In the sermon "Mercy for the Blind," Gary Shepard explores the theme of spiritual blindness through the narrative of Bartimaeus' healing in Mark 10:46-52. The main argument is that Bartimaeus symbolizes the spiritual condition of all humans—blindness to their true state due to sin and false religion, needing the mercy of Christ for salvation. Shepard emphasizes that Jesus' miracles serve both to authenticate His messianic identity and to illustrate deeper spiritual truths about humanity’s need for divine grace. Scriptural references such as Matthew 23 and 2 Corinthians 4:4 underscore the seriousness of spiritual blindness caused by human sinfulness and the influence of the devil. The doctrinal significance is profound, asserting the necessity of recognizing one's spiritual poverty and the need to genuinely cry out for Christ's mercy, which alone brings true sight and healing.
“All of these ailments, all of these infirmities that he dealt with, they are simply spiritual pictures of the condition of all of us as fallen sinners.”
“We are beggars to God for His grace and beggars to God for His mercy.”
“The gospel is not how you're to live in this world. The gospel is not the law. The gospel as its very name means good news.”
“We are blind of ourselves, but there's mercy for the blind.”
Auto-generated transcript • May contain errors
Comments
Your comment has been submitted and is awaiting moderation. Once approved, it will appear on this page.
Be the first to comment!