Saul picked himself up off the ground, but when he opened his eyes, he was blind. Acts 9:8 NLT
I’m not blind,
but I fear becoming that way one day.
At a young age,
I was told my eyesight was poor. I needed glasses. Since then, my eyes have
progressively gotten worse. Every four years, the optometrist would tell me I
needed stronger lenses. Now, at sixty-five, I suffer from chronic dry eye
disease, nearsightedness, and glaucoma risk. Additionally, I must wear
bifocals. As a young child, I feared going blind. My fear is greater now than
then. I muddle through most days with on-and-off blurred vision, not because I
need stronger lenses—the ones I have are new—but because the glands that
lubricate my eyes are damaged beyond repair.
Paul’s blindness
had nothing to do with poor eyesight—unless this episode led to poor eyesight
being his thorn in the flesh, as some have suggested. He was a staunch advocate
of Judaism, hated this new sect called The Way, and spent his days hunting down
Jesus followers. For him, they deserved persecution, jail, or death. Until God
blinded him so he could see. He was like the other religious leaders Jesus
rebuked. Jesus told them they needed to be blind (spiritually) so they could
see. Unfortunately, most of them wouldn’t trade the legalistic sight they had
for the spiritual blindness they needed.
I may have come
into the world physically sighted, but I was spiritually blind. God things
weren’t on my mind. Although at some point, I recognized there was something or
someone greater than I was, I never bothered to search out this Being until he
blinded me as he did Paul. Unlike Paul, I didn’t lose my physical sight, but I
did have to become blind to my own ambitions and wants so I could see the proper
way. Paul did too.
In Paul’s
blindness, the risen Christ spoke to him. He believed, and his sight was
restored—literally and spiritually. From that moment, he became the greatest
proponent of what he once violently opposed.
Believing I was
a sinner who needed to see clearly—and then turning to Jesus Christ, who paid
for my sins—was how I received my sight. It’s the only way any of us can see.
Be willing to go
blind so God can restore your sight.
Father, I praise
you for providing for my salvation. Blind me to myself, so I can see your plan
and purpose.
I invite you to try my book Hurt, Hope, and Healing in eBook or paperback. If you seek hope and healing because of the hurts you have faced, this book is for you. Click on the title above to order your copy. And thanks to all our faithful followers who share our posts on Facebook, Twitter, and Linkedin.

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