“Why Don’t You Ask Him?”
| Are you like the religious leaders in Jesus’ day, failing to recognize Him despite His miraculous signs? They studied God’s Word—so how could they be spiritually blind? Consider why most doubters doubt. That’s our focus on Truth For Life with Alistair Begg. |
Guest (Male): Why do we so easily miss who Jesus is and why he came? When Jesus performed miracles, the religious leaders in his day failed to recognize him too. It was their job to study God's word, so how could they have been so spiritually blind?
Guest (Male): Today on Truth For Life Weekend, Alistair Begg looks at the reason why most doubters doubt, even today.
Alistair Begg: Now we need to be very clear that the Bible makes plain to us that sin has robbed us of spiritual vision. And that in this respect, we too are like this man in John 9, blind from birth. Like this man, we are unable to rectify our condition.
Alistair Begg: And like him, each of us is in need of Jesus to recreate in us the faculty which sin has destroyed.
Alistair Begg: Now all of that by way of introduction, but purposefully, because without that as the framework, we will very quickly lose our way in this particular chapter.
Alistair Begg: Last time, some of you will remember, that we noted in the opening 12 verses or so, that the transformation in the life of this man had really set the cat among the pigeons in his community. Communities are used to things happening as they normally happen.
Alistair Begg: And it often takes some time to adjust to something that is out of the ordinary. Well, this was definitely out of the ordinary because this man was familiar in his neighborhood as a blind man, and as a man who begged because he was blind.
Alistair Begg: The neighbors, according to verse 8, who had formerly seen him begging, said to one another, "Isn't this the same man who used to sit and beg?" And some said, "Oh yes, I think it is." Another said, "No, I think it's probably someone who looks like him."
Alistair Begg: They asked him, "How is it that your eyes are opened?" He said, "The man they call Jesus made some mud and put it on my eyes and told me to go to Siloam and wash, and I went and washed and then I could see."
Alistair Begg: "Well, where's the man?" He says, "I don't know where he is."
Alistair Begg: Now we pick up the story from that point. They are unable to resolve their dilemma, and so they do what was customary to do. They determined to take this man to the court of public opinion as it were.
Alistair Begg: Represented by the religious leaders. The place of the synagogue in the small towns and communities of the time was a significant place. And in the same way that in events unfolding in contemporary life, journalists go to ask for a statement from certain significant individuals in the community, so in this context, they were essentially going to the significant individuals in the community, namely the religious leaders, to see if they could shed some light on what had happened to this man.
Alistair Begg: Now Peterson, who paraphrased the New Testament, might be a little zealous when he paraphrases verse 13. They brought to the Pharisees the man who had been blind. He paraphrases that, "So they marched the man to the Pharisees."
Alistair Begg: Almost as if they took him by the ear and said, "Come on, you're coming to the Pharisees." You can imagine the man saying, "Oh no, not the Pharisees, please. Not the Pharisees, I don't want to go to the Pharisees."
Alistair Begg: And that would have been with some justification because what follows is not so much a conversation as it is an interrogation. An interrogation which at the beginning has the Pharisees, the religious leaders, very much in the driving seat.
Alistair Begg: But by the time it reaches the end, the man himself has turned the tables on them. Verse 26, they ask him again, "What did he do to you? How did he open your eyes?"
Alistair Begg: And the man said, "I told you that already." "Why do you keep why do you keep asking me the same question? You didn't listen when I told you the first time." "Why do you want to hear it again? Aha, you want to become his disciples too, don't you?"
Alistair Begg: Oh, that infuriated them. Oh, they were angry then, they insulted him, they threw him out. Who is this upstart that can see? Who does he think he is? Smarty pants going around the community, coming to us, the religious leaders, we who know everything, and speaking as if there is something he knows that we don't know. We don't usually like people knowing things that we don't know.
Alistair Begg: Now, in an attempt at clarity and simplicity. I'm going to draw our thoughts around three words. Formalism, fear, and faith.
Alistair Begg: First the formalism that is represented by the attitude and the actions of the Pharisees to whom we're introduced in verse 13. These religious leaders were focused on the externals without any real regard to the inner significance of the things that they paid lip service to.
Alistair Begg: And you can see that the religious orthodoxy of these individuals was skin deep. Because they brought the man to the Pharisees, the man who had been blind, and instead of these individuals rejoicing in the man's story, instead of them saying, "We've been hoping for a chance to meet you, the word is out in the community that you could see and we're so glad that you've chosen to come along and meet with us." No, there is none of that at all.
Alistair Begg: Instead, they react in such a way as to challenge what he's saying, looking for ways to discredit him, and at the same time, to incriminate Jesus.
