Why the Believer Doubts, Part 2
Luke 7:21-23
We return to the study of the Word of God, this morning, as our little motto at Grace To You says, "We unleash God's truth one verse at a time." And we find ourselves in the seventh chapter of the gospel of Luke and verses 18 to 23. Including Christmas Sunday, this will be the third and final message on this very wonderful text of Scripture. Luke chapter 7 verses 18 to 23, let me read the text for you so that I can set it in your mind, starting in verse 18. "The disciples of John...that is John the Baptist...reported to him about all these things. And summoning two of his disciples, John sent them to the Lord, saying, 'Are You the Expected One, or do we look for someone else?' And when the men had come to Him, they said, 'John the Baptist has sent us to You saying, Are you the Expected One or do we look for someone else?' At that very time He cursed many people of diseases and afflictions and evil spirits; and granted sight to many who were blind. And He answered and said to them, 'Go and report to John what you have seen and heard: the blind receive sight, the lame walk, the lepers are cleansed, and the deaf hear, the dead are raised up, the poor have the gospel preached to them. And blessed is he who keeps from stumbling over Me.'"
Now I've entitled this particular portion, "Believing doubt...believing doubt." I know that's paradoxical, that's kind of an oxymoron but it's reality. Believing doubt. And interestingly enough the doubt here we find in the believer named John the Baptist, of all people, the greatest man who had ever lived up until his time by the statement of Jesus Himself, the greatest of all Old Testament prophets, the one who was the forerunner to the Messiah, the one miraculously born late in life to Zacharias and Elizabeth to be the Messiah's herald, this great man who had seen Jesus come down to the Jordan River and had baptized Him there and heard God affirm Him as His Son and seen the Holy Spirit descend upon Him and who himself had identified Jesus as the Coming One, and the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world...this John who had said, "I must decrease and He must increase," this John who had known Jesus all his life because they were related, this John has some doubts about whether Jesus is the Expected One, or not. And that is the key question in verse 19, repeated in verse 20. "Are You the Expected One?" Expected One being a technical term for the Messiah, the Coming One. Are You the One?
After all that John had been told by God Himself, after all that had been revealed to John directly, certainly we wonder why he would ask the question. Well we're learning a little bit about that as we go. Well we're introduced to the fact that even the best of men, the greatest of men, the noblest of men, the greatest of men who had ever lived can experience doubt. And so we're talking about doubt, believing doubt.
As I told you last time, in the gospels, in the four gospels, whenever you run into somebody with doubt, they are believers. Doubt is an issue with people who believe. It's a matter of completing their faith. Doubt is something that occurs among immature believers. It can also occur among very mature believers, but in that case it's...it's really sinful whereas doubt in the case of a young believer or immature believer may not necessarily be sinful.
Let me tell you what I mean by that. Doubt, honest doubt, is not a bad starting point, it's just a bad finishing point because as a starting point doubt serves us very well. In fact, I think doubt...the capacity to doubt is connected to rationality, it's connected to being created in the image of God. God is a rational being and when He created man, He created man a rational being. And part of rationality is to be able to discern what is true and what is not, that is absolutely critical to God's plan, isn't it? If God creates people to whom He's going to reveal truth, then it's absolutely essential that He give those people the apparatus to sort out information to come to a correct conclusion. One of the features of that sorting process, one of the components of rationality is doubt, or...if you will...skepticism, a healthy kind of skepticism.
I know from a personal standpoint doubt has served me well through my life, particularly when I was very young. I tended to be skeptical about what people said. And so I tried to follow a pattern that I learned about fairly young as a Christian, in the seventeenth chapter of Acts and verse 11, a pattern that was established by a group of Jewish believers in a town called Berea. And when they heard the gospel, it says they received it with eagerness, but then they searched the scriptures to see if these things were so. That's a healthy skepticism. So if you come to my door and you're trying to sell me snake oil, you're going to be met with doubt. I'm not very gullible, I hope. Doubt will serve you well the next time you go to the used car lot, healthy skepticism. You understand what I mean. There's a certain amount of doubt that serves you well even when you go to the doctor and somebody says, "If you're smart you'll get a second...what?...opinion," because you don't want to be sucked up into something that may not be quite right. That is part of being made in the image of God. Doubt in that sense is a very, very good gift. And when somebody is gullible, that's not a compliment. When we say about someone they'll believe anything, that is not a compliment.
