THIRTIETH SUNDAY IN OT B 2024
Today’s
Gospel describes the beautiful miracle of Jesus giving sight to the blind man
Bartimaeus. In the account, Jesus asked
Bartimaeus: What do you want me to do
for you? He responded: “Lord, that I may
see.”
In today’s
liturgy, Jesus is asking us the same question that he asked Bartimaeus: What do you want me to do for you?
Would like
you to pause for a few minutes before you answer the Lord’s question to you.
In today’s
Gospel, the disciples were the security guard for Jesus as He was leaving
Jericho. To keep some order and to keep
people from bothering Jesus, the disciples kept people like the blind
Bartimaeus at a distance. The disciples
basically told the blind beggar to shut up.
He was disturbing the peace.
The irony of
this Gospel passage is that it was the disciples who were blind. They had a spiritual blindness to the
healing, merciful mission of Jesus. They
simply did not get it. They were very
content to leave people with disabilities as unnoticed people on the side of
the road.
Yet, the
ministry of Jesus was to reveal the merciful love of God to people in need.
Wondering if
there is a message for us today. Do we
sometimes suffer from spiritual blindness and sometimes mistakenly try to keep
Jesus from people in need?
I wonder if
we faithful Churchgoers, starting with the pastor, sometimes act as the
security guard for Jesus in the same way that the disciples did in the Gospel
account. Who are the people we tell to
shut up, and we want to keep at a distance from our faith community?
Perhaps it
is people who we judge are not living a moral life -- people with a different
sexual orientation, people who have experienced separation and divorce in their
married life, people we judge not to be living a Christ-like life, people we
think are phonies, people who are disruptive to the ways we pray.
Like the
first disciples often we are unaware of the ways we can keep people from
experiencing the merciful love of Jesus.
May the
blind man Bartimaeus represent all the unnoticed people, all the forgotten,
people with disabilities, and the people we try to shut up in very polite
words.
And may see
have the spiritual sightedness to witness to the merciful love of Jesus to all
who are in need.
As we pray
over today’s Gospel, be aware of the physical blindness of Bartimaeus, and be
aware also of the spiritual blindness of the disciples. As we pray in the words of Bartimaeus, “Lord,
that I may see.” We pray for both
physical and spiritual sightedness to the ways Jesus is present and the ways
Jesus wishes to be present to all who are in need.
This week’s
Gospel invites us to place ourselves along the way with the blind
Bartimaeus. How would you name your
spiritual blindness -- contemplate and admit your own blind spots? This is bit of a challenge for all of us
because it is so easy to be unaware of our own blind spots.
Do we have a
blindness to the unnoticed people on the side of the road that we so easily
pass by? How aware are we of the people
near us in Church today? What can we do
to connect more fully with the people in our faith community?
Who is the
person in our family life that we have built up a wall of blindness that makes
it so difficult to reach out to? Lord,
that I may see how your grace can bring healing to this relationship?
A blind spot
in our spiritual journey may be the blindness that keeps us from experiencing
the merciful healing of Jesus in the Sacrament of Reconciliation. What is the last time we have experienced
this sacrament? What would it take for
you to remove this spiritual blindness and know the forgiving love of Jesus in
this beautiful sacrament?
The dialogue
of Jesus with Bartimaeus is the dialogue Jesus has with us today. Bartimaeus, like each of us, needs to be
loved, and is fortunate to receive by Jesus a loving question. Not “what do you want to do?” asks Jesus, but
“What do you want me to do?” It’s a
question that comes from the heart of Christ and shows His compassion.
The Lord is
asking us: What do you want me to do for
you? May we respond with Bartimaeus:
“Lord, that I may see.” Let Bartimaeus
be our guide. He asks for the most
important gift God can give. May we see
what is of real value in life. May we
know what is true. May we judge rightly
and walk confidently in the light of Christ.
Notice in
the account that the very first thing Bartimaeus sees when he is healed is the
face of Christ. To know Jesus is the key
to the Christian life. To know Jesus is
to know God and our true self.
Bartimaeus’
prayer is answered. Once he has seen
Jesus’ face to face, there is no other life for him except to be with Jesus and
to follow him. He leaves behind his
beggar’s cloak and joins Jesus and the other disciples on the way to
Jerusalem. Like a man in love, he has
seen the face of his beloved, and there is no turning back. May we too be cured of our blindness which
keeps from seeing the face of Jesus.
What would
it take for us to have a vision of life in which we trust that Jesus goes with
us in all experiences of life? What
would it take for us to have a vision of ourselves as a faith community in
which we welcome everyone as one who is made in the image and likeness of God,
and there is room for everyone in our faith community?
Bartimaeus
never gave up. He was persistent. He made known his request to God. He was a man of faith. In this account, he understood the mission of
Jesus far better that the disciples did.
May we with
the persistence of Bartimaeus ask the Lord that I may see. May we see and experience the truth of our
lives. God’s love for us is unending. Whatever anxiety we experience, whatever
struggle we are dealing with, whatever disabilities hold us down, we all are
the recipients of the abundant merciful love of Jesus. Lord, that I may see how you are present to
me in my time of need.