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Bartimaeus

The story of blind Bartimaeus

October 28, 2024 by Holy Name Monastery Leave a Comment

The story of Bartimaeus has a familiar ring in the lives of many people today as it follows in the wake of storms, fires and other disasters of unheard proportions.   Imagine what might have been his story.   He once had a family, a job, a house, kids, the whole works. He was active at the local synagogue. He would tell his children stories of their ancestors.  Then things started to change and his vision would become blurry. At first, he did not allow this to bother him but kept on working and living, but eventually the blurred vision got worse and worse so that he could barely see his wife and children.   Then things went black and that’s the way they stayed.

He would lay his cloak on the ground so people could throw their loose change on the ground next to him. Most people avoided him altogether because in those days many people felt that blindness was caused by sinfulness either by the person or by their parents.

Despite all the hardships that he faced he still loved God. He recalled how God always came through in the end. Now Bartimaeus sat daily next to the road listening to the people passing by. The conversation lately had been about this guy named Jesus who had healed people, even blind people. Some had even said that he was the Messiah that had come to redeem Israel. Bartimaeus thought, “Wow, if only Jesus would come around here.”

Then one day there was a commotion. There were more people on the road than usual and then Bertimaeus heard the name, Jesus. Should he say something? Would Jesus come to him? Could he restore his vision? Something deep inside said “Yes, call out his name.”  But the crowd around him tried to silence him. Yet Bartimaeus persisted, calling out more loudly and with greater urgency.   Notice how quickly the crowd’s reaction changed when Jesus called for Bartimaeus. Those who sought to quiet him now encouraged him.

Bartimaeus recognized power and authority when he sensed it. We do the same thing. If we had a broken leg we wouldn’t go to AutoZone to have it fixed.  If the doctor comes into the examination room in overalls, we might have a few questions, but if he wears a white coat, with a stethoscope and a pocket protector, we generally don’t immediately ask for credentials or references.  Bartimaeus recognized Jesus’ authority.  Jesus didn’t wear a uniform, and even if he did, Bartimaeus was blind and he couldn’t see him anyway. He’d heard stories, and he’d heard false rumors, fake news.  This recognition of Jesus as a man of authority came from a place deep within him.   We experience that same recognition of Jesus. We have never seen Him.  We’ve seen artistic renditions of Jesus but our recognition originates from a different sense than sight.  It comes from a spiritual sense. It comes before anything. It is grace that allowed us to have that first moment with God, when God was not just a figure in CCD or Faith Formation classes or in the Bible. God became personal, a friend.

When Bartimaeus recognized Jesus, he still had a choice to make; act on that recognition or let it pass by.  Bartimaeus cries out, “Jesus, Son of David, have mercy on me!” He addressed Jesus by name and by title, Son of David, the messianic title reserved for the redeemer of Israel.   We cry out as well when we get to the last point, the straw that breaks the camel’s back.  We cry, “Help me, Jesus.” “Have mercy, Jesus” Or simply, “Jesus” “Gott im Himmel.”  “Mi Dios!”  We realize that only God can help us in whatever situation we are in. God’s grace not only gives us the ability to perceive God’s power and love. It also gives us the strength to respond to it. Unlike Bartimaeus however, we are not limited to a once in a lifetime response. We must continually respond to the gift of grace and power in our lives.

What is Jesus’ response to Bartimaeus? “Go; your faith has made you well.” It is interesting to see that Jesus says that it is Bartimaeus’ faith that produced his healing not Jesus’ faith that made him well.   Bartimaeus’ faith, and ours too, is not born out of nothing, nor does it come out of thin air.  It is a response to the love and grace of God.  It was Bartimaeus’ response to God’s initial contact through grace that made him well – restored his sight. Our response to the power or grace is also a restoration and a reconnection.  We might not be physically blind but spiritually we may be walking around aimlessly. Our spiritual vision may be black as night, but God still initiates the reconnection through grace and gives us the freedom to respond or reject His gift.

That’s the end of the story, right? Not quite. What does Bartimaeus do once his sight has been restored?  Immediately he follows Jesus on the way.  It is not the end, but the beginning of a journey.  We don’t receive the fire of the Holy Spirit, the connection with God, only to sit it in the corner or in the closet, or even the chapel.  We can’t isolate ourselves in a cozy niche.  We are impelled to take up the invitation and follow Jesus on the way.  The question facing us is: Am I going to do for God today or for myself?  Am I going to spend today in connection and in conversation with God and God’s people or am I going to satisfy my own selfish wants and desires?  Our blind eyes opened, we have a unique opportunity to spread God’s love in the world.  Lord, we pray: open our eyes and strengthen us to following your prompting to be an expression of your compassion and mercy in our world today.

