true source of light with healthy hearts.
SingleVISION Living =
“the capacity to see clearly what God wants us to do, and to see the world from his point of view.”
The Greek word for healthy here implies generous. The Greek word for unhealthy here implies stingy. So this spiritual insight can be easily clouded by an unhealthy eye. Self-serving desires, interests, and goals block that spiritual vision. Serving God is the best way to restore it. A “healthy” or “single”eye is one that is generously fixed on God.
A little boy flying in a commercial airplane was sitting in the seat next to a lady who was shredding her Kleenex, trembling with worry and fear. “Little boy,” she asked, “How can you be so calm as we fly through this storm? Aren’t you terrified?” “No,” the boy responded as he played with his toy airplane. “How can you be so calm in a situation like this?” The boy stopped flying his toy plane and looked her straight in the eye and said, “I’m not worried. You see, my dad is the pilot.” That’s Single VISION living!
Who’s flying our plane? Without SingleVISION it is not even possible to experience Christ-empowered living as the words of Jesus command.
When it comes to Single VISION living people fit into one of four vision levels:
Wanderers: those who never see it
Followers: those who see it but never pursue it on their own
Achievers: those who see it and pursue it
Leaders: those who see it, pursue it and help others see it
Vision from the world is self-oriented and focuses on “what we can get.” Vision from God is people-oriented and focuses on “what can we give.” G. Campbell Morgan, the great preacher and teacher, wrote concerning the need for Jesus-followers to develop vision from God by waiting upon God:
“Waiting for God is not laziness. Waiting for God is not going to sleep. Waiting for God is not the abandonment of effort. Waiting for God means, first, activity under command; second, readiness for any new command that may come; third, the ability to do nothing until the command is given.”
Just as the blind man of Bethsaida had to wait for his “second touch” from Jesus, we as Jesus-followers need to wait for our “second touch” from God. It’s SingleVISION—seeing God in all things.
What are the qualities of SingleVISION?
1. Eagerness in activity under command. God continually seeks us—just as Jesus, upon the begging of the people, seeks to heal the blind man. We need to perceive the command of God so any activity we seek to accomplish for Jesus is seeing God in the midst of it.
2. Readiness for any new command.God desires for us to be receptive to any new command in our lives—just as Jesus, with intention and purpose, gives instruction to the blind man. We need to perceive any new command of God as a second touch in our lives.
3. Willingness to act when the command is given.God expectantly works his thoughts and his ways in us—just as Jesus, with methodical precision, sequentially heals the blind man. We need to perceive God’s ways and act upon them when God commands.
In all of our learning experiences, there is a time when the various pieces of listening, talking, reading, memorizing, and practicing come together. Learning a foreign language is an example. We begin with the “Argh” stage! We become technicians in the language—vocabulary, pronunciation, grammar, and culture meaning. This is the hard part. But then we experience the “Aha” stage! All of the pieces converge together so we move from the tedious technician stage to the budding artist stage. One of the practical ways we can be transformed from the “Argh” stage to the “Aha” stage, keeping our focus for SingleVISION living, is through a “Spiritual De-tox”. Just as the human body needs to be cleansed from toxic waste, our spiritual vision needs to be cleansed as well through the visitation of God’s Spirit. [See this exercise at the end of the message.]
We allow Jesus to minister to us from the “Argh” stage to the “Aha” stage. We come and keep coming, and we don't ever quit coming. Jesus says, “…do you see anything? (Mark 8:23). Jesus is the God of the “Second Touch”! Blindness no longer deprives us of color and light, of the freedom to walk without stumbling, of the ability to match a friendly voice with a familiar face.
Calvin Miller, in his book entitled, an Owners Manual for the Unfinished Soul, writes…There is no doubt that Jesus is the Great Physician. But he is a specialist in all fields: I have experienced his renovation work on my entire values system, and I know him for a heart surgeon. After he healed my heart, he touched my eyes with new vision, and I saw him as an eye surgeon.
Of Blindness and Light
“A scalpel, Nurse, and steady now; our fingers must not show their fright. My knife must cut away the dark—restore the blessed hope of light.
Adjust the clamp; I need more room; mop the water from my brow. More anesthetic, Orderly; prepare the sterile forceps now.
The doctor’s hand clasps sure the blade. His wrists are firm; His fingers play a steady, ‘delicado’ hope, and lay the lancet on the eye.