So we're not talking now about having all the evidence and not coming to a reasonable fate, we're talking about an honest kind of doubt that serves you very well. Doubt is a very good starting point, it's just not a good ending point. And for many of the people who heard Jesus and saw His mighty works, doubt was the beginning and the end. And they treated Jesus with criticism and indifference and rejection and hatred and hostility and even a conspiracy to execute Him. And the best some of them ever offered Him was curiosity or fascination and they retained a certain measure of doubt. Doubt's a good starting point, I say again, but not a good place to finish. And I really do believe that God has wired us with a certain measure of skepticism for the sake of self-protection. You just know not to trust everybody and everything. And people who do are seriously wounded by it, spiritually and even physically.
Now some of the great heroes of the faith were really pretty monumental doubters to start with. Abraham was filled with doubt when God told him he was going to have a son. He doubted that seriously, since he was a hundred years old and had never been able to have children. He had a healthy case of doubt. But Abraham is now known to us as the father of faith. And what started out as doubt, having been resolved by God, then transformed itself by God's power into faith.
Sarah, along with him at the age of 90, when she was told she was going to have a child, laughed with a serious case of doubt. Sarah, of course, eventually did bear that son of promise that God had pledged she would bear and her doubt became faith and she too is included among the heroes of faith in the eleventh chapter of Hebrews.
When it comes to listing all the great people of faith, you have Abraham and Sarah. You have another one by the name of Moses. And Moses had a very formidable case of doubt. When God told him to lead the people Israel out he said, "I can't do it, I'm not a very good speaker," etc., etc. You remember the story. And Moses became the greatest leader in Israel's history, led them in the great exodus from Egypt, led them through 40 years in the wilderness to the edge of the promised land where his leadership ended and Joshua took over. Moses too is listed among the heroes of faith. To Abraham, Sarah and Moses are given the greatest portion of the eleventh chapter in describing those people whose lives are marked by the most monumental faith.
And then in the eleventh chapter of Hebrews you have a whole lot of other names of people who could give testimony to periods of doubt in their lives but whose lives ended up as great monuments to faith, including a man named Gideon who seriously doubted that he was some kind of mighty warrior from God, when God identified him as such. Didn't believe that he could carry off a great victory but did. And his doubt was resolved into faith. In Judges chapter 6 we learn the story of Gideon whom God used in such a mighty way that he too is included in the eleventh chapter of Hebrews as a hero of faith.
Well, you get into the New Testament, Zacharias the father of John the Baptist certainly doubted his capacity to give birth to a son late in his life, probably in his eighties. When he was told that he would be a father in old age in Luke 1:18, this was something beyond his capability to believe. It was very unreasonable, said, "I'm an old man, my wife is advanced in years. This is impossible." But he began a doubter and ended up a man of great faith who gave magnificent tribute to the Messiah at the end of the first chapter in that powerful, powerful statement of Zacharias that ends Luke chapter 1 in which he shows how the Messiah fills all the Old Testament...fulfills all the Old Testament covenant promises.
And then you have among the Apostles the most famous doubter, the Apostle by the name of...Thomas. We all know about doubting Thomas. Thomas, unfortunately, is saddled with that label of being a doubter but the fact of the matter is Thomas is the one Apostle who made the most unequivocal clear statement about who Jesus was of any of the Apostles. It was Thomas, you remember, who said concerning Jesus, "My Lord and my God." There can be no greater statement made, one who was labeled a doubter became the man who made as great a confession as is made in the gospel accounts. And even the Twelve who were little-faith kind of characters eventually had their faith strengthened to the point where Luke says in Acts 17:6 that they actually turned the world upside down.
So doubters whether Old Testament or New Testament, and those are just a few of many, can become heroes of the faith listed with the great. Doubt then is a good place to start. It's just not a good place to finish. And so we all understand the man in Mark 9:24 who said, "Lord, I believe, help my unbelief." I believe as far as I can believe but if I'm going to believe anymore than this, You're going to have to help me by giving me what I need to believe it." And there again is that...that rationality, I want to believe if You'll give me reason for faith. Doubt is very real and it's most real in immature believers who don't yet have enough understanding to continue to believe to a greater and greater degree. And amazingly the greatest man who ever lived, John the Baptist, struggled with doubt at the beginning of his exposure to the gospel. He was very little different than the disciples, the apostles who had little faith.
