22 - Lesson From The Bethsaida Blind Man (Mark 8:22-26)
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Lesson From Bethsaida
(Mark 8:22-26)
I. INTRODUCTION
Hello there! I’m Dr. David Wolfe, one of the pastors at Bensenville Bible Church. If this is your first visit, we want you to know that our faith is based on the Bible as the Word of God. We also want you to know that we are a church where pretty much everybody knows your name.
The COVID pandemic may have interfered with our worship gatherings, but it has not dampened our faith. In spite of the restrictions, our faith continues to carry us.
Before our Christmas celebrations we were working our way through the Gospel of Mark. Today we are going to return to our study. To help us get back on track, we need to back-peddle for a moment. We begin by remembering that the focus of Mark’s Gospel is the gospel of Jesus, the Messiah, the Son of God” (1:1). As one writer states it, Mark’s Gospel is a simple, concise, unadorned, yet vivid account of Jesus’ ministry, emphasizing more of what Jesus did than what he said. He moves quickly from one Jesus story to another, highlighted by the adverb “immediately”. [i]
That said, as we journey through Mark’s Gospel, we need to keep foremost in our minds that that what Mark was writing about is about the good news given to us by God through Jesus Christ that our sins can be forgiven by personally confessing them to God and aligning our lives with Jesus’ calling.
Jesus came to give himself as a sacrifice for all peoples so that we could escape our corruption and reconnect with God. As we are told in Romans 6:23 For the wages of sin is death, but the gift of God is eternal life.
In capturing the gospel story, Mike Willis lays it out for us when he says, “Every word, sentence, event, story and conversation reported by Mark leads ultimately to the conclusion,” that the baby born to Mary is Jesus Christ, the Messiah sent by God to break sin’s bondage.[ii]
Let’s take a moment to ask God to give us insight as to the lessons He wants us to learn in the drama spearheaded by the blind man who lived in Bethsaida. “Heavenly Father, thank you for this time you’ve given us to open your Word. We really believe that Your written word is Your voice speaking to us, giving us hope in the midst of blindness brought about by sin. Thank you for the clarity, encouragement and hope Your Word brings. In Jesus’ Name, Amen.”
II. Mark 8
The last time we were in Mark’s Gospel we had just looked at the story of the feeding of the 4000 in Mark 8:1-21. The event before us today comes in vs22-26, the healing of the blind man in Bethsaida. The stories in Mark are deliberately placed. In this story, the healing of the blind man bridges between v21, where Jesus was very frustrated with the ‘brain deadness of His disciples’ as to His identity, to Peter’s grandiose proclamation in v29, You are the Messiah!
The story that unfolds is huge for a number of reasons.
- First it is the halfway point of Mark’s Gospel.
- Second, following the encounter with the blind man, Jesus turns His attention inclusively to His disciples vs the crowds.
- Third, the healing of blindness speaks directly to Jesus as the Messiah sent by God.
- Fourth, it appears to have opened the spiritual eyes of the disciples in the reorganization that Jesus was indeed the promised Messiah.
Open your Bibles to Mark’s Gospel, chap 8, vs 22-26, and follow along as I read these verses for us.
And they *came to Bethsaida. And they *brought a blind man to Jesus and *implored Him to touch him. So 23 Taking the blind man by the hand, He brought him out of the village; and after spitting on his eyes and laying His hands on him, He asked him, “Do you see anything?”
24 And the blind man looked up and said, “I see men, for I see them like trees, walking around.”
25 Then again Jesus laid His hands on his eyes; and he looked intently and was restored, and began to see everything clearly.
26 And Jesus then sent him to his home, saying, “Do not even enter the village.”
Make a note of this: the healing of the blind man at Bethsaida is radically different from the other miracles Jesus performs, in that it explicitly takes place in two stages. After Jesus’ first touches the man, he could only see partially. It is only after the second touch that the man was able to “see everything clearly.”
