Bible Commentaries
Arthur Peake's Commentary on the Bible
John 9
John 9. The Healing of the Man Born Blind. Jesus the Light of the World. Hostility to His Followers.
John 9:13-34. The Incompetence and Anger of the Authorities.—In what follows the actors are described first as Pharisees, then as Jews, the larger party of whom the Pharisees are one section. In John 9:13-17 the attempt is made to get evidence out of the man to disprove the fact of the healing, which they refuse to believe, on the ground that a Sabbath-breaker could not do so great a work. They only elicit the man's view that Jesus is a prophet. Interest in the matter spreads. The "Jews" now question the man's parents, in the hopes of being able to deny his identity. They assert that it is undoubtedly their son, and for the rest they are cautious, knowing the hostility of the authorities to the claims of Jesus. So the man himself is called again, in the hope that his admissions may be made to point to demoniac agency, as the fact of the healing can no longer be denied. He is solemnly adjured to confess the truth, in the words "Give glory-to God," used by Joshua to Achan (Joshua 7:19; cf. also Ezra 10:11). Jesus is a "sinner," and if He has really cured the man's blindness, it must have been with the help of the Prince of the Devils (cf. Mark 3:22). The man's answer is ironical. They are better authorities than he on the question of "sinners," but the facts about his own eyes cannot be disputed. Further inquiry fails to elicit adverse evidence, so Jesus is denounced. God spake to Moses, but who and whence is He? The man, with growing boldness, expresses his surprise that the religious leaders of the nation should be so ignorant about one to whom God has given such power. Even the unlearned know that God does not favour sinners, but only His true worshippers. At this retort they degenerate into mere abuse and drive the man out, an action which the author probably interprets as excommunication, in the light of later history.
John 9:35-41. The True Significance of the Event.—Jesus, hearing what has happened, seeks out, or chances to meet (cf. John 1:41, John 12:14), the man. To draw out his faith, He asks, "Dost thou believe on the Son of man?" (mg.). Apparently the title is not familiar to the man. Jesus answers by claiming the name*, at which the man confesses himself His disciple. In what follows the author expresses, in his own language, the Lord's judgment on the incident. His coming. though not for the purpose of setting up the Messianic Judgment (cf. John 3:17-21) has resulted in judgment, in separation. The man's recovery of sight is typical of what is going on in the sphere of spiritual enlightenment. The eyes of the unlearned are opened to see. Those who claim the light of education, by refusing to obey, have blinded themselves. The Pharisees, who claim to see, cannot escape responsibility for their failure to do what they claim to have the power of doing. Their guilt remains (cf. Matthew 11:25).
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