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Sense and Nonsense

“And it came to pass, that as he was come nigh unto Jericho, a certain blind man sat by the way side begging: And hearing the multitude pass by, he asked what it meant.” (Lk. 18:35-36)



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e could not see, but he could hear.  That means that he still had some sense.  We are supposed to have five: taste, touch, hearing, seeing, and smell. Once I had no sense for spiritual things.   Bartimaeus could not see, but he could hear.  God always works with what we have, not with what we don’t have.  God wants us to come to our senses.  Long before we could “taste” and see that He is good, He was good to us.  When we were without any feeling for God or the things of God, He touched us, but we never knew it because we were dull.  We were as blind as a bat or were satisfied with shadows.  Then one day we began to come to our senses.  We heard.  “Faith comes by hearing and hearing by the Word of God.”  Bartimaeus could not see, but he could hear.  That is the way it is when faith is born.  It always “hears” before it “sees.”  The Lord Jesus was coming by.  May we not let Him pass without an audience.  God has given us senses that are now sensitive to His presence and purposes.  May we learn today when we hear God’s Word, and ask, like this once poor beggar, “what does it mean?”   Then when we know by faith that it is Him, that God is passing by, may we like Bartimaeus (Mk.10:52) have enough sense to follow Jesus.  To follow any other is simply nonsense. 


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