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Watch Video & Full Sermon Transcript » Mensa Otabil » Mensa Otabil - Witnessing of the Lord

Mensa Otabil - Witnessing of the Lord (10/19/2025)


Mensa Otabil - Witnessing of the Lord
TOPICS: Word to Go

Well, this week we’ve been looking at a remarkable story of a man that Jesus healed. Jesus was the one who took the initiative and approached the man. The man was blind; Jesus made clay and touched the eyes of the man with the instruction for the man to go and wash in the pool called Siloam. The man went, and he came back seeing. Now, that miracle caused a big consternation in the community. People were puzzled that this man’s situation had changed, so they started questioning him. We read from John chapter 9, verses 14 and 15: «Now it was a Sabbath when Jesus made the clay and opened his eyes. Then the Pharisees also asked him again how he had received his sight.» He said to them, «He put clay on my eyes, and I washed, and I see.»

You know, I can’t help but admire this man. His answers are the same; he doesn’t embellish his story. He’s not stressed about it, and he doesn’t feel he should answer differently to different people. The neighbors ask him, and he gives the same answer. Now the Pharisees ask him. The neighbors were not fully satisfied with the answer that this man gave, so they took him to a higher level- to the Pharisees. If you know anything, the Pharisees were the normal critics of Jesus Christ; they had issues with him. This time they had an issue because Jesus had performed this miracle on the Sabbath.

One of the things about the life and the ministry of Jesus is that he intentionally did things on the Sabbath because the Jews had given an interpretation of the Sabbath that was not how God intended it. The Sabbath is God’s rest; when God gives us rest from our labors, from our toils. Jesus felt the way God gives us rest is to take our burdens from us, to make us better, to deliver us, and to heal us. So, Jesus gave rest to people on the Sabbath; they rested from their labors, from their pain, from their sorrows, from their weaknesses. But the Pharisees didn’t understand that Jesus was giving them rest on the Sabbath by the miracle. They thought he was working. They never thought about the people receiving the miracle because the people receiving the miracle were not working; they were receiving rest. But you could say that maybe Jesus was the one who was working.

So, they questioned the man because it was a Sabbath. Now, this man was not going to get into a Sabbath debate about whether you can do a miracle on the Sabbath or not. He just kept coming back to the same thing: «The man helped me, and I am free.» The critical thing I want you to note about this miracle is that, at this point, although Jesus has healed the man and the man had this encounter with Jesus, he did not know Jesus personally as Lord and Savior. So, all he can testify is that «Jesus helped me,» but he cannot say, «Jesus is my Savior» or «Jesus is the Son of God» or «Jesus is my Lord.» And that’s very important because many times we encounter God or Jesus at a level where he helps us, but we don’t know that he wants us to have a deeper relationship beyond the healing we have received or the miracle we have received.

Ultimately, we have to know Jesus Christ not just as a healer or a good teacher or someone who helped us. We have to know him as our Savior and as our Lord. That means that we have trusted him for our eternal salvation and also that we commit our lives to obey him, to follow him, and to do his will. This is the journey that this man is yet to walk, but at this point, he only knows Jesus as healer, not as Savior, not as Lord, or as the Son of God. It’s possible for many of you to know Jesus as someone who answers prayer, but you don’t know him as your Lord and your Savior. I pray that you will know him deeper than just your healer.

Let’s pray. Say with me, «Heavenly Father, help me to know and love you beyond the things that you do for me. In Jesus' name, Amen and Amen.»