The Blind Man
Today we read about our Lord's encounter with a man who was born without eyes. Due to his blindness, he was forced to beg near the Temple in Jerusalem. Many people knew him and his physical condition, for they would pass by him on a regular basis. When Jesus and His disciples came near to the blind man, the disciples asked Jesus if this man's blindness and birth defect was due to sin. Jesus said that in this man's case, it was not due to his sin or his parent's sin but allowed to manifest the glory of God. As we shall see, the glory of God was indeed manifest both in this man's life and in many others through the miracle of this healing.
Jesus chose to heal this man in a remarkable and dramatic way to reveal that He was God and to show that He chooses to use His creation as an agent of His divine grace to create that which did not exist before. In this case, Jesus, the Son of God, spits on the ground, making a moist clay from the dust. He applies this clay to the empty eye sockets and commands the blind man to wash in the pool of Siloam, engaging the man's free will and faith. As soon as the man obeys, the clay upon his empty eye sockets is transformed into fully functioning eyes that before did not exist, granting the man perfect vision.
Finally, our good and loving God orchestrates this miracle in such a way that it includes as many witnesses as possible: the parents, the disciples, neighbors, onlookers, the Pharisees and others in the Temple. Even this healed blind man is given the opportunity to publicly offer his own testimony to verify the truth of the miracle and become the teacher to a segment of Jewish religious leaders and supposed “teachers.” The end result is manifold: The blind man, now healed, becomes a disciple; many witnesses, including the parents, now have ample evidence to become believers; and Jesus's reputation as a healer and the possible Messiah in contrast to the ineptitude of the Pharisees becomes more widely known.