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39 Spiritual Blindness.[a] Then Jesus said,

“It is for judgment
that I have come into this world,
so that those without sight may see
and those who do see may become blind.”

40 On hearing this, some Pharisees who were present asked him, “Are we blind too?” 41 Jesus replied,

“If you were blind,
you would have no guilt;
but since you claim, ‘We see,’
your guilt remains.

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Footnotes

  1. John 9:39 Human beings cannot remain indifferent or neutral in the presence of Jesus: we must opt either for light or for darkness. In this choice, the divine judgment comes into play with a sentence of life or death—which foretells the division between synagogue and Church. The lot of each person depends on one’s attitude of faith or unbelief toward Jesus. Those who realize they are walking along the way of error and open themselves to the light of the Gospel revelation will be saved. Those who delude themselves that they possess the truth and voluntarily close their eyes to the light will be lost.
    While the man born blind receives not only his physical sight but also the light of faith, the Jews who claim that they have sight are blind in a spiritual sense, because they refuse the light of revelation brought by Christ. True blindness is not the physical blindness of the blind man but the lack of belief. The Pharisees are convinced that they possess the truth and oppose themselves to the Envoy of God. They deprive themselves of the way to salvation. For they remain slaves of the sin of unbelief.