~Reflection by Sister Roberta Bailey, OSB

 

 

Reminder: next weekend the time changes “fall back one hour”.

Have a good week and pray fervently for an optimal election outcome.

 

 

First Reading:   Jeremiah 31:7-9         Second Reading:  Hebrews 5:1-6
Gospel:   Mark 10:46-57
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Filed Under: Blog, Front Page, Homily Tagged With: Bartimaeus, Blind, crowd, Faith, Jesus

I Could Have, But Would I?

October 25, 2021 by Holy Name Monastery Leave a Comment

 

I COULD HAVE, BUT WOULD I?

 

There are people today, like Bartimaeus in this Gospel, who sit by the wayside and cry out for help.  24-hour news channels, Instagram, Facebook and other social media illustrate, with varying details, the kinds of horrific stories we too often hear that viewers weary of the repetition and harden their hearts.

The stories caught on cell phone video could happen anywhere.  Shock waves of horror rock the world and put us to shame.  The scene may be a toddler struck by a van in a hit and run accident and left to die on the pavement, a home break-in turned murder, or a teen-age boy gunned down while walking home after dark on a lonely stretch of roadway.  You can imagine it – you’ve probably seen it in reality.  They are all victims of violence of one sort or another!   Many left dying unattended except by doorbell security cameras or gawking on-lookers.  On film you can see people passing by, some going out of their way to avoid involvement.

Later in interviews, we can hear passersby make remarks like “But, it wasn’t my child.  I didn’t know him.  I didn’t want to get involved.  Why should I bother?”  A columnist shouts in print, “Shame on us!”  A young student leader digs deeper, expressing a measured degree of hope that this untimely and inhumane death will cause an ever greater stir in regards to the value of human life.  Reporters and commentators plead about the responsibility of families and society to care for their children, for each other in a way more powerful than any video could arouse.  If one video of a dead toddler on a side street can cause millions of people around the world to stop and rethink their own morals, why can’t it spur others to craft legislation that may save lives in the future?  What sort of change is possible?  What about videos of young mothers leaving their newborn on the steps of a local fire station with a note saying she lives in a “food desert” and did not have a bus pass.  And anyway, the fact is she could not afford to feed her baby?  Would this cause a commotion and stir to action our society where one in six children go to bed hungry every night?”  It does require that we each ask ourselves, “Would I have stopped to care for that abandoned person in the street?”

It is not only stories of horrific violence that can cause us to hang our heads in shame.  Inspirational stories, too, of everyday heroic deeds can bring us to tears and evoke recognition that we probably would not have had the courage for similar acts of compassion.  Such “warm, fuzzy news” may bring tears of emotion and waves of shame.  Would I have cared enough to rescue a helpless toddler?  Could I have braved jumping into the fray or the freezing water or moved between the bully and the victim?  Are there times I could have, (but would I have) spoken up to divert the direction of a racial bias comment or harsh exchange of words?  Did I miss the chance to welcome the person being ignored?

There is one thing I DO KNOW: Jesus would, and Jesus did!  How do I know?  A poor blind beggar named Bartimaeus tells us so!  His friends who at first had shushed him, now encourage him – “Take up your courage; get up, Jesus is calling you.”  Bartimaeus was dependent upon the eyes of his friends and the sound of Jesus’ voice beckoning him, as he made his way through the crowd.  Jesus asked him, ”What is it you want of me?”  “Master, that I may see.”  “Go your way; your faith has saved you.”

And, don’t be mistaken, this time Jesus didn’t say: “Follow me or come my way or go away.”  There’s the lesson for us.  Bartimaeus did not linger when Jesus said “Go your way.”  That is exactly what he did.  “He followed Jesus on the way.”  That was his way.  And in this process, Bartimaeus and his friends demonstrated for us what it means to “be a slave to all,” to serve those who cannot do even one thing in return for your loving them enough to stop and help.  May we each have the sight and courage to lead those who are blind to Jesus that they, too, may see.

~Reflection by Sister Roberta Bailey, OSB, Prioress

 

First Reading: Jeremiah 31:7-9                   Second Reading: Hebrews 5:1-6
Gospel Reading: Mark 10:46-52
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Filed Under: Blog, Front Page, Homily Tagged With: All Souls, All Souls Day, Bartimaeus, But Would I?, cell phone, I Could Have, Jesus, stories

Our Blind Eyes Opened, Spread God’s Love

October 26, 2015 by Holy Name Monastery 2 Comments

eye for GodMark 10:46-57                                           Intention:  Jubilarians

 

The story of Bartimaeus rings with a familiarity of the plight of many people today.  He once had a family, a job, a house, kids, the whole works. He was active at the local synagogue. He would tell his children stories of their ancestors.  Then things started to change, he started to get these real bad headaches and his vision would become blurry. At first he did not allow this to bother him but kept on working and living, but eventually the blurred vision got worse and worse and eventually he could barely see his wife and children. He told them to leave because he wouldn’t be able to support them or protect them. Then things went black and that’s the way it was.

