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The
Healing of Two Blind Men
By Dr. Curtis
Hutson (1934–1995)
“And when Jesus
departed thence, two blind men followed
him, crying, and saying, Thou Son of
David, have mercy on us.
“And when he was
come into the house, the blind men came
to him: and Jesus saith unto them,
Believe ye that I am able to do this?
They said unto him, Yea, Lord.
“Then touched he
their eyes, saying, According to your
faith be it unto you.
“And their eyes
were opened; and Jesus straitly charged
them, saying, See that no man know
it.”—Matt. 9:27–30.
There were many
blind people in the Eastern countries. I
have read that at one time for every one
hundred persons there were at least
twenty blind people, ten who had sight
in only one eye and twenty others who
had some affliction of the eyes.
It was probably
worse in the Saviour’s day. The fact
that He healed so many blind people is
an indication that many were blind. The
Bible records several instances where
Christ healed the blind. He healed blind
Bartimaeus in Mark 10:46–52, the blind
man in John 9 and others.
When I read the
Bible, I am impressed with the fact that
Jesus was attracted to the needy. And it
seems the needier the individual, the
more Jesus was attracted. For instance,
in John 5, when He went to the pool of
Bethesda, He was seemingly attracted to
the man with the greatest need. The man
he healed had been stricken with an
infirmity for thirty-eight years. Where
human sorrow was most conspicuous,
divine power was most compassionate.
Mercy met misery on its own ground. What
an encouragement for the sinner! Romans
5:20 says, “But where sin abounded,
grace did much more abound.”
In the story in
this text, Jesus healed two blind men.
Blindness can be viewed as a picture of
the unsaved man. All men without Christ
are blind. They have intellectual light
but not spiritual light. Everyone comes
to Jesus under a cloak of darkness.
John Newton, in
that wonderful song “Amazing Grace,”
described his own salvation experience
by saying, “I once…was blind, but now I
see.”
“But if our gospel
be hid, it is hid to them that are lost:
“In whom the god of
this world hath blinded the minds of
them which believe not.”—II Cor. 4:3,4.
In this story of
two blind men seeking Christ, I want us
to consider several things:
I. The Seeking
Blind Men
“And when Jesus
departed thence, two blind men followed
him, crying, and saying, Thou Son of
David, have mercy on us.”—Matt. 9:27.
Notice, first, they
were earnest. The word which describes
their appeal is “crying.” This implies
that the men were earnest, energetic,
pathetic, imploring, pleading and
beseeching. How eager they were! Far too
many unsaved people are indifferent to
their need.
I have had the
happy opportunity of leading thousands
to Christ. I remember once when I
explained to a man that Jesus Christ had
died to pay his sin debt, he shrugged
his shoulders and said, “What do I care?
I don’t want anybody to do anything for
me. I’ll take care of myself!” I could
not believe what my ears were hearing.
The man seemed so indifferent.
Indifference is the dry rot of the
church, but in many cases, indifference
is the damnation of the sinner.
There was no indifference on the part of
these two seekers. They were earnest.
Notice, second,
they were persistent. Verse 27 says,
“Two blind men followed him.” Think of
that a moment—they followed Him. The
Bible continues in verse 28, “And when
he was come into the house, the blind
men came to him.” Remember, they were
blind.
It is not easy for
two blind men to follow anyone. I am
sure they had to ask others which way He
went. And sometimes He would almost get
away from them. It must have been
frustrating—two blind men following
Jesus. But they were persistent. They
would not give up! Being blind—I am sure
they kept their ears open for every
sound so as not to lose Him. Oh, how I
wish that unsaved men were as persistent
in seeking Jesus!
Not only were they
earnest and persistent, but, third, they
had a definite object in prayer. They
knew what they wanted. They wanted their
sight. There was no beating around the
bush with these men. Too many blind
souls do not know what they really want.
When I first
started leading souls to Christ, I
thought it was better for the person to
pray his own prayer rather than lead
him. But after several experiences, I
found that it is wiser to lead the
unsaved man in prayer. When he is left
on his own, he will pray for everything
except the main thing. He will pray
“Lord, make me a better father. Lord, I
thank You for this preacher. Lord, make
me a better husband. Lord, help me to
live a better life.” He may never get
around to saying, “Dear Lord, I am a
sinner. I do believe that You died for
me, and here and now I do trust You as
my Saviour.”
These blind men had
a definite object in their prayer. They
knew what they wanted. When the unsaved
man comes to Christ for salvation, his
prayer need not be long, but it should
be to the point.
Then, in the fourth
place, they confessed their own
unworthiness. They cried out, “Thou son
of David, have mercy on us.” They were
not asking for justice. If the sinner
received justice, he would be in Hell.
There was no talking about merit with
these two blind men.
When we come to
Christ for salvation, we must approach
Him as condemned criminals. Nobody ever
receives his sonship until he recognizes
his sinnership. Jesus Christ came to
save sinners, and, if we expect to go to
Heaven, we must realize that we are
sinners and trust Christ as personal
Saviour.