III. BACK STORY
A. Stigma of Blindness
This story of the Bethsaida Blind Man causes me to recall a childhood moment as a missionary kid in Kenya. I was playing in the front yard of our house, when I noticed a boy around 8 yrs. leading an older man with just a blanket draped over his shoulder, both holding on to a stick. The older man was blind, and the little boy was leading him to the hospital. Word was out that the eye doctor had come to town. I watched in wonder as this little boy guided this blind man over the rough terrain into the hospital waiting room. According to the OPTOMETRY Journal, Africa has 19 per cent of the world’s blindness.[iii] As in most cultures, blindness intensifies poverty and increases insecurities and social isolation. In Jesus day, to be blind was considered to be a curse from God. That’s why Jesus’ disciples asked Him in John’s gospel, chap 9, while looking at a blind man, Who sinned? This man or his parents? (John 9:1-2).
The question was real. To be blind had stark theological issues. To be blind was right up there with those that had leprosy—untouchable and cursed.
B. Jesus Uses Blindness As A Mark Of His Identity
What is stunning is this miracle is that Jesus uses blindness to epitomize His identity. To pick up this thought we need to go back to Mark 1:14.
Here we are told that King Herod had John the Baptist put into prison. According to Matthew’s account, during his imprisonment he began to question if Jesus’ really was the Messiah. You can read about it in Matthew 11:1-6. Anyway, John the Baptist sends his disciples to ask Jesus directly--Are You the Expected One, or shall we look for someone else?” As they say on the radio: Great Question.
So Jesus answered, “Go ‘back’ and report to John what you hear and see: What were the disciples hearing and seeing that Jesus told them to report back to John the Baptist? The answer comes in Vs5, Matthew 11, don’t miss these pointed words: the blind receive sight. Mark this down, Jesus said to John’s disciples and to His own, that one of the great marks of His identity was rooted in the fact that the blind got their sight back in real time.
Make a note of this. The sequence of stories in Mark’s Gospel are deliberate, not by chance or because of writer’s block. The healing of the Bethsaida blind man becomes the foundation of Peter’s bold declaration in v29 You are the Christ, The Messiah. The point is, this was not just another miracle. As John MacArthur points out for us, this miracle had a massive impact, showing that not only that Jesus was the Great Healer, but more so that He was the Messiah promised in the Old Testament.[iv]
IV. CLOSER LOOK AT THE MIRACLE
Let’s take a closer look at the miracle.
1. V22 tells us that when Jesus came to Bethsaida, (and by the way, this is the home town of Peter, Andrew, and Philip) the town folk brought a blind man to Jesus, begging Him to touch him.
For some reason, I don’t think the town folk brought him to Jesus for healing out of concern, since he would have been more of an outcast than part of the community. It would be more likely that they brought him for healing because they wanted to witness firsthand Jesus’ miraculous power.
2. V23, Jesus follows through on their request. But instead of doing something miraculous in their midst, He takes the blind man by the hand and leads him out of the village and away from the crowd. He did something like this in the previous chapter with the healing of the deaf mute man (7:31-37).
The first stage is very shocking—once apart from the town folk, Jesus spits on the blind man’s eyes and then touches him. This all seems quit disgusting to say the least. Now follow me, Jesus never does anything randomly. He is always very intentional. So the question arises, why did He spit on the man’s eyes? Quite frankly nobody really knows. Suggestions range from the belief in that day that spit had some kind of healing power to symbolizing to the blind man that healing was coming.[v]
But I am wonder if there is another angle. In Numbers 12:14 (Deut 25:9) spitting on someone was a grave insult.[vi] Though unclear as to why Jesus spit on the man’s eyes, two things are apparent.
- First, I think there was something unusually about this man’s blindness that was disgusting to Jesus.
- And second, Jesus was using the blindness as a teaching moment for His disciples.
After spitting on the blind man’s eyes, Jesus then lays His hands on him, and follows up with a question: “Do you see anything?” 24 The blind man looked around and said, “I see men, for I see them like trees, walking around.”
