John
9:1-16a
Jesus
heals a man who was blind from birth…brings a healing that will completely
change this man’s life. And the Pharisees response? “But you did it on a
Sabbath…!” Really? Sigh….
The
Sabbath rules that Jesus broke were based on tradition, not on the Scriptures.
God gives us the amazing gift of Sabbath—a day of rest, a break from the rush
and hurry of work. Over the centuries following the gift of the Sabbath, the
well-meaning Pharisees and teachers of the law decided they should “help”
people avoid breaking the Sabbath command by building fences around the
Sabbath, by making it painfully (and exhaustingly!) clear what was work and
what wasn’t. Jesus broke the rules of tradition…and the Pharisees were having
none of it.
Just
before the Pharisees have their conniption over Sabbath-breaking, the disciples bring a
very theological question to Jesus concerning the fellow born blind: “Who
sinned that this man was born blind? Him or his parents?” (John 9:2). The disciples and the cultural were still struggling with a worldview that was centuries old—the
law of retribution—a law (wish?) still alive and well today. They understood
that if one did something good, then good would follow, and if someone did
something bad, bad would follow. Here’s a man born blind (bad), so someone must
have done something bad to precipitate this. Jesus now has a chance to affirm
or deny the law of retribution—and thankfully, Jesus denies this law. “Neither
this man nor his parents sinned,” Jesus says, but just watch how God’s
glory comes through all of this!
So,
Jesus is breaking the rules here, breaking tradition, and we need to know that
breaking tradition may be necessary, helpful, life-giving at times. But, we
also need to see that this is about more than breaking tradition. This is about
putting first things first, about putting people in need before everything
else. Before traditions, rules, or laws, Jesus puts people first.
This
is how God deals with us. God puts us first allowing his own Son to die that
we—you and I—may have life. God puts forgiveness before retribution, love
before justice. And Jesus does the same. The law of love replaces the law of
retribution. To echo Paul in 1 Corinthians 13, if we faithfully maintain the
traditions, keep the rules, and observe the laws but do not act with loving
kindness towards those in need, we are nothing.
The
law of love—this is what motivates Jesus and should motivate us as followers of
Jesus. Traditions are great. Customs can be beautiful. Our usual and normal
practices can be helpful. But if ever we have to choose between any of those
things and meeting the needs of a person, Jesus shows us clearly what our task
is: We follow the law of love, we follow Jesus.
Sunday, February 15, 2026
Breaking the Rules: Enemies
Watch/Listen:
9AM (Contemporary) - HERE
11AM (Traditional) - HERE