an intriguing passage in the gospel about the cure of the
man born
blind. I believe it’s worth going through it again, and
slowly, to
highlight a particular point we need to understand well
and live
better.
The passage is in St. John’s chapter 9, in that part when
Christ
sought the blind man who was cast out of the synagogue
for attributing
his cure to Christ, even if he did not know yet who
Christ really was.
The passage goes this way:
“Jesus heard that they had cast him (the blind man with
restored
sight) out, and when he found him, he said to him: Do you
believe in
the Son of God? He answered and said: Who is he, Lord,
that I may
believe in him?
“And Jesus said to him: You have both seen him, and it is
he that
talks with you. And he (the blind man) said: Lord, I
believe. And he
worshipped him. Jesus said: For judgment I came into this
world, that
those who do not see may see, and those who see may
become blind.”
This is classic divine logic, paradoxical in character,
similar to
Christ’s other statements about exalting the humble and
humbling the
proud, the last will be first and the first last, etc.
It is a logic that corresponds to our wounded human
condition that
many times leads us to think, judge, reason, speak and
behave in ways
we consider as proper to us when in reality they are
contrary to our
dignity as God himself, our creator, intended for us.
Christ’s
paradoxical statements seek to undo this problem of ours.
We need to be more aware of this predicament of ours and
start to
develop and use the appropriate means to correct, if not
avoid, that
delicate situation. We need to be humble and always
feeling the need
to be with God even in our most intimate thoughts, let
alone, our
words, deeds and public interventions.
There is actually no other way to correctly and properly
understand
and react to things and events in our life. We have to be
wary of our
tendency to rely solely on our human estimations of
things, quite
independent, if not contrary to the way God understands
them.
In fact, not only should we be guarded against this
tendency. Rather,
we should also actively fight it, converting it into what
is our
proper way of thinking, judging and reasoning. And that
is to do all
these spiritual operations with God as the main guide and
inspiration.
The story of the man born blind does not end there. The
coup de grace
still had to come. It continues: “Some of the Pharisees
near him heard
this, and they said to him, Are we also blind? Jesus said
to them, If
you were blind, you would have no guilt, but now that you
say, We see,
your guilt remains.”
We have to be most careful when because perhaps of our
education, our
experience, our position, among other reasons, we feel
that we would
already have enough reason to make ourselves our own
standard of what
is true, good and beautiful.
We always need to be like the man born blind, and resist
the attitude
of the Pharisees mentioned in the gospel. That’s simply
because it’s
when we acknowledge our blindness, deficiency and
inadequacy to tackle
our temporal affairs that we attract God’s grace, God’s
light, his
wisdom, his strength.
That’s when we would know how to live by the ideal of
pursuing the
truth in charity. Especially in our contentious issues,
like in
politics, we need to see to it that our views and
opinions, no matter
how strongly we feel about them, should always be given
with utmost
delicacy.
We would be quick to understand others in their opposing
positions,
and would know how to derive some good and benefits from
them. We
would know how to be open-minded and tolerant even as we
express our
opinions too.
To be like the Pharisees mentioned in the gospel is to
make ourselves
and no one and nothing else the standard of truth and
fairness. We
become rigid and closed-minded, prone to dogmatizing
opinions,
absolutizing what only have relative value.
No matter how strongly we feel we are correct in our
views, we cannot
help but sooner or later fall into the subtle traps of
pride, vanity,
envy, greed, lust, avarice.
It’s always good to acknowledge our blindness so we can
see things
clearly through God’s grace.
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