The scriptures referred to are 1 Samuel 16:1-13, Ephesians 5:8-14, and John 9:1-41.
Most of us noticed this, right? You were in class, looking at a map of the world and you noticed how the part of South America that jutted out from its east coast looked like it should fit neatly into the part of Africa's west coast that retreated inward under its northern bulge. They looked like two puzzle pieces that should fit together. Yet it just seemed a coincidence to the vast majority of geologists for centuries because they knew that continents don't move. And even after mapping the oceans with sonar after World War II and discovering undersea mountain ranges ringing the continents, mountains being continually pushed up by magma beneath earth's crust, geologists still resisted the idea. Because the heads of geology departments and presidents of geological societies were established and held to the orthodoxy of a stable earth. It took decades for the idea of plate tectonics and continental drift to become widely accepted as newer geologists saw the evidence and overturned the older model. I didn't realize that when I took geology in college in the 1970s that what I was taught—that all the continents were once a single supercontinent and that South America and Africa had in fact snuggled together hundreds of millions of years ago—had only recently become the scientific consensus. Humans are simply that reluctant to change their minds, even when confronted with clear and visible evidence.
Today's lectionary texts are concerned with different ways of looking at things. In our passage from 1 Samuel God sends the prophet to the family of Jesse in Bethlehem to anoint one of his sons as the new king. Samuel is impressed by the oldest son who looks tall and regal. But God says, “Do not look on his appearance or on the height of his stature, because I have rejected him, for the Lord does not see as mortals see; they look upon the outside appearance, but the Lord looks upon the heart.” And in the end, the person the Lord had chosen was the youngest brother, David, “a man after his own heart.” (1 Samuel 13:14; Acts 13:22) David becomes one of the greatest kings Israel ever had and Isaiah says that the Messiah will come from his line. (Isaiah 11:1-5)
Now we know that David wasn't perfect. And you may have heard that some people, trying to justify their support for a flawed leader, often point this out. And, yes, David committed adultery with Bathsheba and even sent orders that her husband, Uriah, a soldier, be put in the front lines where he was sure to be killed. But when the prophet Nathan bravely confronted the king with his sins, David repented. He was forgiven but there were consequences for what he had done. (2 Samuel 12:1-14) Contrast this with someone who has said he has never confessed his sins to God or asked his forgiveness and doesn't accept the consequences of what he has done. We are all sinners, including the guy up here with the funny collar. The difference is we know it, acknowledge it, ask God for forgiveness and seek to become better people with the help of his Spirit.
But the main thing we should notice is that God does not judge by outward appearance, while humans often do. Studies have shown that very attractive people are more likely to be hired over ordinary looking people. Experiments have shown that men will stop more quickly to help an extremely good looking woman on the side of the road with car trouble than women who are just normal looking. The taller candidate for president usually wins. Children are more likely to attribute good moral qualities to handsome and beautiful people just from seeing their photos. And the person who was voted class president or most popular in your high school was one of the really attractive kids, right?
And yet we know that it is what's inside a person that is more important. Shakespeare said, “There's no art to find the mind's construction in the face.” (Macbeth Act 1, Scene 4) There is no real connection between how a person looks and how they act. Con men and cult leaders use this and charisma to get people to go along with their schemes. Ted Bundy used his very handsome features to lure women into his car. Yet Harriet Tubman saved a lot of people from slavery, even though she was no beauty queen. Abraham Lincoln grew a beard to give some dignity to his face with its gaunt cheeks, large nose and ears, and deep-set eyes. It's the intangibles—a person's character, trustworthiness, and empathy, the contents of their heart—that count. Everything else is just packaging.
In our gospel the disciples see a man born blind and ask “Rabbi, who sinned, this man or his parents, that he was born blind?” (I am assuming the man, a beggar, had a sign his parents made that explained his condition.) When something really bad happens to someone, we all wonder why. Is there something they did to bring it on? Is there something they could have done to prevent it? We do this because (A) we want the world to make perfect sense and (B) we like to think that we are in control of our lives. Maybe we can learn how to avoid a similar fate. And some people, disturbed by the idea that such things may be random, cling to the idea that “everything happens for a reason.” Prosperity gospel preachers say that if you believe hard enough and do the right things (including giving to their ministries) you will be healthy and wealthy. If you don't become those things, it's your fault. Many a person who thought they had some contract with God that granted them immunity to suffering tragedies has had their faith shattered when they discover that bad things can happen to good people. C.S. Lewis went through such a crisis of faith when his wife died. His book A Grief Observed is one of the most honest explorations of wrestling with loss that anyone has ever written. He originally published it under a pseudonym and found to his chagrin that friends often purchased it and gave it to him to help him with his grief.
