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Blindness, Sight and Shawn Moore
April 16th, 2011 | Posted in Streams | Comments OffI was reading this morning (4\16\2011) about the man born blind from the story in John 9. Ironically, Jesus had just had a lengthy conversation in John 8 with a bunch of Jews in which he was basically saying to them, “You are blind!” They were unwilling to believe the truth that He was from God, and speaking for God. He actually says to them, “Why do you not understand what I say? It is because you cannot bear to hear my word.” The self-sufficiency of the Jews made them blind to their true condition of weakness and neediness! They could not bear the thought that they need something or someone outside of themselves to make them right with God.
And then Jesus “just happens to pass by” a man born blind from birth (John 9:1). I thought about the experience of a blind person. Blind people are handicapped. They are weaker, in one sense (excuse the pun). They must be dependent on people, walking sticks, seeing eye-dogs, Braille and other things to navigate in a world where most navigate effortlessly. They are, at least to some degree, limited. They are not as self-sufficient as most.
Aren‟t we all “blind”? In a spiritual sense, we are all these things that the blind man was. We are handicapped spiritually. We are weak. We don‟t have all that we need inside of ourselves to be right with God. We are dependent. We need Christ! We need help outside of ourselves. We are not self-sufficient! Blindness, in this context, is the ability to ascertain the truth about ourselves and our desperate need for Christ! This blind man was in a better position than the Jews were to understand the true reality about himself. He lived with an outward, physical manifestation of an inward reality that would make him more keenly aware of his needs. So, who was the truly handicapped? The Jews or the blind man?
I saw Shawn Moore last night. He is coming to terms with his new normal, which includes some similarities to the blind man of John 9. Shawn is experiencing weakness, dependence, and a limit to his abilities. There is expected frustration and sorrow over the losses that resulted from his cancer. This man who wants to be a rock for his family to depend on is realizing that he may need to depend on them. How hard this must be! He will need to depend on special cars, crutches and wheel chairs during this time. As he watches people walk effortlessly across a hall, he will have to navigate much differently, and with more effort. God will be faithful to Shawn as he always has been. But what a hard road he is on!
Shawn, like the blind man, has an outward, physical representation of an inward reality that we all share! We are all broken. We are all needy. We are all limited. We are all dependent. How will Shawn‟s situation be used in his life to sharpen his understanding of these truths? We all need to understand just how much we continue to need Jesus! We don‟t have what we need in ourselves. How many of us really believe this? The self-sufficient Jews refused to believe, and the blind man readily believed. Why was belief easy for him? When questioned about Jesus, the blind man simply and clearly told them the truth. “One thing I know, that though I was blind, now I see.” The blind man was amazed at their lack of logic and even says, “Why, this is an amazing thing! You do not know where he comes from, and yet he opened my eyes…If this man were not from God, he could do nothing.” In the face of miracles, and concise logic, the Jews refused to believe because they could not bear to hear the truth about themselves (John 8:43). Again, their self-sufficiency was their greatest obstacle.
Jesus said, “For judgment I came into the world, and those who do not see may see, and those who see may become blind.” Strange! Apparent weakness became the path to the greatest strength! He says later to the Phaisees, “If you were blind, you would have no guilt; but now that you say, „We see,‟ your guilt remains. Remember, blindness in this context is the ability to own our weakness and need of Christ. Weakness is the beginning of receiving the true strength of Christ. Having nothing puts you into position to receive everything! Understanding our desperate needs puts us in the place of receiving the lavish benefits of grace and mercy. Getting Jesus because we understand just how much we need Jesus sets us free from guilt. If you think you “see” and have no sense of your desperate need of Christ, then your guilt will remain. You are the truly blind!
Though he may not feel it yet, Shawn seems to be in the best of all positions, as a receiver of grace. His outward weakness is representative of the truest reality of all of us! We need grace to make it! We need Christ‟s strength to navigate through life. Shawn will more acutely understand these things than the rest of us who may tend to take things for granted, like walking! So, who is more “handicapped”? Shawn or me?
I love the response of Christ when asked if it was sin that led to the man‟s blindness. He said, “It was not that this man sinned, or his parents, but that the works of God might be displayed in him.” What works will God display through Shawn Moore? How will Shawn‟s unique life and calling glorify God through seeming weakness? When we are weak, He is strong! How will the strength of Christ shine through Shawn? How will you work the works of God as long as you are in the world? Are you weak and needy and lacking confidence in your limited abilities? Then you are in a great position to be a receiver of the lavish grace and power of Christ‟s strength! Oh, how desperately we need Him!