Alistair Begg: Now their problem, John tells us, at least on the surface, was the Sabbath. Verse 14, Now the day on which Jesus had made the mud and opened the man's eyes was the Sabbath. Therefore, the Pharisees asked him how he had received his sight. It's interesting that it's a therefore.
Alistair Begg: Why therefore? Why so they asked him? Well, because they were the custodians of the Sabbath. They were the ones who knew what was to happen on the Sabbath and what wasn't to happen on the Sabbath, and they knew for sure that there was no spitting on the Sabbath.
Alistair Begg: You see, the Pharisees not only had the bold statement of the law of God in the fourth commandment, that you shall not work. But they had decided that that needed a little help. And so they had added to it a whole list of their own regulations.
Alistair Begg: For example, if a man had a running nose, a runny nose, and he was downstairs in the kitchen and he knew his handkerchief was up the stairs, it was a violation of their perspective of the Sabbath to go upstairs and get the handkerchief, let alone start rubbing his nose with it. It was not possible from their perspective on the Sabbath for a man to cut his toenails.
Alistair Begg: Nor if he found that he had one of those strange hairs that grows right out of the front of your eyebrows, if he happened to see that as sometimes happens, he was not allowed to reach for it and pluck it out until the day after the Sabbath. And certainly there could be no spitting in the dust and stirring around and making up any kind of paste, no matter what you're trying to do with it.
Alistair Begg: Now you say, "Well, isn't this all so very far away from us?" Well, no, actually not. This Sabbath question was enough for them to be divided amongst themselves. Verse 16, Some of the Pharisees said, "He's not from God for he doesn't keep the Sabbath." What they meant by that was he doesn't keep the Sabbath our way.
Alistair Begg: Of course, Jesus kept the Sabbath. He kept the law in its perfection. Jesus was sinless. In fact, Calvin suggests that Jesus performed these miracles purposefully, deliberately on the Sabbath. I kind of like that idea.
Alistair Begg: So that it wasn't like he said, "Now take up your mat and walk," and he healed the man and somebody said, "Hey Jesus, don't you realize it's the Sabbath?" He said, "Of course I know it's the Sabbath. Watch this."
Alistair Begg: And then he does it again, the man born, "Sabbath." He says, "I know. Watch this." And right on cue, they come. Religious formalism cannot cope with transformed lives. Religious formalism can't cope with conversion. Religious formalism cannot face the fact of the dramatic impact that Jesus makes when he takes a person and turns them upside down, which is actually to turn them the right way up.
Alistair Begg: Why? Because the religious formalist then recognizes that he or she is upside down and therefore needs as much to be turned the right way up as this individual. And not wanting to face the challenge of that, they hide behind the smokescreen of their ability to maintain all of the externals in terms of their religious experience.
Alistair Begg: There's no indication on the part of these folks that they examined the evidence, that they had any interest in the evidence at all. Their interest was to deny the miracle and to discredit Jesus.
Alistair Begg: Now I'm sure that some of you can identify very quickly with this. You became a Christian. You may have become a Christian just recently. You came and acknowledged that you were blind and that you that you had things completely wrong, that you were lost and that Jesus came seeking to save the lost. And you asked Jesus to save you and to be the shepherd of your soul.
Alistair Begg: And what you've discovered now is that religious formalism has no place for that kind of radical change. If you go to the religious formalist, whether it is your pastor or your priest or your rabbi or your next door neighbor, or perhaps your mom and dad or your brother or whoever it might be, and tell them about this amazing change, if they are religious formalists, they probably will not give you a wonderful response.
Alistair Begg: Or they may give you some kind of superficial pacifying reaction, but they will not enter into your joy. They can't. Because you see, religious formalists do what these folks had done.
Alistair Begg: While failing to keep the law of God, which they know themselves incapable of keeping, they create a convenient smokescreen by adding their own little rules and regulations. So that as long as they keep their list of what is acceptable, the fact that they are still confronted by the challenge of God's law does not really concern them.
Alistair Begg: And there can be nothing more challenging, nothing more embarrassing to the religious formalist, than the presence of someone who comes and shares with them that they have found Jesus to be their savior, to be the one who has opened their eyes, to be the one who has turned them from darkness into marvelous light.
Alistair Begg: You see, if you look at the text, you see that that's exactly what happened to them. When they when they come a second time in verse 24 and summon the man, and they said, "Come on now, tell the truth. We know that Jesus is a sinner. This man's a sinner." He says, "Well, I I don't have a comment on whether he's a sinner or not. I don't know anything about that, but I do know this, one thing I do know, I was blind but now I see."
Alistair Begg: And they couldn't cope with that very, very quickly. But they began to insult him. They hurled insults at him, verse 28, and eventually in verse 34, "How dare you come and lecture us?" they said, they just threw him out.
