According to some definitions when you ask about degrees of blindness, it will immediately go to the medical consideration of legal blindness which starts at 20/200 or worse. I do not want to get into the logic behind this consideration or what it means but I certainly do not want to get into the passenger seat of a person driving with this condition. Would you?
I prefer just to talk generally that we are all subject to degrees of blindness. The absence of energy which produces heat yields degrees of coldness. Likewise, the absence of light yields degrees of darkness. If you close your eyes very tightly to block out light, you may have a very brief glimpse of what a blind person sees with his other abilities. Is a blind person different than anyone else? No! Do they have a different perspective to the world around us? Yes! Consider the story in John 9. The teachers of the law or Pharisees accused a blind man as being a sinner and certainly not as informed about the world according to their perspective. He was cured by Jesus on the Sabbath. That was against the laws as understood by the Pharisees so therefore he was a sinner. Let me try to understand this logic. The blind man or his parents were sinners because he was born blind. Jesus was considered a sinner because he performed a miracle on a Sunday. The Pharisees were disciples of Moses because they knew God spoke to Moses. So does that make the Pharisees right? The blind man was questioned repeatedly how he received his sight as they refused to believe the miracle. Verse 25 says it all. The blind man said all he knew was that he was blind and now he can see. He went on to say this is incredible that the so call intelligent people can be so blind. How did they react? He was expelled from their society. Does any of this story run very close to our own current so called modern day society?
I believe that we all have degrees of blindness. Our vision is too narrow to see the world from other’s perspectives. Perhaps, we should see more with our heart and soul and less with our limited logic of the world.
Let’s look for the miracles of faith around to see the true light.
Led Zeppelin wrote and performed a beautiful song called “Stairway To Heaven”. The lyrics begins with “…and she’s buying a stairway to heaven” then ends with the same words. I do not profess to be an expert in the story behind the music but I do appreciate the symbolism in that we all use steps to advance into a higher level. Perhaps, it is just getting up a flight of stairs to another level of a house or store. It could be a simple routine we do each and every day but I like to also use the step analogy as our journey in faith. I believe in work. If a person does not work then there should not be a reward. Most of us work for a pay check. If we do not, I believe we better have a very good reason why. The work ethic is fundamental to our way of life. In my opinion, there are too many people living off the blood, sweat and tears of others. So my basic belief hear is that we all work for pay. If no pay, no work and visa versa. As a professional for many years in my career, I learned that sometimes the amount spent in work yielded very little pay because I was building an investment with the belief that eventually the money would come. You might call that sweat equity. My respect towards the medical profession for example has gone up tremendously watching my Dr. daughter pay a huge price in sweat equity knowing the payoff will be further down the road. Now, there are some who work just enough to avoid being fired to earn a small living from someone who will pay just enough to keep them from quitting. I call that employee-employer mentality.
We take steps in our career to hopefully advance to the point where our work equals to our pay and then strive to compound our expertise to yield less work for more pay. There are many ways in which we can make our pay turn into investments that pay off huge dividends. I will stop here and say read more about how you can improve your chances of success in the future. Just go to any site or self help book on the shelf and learn more. It is never too late to become a student of investments for your future.
We work for pay but we pray for faith. What is the difference in faith versus work? From Baker’s Evangelical Dictionary of Biblical Theology, “Faith is a belief, trust and loyalty to a person or thing. Christians find their security and hope in God as revealed in Jesus Christ, and say “amen” to that unique relationship to God in the Holy Spirit through love and obedience as expressed in lives of discipleship and service.” In Romans 4, Abraham was made righteous not because of his actions of work on the basis of an employer’s grace but rather on faith credited as righteousness not by work but by his faith in God who makes the ungodly righteous. I consider Abraham at the top of the stairway to heaven because of his great faith.
Imagine steps leading to a door to heaven. Most of us wander around the house trying to figure out how to get into the house. Do we work to earn a ticket into the great door or do we submit to another way that may be somewhat different to our human nature? As a young Engineer, I was trained to perform my task a certain way to get favorable results. Deviations could lead to disaster. When I first began to question my own mortality having witnessed a few deaths, I began to wander is their a hereafter? I was walking around that door that seemed so far up. Try as I may I could not reach the entrance. Within the Wesleyan heritage and the Methodists to whom he founded, Grace can be defined as “the love and mercy given to us by God because God wants us to have it, not because of anything we have done to earn it.” In other words, we cannot work to earn His Grace. John Wesley described God’s grace as threefold. First is prevenient grace which in my words is the grace that we did not even know existed. The story of Nicodemus in John 3 to me is about our own journeys where we are stuck in one paradigm and need to shift into a new understanding. Nicodemus was a Jewish leader, a teacher of the law, who was searching for a new understanding through Jesus. He said how can an adult be born again? I encourage you to read more to find out what he discovered. Nicodemus was given a gift of God’s prevenient grace which is the grace that comes before our understanding. Like Nicodemus, so was I standing at the house looking up at the door. I took a leap of faith and made that first step towards the door. We do not know much more about Nicodemus after learning more about being born again but I suspect he went on to the next step of grace Wesley called justifying grace where we become aware of our fruits of the spirit or born again spirit. The first step was all about God’s pull because of his love for us where the second step is discovery of our newness. We may stay on this step of justifying grace for a long time before truly recognizing our gifts of grace to serve a higher calling. We then can take the third step to sanctifying grace where we are used to lead others to the stairway to heaven. Our time is well spent at this level before we enter the door ourselves. I believe none of us quite reach perfection but it is all about the journey to reach the highest level we can achieve in our very short period of time here in the flesh. After-all whatever is born of the flesh is flesh and whatever is born of the Spirit is spirit. May we all look forward to our spiritual lives according to His time.
It seems the older I get the more I witness lives changing around me by the loss of loved ones. My wife and I just this Friday was stepping out the door for an evening walk and just across the road a life changing event was occurring. A neighbor and friend for many years had collapsed and his mortal being was no more.
Mortality is the state of being susceptible to death. As far as I am understanding, this state applies to us all. Now, I know many movies or TV series have a theme of immortality but that is in the movies. Right? If you spend time looking at mortality rates around the world the news is quite shocking. People die from all sorts of causes but they die nevertheless. From the pharaohs of Egypt to ancient royalty, all believed they could rise above their mortal status but time proved no match for the inevitable.
During this season of Lent beginning with Ash Wednesday, many of us consider this time to contemplate our own mortalities in preparation for celebrating Easter. The first Sunday during this time we remember Jesus’ temptation by Satan and the sixth Sunday we remember the triumphal entry into Jerusalem with Palms with his subsequent passion and death. But here is where we all have victory over death. The verdict of our sins with the first Adam is reversed to an acquittal with the second Adam (Jesus Christ). Can you imagine being given a death sentence only to be reversed to an acquittal knowing full well you deserve the punishment to its fullest? Read Romans 5:16 and more for a greater understanding.
During this season of remembrance of our own iniquities, sins, failures and eventual death, look forward to the verdict of acquittal when you truly go on faith. When we are young we may challenge death with our actions but as we grow older and wiser we learn that there is really no challenge. Death will catch up to us but so too will life everlasting for those granted with the verdict of acquittal. Learn more how you can overcome to become.