Apparently the man was not blind from birth. He had at one time the ability to see clearly. He knew what a tree looked like. Apparently he had lost his eyesight either to disease or some action on his part. After Jesus initially touched him, he could see, but everything was just too fuzzy so that he could not distinguish objects.
3. V25, Then Jesus laid His hands again on his eyes; and he looked intently and was restored, and began to see everything clearly.
The fog or scales over his eyes suddenly lifted. In that moment he gained 20/20 vision. He saw everything with sharp clarity.
Backing up for a moment. Jesus’ spit had no healing power. Assuming it was an expression of great disgust . . . By touching the man with His hands, the disgust and social hopelessness was removed.
4. 26 And He sent him to his home, saying, “Do not even enter the village.”[vii]
This is not the first time that Jesus has clamped down on a recipient of one of His miracles. I’ve pointed out previously when Jesus exhorted recipients of healing, it was because He didn’t want to draw crowds just for the thrills of miracles. His sight would be known soon enough.
V. TRUTHS THAT SHAPE OUR LIVES
Let’s pause here and reflect for a moment on the story. Through the healing of the blind man of Bethsaida comes a powerful learning transformation for the disciples.
Let me highlight at least two lessons from this miracle, and perhaps you will find them spiritually transforming also.
A. Jesus’ Compassion
First, I want to call our attention to the Compassion of Jesus. I find it interesting how Jesus handles the blind man when brought to Him by the community. He knows their scorn for the blind. Yet he sees past their disdain and touches him and leading him away from the crowd’s peering eyes into His inner circle with His disciples. I take that to mean that Jesus didn’t want the blind man to be some kind of a healing show. The man was already an outcast, and didn’t need more community pressure.
As we read through the Gospel we are often called to make note of Jesus’ compassion for the suffering and hurting. In the miracle of the Bethsaida Blind Man Mark points out for us that Jesus took the Man by the hand, touched his face and eyes. Of special interest is the term “touched.” The Gk word here is the word that we get our English word sympathy. According to the Theological Dictionary of the New Testament the word “does not signify a sympathetic understanding that is ready to condone, but a relationship that derives from full acquaintance of the seriousness of the situation”[viii]
In Hebrews 4:15 we are told that we do not have a high priest that cannot be touched with the feeling of our infirmities; but one who has been tempted like as we are, yet without sin, What we need to understand is, that as Jesus Followers who struggle with physical and emotional suffering, and the urgings of temptation, we can be confident that there is someone who understands and is very sympathetic. (cf. Rom. 7:14ff; 1 Cor. 9:27). His compassion and sympathy were clearly seen in His interaction with those among whom he moved during his sojourn on earth. Because His heart is immersed in compassion He steps into our struggles, He feels our hurts, He hears our cries. As the hymn writer asks:
Does Jesus care when my heart is pained
Too deeply for mirth or song,
As the burdens press, And the cares distress,
And the way grows weary and long?
O yes, He cares, I know He cares,
His heart is touched with my grief;
When the days are weary,
The long night dreary, I know my Savior cares[ix]
The point is:
- When we are afflicted with disease and pain, He cares.
- When we are grieving the loss of dear ones, He cares.
- When we are confused and in a maze of misdirection, desperately needing leadership, He has compassion for us.
- When we are mistreated, He feels for us.
- When we dredge ourselves into the mire of sin, He grieves over that disaster.
- When, in the hardness of heart, we even hatefully oppose him, He continues to feel for us.
- And does He care about us in this pandemic? Yes, He really cares
This is one of those promises that we stand on—Jesus cares. The story of the blind man reminds us that God cares even for the socially broken. If that is you, Be comforted by it.
B. It’s Possible To See And Still Be Spiritual Blind
Second, I want to call our attention to the truth that we can see, and yet be spiritually blind. To quote Jesus in John 9:39, I came into this world, so that those who do not see may see, Jesus came to give sight to the spiritually blind. In light of the tension between Jesus’ teaching and the disciples’ lack of understanding, Mark points out a blind man that Jesus uses to symbolize the disciples’ spiritual tension and transformation.
