The One Who Seemed to See
In Luke 18, Jesus meets a man who has everything: a clean record, a good reputation, the right question on his lips… and a blindness he can’t see. This is the kind of blindness that doesn’t beg on the roadside; instead, it wears a suit, quotes Scripture, and still misses the Savior standing right in front of it. In "The One Who Seemed to See," Terry explores the rich ruler’s encounter with Jesus, why he walked away sad, and how it contrasts with the desperate cry of a blind beggar who wouldn’t be silenced. It’s a story about the danger of respectable refusal, the mercy that meets all kinds of blindness, and the freedom that comes when we finally let go and follow.
Series Information

Terry proclaims the one Gospel through the history, research, rememberings and faith expressed in the text of the Gospel According to Luke. Jesus himself is the good news expressed by Luke. Beginning with the birth narratives unique to Luke's presentation, the good news of the Kingdom explodes into faithful view as each account, teaching, parable and event lived out and offered by Jesus, the Messiah-King, is examined the way Luke seemingly examined Jesus in his own work. Here we find a Jesus to love, a Jesus to follow, and ultimately a Jesus to worship.