4. We must do the work of the One who sent Me, so long as it is day! Night is coming when no one can work.
5. While I am in the world, I am the light of the world.”
6. Having said these things, He spat on the ground, made mud with the saliva, and spread the mud on the blind man’s eyes.
7. He told him, “Go, wash in the Pool of Siloam” (which is translated Sent). So he went away, washed, and came back seeing.
8. Therefore his neighbors and those who had seen him as a beggar kept saying, “Isn’t this the one who used to sit and beg?”
9. “This is the one!” some said. “No, but it looks like him,” said others. But the man himself kept saying, “I am!”
10. So they asked him, “Then how were your eyes opened?”
11. He answered, “The Man who is called Yeshua made mud, rubbed it on my eyes, and said to me, ‘Go to Siloam and wash.’ So I went away and washed, and then I received my sight!”
12. “Where is He?” they asked him. “I don’t know,” he said.
13. They bring to the Pharisees the man who once was blind.
14. Now the day was Shabbat when Yeshua made the mud and opened the man’s eyes.
15. So again the Pharisees were asking him how he received his sight. He responded, “He put mud on my eyes, and I washed, and I see!”
16. So some of the Pharisees began saying, “This man isn’t from God, because He doesn’t keep Shabbat!” But others were saying, “How can a sinner perform such signs?” So there was a split among them.
17. Again they say to the blind man, “What do you say about Him, since He opened your eyes?” And he said, “He’s a prophet.”
18. So the Judean leaders didn’t believe that he had been blind and received his sight until they called his parents.
19. They questioned them, “Is this your son, whom you say was born blind? Then how does he see now?”
20. Then his parents answered, “We know that this is our son and that he was born blind.
21. We don’t know how he now sees, nor do we know who opened his eyes. Ask him—he’s old enough. He will speak for himself.”
22. His parents said this because they were afraid of the Judean leaders. For the Judean leaders had already agreed that anyone who professed Yeshua to be Messiah would be thrown out of the synagogue.