Kelly Iverson points for us that Mark’s use of the blind man functions as a metaphor for the disciples’ lack of understanding. This relationship is made clear by Jesus’ own words in vs 17-18, and 21: “do you still not perceive or understand?…Do you have eyes, and fail to see?”[x] One writer reminds us that the disciples struggled with Jesus true identity. They witnessed his marvelous acts, and yet did not trust him to provide for their needs in the moment. Furthermore, in the blind man’s story key words such as perceive, understand, eyes, and see provide strong links to Jesus’ next act of giving sight to the blind man.
This takes us back to the distressing question posed to the disciples: Do you not understand who I am? And then without allowing the disciples to respond, Jesus proceeds to demonstrate who He is by performing the miracle of giving sight.[xi] The confusion of the disciples about the mission and identity of Jesus, indicates, that like the blind man, their vision was still partial—as the blind man couldn’t distinguish people from trees, they couldn’t decipher between Jesus the Teacher, Jesus the Miracle worker, and Jesus the Savior even though they had been called to be with Him (Mark 3:14) and invested with the mysteries of the kingdom (Mark 4:11-12).
Like the Bethsaida Blind Man, the disciples were in need of a second touch. As David Garland points out, Their failure to grasp everything reflects the condition of those guided by human wisdom before the resurrection, who have not received God’s Spirit to reveal God’s ways.[xii] As Paul writes in 1 Corinthians 13:12 For now we see through a glass, darkly; but then face to face: now I know in part; but then shall I know even as also I am known.
The beauty of the story of the Bethsaida Blind Man comes when we see our own blindness in the disciples’ blindness. If we ask, “How could the disciples be so dense?” we need immediately to ask the same question of ourselves. The disciples saw dimly in a glass coated with the dust of traditional ways of viewing things and warped by the curvature of their own dreams and ambitions. The glass we look through is no different. We are no less in need of healing before we can see what God is doing, and it may not take on the first try.[xiii]
The events in this story give us hope that although we only perceive Jesus now dimly as in a mirror, we shall one day see him face to face, declaring with the blind man that we can see “everything clearly,” including the grace and glory of Christ.
And that my friends is absolutely true …
Let’s close in prayer …Lord, we fall so short of you and your mission. The world we live in is so very needy and hurting. Burden us to sow your word earnestly that we may see a harvest. Take away our sin. Take away our scholarly unbelief and doubt. Take away our fears of what people would think of us. And anoint us with power afresh to sow your eternal Word. And like your disciples of old, serve you to the ends of the earth until you come. In your holy name, we pray. Amen.
As you go this week, remember . . . as Followers of Jesus we believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God, that He is sufficient for all our needs. Believing He meets all our needs, we strive to live out in a tangible way that belief. Calvin Schoonhoven offers the following illustration to help process how tangible our believes need to be with the following true story.A certain tight rope walker publicized that he was going to walk across Niagara Falls. A large crowd gathered. He dusted his hands and feet with powdered chalk, grasped with both hands the pole he used for balance, and proceeded confidently across the rope. He not only went across but also made a return trip. The crowd stood amazed and responded with cheers. The man proclaimed he would do it again without his pole. Again he successfully went over and back. As he stepped off the rope, he turned to the crowd and asked how many thought he could make a third trip, this time with a wheelbarrow. Some responded with confidence while others with skepticism. He set off on his task and completed it with the greatest of ease. He then inquired of the crowd as to whether they believed he could do the same thing with the wheelbarrow full of cement. This time the crowd responded with great confidence. Again, he performed his feat with unbelievable ease.
Having completed these four trips successfully, he asked the spectators if they believed that he could wheel a human being across the dangerous expanse. The response was unanimous. He could do it. Upon their reply he turned to a gentleman and said, “All right, my friend, let’s go.”[xiv]
How willing are you and I to live tangible our faith? Reading Matthew 16:24-25 from the Amplified Bible: Jesus said to His disciples, “If anyone wishes to follow Me [as My disciple], he must deny himself [that is set aside selfish interests], and take up his cross [by expressing a willingness to endure whatever may come] and follow Me [that is believing in Me, conforming to My example in living and, if need be, suffering or perhaps dying because of faith in Me].
