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Send the Light

By Bill Whittaker
John 9: 1-41 (NKJV)

[A proclamation suggestion: This message could be delivered in a segmented format with the congregation singing a verse of Send the Light (Charles H. Gabriel, 1856-1932) between the divisions. In a nighttime worship setting, consider doing the introduction with lights out.]

Returning from a night crusade in a northern Nigerian village, my missionary host stopped the car on the side of the road to meet another preacher returning from his assignment. Without security lights or the sound of a generator, we seemed to be in the middle of nowhere. It was the darkest night I’ve ever experienced. The next day we passed that same place and I was surprised to find many people lived in the area. Light made all the difference.

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Jesus’ encounter with the man born blind demonstrates the impact of the Light of the World (John 8:12; 9:5). This Lenten season offers special opportunities to influence others for Christ. How can we be used to send the light?

There are souls to rescue; there are souls to save (vv. 1-7)

Whom do we see as we pass by? Both Jesus and the disciples saw “a man who was blind from birth.” Jesus saw an opportunity to do “the works of God.” For the disciples “the blind man was an unsolved riddle rather than a sufferer to be relieved” (Merrill C. Tenney. The Expositor’s Bible Commentary, Vol. 9, 1981, p.105).

With the cross looming, Jesus emphasized the critical need to “work the works of Him who sent Me while it is day; the night is coming when no one can work” (v. 4). That same issue of time faces every disciple. Our personal time is limited; opportunities to influence friends, family, and neighbors soon disappear. There are souls to rescue and now is the time to be about the work.

Pray that everywhere grace may abound (vv. 8- 34)

The work of Christ always brings a varied response; the healing of the blind man created quite a stir in his community. The neighbors, the Pharisees, and his parents demonstrate the difficulty people have in accepting the grace of Christ. In the presence of amazing power some people are content to remain where they are or defiantly resist Christ’s grace.

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