Light!
John 9:1-41
It struck me the other day that the gospels need to be
approached as a sort of unfolding - the unfolding of who Jesus is and what that
can mean about who we are called to be. So perhaps it helps to think of a
time-lapse video of a flower opening, one petal at a time until the entire
flower is open and we can see every detail down to the tiniest specks of pollen
on the stamen and anthers. The difference being that the gospels begin by
saying just who Jesus is.
John's gospel begins with the most astonishing claim:
"In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word
was God. He was in the beginning with God. All things came to be through him, and without him not one thing came into being. What has
come into being in him was life, and the life was the light of all people. The
light shines in the darkness, and the darkness did not overcome it."
There are all kinds of things that can be said about this
story of The Man Who Was Born Blind: things about sin, about blindness both
literal and metaphorical, about miracles, about how societies divide themselves,
the barriers we erect for those not just like us and so on. He is an outcast. He
is forced by societal norms to live on the margins of society.
Yet, the most fundamental purpose of the story as it works
in John's gospel is to illuminate, if you will, the essence of who Jesus is.
The revelation comes from his own mouth: "I Am the light of the
world." John has already told us this "in the beginning." And we
need always to remind ourselves that whenever Jesus utters the words, "I
Am," we are meant to recall that sacred moment of self revelation at the
Burning Bush when Moses is being given a task and asks, "Who shall I say
sent me?" The voice from the bush replies, "I Am who I Am...you shall
say...I Am sent me to you."(Ex 3:14)
The very first word God utters in creation is,
"Light!" Jesus says, "I am the light of the world." This
story sheds light on just what that means. And what it means is justice for all
people and the need to respect the dignity of every human being.
In Victor Hugo's Les Miserables, the protagonist is Jean
Valjean - who is forever called by his prison number, 24601. A person reduced
to a number. The stage version of the story depicts prisoner 24601 as a complex
character. Is he just a thief, plain and simple? Is he a victim of an unfair
system of justice? Is he a compassionate businessman and mayor? A benevolent
step-father? A valiant revolutionary of the Paris Uprising of 1832? A compassionate
liberator of his most persistent enemy, Inspector Javert? Or, in his own words,
is he "no better and no worse than any other man"?
Just as Hugo attempts to shed light on the complexities of
post-Revolutionary France, so the Jesus in John seeks to shed light on all
sorts and conditions of humankind - and the artificial and often arbitrary ways
in which we treat others - especially others who are not at all like ourselves.
The Man Born Blind is a figure not unlike 24601. That is,
like prisoner 24601, the man is cast into a lifetime of darkness - he must be a
beggar on the streets. What he says carries no weight.
Even Jesus' own disciples believe he is blind because of his
own or his parents' sin. Note that the man does not seek to be healed. Jesus states
that he is the light of the world, and as long as he is in the world there is work
to do. After Jesus restores the man's sight, he seeks to shed light on what
real sin exists in the world.
For the man is not a victim of his own sin or that of his parents.
Rather he is the victim of an entrenched system of fear that declares some
people unclean - rather like the untouchables in India. We watch and we listen
as all those people and societal institutions expected to support the Man Born
Blind just step away - they recoil, even though now he can see! His parents
disown him. The Pharisees chastise him. The neighbors pretend he is not the
same man. All those societal systems meant to be a support just collapse, until
in a most astonishing moment, the Man Born Blind becomes not only his own
advocate, but he defends Jesus against all criticism as now he is lecturing the
Pharisees, the doctors of the law of Moses.
He whose being has had no standing whatsoever in the
community when the story begins is now the one who is exhorting them, the
arbiters of society and religiousies to "see." -to see the Light of
the World - The Word that was with God and is God. Egads, he seems to say, this
can be no other than the will and the work of God!
Leave it to people to look at the wrong end of a miracle
every time. The miracle is not that the man can see. The scandal is not that
the Sabbath has been broken. The miracle in one part is the fact that Jesus is
the Light of the World that can turn the darkness of blindness and the darkness
rejection and persecution of the world into light.
But more than that, this story is meant to demonstrate that
we can be the light. We can turn darkness into light. Just as Jesus changed the
life of the Samaritan woman (John 4) by giving her dignity, by giving her purpose,
by giving her a new identity, by asking her to do something for him - give him
a drink - so the Man Born Blind is given a new lease on life.
Well anyone, the neighbors, his parents, the Pharisees,
whomever, could have granted The Man Born Blind more purpose in life, made him
a more integral part of the community, rather than writing him off as an
outcast. Jesus says, "There is something you can do for me." The
woman becomes the first evangelist. The Man Born Blind (notice how he, like
her, is so marginalized that he has no name!) becomes a vocal advocate for God
and The Light of the World! He has dared to step beyond the barriers the others
created for him.
There is something you can do for Jesus. Whatever it is, it
will heal you and heal the world. Prisoner 24601 became a person who
compassionately cares for others all the while accepting and acknowledging the
wrongs he has done.
If the Samaritan Woman at the Well, The Man Born Blind and
24601 can do God's work so effectively, what are we being called to do? What
barriers are we willing to break down so that people like the woman, the man
and 24601 can be granted personhood? Looking at the world in which we live,
there is not much time given to us to ask such questions. Lent means to be such
a time. Amen.
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