God sees the heart: 1Sa 16, Eph 5, and the blind from birth in Jn 9
Jesus passes by a man born blind. The disciples ask, “Who sinned, he or his parents, that he was born blind?” Jesus replies, “Neither he nor his parents sinned; it is so that God’s works might be revealed in him” (Jn 9:3). Jesus makes mud with spittle, anoints the man’s eyes, and sends him to wash in the Pool of Siloam, which means “Sent” (v.7). The blind man went, washed himself, and regained his sight. Neighbors and acquaintances were divided. The Pharisees investigated. The man began to see more than just with his eyes: “He is a prophet” (v.17). The Pharisees pressed him and his parents. The man resists: “I know one thing: I was blind, and now I see” (v.25). He is expelled from the synagogue. Jesus goes to meet him and asks if he believes in the Son of Man. The man prostrated himself and worshiped (v.38). Jesus says, “I came into this world so that those who cannot see might see, and those who see might become blind” (v.39). The Pharisees, who claim to see, only grow more blind. The blind man, who could claim nothing, becomes the one who worships.
IV. Mary and the Vision of the Heart
1 Samuel 16 states that God sees the heart, not appearances. Mary was not chosen for her status, social position in Nazareth, or visibility in contemporary Israel. She was chosen for her inner disposition of total availability to God’s will. The same criterion that rejected Eliab and chose David rejected the powerful ones of Israel and chose the young woman from Nazareth. Ephesians 5 speaks of darkness turning into light: Mary never was darkness in Paul’s sense, but her light has the same source, the Spirit of Christ who covered her with his shadow. John 9 presents the blind man who went to the Pool of Siloam, the Sent One, and regained his sight. Mary was the one who brought the Sent One into the world: during the Visitation, when she arrived at Elizabeth’s house, her voice caused the little John in his mother’s womb to leap for joy (Lk 1:41). Mary arrived before Siloam: she brought the source of vision before the source reached everyone. Where the blind man in John 9 worships progressively, Mary worships from the start, with a heart that God knew how to see before any appearance.
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