Sunday, March 19, 2023

Apostle Prototype, Sermon at St. Andrew's

 So here we are now, deep in Lent, 

and you have probably noticed that the Gospel readings during this Lent

             have been a series of whole chapters from John,

each with a rich story loaded with 

1) revelation about who Jesus is, 

and 2) each with the exploration of particular personalities – 

Nicodemus, the Samaritan woman at the well, the man born blind, and next week Martha, Mary and Lazarus.  

 

Today in this chapter not only are we presented 

with a startling revelation about Jesus, 

but we also can see modeled for us

the example of a candid and guileless apostle.

 

The man born blind -  

            he sees more clearly than the religious leaders, 

            those who have studied the Torah and who are experts in their religion.

 

They, the theologians and “church pillars” as we might call them, 

            are metaphorically blind 

            because they cannot see past their doctrine and dogma 

                        to perceive the hand of God in operation right there before their eyes.

 

Their theology, their belief system provides them with a structure of meaning,

            a way to interpret the world around them in light of 

            the revelation of God that has come to them 

                        through the Torah, the prophets and the wisdom literature.

But their theology has become a box for them, 

and everything they encounter and experience 

passes through the filter of their belief system.

Now the story from the Hebrew Bible paired with this Gospel for today

            may not appear on the surface to have a ready connection with each other. 

This is the story of Samuel inspecting the sons of Jesse, 

searching for the one chosen by God,

until finally David, the youth, hardly more than a boy,

            is summoned in from the fields.

But the key verse is, 

            "Do not look on ... appearance(s) ... 

            for the Lord does not see as mortals see; 

            they look on the outward appearance, 

            but the Lord looks on the heart."

 

The theme here in both readings that connects them is discernment;

            this is discernment that takes place on the spiritual level, 

it is a different kind of seeing,

            what we experience and learn through the heart.

 

The spiritual vision, or sight, of discernment requires 

            that we are open to what goes on beyond appearances, 

beyond simple physical sight. 

It requires that we can "think outside the box."

 

We know that in problem solving 

if you're focused on the problem, 

you're going to miss possible solutions.

            You have to look beyond the problem for the solution.

 

Samuel's preliminary judgment was that the eldest son of Jesse 

would be God’s natural and traditional choice,  but not so.

Samuel had to move out of that perspective through the parade of six more sons, 

            seeing beyond physical sight,

and he was finally rewarded when David came in from the fields.

 

Now in the Gospel passage it is obvious who moved outside the box:

Not the religious leaders but the blind man.

 

The problem was the Sabbath;

making a mud poultice, healing, walking and washing were problematic 

            since technically they were work.

The religious leaders could not conceive 

                                                of how a messiah could flaunt the law; 

            they couldn't move outside their meaning box.

Their understanding of the law and how they interpreted it, 

                                                and how they defined Messiah 

            was preventing them from seeing the life behind the law.

 

Spiritual discernment is certainly something the world needs at the moment,

             especially when there is violence 

being wrought in the name of religion 

This happens in more than one place in the world.

 

I won’t presume to touch that on the global level here today,

            although I saw some of that most recently in the Holy Land itself.

But spiritual discernment is a needed element for life for each of us individually; 

            I would say that it is a Lenten focus, 

                        as it connects with the Lenten discipline 

                                    of self examination and repentance.

 

We are over half way through Lent now.

Do you remember back on Ash Wednesday?

            We were invited “to the observance of a holy Lent, 

by self-examination and repentance…

 

When it comes to self-examination and repentance in looking at ourselves, 

                        we can very easily have blind spots.

What may seem so apparent to others, 

            is hidden from our own perception, and we get "blind-sided."

We actually live in self delusion continually.  

We have a constant drama going on inside our heads, 

a continuous process of running all our experiences and encounters

             through the belief system we operate out of.

And this can feed right back into our self-delusion.

 

For instance someone may have the view of life that 

if you eat right, exercise regularly and drink lots of water 

you will enjoy good health.  

And then that person is diagnosed with colon cancer, 

and feels betrayed by their body. 

You can see how that can create a great internal crisis of meaning!

                                                                                              And that’s just a little example.

We all fall into that trap of thinking to greater or lesser degrees 

with all sorts of things that happen to us.  

The meaning frameworks operate fine for much of the time, 

but when they don’t

then we feel lost, shaken, anxious, fearful, and angry.  

The meaning frameworks we construct 

can be a set up for our self delusion.  

 

Life blind-sides us. 

Life too often happens outside our box.

The Spirit of Christ at work in the Church and in the world today

            has a way of always taking us where we hadn't expected to go,

in getting us to move out of some of our boxes.

                                                                                    The last 3 years have shown us that.

So - Think of experiences of when the Spirit of the Risen Lord touches us – 

When that happens, you gain insight, 

you come awake, as it were,

            once you were blind, now you see.

 

What John is writing about in his Gospel

            is this process for Christians everywhere for gaining sight.

 

Jesus had told the blind man to go across town 

and wash in the Pool of Siloam.

Now notice this:

The blind man is sent to a pool whose name means “sent,” 

and the blind man who now sees becomes an apostle, one who is sent.

 

This person is the quintessential Christian,

                         the quintessential apostle.

            He is you and I, 

                        if we too are willing to look beyond appearances 

                        and see with the spiritual eye.

 

Even if we aren't willing to look beyond appearances,

Jesus is still there for us offering the same healing for our blindness.

 

And – here is the revelation about Jesus – 

            Jesus made mud – he did work – and this was a work of creation.

Notice how this parallels the Genesis account of the creation of Adam

                        whose name refers to the mud from which he was formed.

 

The man was blind, but this was no sin, 

just a matter of an incomplete body, that is, eyes that don’t function - yet.

Here is a revelation about Jesus – Jesus as the Creator.

            Jesus completed the act of creation with this man

                        using the same primordial ingredient of creation, that is, mud,

                        using mud to make, in a sense, new eyes that actually see.

 

And it is noteworthy how compassionate he is.

            Jesus and his disciples are just walking by on the street,

            and they see a blind man sitting there.

They find out he was blind from birth,            

            and  the disciples focus on the reason why the man had been afflicted.

They only saw the problem, while Jesus was already far ahead, 

beyond even the healing to the consequences:

            making the glory of God manifest in the blind man,

            showing himself as light for the world.

 

And all the while this person, as far as we know,

             had not even asked for healing,

                        yet Jesus was already at work.

 

I suggest that we haven't even seen our own need for healing,

still being imprisoned by our own narrow sighted-ness and self-delusion,

            and Jesus has already been working for our healing ahead of us 

                        before we ask.

 

The blind man hadn’t asked yet, 

and Jesus gave him sight, 

and the man went through a huge paradigm shift of perception 

and he immerged as an apostle, 

speaking words of truth to those questioning him:

 

“Here is an astonishing thing!” he said.

“You do not know where he comes from, and yet he opened my eyes.

We know that God does not listen to sinners, 

but God does listen to one who worships him and obeys his will. 

Never since the world began has it been heard 

that anyone opened the eyes of a person born blind. 

If this man were not from God, he could do nothing.” he said to them.

                                                                                                And he worshipped Jesus.

 

How about us?

 

The process of gaining sight is one way we can describe 

spiritual discernment –

                        for each of us and for this congregation as a whole.

 

It is a process of waking up to self-delusion and self-limiting perspectives,

            a healing process of Lent,

            encouragement for seeking and opening to 

our Lord at work within us.

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