A Blind Man and the Shepherd
Gospel of John: That You May Believe
March 20, 2022
Joanna Sullivan was born near Springfield, Massachusetts in April of 1866. She was the oldest of three children born to Irish immigrants. Annie was only 8 years old when her mother died of tuberculosis. Two years later, fearing the responsibility of raising three children alone, Annie, her brother and sister were deserted by their father. A childhood illness had left Annie almost completely blind. After enduring several unsuccessful surgeries to correct her eyesight, Annie entered the Perkins Institution for the Blind at the age of 14. A year later, surgery partially restored her vision. It was at Perkins where she learned to use a manual alphabet...a way of using hand signals pressed into the palm of another to spell words. In 1886, at the age of 20, Annie graduated as the valedictorian of her class.
Annie is best known as the teacher and life-long companion of Helen Keller. Just a few short months after graduation, Annie accepted a call to work with the then 7year-old Helen. Like Annie, a childhood illness had left Helen with physical impairments. She was blind, deaf, and had a limited ability to speak. Annie began teaching Helen the same manual alphabet she had learned at Perkins Institute; teaching her that things had names. Within 6 months, Helen had learned 575 words, some multiplication tables, and the Braille system.
Orphaned, abandoned, and robbed of her sight, it would have been understandable if Annie had become bitter, defensive, arrogant and isolated. But instead, she chose to listen, learn, and discover new ways of seeing. And not only was her life radically changed, she dramatically impacted the life of Helen, and through her, thousands of others as well.
We are working our way through a study of the gospel of John. This week, we’re looking at the account of Jesus’ healing of the blind man. Certainly, the restoration of physical sight was amazing, but there are deeper implications about spiritual blindness that we’ll unpack together.
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