In John 9, Jesus heals a man whose life has been shaped by hardship since birth. But the healing is not the center of the story.
The real conflict begins when his life changes — and the people around him don’t know what to do with it.
The neighbors argue about his identity.
The religious authorities search for someone to blame.
The system looks for a way to explain the disruption.
And when the man refuses to repeat their explanations, they drive him out.
“One thing I do know: my life has changed.”
This episode explores what actually unfolds in John 9 — how human beings search for fault when life feels unpredictable, why institutions resist transformation they cannot control, and what happens when lived experience challenges the expectations we rely on.
Hardship does not always come with a reason.
But how we respond to someone whose life changes reveals something deeper about us.
From addiction recovery to cancer survivorship to public debates around identity, the pattern still repeats itself today.
When lives change, communities often struggle to adjust.
Instead of making room for transformation, we sometimes push the disruption away.
But the story doesn’t end there.
Jesus hears that the man has been driven out.
And he goes looking for him.
This episode asks what that response means for us now.
If life already contains enough hard parts, why would we make them harder for each other?
Join us during Lent as we ask together: Can we skip to the good part?
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