Jesus resists getting into questions of what someone did to cause this and instead turns to what he can do to help. He doesn't look at the man's condition as a theological problem to be discussed but a practical problem to be solved. He sees this as an opportunity to show God's works of love and mercy and healing. Jesus says, “We must work the works of him who sent me while it is day; night is coming when no one can work. As long as I am in the world, I am the light of the world.” And as the body of Christ in the world today, we must take up his torch and be the light of the world. (Matthew 5:14-16)
Sadly, there are people in this world and even in the church who are more interested in fixing the blame than in fixing the problem. But as Paul says in today's reading from Ephesians, “Once you were darkness, but now in the Lord you are light. Walk as children of light, for the fruit of the light is found in all that is good and right and true.” He goes on to say, “Take no part in the unfruitful works of darkness; rather expose them.” Light can reveal the beauty of the world; it can also expose what's wrong and deceitful and harmful. We may not like to look at such things but they are important to make note of and to warn others about. As Jesus said, “For everyone who does evil deeds hates the light and does not come to the light, so that their deeds will not be exposed. But the one who practices the truth comes to the light, so that it may be plainly evident that his deeds have been done in God.” (John 3:20-21) One way you can tell if a person knows that what they have done is evil is by how much they fight to keep it from coming to light.
Finally, Jesus highlights another way of looking at things. The man born blind is astonished that rather than the religious leaders rejoicing with him about his healing they attack him for pointing out that what Jesus did was good. They are so frozen in their beliefs that they cannot see what is obvious: that this is a sign that God is working through Jesus. Even the man's parents won't speak up for him. The Pharisees drive the man out and when Jesus hears this, he seeks the man out. On seeing the one who healed him, he puts his trust in Jesus. And Jesus says, “I came into this world for judgment, so that those who do not see may see and those who do see may become blind.” Some Pharisees overhear this and say, “Surely we are not blind, are we?” Jesus replies, “If you were blind, you would not have sin. But now that you say, 'We see,' your sin remains.”
Isaiah wrote, “Woe to those who call evil good, and good evil, who replace darkness for light and light for darkness, who substitute bitter for sweet and sweet for bitter.” (Isaiah 5:20, my translation) Again, we see this everyday. We see people commend what is obviously bad as something good and who condemn what is obviously good as something bad. We see people who look at those whose outward appearance is different and think that means they must be bad inside, without any evidence that they have actually done anything wrong. We see folks who watch others do bad things in the name of security and patriotism, like destroying, harming and killing innocents, but somehow think those are good things they can justify and even celebrate. They see evil as good and good as evil. They are morally and spiritually blind.
If this blindness is willful and persistent. it becomes the “unforgivable sin.” The context for this is that Jesus was again healing people and his critics said that he was doing it by the power of the prince of demons. In other words, they saw Jesus doing the works of the Holy Spirit and said he was doing it through the power of a supremely evil spirit. (Matthew 12:24) That's why Jesus says, “Whoever speaks a word against the Son of Man will be forgiven, but those who blaspheme against the Holy Spirit will not be forgiven.” (Luke 12:10) Blaspheming against the Holy Spirit is essentially seeing God at work doing something good and seeing it as something demonic and bad.
Why is it unforgivable? For the same reason that a doctor cannot cure someone who thinks the medical profession is a scam and medicine is a hoax perpetrated by Big Pharma. If a patient does not trust doctors, doctors can't help him. We saw this during the pandemic. And if people look at Jesus, who told us to love one another and help to the disadvantaged, deprived, diseased, and despised as if they were him, and they see instead something demonic and evil afoot, if they see empathy as a sin and mercy as a weakness, they will not trust in the God who is love incarnate and thus he cannot save them. They are unforgivable because they will not seek forgiveness. As C.S. Lewis said, the gates of hell are locked from the inside. They are locked against God. Otherwise he might get in and start changing things and even changing people. As Lewis said elsewhere, there are people who say to God, “Not my will but yours be done” and people to whom God will at last say, “Very well; not my will but yours be done. You don't want any part of me. So be it.” Because God is love and love does not do anything to the object of his love without their consent. In the end everyone will get what they desire, Lewis said, but some may not like it when they see what they have chosen.
God gave us two eyes in the front of our face and they allow us to see the world in 3 dimensions. In our readings today we see 3 ways of looking at things. First, we saw that God doesn't judge people by external appearances and neither should we. It doesn't matter what we look like. What matters is whether our hearts are tuned to God and whether we are willing, when we sin, to admit to it and ask God to make us better.
Second, we saw that God does not judge people by conditions that are beyond their control and neither should we. Instead of trying to fix the blame we should seek to fix the problem. God expects us to do what we can to help and heal those who suffer, not make things worse. We are to do what is good and right and true.
Third, we must be clear eyed on what is good and what is evil, and never confuse them. When we find things that harm others or our relationships with them, or our relationship with God, we must not ignore or act willfully blind to them. And when we find dark deeds we must expose them, not cover them up. We must be sensitive to the Spirit, looking for his hallmarks in people and their works. If we see hatred or indifference, despair, discord, unreasonable impatience, cruelty, stinginess in giving others what they need, untrustworthy behavior, harshness or someone out of control, that is not the Spirit of God in action. If we see love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, generosity, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control growing and bearing fruit in someone's life, that is clear and visible evidence that the Spirit is active in them. (Galatians 5:22-23) The pieces fit. And when we see God acting in someone's life, we need to support them.
We live in dark times. But "God is light and in him is no darkness at all." (1 John 1:5) As children of the light, we are to reflect his life and love and truth and healing to the world. We are to act as beacons to bring others out of the darkness. And no matter how long and dark the shadows get, remember: Jesus is the light that shines in the darkness and the darkness has not overcome it. (John 1:5)