And so, we began to look last time at John's situation. Let's pick it up in verse 18 where we left off. "And the disciples of John reported to him about all these things." Jesus was going everywhere teaching and healing. He was demonstrating power over disease, over demons, over death. John the Baptist was in prison at the time, according to Matthew 11:2 and 3, he was in prison, a place called Fort Machaerus. He had been put there by Herod Antipas who was the ruler of Galilee and Peraea. John had confronted him about his wicked life, particularly about the fact that Herod Antipas, one of the sons of Herod the Great, had seduced his brother's wife and then taken her and married her. It was a soap-opera kind of situation. So it was...he was a gross and immoral man. John the Baptist in his normal fiery form confronted Herod Antipas. He didn't like what he said to him so he took him prisoner and slapped him in a dungeon in Fort Machaerus which is out in the wilderness north and east...on the northeast portion of the Dead Sea in a barren place where the Herodians had built one of the summer palaces. John has been in a dungeon for months and months, nearly a year perhaps. Soon he will have his head chopped off. He will be decapitated because of the sexual desire and the perversion of Herod Antipas who will do that when he is seduced by a dance by the daughter of his wife. That whole sorted story is recorded in Matthew 14 and Mark 6. So John is at the end and he is now isolated. He's a prisoner and he's going to be beheaded not long after this incident happens.
The only information that John has then about Jesus is secondhand. Somebody has to come and tell him. He's not circulating anymore, he has no firsthand opportunity to hear Jesus or to see Him. So he has some disciples, as we noted last time, who perhaps occasionally came to visit him and to tell him because he was very interested in what was happening. I mean, his whole life had been preparation to present the Messiah. His ministry then was preparing the people through the message of repentance to get ready for the Messiah. And then when the Messiah came he proclaimed the Messiah, pointed to the Messiah and said, "Okay, I fade away at this point." He continued to preach. He continued to proclaim until he was slammed in prison. And now he's out of the picture. Occasionally perhaps, obviously, this imprisonment was...was relieved to some degree so that he could at least meet with some of his followers. And on this occasion they came to tell him about what Jesus was doing, both in general, the miracles of Jesus and maybe even about the raising of the widow's son in the prior passage and the Centurion's slave being healed in the passage before that.
John's response in verse 19 is that he identifies two of these disciples, we don't know how many there were at this time, and he sent them to the Lord saying, "Are You the Expected One or do we look for someone else?" This is the instruction he gives them. You go back and ask Jesus if He is really the Messiah. John knew, and it says in Luke 3:16 that John said, "The Coming One will baptize you with the Holy Spirit and with fire." So he had identified the Coming One. He knew it was Jesus because t he Father had said so, the Spirit had come, John had baptized Him. But now he's having doubts. And so he says to two of these men, "You go back and you find out for sure if He is the Expected One, the Coming One," a term for Messiah, "or do we look for someone else?" And I told you last time and I think it needs to be repeated, to get his doubt resolved he went to the Lord which showed that he believed. He was a believer or he never would have asked the Lord to resolve his doubt. He knew that the Lord Himself was the one who could help him with the doubt.
And remember, the picture wasn't clear to John. He wasn't there for firsthand testimony. He was getting things by hearsay. And Jesus hadn't yet died, He hadn't risen, He hadn't ascended. He certainly hadn't confronted the apostate religious leaders. He hadn't confronted the corrupt people in Israel. He hadn't established the Kingdom of God on earth. He hadn't defeated the Romans and all the enemies of Israel and set Himself upon the throne of David. He hadn't brought Abrahamic blessing. Everything that John sort of expected to happen, hadn't happened. And I think John had a pretty clear picture of what should happen, John knew well the Old Testament. His father was Zacharias a high priest...not a high priest, but a priest. And because he was a priest he was a student of the Old Testament who two weeks of the year would do priestly duties in Jerusalem. The rest of the year he would live in the hill country of Judea where his home was and he would be teaching the Old Testament. That was his duty. And so John would have been raised on the Old Testament, he would have known messianic prophecies, he would have known what the Messiah was going to do when He came and He had certain expectations.
