Isaiah 29:17-24: The deaf shall hear and the blind shall see.
Matthew 9:27-31: Jesus gives two blind men sight.
Two blind men are among the many healed by Jesus in Matthew’s gospel. They’re healed together and they represent the blind who will see when the Messiah comes, Isaiah says.
Notice there are two of them, not one. Do the two blind men represent a collective blindness, a group blindness, perhaps a group prejudice against certain people, or a way of thinking that distorts how others are seen? Is it more than physical blindness they share? The cures Jesus worked touched more than the ills of body.
When John Newton, the former 18th century captain of an African slave ship, wrote the famous hymn “Amazing grace,” he said he “was blind, but now I see.” It wasn’t physical blindness he described. The tough seaman was converted on a voyage after reading Thomas a Kempis’ “The Imitation of Christ,” and gradually came to see the horrific evil of slavery as well as other vices he had fallen into.
In 1788 after years of debate over the issue in England, Prime Minister William Pitt formed a committee to investigate the slave trade which, until then, was largely seen by the nation as good for their country’s economic welfare. One of its star witnesses was John Newton who described in detail the slave trade and the horrendous practice it was.
This advent may Jesus bring light to our world, our nation, and our church. There are many things we don’t see.
What do you think they are?

Father, that is a wonderful question and one I have been asking since I read your entry late last eve. Sometimes I think I have tunnel vision and fail to see so much of what is present. I watched the sunrise this am and then read something that I think may connect. This came from a 5 year old–“To glow in the dark, you first need to be in the light.”
So, Lord lead us all to see with eyes of faith what you place before us this new day and respond with tender compassion, sensitivity and a real response in making a difference in whatever way is possible–be it by quiet affirmation or an act of real self giving.
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Father, have you or other bloggers ever seen the movie “Amazing Grace”?? It is way powerful and worth the time. A good Advent time investment. Have kleenex available. It makes you think about the hymn in a whole new “light””””””””.
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That movie was a beautiful telling of the story of the fight against racism in 18th century England. Worth seeing.
Fr.Victor
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Fr Victor ,That’s the kind of blindness that I know I cannot see !, I thankyou.
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