None at all stand near me, please, to jar my hand or touch the bed. Even interns, please step back, and leave me room about the head.
The lancet makes the feather cut; syringes draw the red aside; The forceps lift the cataract and lay it on the culture slide.
O blessed is the Surgeon who ends this endless night By bandaging the blinded to restore them to their sight!
Even so the Great Physician cuts away the blinding part, Lifts your soul to see his love, turns the light on in your heart!” -- Calvin Miller.
Let’s ask ourselves some closing questions as we identify our source of light:
How have we come to Jesus to receive his touch?
How is Jesus making us whole?
How are we coming back to Jesus to receive a second touch?
This Lenten season, however hindered by soul’s blindness, we tell ourselves that through the power of Christ’s indwelling presence; we can practice SingleVISION and discover for ourselves how God is always working in all things for our good and according to his purpose. We have the power to see anew. As we live the forty-days of adventure from Lent to Easter with them, they have much to teach us about the journey from sacrifice to celebration. We tell ourselves we have SingleVISION to see anew!
20-Minute Spiritual De-tox
One of the practical ways we can experience the power of Christ in us is through Single VISION living. The power to see anew comes through a “Spiritual De-tox”. Just as the human body needs to be cleansed from toxic waste, our spiritual vision needs to be cleansed as well from harmful thoughts and desires through the visitation of the Spirit. We can experience a visitation of the Spirit while seeking God alone. It’s a matter of waiting on God and giving him time to speak.
We can participate in the following simple exercise at home or outside at a park, etc. It’s a good starting point if we want to connect with God. It’s nothing fancy; and anyone can do it. Bring with you a Bible, Pen, a Journal for writing, and a portable CD player or iPod. We can find a moment once a week for twenty-minutes to experience SingleVISION living.
Instructions:
1. Seclude yourself in a quiet place (5 minutes).
Get comfortable. Then close your eyes and do nothing. Don’t go through your prayer list (that’s for another time), don’t think about dinner, work, or the family. Just close your eyes and be quiet. Still your thoughts and concentrate on God. Think about God’s peace and God’s love, and just bask in it.
2. Listen to a worship song on a CD or on your iPod (5 minutes).
Just let the song minister to you, with no agenda. Enjoy God’s presence.
3. Pick a short passage of Scripture (3 minutes).
Just meditate on a few verses from one passage [for example, Proverbs 3:5-6; Isaiah 40:28-31; Matthew 11:28-30; Romans 8:28-30]. Read those verses over and over, asking God to speak to you through one of the phrases in the passage. This will take a few minutes of contemplation.
4. Ask God to give you a phrase (5 minutes).
When God has given you a phrase, close your eyes for five more minutes and simply ask the Lord to direct you as to how that speaks to you; how it might apply to your life.
5. Write down what God tells you (2 minutes).
Turn your journal entry into a prayer for your life that week.
This exercise is nothing fancy. But the challenge is to try it one day a week, and see what happens. Expect a vistitation of the Spirit. Expect SingleVISION living!
Prayer for the Fourth Sunday in Lent
Christ-empowered Savior: Even when the eyes of our souls are blind because we have lacked the faith to open them, we are held in your embrace. You never let us go. You never turn us away from your touch. Although we cannot see you, we hear your voice in our inner spirits. In spite of the sound and fury of the world that rings constantly in our ears, in spite of the clamor of many competing distractions, your voice breaks through. It is a gentle voice, soft yet persistent, understanding yet challenging, that comforts us when we are disturbed, and disturbs us when we are comfortable. Penetrate our defenses and speak to us anew. Come as the wind that refreshes, the rain that cleanses, the fire that refines. We lay bare before you the best and worst of ourselves. Part of us yearn to know you, to do your will. Another part of us resists you. It wants to be left alone—alone to enjoy the pleasures of its addictions, to savor the rewards of its compromises, to bask in the smugness of its pride. We bring both parts of us into your presence. Heal the blindness of our souls, that, in seeing you as you are, we might become whole. Remind us beyond the darkness of life’s many crosses, lies the radiance of Easter’s dawn. Open our eyes to see this dawn even now. Place your scalpel of compassion upon our eyes that we may have single vision. Even perform a second touch of healing in our lives today! Amen.
