Moments with the Gospel
 |
Moments with the Gospel |
MOMENTS
WITH THE GOSPEL
Today is Friday of the First Week of Advent. The Church offers us this Gospel.
I was meditating on Mt 9: 27-31 this morning and the I was curious that Jesus
asked the blind men whom He had just healed to ‘not tell anyone about it’. How is this possible when they had been healed
and their sight returned. Let us consider what this might mean both for the
blind men and for us during advent
. Why does Jesus tell the
blind men not to tell anyone? (Mt 9:27–31)
This command—often called the “Messianic Secret”—appears
several times in the Gospels. Jesus heals, then tells the person, “See that
no one knows about this.” At first
glance it feels almost impossible…
How can two men who were known as blind suddenly appear sighted, and not
draw attention?
Exactly. Jesus knew they couldn’t be invisible. But His instruction
wasn’t meant to hide the miracle itself…it was meant to shape the meaning
of the miracle.
Let’s look at the deeper
layers.
1. Jesus did not want a
“miracle circus”
Crowds often pursued
Jesus not for His teaching but for spectacle, excitement, or curiosity.
If these men spoke
freely, it would increase the number of people coming seeking power, not seeking
conversion.
Jesus wants faith, not
frenzy. Notice the key line in this passage:
“Do you believe I am
able to do this?”
Faith first. Miracle
second. He wanted to avoid a reputation that was only about wonders.
2. Jesus’ identity had
to be revealed in God’s timing
If His fame grew too
quickly as a miracle-worker:
- Religious
leaders would move against Him prematurely.
- People
might try to make Him an earthly king.
- The
nature of His mission (the Cross) would be misunderstood.
He was not avoiding
revelation; Jesus was controlling the timing so that the Father’s plan unfolded
properly. He was being obedient to His Father.
3. The healing itself
was already a silent proclamation
The blind men’s healing
was obvious not only to the blind men but the whole town would notice. Jesus was not asking them to pretend nothing
happened.
He was asking them not to distort the meaning of the healing by talking about
it carelessly, proudly, or in a way that fed the wrong kind of excitement.
Sometimes silence is the
most reverent response to grace. It allows the grace to take root and be fully
appreciated.
4. Jesus wanted their
hearts more than their advertising
He was not recruiting
“publicity agents.” He was forming disciples. He often tests people this way: We may wish to ask ourselves:
Can
I hold a grace quietly with humility?
Can
I allow God to work in you without needing to broadcast it?
Do
I truly want Jesus—or the miracle?
It is a spiritual principle: What God does in us
should first transform us before it becomes something we speak about.
5. The men’s reaction
shows human enthusiasm… but also disobedience
The Gospel says:
“They went away and
spread his fame throughout that whole district.”
Their joy is
understandable. However, Matthew subtly
shows they did not listen to Jesus. The command of Jesus was not arbitrary—
it protected Jesus’ mission and their own spiritual purity. He did not ask them
to do this just for Himself but it was also for their good too.
Disobedience, even
joyful disobedience, can still create complications. Sadly people do not always
rejoice in other people’s good fortune and when it comes to spiritual healing,
may be jealous or allow the evil one to attack the person through them or even
copy the person’s healing causing other falsehoods. Taking the root of
disobedience will always have consequences.
6. A deeper meditation:
Some experiences of
grace are meant to be held, not immediately spoken.
Sometimes God does
something in our lives—healing, forgiveness, peace—and the impulse is to run
and tell the world. Often God whispers:
“Let this work go deep in you first.”
Jesus’ instruction to the blind men mirrors that inner discipline of
the spiritual life.
Summary:
The restored sight of
the blind men would speak louder than any words. Even if they stayed silent,
their lives would proclaim:
- God
sees
- God
acts
- God
restores
Jesus often prefers witness
by transformation over witness by publicity.
What does this mean for Me?
- What
this passage teaches me personally about obedience, gratitude, and
humility.
- Why
Jesus heals in different ways in different stories.
- What
“faith” means in this passage, where He asks them point-blank about belief
before healing.