Having said these things, He spat on the ground and made mud with the saliva. Then He anointed the man’s eyes with the mud and said, “Go wash in the pool of Siloam.” John 9:6-7
Each of us needs supernatural healing from God, whether physical healing, emotional healing, or perhaps even spiritual healing from something related to spiritual abuse. When we hear that someone else received it, we’re eager to listen to their story. We want to know how it happened and when it happened. As they tell us about it, we wonder if something in their story holds the secret to our own breakthrough.
But there is no formula. Jesus never offered any nor did He conform to them. He varied His methods of healing. Once, Jesus put spit on a man’s eyes. Another time, he just touched them, and the man could see. In John 9, he put mud on another man’s eyes and told him to go to the pool of Siloam, in the southeast corner of Jerusalem, to wash the mud off. Why such a wide variety of methods?
Here’s a thought. If Jesus consistently sent blind men to the pool of Siloam to wash their eyes, every blind person would have attempted to travel to the ‘miracle pool.’ The grandeur of the tales about Siloam would have obscured the power of Jesus, and He would not share His glory with another. The whole point of blind people receiving their sight was that they encountered Jesus Christ.
For any who is waiting on God, we know how tempted we are to work hard for our miracle. We pray and read more, trying to uncover the secret of getting God to move on our behalf. If such miracles depended on self-effort, we would all get our breakthrough sooner. But on the other side of it, what would be our testimony? “When I did this, the miracle happened.”
Encounters with Jesus are happening all over the world at this very moment. He’s speaking to someone sitting at an airport gate, and another will feel His presence in the kitchen packing their child’s lunch. You may sense a holy encounter when you see handwritten notes in your mother’s bible. The Lord still changes bitter waters to sweet springs of Living Water.
How I love this Charles Spurgeon quote:
Do not call yourself Mara but remember the new name the Lord named you. Don’t be so ready to affix to yourself names of sad memorials; your griefs have tainted your memory. Do not aid them to sting you. Call the well by another name. Remember Jehovah Rapha, the Lord that heals both you and the waters. Record His mercy rather than the sorrows and thank the Most High God.