Alistair Begg: See, what they were doing was they were saying, "We have tradition and we have orthodoxy on our side." Verse 28, "You are this fellow's disciple." "We are the disciples of Moses." "We know that God spoke to Moses, but we don't even know where this chap comes from."
Alistair Begg: You see, what these individuals were saying was something like this. "Whoever does not bow to us." This is really what he's doing they're doing and seeing to intimidate this young man, who knows clearly that he was once blind but now he can see. But they're giving him a bad time. They're back at him again and again and again, seeking to intimidate him and rob him of the reality of what he's conveying.
Alistair Begg: And what they're saying is this, "Whoever does not bow to us and our knowledge knows nothing. And whoever knows something we don't know is a fool." "Whoever doesn't bow to us and our knowledge doesn't know what they're talking about. And whoever comes in here to tell us something that we don't know, they're foolish."
Alistair Begg: That's not only the approach of religious formalism. It is also the approach of agnosticism and skepticism and intellectual elitism, isn't it? Isn't that what the young university student, what the what the what the 10th grader is up against within the public square?
Alistair Begg: If they would be bold enough in a context that is allowable and understandable to say, "I once was blind but now I see, have discovered that Jesus is the creator of the ends of the earth and that he died upon the cross, and that the death of Jesus is the pivotal event of human history, and that everything needs to be understood in light of that." "Oh please, sit down, would you?"
Alistair Begg: "Unless you bow to what we know, you know nothing. And if you think you know something that we don't know, you're a fool, sit down."
Alistair Begg: "Well, I believe that God created the heavens and the earth out of nothing and out of chaos." "Sit down, idiot." "You exist as a result of time plus matter plus chance. Bow to what we know."
Alistair Begg: See religious formalism when it is challenged by the radical claims of Jesus, reacts in the same way. Well, you say, "What what about it?" Well, let me just say this to you. Some of you may be here and this actually describes you.
Alistair Begg: You say, "Well, I hope not, but but let's just hold out the possibility, shall we?" You may be here and you actually are a religious formalist. That's been your whole background, forms and structures and the doing of things.
Alistair Begg: Do you have peace with God? Do you have the assurance of the forgiveness of your sins? Do you rest in the reality of your hope that one day you will see Jesus and be made like him? I wager that you don't. You actually can't.
Alistair Begg: Because the religious formalist is relying on their capacity to continue maintaining the externals. Without the radical internal transformation which gives significance to the form and structures of religious life. Indeed, these very forms and structures may prove to be a barrier to you coming to faith in Jesus.
Alistair Begg: Because if you have a little list of whatever it is that makes you acceptable to God, and it's easy for us to come up with this list, "Well, I always go by the golden rule and do unto others as you would do to yourself." "And that's my credo and that's my good." Well, that's fine. But what about your jealous heart? What about your dirty mind? What about your dishonesty? How does this little golden rule deal with these things?
Alistair Begg: Of course it doesn't. You see, if religious formalism was enough to get a man or a woman to heaven, then there would be no need for Jesus to die upon the cross, would there? If doing it ourselves is sufficient, then there would be no need for this amazing grace.
Alistair Begg: I've just got a moment to go to the word fear. Don't be afraid that we're going to go much beyond our time, we're not. That's not the fear that I'm referencing. The fear here is the fear that is found in the reaction of the man's parents.
Alistair Begg: The Jews send for the parents. They still didn't believe, verse 18, that he'd been blind and had received his sight until they sent for the man's parents. After they sent for the man's parents, there was nowhere for them to hide. And they brought the parents there. It'd be a little intimidating for them, I think you would agree.
Alistair Begg: If somebody summoned you to the synagogue of the day, and there the elders sat in their robes and in their finery, and you came along, Mr. and Mrs. Levi or whoever you were. And they said, "Thank you for coming out. We were hoping for a chance to talk with you. We have three questions. Number one, the fellow over here is your son. Number two, is he the one you say was born blind? And number three, how is it that he can now see?"
Alistair Begg: The husband looks at the wife, the wife looks at the husband, and then the wife responds. Because she's the braver of the two.
Alistair Begg: Well, we can answer one and two very easily. He is our son and yes, he was born blind, but when it comes to your third question, well, we really don't have a comment on that at all. They're reticent, they're timid, and they're quick to pass the buck. Why don't you ask him? He's a big lad, he can speak for himself.
Alistair Begg: Well, clearly they must have known something. They knew that a person was involved, otherwise they couldn't have mentioned the person. Can it be that they were more concerned for their reputation and for their status than they were thrilled and excited that their son had received his sight?
Alistair Begg: And we why why are they not linking arms with this boy and saying to these religious leaders, "This is the kind of thing we need in our church. I mean, we need some of this stuff, guys. We're listening to your sermons and frankly, they're like dust in your mouth."