Just to give you a little better insight into that, turn back to the first chapter of Luke, the end of the chapter, verses 67 and following. Now John the Baptist has been born. And he's just a little baby. And just at the time of the birth of this baby, the father Zacharias knows that this child is to be the forerunner of the Messiah, that has been made very, very clear. He is to proclaim the arrival of Messiah. Now Zacharias in response to this knows the Messiah is coming and so verse 67, "He, filled with the Holy Spirit, preaches." Here is an Old Testament preach...preacher, an Old Testament priest filled with the Holy Spirit giving a sermon, a messianic sermon. It is a magnificent one, inspired by the Holy Spirit, but also from all of the learning of Zacharias. And this is what he says. "Blessed be the Lord God of Israel for He has visited us and accomplished redemption for His people, raised up a horn of salvation for us in the house of David His servant." Verse 71, "Salvation from our enemies, from the hand of all who hate us, to show mercy toward our fathers, remember His holy covenant, the oath which He swore to Abraham our father, grant us that we being delivered from the hand of our enemies might serve Him without fear, in holiness and righteousness before Him all our days. And you, child," he says to this little infant John, "you'll be the prophet of the most High and you will go before the Lord to prepare His ways; to give to His people the knowledge of salvation by the forgiveness of their sins because of the tender mercy of our God with which the Sunrise, the Messiah, from on high shall visit us, to shine upon those who sit in darkness and the shadow of death and to guide our feet into the way of peace." This is a great, great, great sermon, testimony to what Messiah will do. It incorporates elements of the Abrahamic Covenant, the Davidic Covenant and the New Covenant. If you didn't hear the series I preached on that, you ought to get the tapes, it's the best bridge from the Old Testament to the New Testament I know of to help you understand how Jesus fulfills all the Old Testament promises in the covenants.
And so Zacharias preaches this great sermon. But notice the components of it. In fulfillment of the Abrahamic Covenant, the Davidic Covenant and the New Covenant, when Messiah comes a number of things will happen. Redemption will happen. Salvation will happen. In particular, deliverance from our enemies and the hand of all who hate us will happen. And again in verse 74, deliverance from the hand of our enemies and then we will serve Him without fear. And there will be holiness and righteousness. And then further down into verse 79, there will be the Sunrise coming, in verse 78, and light will fill the darkness and the shadow of death will disappear and we will be led into the way of peace.
Now, surely this is the best sermon Zacharias ever preached, the only inspired one. And I can imagine that when John was growing up, Zacharias, like any father, had said to him, "Did you ever hear that sermon I preached, you know, the one when you were...?"
"Yes, I hear it all the time, Dad. Of course I heard it. I've got it memorized. I know it was your greatest sermon. If they had it on tape you would be distributing the tapes his whole life. Yes, Dad, I know the sermon." So you can be sure that John grew up understanding when the Messiah comes redemption comes, when Messiah comes salvation comes, salvation from enemies, from all who hate the Jews, mercy comes, the Abrahamic Covenant is unfolded, the Davidic Covenant is unfolded, the New Covenant is unfolded, holiness, righteousness comes, the Sunrises and light floods the land and darkness disappears and death disappears and peace arrives, that was John's messianic view. And when the Messiah came, it didn't happen...it didn't happen. And he had been raised on that great sermon by his father. And he comes to this point and he's down in a dungeon in Fort Machaerus east of the Dead Sea, completely out of circulation and all he hears about Jesus is that He's traveling around healing people and raising dead people, casting out demons. And these are people that aren't believers, these are sinful people, people who are part of the apostate system of Judaism. It's all confusing to him. So he struggles with doubt.
Sorting through that, just kind of pulling it apart a little bit to look at some of the components, I suggested to you that there are four things that contribute to this kind of doubt for us as for John. First, personal tragedy. Remember that last time? John's circumstances didn't seem to fit with his faithfulness. How is it that he being faithful to his calling preaching what he was told to preach, no indication that John was anything other than faithful to the very max in his ministry, why is he languishing in a stinking dungeon, months and months in prison, headed for a rendevous with death? How can this come? This is the doubt that comes because the circumstances don't seem to match our devotion, or our faithfulness, or what we think we deserve, or what we think has been promised. Doesn't this look like the triumph of evil and not the triumph of God? Isn't this the triumph of a wretched, wicked Herod and not the triumph of Messiah?
So John began to stumble into doubt, it just didn't seem to make sense. So he's questioning, "Are You really the Messiah, or are You just one in the line?" And that takes us to the second reason for his doubt, popular influences. There was a view existing that there would come Elijah and then Jeremiah and then Prophet A, Prophet B, Prophet C, however many, and finally Messiah. That's why in Matthew 16 when Jesus said to the disciples, "Who do men say that I am? Some say You're Elijah, some say You're Jeremiah, or one of the prophets." So there was this popular idea that there was a sequence. And John is saying, "Well, are You Prophet B, or A, or C, or D? And Messiah's not here yet? Is that the idea?" So popular influence is popular ideas, popular concepts can create doubt. And they still do that. There are those people who develop a popular image of Jesus and when the preacher who preaches the true Word of God doesn't preach what fits with the popular idea of Jesus, people doubt and wonder because they've accepted unbiblical notions of the Savior. And we talked about that last time.