Let’s ask Jesus to give sight to our eyes that we may see clearly.
And Don’t forget …God’s got you no matter your difficulties. Because of technical issues and the forecasted snow storm, we will not be having ‘live worship’ this Sunday. Looking forward to meeting up with you again … at next week’s posting.
[i] https://www.biblica.com/resources/scholar-notes/niv-study-bible/intro-to-mark/
[ii] L.A. Stuaffer, Truth Commentaries, Edited by Mike Willis, p.#1
[iii] Kovin Naidoo, Poverty and blindness in Africa https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1111/j.1444-0938.2007.00197.x
[iv] John MacArthur, Jesus’ Power Over Blindness, https://www.gty.org/library/sermons-library/41-39/jesus-power-over-blindness
[v] John MacArthur, Mark 1–8, MacArthur New Testament Commentary (Chicago, IL: Moody Publishers, 2015), 408.The Lord did not need any props to accomplish His miracles, but it symbolized His healing power for a blind man who could feel the spittle on his eyes. Cf., https://www.gotquestions.org/Jesus-spit.html. One possible reason for Jesus’ use of His saliva has to do with the beliefs of His contemporary culture. Several Roman writers and Jewish rabbis considered saliva to be a valid treatment for blindness. Since the people of that day had a high view of saliva’s healing properties, Jesus used spit to communicate His intention to heal. Those being healed would have naturally interpreted Jesus’ spitting as a sign that they would soon be cured. The greater need of each of those healed was the need for increased faith. Jesus recognized this spiritual need and offered a physical action as a means of raising their expectations and focusing their faith on Himself. Thus, in Mark 8, the man’s spiritual sight was strengthened even as physical sight was imparted to him.
[vi] https://biblehub.com/commentaries/numbers/12-14.htm. Spitting in the presence of any one, much more spitting in the face of any one, is regarded in the East as an indication of the utmost degree of abhorrence and indignation.
[vii] Jesus at times wanted His work not proclaimed. The leper He cleansed in Mark 1:44 was charged, “See that you say nothing to anyone”. The many of the demon possessed “he strictly ordered not to make him known” (3:12). Jairus and those with him, which Jesus raised his daughter from the dead was “charged to tell no one (7:36). Here the blind man of Bethsaida was told to go home, and not tell anyone. Peter, James, and John at the Transfiguration were told “to tell no one what they had seen, until the Son of man should have risen from the dead” (9.9).
[viii] Bromiley, G. W. 1985. Theological Dictionary of the New Testament — Abridged. Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans. Pp 802-803
[ix] Bill Gaither Does Jesus Carehttps://www.bing.com/search?q=does%20jesus%20care%20lyrics& pc=cosp&ptag= G6C1N1D122320AA794BFC089&form=CONBDF&conlogo=CT3210127
[x] Kelly R. Iversonm, The Healing of a Blind Man (Mark 8:22-26), https://www.bibleodyssey.org/en/passages/main- articles/healing-of-a-blind-man-mark-822-26
[xi] Jason Piland Mark 8:22–26: Jesus the Parable-Worker or The Healing of the Blind Man at Bethsaida as a Parable of the Disciples’ Faith https://rts.edu/wp-content/uploads/2019/01/Gospels-Paper-Mark-8.22-26-as-Parable_Piland.pdf
[xii] David E. Garland, Mark, The NIV Application Commentary (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan Publishing House, 1996), 316.
[xiii] Ibid.
[xiv] Calvin R. Schoonhoven, “The ‘Analogy of Faith’ and the Intent of Hebrews,” in Scripture, Tradition, and Interpretation, ed. W. Ward Gasque and William Sanford LaSor (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1978), 110, n. 14.[xiv]
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