
A Different Perspective Official Podcast - Sight for the Blind // Why Jesus Came for Me, Part 3
RadioAfrica.fm Podcast Network
Imagine just for a moment that you're blind and all of a sudden, your sight is restored. What would that be like? How would it feel?
As a young man I used to have 20/20 vision but like just about everyone else, when you get to your late 30s and early 40s the old vision gets a bit blurred, and I needed glasses. These days I wouldn't even think of driving a car or reading a book without the old multifocals. When you think about it, little by little without us even noticing, our vision becomes distorted. It's like that with glaucoma too, little by little people lose their sight and by the time they notice it, it's just too late. Being able to see clearly is one of the most precious gifts of life and if you ask anyone who's lost their sight, 'What would you like most in life?' Well one of the things that would be right up there on their list, would be being able to see again.
They say that seeing is believing, that's the old saying but what we see, tends to be influenced by how we look at the world. I guess that's why we call this program A Different Perspective. But when you think about it the glasses I wear, they give me clarity of vision that simply doesn't exist when I take them off. And you know when I go to the optometrist to have my vision re-checked you know every couple of years, they put all these funny little lenses in front of you and they flick them and "is this one better or is that one better, is this one better or is that."
And it's amazing how many different perspectives you get on the world, with all the different combinations and permutations of lenses that they flick, flick, flick in front of your eyes. Our view of politics for instance, is influenced by what? Well mostly by our parents and by the socio-economic group that we come from. Our view of the status of men and women in marriage and workplace, well a lot of that depends on what we've learned, and what we believe.
I remember as young officer in the Australian army, you know I've been through four years of training at the Royal Military College at Duntroon and they're all blokes, I mean women at Duntroon was just, well I mean that would never have happened – it does now of course, but not in those days. And I remember as a young officer getting my first female boss, can I tell you? I was devastated, I could not believe that I would be working for a woman, I was horrified. Now, I had the honesty to sit down with her and tell her that. I look back on that now and I think, "How could I ever have had that attitude, that's a bizarre attitude" but yet it was a very powerful attitude as young officer who spent four years at Duntroon. Where we sit really influences what we see and how we respond to it.
There's a wonderful little story, I have used this occasionally, I have used this before but I think it's a powerful one, written in the naval journal of the US and it goes like this:
Two battleships were assigned at the training squadron and had been at sea on manoeuvres in heavy weather for several days, I was serving on the lead battleship and was on watch on the bridge as night fell. The visibility was poor with patchy fog so the Captain remained on the bridge keeping an eye on all activities. Shortly after dark the lookout on the wing of the bridge reported, 'Light bearing on the starboard bow,' 'is it steady or moving astern?' The Captain called out. Lookout replied, 'steady Captain' which meant we were on a dangerous collision course with that ship. The Captain then called to the signalman 'signal that ship we're on a collision course, advise you change course 20 degrees', back came the signal 'advisable for you to change course 20 degrees'. The Captain said 'send I'm a Captain, change course 20 degrees', 'I'm a seaman second class' came the reply 'you'd better change course 20 degrees'. By that time the Captain was furious he spat out 'send I'm a battleship, change course