Alistair Begg: "And now comes the Galilean prophet, his sermons are understandable, and look what's happening to people's lives. Yes! We know Jesus is the key to this. Our boy's here and we're here and what do you have to say for yourselves?" But they don't.
Alistair Begg: Why don't you just ask him? He's there, he can speak for himself. He's a big lad.
Alistair Begg: Now admittedly, the prospect of being removed from the synagogue, which is the explanation in verse 22. The reason the parents said this because they were afraid of the Jews, because the Jews had decided that anyone who acknowledged that Jesus was the Messiah would be put out of the synagogue. We're not going to make little of that. There's some significance in it, isn't there, the embarrassment that would be attached to that kind of removal?
Alistair Begg: But if they had truly understood what had happened, if they had truly come to understand who this Jesus was, then they would have taken their stand with their boy. But as it was, they didn't take their stand with the boy because they couldn't take their stand with the boy, presumably because they had not come to trust in Jesus.
Alistair Begg: So the Pharisees are distanced from this great good news by their formalism. And the parents are distanced from this great good news by their fear.
Alistair Begg: Now you may be here and that's exactly your story. With little variations. One day your son or your daughter came into your home and said, "I've discovered that Jesus is my savior and my friend." And you said, "You don't need that kind of nonsense." "We brought you up in the way that you needed to be brought up. We gave you every kind of opportunity for religion."
Alistair Begg: And you did, and it was good. And it was helpful. And it actually was a foundation that led the youngster to the point where they said, "Doing all this stuff isn't giving me forgiveness, isn't giving me peace, isn't giving me hope."
Alistair Begg: And then they discovered that it wasn't in the doing of the stuff, but it was in what had been done by Jesus, that there was faith and there was grace, and there was forgiveness and there was freedom. And the parents now have the same decision to make as the religious formalists.
Alistair Begg: If we acknowledge that what has happened to junior is true, then that means it needs to happen to us as well. And that may be too high a hill to climb.
Alistair Begg: So I say to you, do not allow formalism to keep you from Jesus. And do not allow fear of your peer group to keep you from Jesus. See the fear of going back to the country club and the friend saying, "What happened to your boy?" And for you to have to say, "The same thing that's happened to me."
Alistair Begg: "What? You're in it as well?" "Yes!" "How did that happen?" "What did you do?" "Nothing." "Well, somebody had to do something." "Somebody did do something." "Sit down, I'll tell you what he did."
Alistair Begg: That's the story. Get out there and tell your friends. Get out there and turn Cleveland upside down with this fantastic good news. Come on.
Guest (Male): You're listening to Truth For Life Weekend with Alistair Begg. As Alistair mentioned, it's important not to let religious formalism or fear of what others might think keep us from Jesus. To help you resist these temptations, there are a couple of books we'd like to recommend to you.
Guest (Male): The first is a book called Christ and His Threefold Office. It examines the glory of Christ and how his incarnation qualified him to mediate on behalf of every believer and prepared him to act as prophet, priest, and king. The title of the second book is Christ Humbled Yet Exalted. This one looks at why the life, death, and ascension of Jesus is the foundation of true joy.
Guest (Male): These books are revised versions of a Puritan classic, The Fountain of Life. The author is John Flavel, he was one of the most popular preachers in the 17th century. He faced personal challenges throughout his life, and yet he maintained that he was upheld and fortified by the joy rooted in his relationship with Christ. To find out more about this two-book bundle, visit our website at truthforlife.org.
Guest (Male): I'm Bob Lapine. Thanks for studying the Bible with us. Next weekend, we'll take a closer look at why we often encounter pushback when we come to faith in Christ. The Bible teaching of Alistair Begg is furnished by Truth For Life, where the learning is for living.
Featured Offer
By: John Flavel
This two-book bundle by 17th century Puritan Minister John Flavel explores the glory of Christ, the gift of salvation and the believer’s true fountain of joy. Christ and His Threefold Office examines Christ in three essential roles: Prophet, Priest and King. Christ, Humbled and Exalted explores the humiliation and exaltation of Christ, giving readers a deeper understanding of who He is and what He’s done for those who come to Him.
Featured Offer
By: John Flavel
This two-book bundle by 17th century Puritan Minister John Flavel explores the glory of Christ, the gift of salvation and the believer’s true fountain of joy. Christ and His Threefold Office examines Christ in three essential roles: Prophet, Priest and King. Christ, Humbled and Exalted explores the humiliation and exaltation of Christ, giving readers a deeper understanding of who He is and what He’s done for those who come to Him.
About Truth For Life
Truth For Life distributes the unique, expositional Bible teaching of Alistair Begg. Studying God’s Word each day, verse by verse, is the hallmark of this ministry. In a desire to share the good news of the Gospel without cost as a barrier, the entire teaching archive is available for free download and resources are available at cost with no markup.
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