And now that we
have seen the seeking blind men, notice:
II. The Saviour’s Question to Them
“Jesus saith unto
them, Believe ye that I am able to do
this?”—Vs. 28.
His question
concerned their faith. He did not ask
what kind of characters they had been,
nor if they would do right after they
had received their sight. He was not so
much concerned with their reputation or
their resolution. His question was:
“Believe ye that I am able to do this?”
No one is ever
saved because he promises to do better.
He is saved because Jesus Christ died
for him and he trusts Jesus Christ as
his Saviour.
“For by grace are
ye saved through faith; and that not of
yourselves: it is the gift of God:
“Not of works, lest
any man should boast.”—Eph. 2:8,9.
Faith has a
receptive power. Faith is not the
Saviour. It is an attitude of the soul
through which Jesus saves.
When I was a young
boy, we lived in a little two-room
house. Just behind the house near the
back porch was a well where we drew
water for drinking and bathing. Many hot
afternoons I have gone to that well to
draw water to quench my thirst. There
were a bucket and rope at the well, but
that bucket and rope could not quench my
thirst. On the other hand, I could let
that bucket down into the well and draw
it up with fresh water, and the water
quenched my thirst.
Faith is the
bucket. Faith never quenched the thirst
of a poor sinner, but faith can reach
out and take hold of a Saviour who gives
living water springing up into
everlasting life so that he would never
thirst again.
I have often had
people say to me, “But I don’t think I
have enough faith to be saved.” Dear
friend, the Bible never says how much
faith you must have. It simply says,
“Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ, and
thou shalt be saved” (Acts 16:31).
You can take a
little faith and get a mighty big
Saviour. It is not the degree of faith
but the Object of faith that makes faith
important. Take whatever faith you have
and put it in Christ, and the Bible says
you will have everlasting life.
Notice, too, that
the question concerned their faith in
Jesus. “Believe ye that I am able to do
this?” The question was not: “Believe ye
that ye are able to save yourselves?”
or, “Believe ye that ye are able to live
up to a certain set of rules which will
produce your salvation?” No. No. The
question was not: “Believe ye that
ordinances and sacraments are able to
save you?” The question was: “Believe ye
that I am able to do this?”
I heard the story
of a dear lady who was dying. She did
not have peace in her heart about
salvation, so she sent for the priest.
He prayed and read the Scriptures, but
she was not satisfied. After trying
several things, the priest suggested
that she receive communion, and he
brought the bread and wine. After she
had received communion, the priest
asked, “Did it help you?”
Weeping, the lady
cried, “I don’t need it. I need Him!”
The Bible never
says, “Believe and be saved.” It is
always very careful to tell us in Whom
we must believe. For instance, John 3:16
says, “That whosoever believeth in him
should not perish, but have everlasting
life.”
And John 3:36 says,
“He that believeth on the Son hath
everlasting life.” The person who is
trusting in Jesus Christ for salvation
has everlasting life. But the Bible says
that the one who is trusting anything
other than Jesus Christ, no matter how
good the thing may be, “shall not see
life; but the wrath of God abideth on
him.”
Now notice another
thing concerning our Lord’s question.
The question concerned faith for a
specific thing. “Jesus saith unto them,
Believe ye that I am able to do this?”
The question was not: “Do you believe
that I am able to raise the dead?” or,
“Do you believe that I am able to unstop
the deaf ears?” The question was not:
“Do you believe I healed the woman with
the issue of blood?” The question was:
“Do you believe that I am able to do
this?”
I visited a man in
the hospital, and before leaving the
room I asked, “Have you ever trusted
Christ as your Saviour?”
“Oh, yes,” he
replied. “I certainly have.” I knew the
man’s background and knew that he did
not attend church regularly, and I
wondered if he had really trusted Christ
as Saviour.
I continued, “Would
you mind telling me about it?”
He said, “Well,
when they took me down for the operation
the other day, I prayed before I left
the room and told Jesus that if I came
out of the operating room, He would have
to do it, and I told Him I was trusting
Him to bring me through safely.”
I said, “That is
wonderful. Is there another time when
you have trusted Christ?”
“Why, yes. There
have been a number of times.”
“Could you tell me
about another experience?”
“During the
Depression,” he said, “when people were
out of work and jobs were hard to find,
I went several weeks without a job. My
family was hungry. We had nothing to
eat. And one day when I left the house,
I prayed as I walked along the street,
‘Lord, I’m not going back home today
until You give me a job.’ I meant that.
And before the day was over, I had a
good job,” he smiled.
“That’s wonderful.
You have trusted Christ for your health,
and it was given back to you. You have
also trusted Christ for a job, and you
got it. But now let me ask you this: Has
there ever been a time when you prayed
and said, ‘Dear Lord Jesus, I am a
sinner; I owe a sin debt, but I believe
You died on the cross to pay my sin
debt; I will trust You as my Saviour,
and if I die, I will trust You to get me
to Heaven’?” I waited for his response.
There was silence
for a moment, and he said, “No, I’ve
never trusted Him for that.”
“Well, just like He
gave you a job when you trusted Him, and
just like He gave you health when you
trusted Him, He will give you
everlasting life if you will trust Him
for that. Now would you pray with me and
trust Him for salvation?”