He would lay his cloak on the ground so people could throw their loose change on the ground next to him. Most people avoided him altogether because in those days many people felt that blindness was caused by sinfulness either by the person or by their parents, so they were avoided. That’s the way it was for years. He struggled to survive, always hungry and thirsty and everything always black.

Despite all the hardships that he faced he still loved God. He remember the stories that he told his children and he saw in his mind the people in those stories and how God always came through for them in the end. Now Bartimaeus sat daily next to the road listening to the people passing by. The conversation lately had been about this guy named Jesus who had healed people, even blind people. Some had even said that he was the messiah that had come to redeem Israel. Bartimaeus thought, “Wow, if only Jesus would come around here.”

Then one day there was a commotion. There were more people on the road than usual and then he heard the name, Jesus. He was coming. Should he say something? Would Jesus come to him? Could he restore his vision? Something deep inside said “Yes, call out the name.” Bartimaeus opened his mouth: the crowd around him tried to silence him. Yet Bartimaeus persised, calling out more loudly and with greater urgency. He will not be silenced or deterred from getting Jesus’ attention. We notice how quickly the crowd’s reaction changes when Jesus calls for Bartimaeus. Those who sought to quiet him now encourage him.

Bartimaeus recognized power and authority when he saw it. We do the same thing. If we had a broken leg we wouldn’t go to AutoZone to have it fixed.  If the doctor came in overalls, we might have a few questions, but if he was in a white coat, with a stethoscope and a pocket protector we would have no problem. Even though it might be some Joe Schmo from the street dressed as a doctor, we recognize the uniform as power and authority; we don’t ask for credentials or references, we simply accept what experience told us was the situation.

Bartimaeus recognized Jesus’ authority.  Jesus didn’t have on a uniform, even if he did Bartimaeus was blind he couldn’t see him anyway. He had heard stories, but he had heard false rumors, too. This recognition came from a place deep within him.

We have that some recognition of Jesus. We have never seen Him.  We’ve see artistic renditions of Jesus but our recognition originates from a different sense than sight..  It comes from a spiritual sense. It comes before anything. It is grace that allowed us to have that first moment with God, when God was not just a figure in religion classes or in the Bible but God became personal, a friend.

When Bartimaeus recognized Jesus, he still had a choice to make: act on that recognition or let it pass by.  Bartimaeus cries out, “Jesus, Son of David, have mercy on me!” He addressed Jesus by name and by title, Son of David, the messianic title reserved for the redeemer of Israel.   We cry out as well when we get to the last point, the straw that breaks the camel’s back.  We cry, “Help me, Jesus.” “Have mercy, Jesus” Or simply, “Jesus” “Got in Hiemel.”  “Mi Dios!”  We realize that only God can help us in whatever situation we are in. God’s grace not only gives us the ability to perceive God’s power and love. It also gives us the strength to respond to it. Unlike Bartimaeus however, we are not limited to a once in a lifetime response. We must continually respond to the gift of grace and power in our lives.

What is Jesus’ response to Bartimaeus? “Go; your faith has made you well.” It is interesting to see that Jesus says that it is Bartimaeus’ faith that produced his healing not Jesus’ faith that made him well.   Bartimaeus’ faith, and ours too, is not born out of nothing, it does not come out of thin air, but it is a response to the love and grace of God.  It was Bartimaeus’ response to God’s initial contact through grace that made him well – restored his sight. Our response to the power or grace is also a restoration and a reconnection.  We might not be blind, physically but spiritually we may be walking around aimlessly. Our spiritual vision may be black as night, but God still initiates the reconnection through grace and gives us the freedom to respond or reject His gift.

That’s the end of the story, right? Not quite. What does Bartimaeus do once he has been restored?  Immediately he follows Jesus on the way.  It is not the end, but the beginning of a journey.  We don’t receive the fire of the Holy Spirit, the connection with God, only to sit it in the corner or in the closet, or even the chapel.  Instead we must take up the invitation and follow Jesus on the way.  The question facing us is: Am I going to do for God today, or for myself?  Am I going to spend today in connection and in conversation with God or am I going to satisfy my own selfish wants and desires?  Our blind eyes opened, we have a unique opportunity to spread God’s love in the world.  Lord, we pray: open our eyes and strengthen us to following your prompt to be an expression of your compassion and mercy in our world.

                                                                                                                        By    Sister Roberta Bailey, O.S.B.
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Filed Under: Homily, Prayer Tagged With: Bartimaeus, Blind, Faith, family, God, Healing, Jesus, Mark

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