“When Jesus heard that they had thrown him out, he found him and said, “Do you believe in the Son of Man?” He answered and said, “Who is he, sir, that I may believe in him?”
Jesus said to him, “You have seen him and the one speaking with you is he. He said, “I do believe, Lord,” and he worshiped him. “
John 9:35-38 ( NAB)
The blind man was healed by Jesus, and his sight restored, but afterward he was interrogated by the religious authorities in the temple. When they were not satisfied with his answers, they questioned his parents. Finally, they threw them all out of the temple.
The man couldn’t understand why he and his family were being punished just for being healed. Jesus approached him a second time, asking if he believed in the Son of man, and his answer was, “Who is he, that I may believe?” Then Jesus said, “I am He,” and he professed, “Yes Lord, I believe.”
Even after a prayer is answered, we may still have questions, not understanding the way that prayer was answered. The man in the story was confused that such a miraculous healing got him interrogated and thrown out of the temple. He didn’t even know who Jesus was, which is why Jesus intervened a second time, to comfort him and clarify who it was that healed him.
God may be doing things in our lives that we don’t understand. He is answering our prayers, but maybe not the way we expected. We pray, but the answer seems completely different from what we imagined. In those moments, we ask God, “What is happening?”
Jesus still comes to us in our confusion and despair, answering our questions, though we may still not understand the answers. He comforts us with His peace, while clarifying and revealing more of Himself to us.
When the Israelites were hungry in the wilderness, God answered by giving them a different kind of bread, that had to be gathered from the ground each morning. Their first question was “What is it?” Then each day as they went out to gather it, they asked, “Where is it?” Questions don’t indicate a lack of faith, but are a component of faith.
Mary, the mother of Jesus, even asked a question. When Gabriel appeared to her and said that she would conceive the Son of God in her virgin womb, her first and only question was, “How can this be ?”
It’s okay to ask questions because God’s ways are far above our ways. We believe that He will answer us according to His will even when we don’t fully understand His answer. In the meantime it’s natural to ask who, what, where or how.
Before my son, Jon’s motorcycle accident, he estranged himself from his faith, family and friends for no reason. In retrospect we wondered if he had mental health issues, since there were no conflicts that led up to it. Regardless of many unanswered questions, friends and family constantly prayed for him, until the day we received the news of his accident, coma, and brain injury.
It was not the kind of answer we hoped for, but God works His will in each person, even through traumatic circumstances. If a person is running away from God, the Good Shepherd never stops chasing after them. He answers prayers according to His divine purpose, allowing what is best for a person’s soul. It may cause us to ask questions, but we must keep believing because only God sees the big picture.
Through all of our questions or confusing circumstances, the Lord may be asking us the same question He asked the blind man, “Do you believe in the Son of man?” It’s how He reminds us to keep trusting Him as we answer, “Yes Lord, I believe.”
Lord, we believe and trust in you, and ask for clarity in the midst of our questions, knowing that your purposes are always good. Amen