Moms & Kids Group
April 12th, 2011 | Posted in Feature | Comments OffJoin us on Tuesdays from 9:30 am to Noon
Bring your kids (birth to 5 yrs) with you for playtime, fellowship and encouragement! Sign up in the foyer so we can prepare for coffee and treats.
G.O.S.P.E.L.
April 7th, 2011 | Posted in Streams | Comments OffIt’s the full story of life crushed into four minutes
The entirety of humanity in the palm of your hand crushed into one sentence
Listen, it’s intense, right?
GOD. OUR. SINS. PAYING. EVERYONE. LIFE.
The greatest story ever told that’s hardly ever told
GOD. Yes, GOD.
The maker and giver of life, and by life I mean any and all manner of substance
Seen and unseen; what can and can’t be touched
Thoughts, image, emotions; Love, atoms and oceans
GOD
All of it His handiwork, one of which His masterpiece
Made so uniquely that angels looked curiously
The one thing in creation that was made in His imagery
A concept so cold it’s the reason I stay bold
That GOD breathed into man and he became a living soul
Formed with the intent of being infinitely, intimately fond
Creator and creation held in eternal bond
And it was placed in perfect paradise until something went wrong
The species got deceived and started lusting for His job
An odd list of complaints, as if the system ain’t working
And used that same breath He graciously gave us to curse Him
And that sin seed spread through our souls’ genome
And by nature of your nature, your species, you participated in the mutiny
OUR
Yes, our sins.
It’s nature-inherited.
Blackened the human heart. It was over before it started.
Deceived from day one and led away by our own lust
There’s not a religion in the world that doesn’t agree that something’s wrong with us
The question is what is it? And how do we fix it?
Are we eternally separated from a God that may or may not have existed?
But that’s another subject. Let’s keep grinding.
Besides, trying to prove God is like defending a lion.
Homie, it don’t need your help. Just unlock the cage.
Let’s move on on how our debt can be paid.
Short and sweet: the problem is
SIN
Yes, sin.
It’s a cancer, an asthma, choking out our life force
Forcing separation from a perfect and holy GOD
And the only way to get back is to get back to perfection
But silly us…trying to pass the course of life without referring to a syllabus
This is us: heap up your good deeds, chant, pray, meditate
But all of that, of course, is spraying cologne on a corpse
Or you could choose to ignore it, as if something don’t stink
It’s like stepping in dog poop and refusing to wipe your shoe
But all of that ends with, “How good is good enough?”
Take your silly list of good deeds and line them up against perfection
Good luck
That’s life past your pay grade
The cost of your soul? You ain’t got a big enough piggy bank
But you could give it a shot?
But I suggest you throw away the list… Because even your good acts are an extension of your selfishness
But here’s where it gets interesting
I hope you’re closely listening
Please don’t get it twisted. It’s what makes our faith unique.
Here’s what God says is Part A of the Gospel:
You can’t fix yourself. Quit trying. It’s impossible.
Sin brings death.
Give GOD His breath back. You owe Him!
Eternally separated and the only way to fix it is someone die in your place
And that someone’s got to be PERFECT or the payment ain’t permanent
So if and when you find a perfect person, get that person
To literally trade their perfection for your sin and death in
Clearly, since the only one who can meet God’s criteria is GOD
GOD sent Himself as JESUS to pay the cost for us
His righteousness, His death, functions as…
PAYMENT
Yes, payment. Wrote a check with His life But at the Resurrection we all cheered, cause that means the CHECK CLEARED!
Pierced feet, pierced hands, blood-stained Son of Man
Fullness, forgiveness, free passage into the Promised Land
That same breath GOD breathed into us GOD gave up to redeem us
And anyone and everyone, and by everyone I mean
EVERYONE
Who puts their faith and trust in Him, and Him alone
Can stand in full confidence of GOD’s forgiveness
And here’s what the promise is:
That you are guaranteed full access to return to perfect unity
By simply believing in CHRIST and CHRIST alone
You are receiving
LIFE
Yes, life.
This is the GOSPEL
GOD. OUR. SINS. PAYING. EVERYONE. LIFE.
