Inside the Bubble: What Jesus Does with Your Limits
The human brain is breathtaking and maddening.
Even while it dazzles us with its seemingly endless capacities, it bedevils us with its limits. Isn鈥檛 it fascinating how the smartest, most talented people can still display the most puzzling blind spots? The physics genius who cannot make small talk in a checkout line, for example, or the virtuoso musician who鈥檚 hopeless at spelling.
Anytime we marvel at what the brain can do, if we stick around long enough, we eventually get a look at what it 肠补苍鈥檛 do. How can our minds seem to have such unlimited potential and yet still be so limited?
The fashionable term for these limits right now is 鈥渂ubble.鈥 Its most popular use is as a diagnostic tool, whether applied to ourselves or others. It鈥檚 common to hear people say things like, 鈥淵ou know, I鈥檓 trying to grow in that area. I just didn鈥檛 know I really grew up in a bubble.鈥 Or: 鈥淯gh, I 肠补苍鈥檛 believe they posted that; it鈥檚 so ignorant. Of course, it鈥檚 because of their social media bubble鈥攖hey never listen to anyone they don鈥檛 agree with.鈥
Personal and cultural awareness of our bubbles has likely never been higher. And each time we mention or reflect on them, whether we know it or not, we鈥檙e grappling with what it means for humans to be limited.
Coming from Nazareth
An unlikely voice in this conversation is the Apostle Nathanael. In John 1:44鈥50, Philip comes to him saying he鈥檚 met the Messiah, 鈥淛esus the son of Joseph from Nazareth.鈥
鈥淣azareth!鈥 Nathanael responds. 鈥淐an anything good come from Nazareth?鈥
Like most of our instinctive, gut-level reactions, Nathanael鈥檚 words revealed something he might have wished had stayed hidden: in this case, a mindset shaped by the bubble of cosmopolitan Jewish life. Nazareth? Get out of here. That鈥檚 a backwater, flyspeck, junkyard, nowhere place. Be serious, Philip. Wherever the Messiah鈥檚 going to come from, we both know it 肠补苍鈥檛 possibly be Nazareth.
Nazareth was outside the limits of Nathanael鈥檚 experience. His whole life had shaped his imagination to exclude it from Messianic possibility, to give it little thought except, perhaps, a contemptuous shrug. If Philip鈥檚 invitation hadn鈥檛 come from outside of his bubble, Nathanael might not have reacted so strongly. But it did.
It鈥檚 tempting to sit in judgment at Nathanael鈥檚 reaction. Yet when our own bubble gets pricked, doesn鈥檛 our Nathanael-ness similarly spring up? We know we don鈥檛 know everything or have perfect understanding. But it still confuses and maddens us when that fact hits us up close. For people who are clearly not omniscient, it turns out we鈥檙e quite touchy about it.
Expanding the Bubble
You and I have a bubble. Everyone does. No matter who we are or where we grew up or how enlightened we think we are, we all have a bubble. That is what it means to be limited. God is the only being in the universe who doesn鈥檛 have a bubble. He knows all and can do all. But not us. We are always, ever shaped by our experiences and environments. To be human is to be limited. Inescapably bubbled.
Jesus鈥 response to Nathanael鈥檚 bubble is a priceless mixture of grace and power, of addressing our limits from the inside and outside. 鈥淣ow, here is a genuine son of Israel,鈥 he says as Nathanael approaches him. 鈥淎 man of complete integrity.鈥
Bear in mind that Nathanael had just insulted Jesus鈥 hometown with a display of shallow ignorance. Yet Jesus, with no hint of sarcasm, calls him a man without a lie in his heart. How can this be? For us, this is nowhere close to our natural instinct. Yet for Jesus, Nathanael鈥檚 bubble was no impediment to a work of redemption. Seeing the barricades of his limited mind, Jesus slid between them and instead spoke words of life to him.
Nathanael, understandably, was taken aback: 鈥淗ow do you know about me?鈥
Jesus replied, 鈥淚 could see you under the fig tree before Philip found you.鈥 With this, Jesus quickly and decisively explodes Nathanael鈥檚 bubble with a demonstration of omniscience. Nathanael鈥檚 limited human mind bumped into God鈥檚 infinite mind through the incarnate Son. Jesus gives Nathanael a second helping of grace, this one harder than the first but no less valuable: I鈥檓 something entirely different from you, Nathanael. What are you going to do with that? As he does, the limits of Nathanael鈥檚 holy imagination burst entirely, ready to be refashioned by Jesus into a glorious, sanctified expansiveness.
We are Nathanaels at heart. To know this is to own that we make so much of the world into a Nazareth. There are ideas, experiences, ideologies, and, yes, theologies that don鈥檛 look like ours or 鈥渟ound right鈥 to us. We 肠补苍鈥檛 hear them鈥攁re even threatened by them鈥攂ecause our bubbled souls bounce them away. It is enormously humbling to know that we carry our inner Nathanael into every conversation, every interaction, and every quiet time.
But to know this is also to glimpse the horizon of an extraordinary new life, exemplified by Nathanael and Jesus鈥 final exchange: 鈥淩abbi,鈥 Nathanael cries out, 鈥測ou are the Son of God鈥攖he King of Israel!鈥
And Jesus answers, 鈥淚 tell you the truth, you will all see heaven open and the angels of God going up and down on the Son of Man, the one who is the stairway between heaven and earth.鈥 Or to put it another way: I know that was hard, Nathanael, but listen: if you follow me, if you keep letting me pull you out of your bubble, you鈥檒l see things you never dreamed of before. Spiritual vitality you 肠补苍鈥檛 even imagine, a heart overflowing with virtue and dynamism. A life like no other.
In God鈥檚 kingdom, this is what it means to be limited: To see and embrace our inner Nathanael. To be honest about our bubbles鈥攖o know that they exist, where their edges are, and how we react emotionally when they鈥檙e touched鈥攁nd to hunger for Jesus to come and absolutely blow them up, knowing that, outside our bubbles, even more of God鈥檚 soul-satisfying life awaits.