But let's come to the third and the fourth one this morning. And this really is the crux of it. These things aren't really separate from each other, they're kind of intertwined a bit. The third reason, and this is the compelling matter, doubt arises out of personal tragedy when we can't square our circumstances with our faithfulness, out of popular influences when we start to believe the popular image of someone, including Jesus. They also come because of incomplete revelation, this is really the crux of the matter.
John's doubts came because he didn't have full information. And what John couldn't understand was why doesn't the Kingdom come, because John didn't have the information that Jesus would come, He would be rejected, the Lord would then turn from Israel to the Gentiles, establish the church, the church age would go on at least 2,000 years, which it has, and Jesus would then come back, return and then set up His kingdom. That's mystery in the Old Testament. The Old Testament does talk about the Kingdom, that's right. And Zacharias had it exactly accurate in his sermon that the Messiah will come, fulfill Abrahamic promise of blessing in a land, prosperity and all of that, Davidic promise that Israel would have a king, a great king, a son of David and he would reign over Israel and Israel would literally rule the whole world, the New Covenant promise, the forgiveness of sin, mercy and grace and salvation, all of that was there. But the Old Testament didn't show this mystery period, this two-thousand year, at least, period in which God turns from Israel and carves out a new channel of witness to the world, namely the church made up of Jew and Gentile. And not until that period ends and Israel is saved does Jesus return to establish the glorious promised Kingdom and bring to pass the fulfillment of everything He pledged to Abraham and to David.
John didn't have that information. So he's functioning with some incomplete information. He needs what Peter said, "A more sure word that his own experience." He needs to see the truth of God or to hear the truth of God. And some of the apostles, of course, were in the same situation. Even after the resurrection, they didn't know Jesus was raised, Jesus had been killed, they were on the road to Emmaus, they were moaning and groaning that everything was over with, it was all done, that the whole thing was pointless and useless. Jesus was dead and Jesus showed up. And you remember Luke 24 says, "He opened the Scripture and spoke out of the Scripture of things concerning Himself." And helped them to understand that this was all part of the plan from Scripture.
Now this was pretty typical. Even after the cross and the resurrection the disciples struggled. Acts chapter 1, they said to Jesus, "Are You at this time going to bring the Kingdom? Are You going to bring the Kingdom? Is this the time for the Kingdom to come?" Jesus said, "It's not for you to know that." God has that in His own purpose and He'll bring the Kingdom when it's time to bring the Kingdom, it's not for you to know the times and the seasons of the Kingdom.
So their whole expectation was about the Messiah arriving to bring the Kingdom. When He came and didn't bring the Kingdom, and it looked like things were getting worse and worse and it turned out that they were and He was executed, it was like the whole plan dissolved. So they had an incomplete revelation. They could have understood more had they better interpreted the Old Testament. Matthew 22:29 Jesus said, "You are mistaken not understanding the scriptures." You are mistaken not understanding the scriptures. The scriptures do speak about a suffering Messiah, don't they? Isaiah 53, Psalm 22? The scriptures do speak about a final and ultimate lamb depicted in all the imagery of the sacrificial system.
But...but John was really suffering from incomplete revelation. The New Testament hadn't been written, you couldn't say, "John, you need to read 1 and 2 Thessalonians, it's all there. You need to read 2 Peter 3, a day to the Lord is like a thousand years, a thousand years is a day. You've got to realize there's some big time gaps here." But that wasn't written. The book of Revelation wasn't written. It wouldn't be written for over half a century. And so, John was just without the full information to see the timetable.
Well, you and I don't have that problem, do we? If you say to me you have doubts, then what I'm going to say to you is go to the Scripture because the revelation of God is clear. Read the Word, learn the Word, know the Word, trust the Word, blessed is the man who delights in the law of God day and night, who meditates on it day and night because it's in the knowledge of the truth that you understand the purposes and plan of God and doubt is dissipated. For me as a young person, those early doubts sent me into the search for the truth. And once I determined the truth, the doubt disappeared. Doubt is a...almost a foreign matter to me and to many of you, at this point, because the truth has so taken over your mind and your heart. You may be tempted to doubt what you know, but you don't doubt because you don't know. You have the evidence there. You have the mind of Christ in the Scripture. You can bring every thought captive to Christ, as 2 Corinthians 10:5 says. You have an anointing from God, you don't need to be taught by men because the anointing from God teaches you all things, 1 John 2.