He agreed. And with
his hand in mine, he repeated a simple
sinner’s prayer telling Christ he would
trust Him as Saviour. The man was saved,
and I took the Bible and led him to the
assurance of salvation.
If any person will
come to Christ and say, “I know You can
save me; therefore, I trust in You
completely,” that person will not be
turned away.
Charles Spurgeon
told the story of a dog in his garden.
“I threw a stick at the dog to run him
away,” said Spurgeon. “But the dog
picked up the stick in his mouth and
brought it to me wagging his tail.
Immediately,” said Spurgeon, “he trusted
me; he conquered me.”
Now we want to see
one other thing about the Saviour’s
question. It was a reasonable question.
I say it was reasonable because they had
followed Him into the house. If they did
not believe, then why did they pray, and
why did they follow Him into the house?
Many of you reading
this are without the Saviour. In a few
moments I am going to ask you to trust
Jesus Christ—and my question is
reasonable. The fact that you are
reading this indicates that you are
interested. It shows that you have some
concern. It is reasonable that I should
ask you to trust Christ.
III. The Answer
They Gave
“Jesus saith unto
them, Believe ye that I am able to do
this? They said unto him, Yea,
Lord.”—Matt. 9:28.
There was no
hesitation in their answer. They
answered immediately, “Yea, Lord.”
Everything depends
upon the right answer to the question:
“Do you believe that Jesus Christ is
able to save you?”
Can you say, “Yes,
Lord”?
There was no making
of excuses. There was no putting it off.
The answer was “Yea, Lord.”
Suppose someone
offered you a million dollars. Would you
say, “Well, I believe it’s real money,
and I know I need a million dollars, but
I want to put it off awhile; I need to
think about it”? Why, certainly not. You
would accept it immediately. And if
there were any reason you should not
have the million dollars, you would be
careful not to let others know about it.
Suppose a man is on
death row awaiting execution and one day
someone walks in with a pardon and says,
“I’ve got good news. In my hand I hold a
pardon from the governor.”
What would you
think if the prisoner said, “Well, I
know I need a pardon and if I don’t get
a pardon I’ll be executed in a few days;
to be honest, I would like to have a
pardon, but I don’t want to rush into
it; let me think about it awhile”? Why,
you would think the man was crazy, and
he would be.
No. No. If a man
were offered a pardon, he would jump at
it. When Jesus Christ offers to save all
who will trust Him, I wonder that they
do not jump at it. But in many cases,
rather than jumping at it, they begin to
make excuses as to why they should not
have a pardon and be justified and given
everlasting life. The answer of
the blind men was immediate.
Now, finally,
notice:
IV. The Lord’s
Response to Their Answer
“Then touched he
their eyes, saying, According to your
faith be it unto you.
“And their eyes
were opened.”—Vss. 29,30.
The Lord’s response
was immediate: “Then touched he their
eyes.…And their eyes were opened.”
The moment a man
trusts Jesus Christ, he has everlasting
life. The believer is not put in a
position to have everlasting life
eventually, provided he meets other
conditions. Everlasting life is a
present possession. John 3:36: “He that
believeth on the Son hath everlasting
life.” Salvation is instantaneous and
complete.
The moment the
blind men believed, they were healed. It
makes no difference how deep you have
gone into sin nor how hard your case may
seem to be. If you will trust Jesus
Christ for salvation, you will have
everlasting life the moment you believe.
’Twas grace that
taught my heart to fear,
And
grace my fears relieved.
How precious did
that grace appear
The
hour I first believed!
Trust Christ
Today
You have read this
wonderful sermon, “The Healing of Two
Blind Men,” by Dr. Curtis Hutson. They
believed that Christ was able to meet
their specific need. They trusted Him
and received their sight immediately.
If you have never
trusted Jesus Christ as your personal
Saviour, have never trusted Him for
salvation and everlasting life, won’t
you believe that He is able now to meet
your need? And like the blind men, won’t
you say, ‘Yea, Lord, I believe’?
If you will trust
Jesus Christ as your Saviour, sincerely
pray this simple prayer:
Dear Lord Jesus, I
confess that I am a sinner. I need
forgiveness and everlasting life. I
believe that You died for me and that
You arose from the grave victoriously;
and the best I know how, I do trust You
as my Saviour. Now help me to live for
You and to be a good Christian.
If you have now
trusted Christ as Saviour, please fill
out the decision form below and mail it
to me so I can rejoice with you. I have
some free literature that I want to send
you which will help you in your
Christian life.
Decision Form
Dr. Shelton Smith
Sword of the Lord
P. O. Box 1099
Murfreesboro, TN
37133-1099
Dear Dr. Smith:
I have read the
sermon, “The Healing of Two Blind Men.”
Knowing that I am a sinner, I do now
trust Jesus Christ to forgive my sin
debt and to save me. I am trusting Him
as my personal Saviour.
Please send me the
free literature that will help me to
live the Christian life.
Date
_________________
Name
________________________
Address
_____________________
_____________________________
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