John just didn't have enough information to be certain. And that's okay. If you don't have enough information to be certain, then go to the one who has the information. Who's that? The Lord. And where does He reveal His mind? Where is the mind of Christ? It's right here, 1 Corinthians 2:16, "You have the mind of Christ," right here, you don't need to have doubt. That's why I say doubt is a good place to start, it's a bad place to finish. If you have some doubts, go to the Word of God and get your doubt turned into faith.
And then lastly, there was one other component in the case of John that contributed to his doubt, wrong expectation. And it was tied to the information issue...wrong expectation. Now John was a fiery prophet. There doesn't seem to be much grace in God's message. John preached repentance. John preached this furious message of God's judgment, Day of the Lord kind of stuff. And, you know, John knew how the Old Testament ended. The Old Testament ended in Malachi, the last warning of the Old Testament is that the Day of the Lord is coming, the great and terrible Day of the Lord. It's going to come burning like a furnace, all arrogant and evil doers will be chaff. The day is coming to set them ablaze so that it will leave them neither root nor branch. In other words, they'll be burned to the very ashes. This is the day when the wicked are going to be trodden down, ashes under the soles of your feet. That's the last statement of the Old Testament. The Messiah is going to come. The Day of the Lord is going to come. It's going to be judgment. It's going to be a holocaust. This was John and John thundered out that message about fire and brimstone and judgment.
In the third chapter of Luke we meet John, the voice crying in the wilderness. Verse 3, preaching baptism of repentance for the forgiveness of sins. It's a strong message. When the religious leaders show up along with the multitudes, he says, "You brood of snakes, who warned you to flee from the wrath to come?" I mean, he called them snakes, they were like snakes scrambling in front of a prairie fire to get to a river before they got incinerated, scrambling down here to the water to get baptized like snakes running to the water from a fire. And then he preached to them about an axe that was going to chop them down, about a fire that was going to burn them incinerating them to ashes. That was the kind of preaching he did. So it was connected to the idea that when Messiah comes, there's going to be a holocaust of judgment, furious judgment. He's going to baptize you with fire. He's going to take out a winnowing fork in his hand and he's going...he's going to thresh you like wheat is threshed and separated from chaff and then he's going to take the chaff and He's going to burn it with unquenchable fire. That was John. He was the...he was the original hell-fire-damnation preacher. And that's what he expected Messiah to do.
Well here comes Jesus and what does He do? What does He do? He heals everybody. That's not judgment. He makes everything better. It's all compassion and tenderness and love and mercy and He's doing all these wonderful things that express the compassion of God. And He's doing them to unbelievers. And where is the confrontation of the faithless and wicked people? And where is the confrontation of the wretched, wicked not only Jewish people, but Idumaeans like Herod Antipas who lived such a gross and evil life. Where's the axe in the hand of Messiah? Where is the fire in His hand? Where is the winnowing fork? What doesn't He blast His enemies, burn up the wicked, bring the fury of the Day of the Lord? It just doesn't seem to be going the way he assumed it had to go because John was getting people to repent so that when the Messiah comes they didn't get burned up. And now the Messiah came and they were getting healed and dead people were getting raised, demons were being cast out.
And so these are the things that caused his doubt...expectations, lack of information, those are things that are reasonable. His doubt was a reasonable...it was a rational doubt. It was a starting point. And it was a good starting point because it drove him to the Lord to get the rest of the information that he needed.
How did the Lord respond to him? Let's go back to the text. This becomes very clear to us, verse 21, here's how He responded. At that very time immediately, right on the spot in front of these two disciples of John who asked the question, they said to Him, "Are You the Expected One or do we look for someone else?" And you can see they...verse 19 John tells them what to say, verse 20, they say exactly what he told them to say. So they're faithful to their commission. Verse 21, "At that very time He cured many people of diseases and afflictions and evil spirits and He granted sight to many who were blind." On the spot, at that instant, wherever He was and we don't know exactly where He was, somewhere in Galilee, maybe near to the town of Nain where He had raised the widow's son from the dead...immediately, instantaneously He just does this massive display o