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30th Sunday in Ordinary Time (B) - October 24, 2021 - Seeing and following Jesus - the witness of blind Bartimaeus

A few weeks ago, we heard the account of the rich man who came up to Jesus seeking an answer to the question, “what must I do to inherit eternal life?”  He is struggling with the question of the meaning and purpose of his life.  Jesus invites him to sell what he has, give it to the poor, and follow him.  Jesus challenges him to recognize his attachment to earthly treasure and his reliance on his own abilities and to let go of them.  The man recognizes at some level that in Jesus is the answer to his fulfillment, but he won’t surrender himself to what his heart recognizes is true.  He doesn’t answer Jesus’ question that speaks to the correspondence between Jesus and his heart’s longing: “Why do you call me good?”  He goes away sad and doesn’t follow because he thinks his answer is found in a program, tool, or a piece of information that he can use, but that is not what Jesus is offering.  Jesus is offering a relationship - “come on a journey with me.”  But the rich man can’t see that God’s love is the answer.  He’s too near-sighted or under the false impression that he can satisfy his infinite desire by his own abilities and efforts.  He has a profound spiritual blindness. 

          We see a profound contrast between the rich man who meets Jesus as Jesus was setting out on a journey with the disciples and the blind man, Bartimaeus, who meets Jesus as Jesus and the disciples are almost at the end of their journey to Jerusalem.  This episode becomes a way for Jesus to reveal to the disciples that it takes a journey with him - an ongoing relationship with him - a willingness to follow him - for them to come to “see” who Jesus really is.  Bartimaeus is a beggar.    Unlike the rich man, he seeks Jesus from a position of poverty, including spiritual poverty.  It is only from a position of need that we recognize Jesus as our fulfillment.  He cries out, “Jesus, Son of David, have pity on me.”  He recognizes in Jesus not just a “good teacher” (as the rich man addressed Jesus as someone who knows and can give the right answer) but that Jesus is the “Son of David”, i.e., in Jesus and with Jesus lies the fulfillment of the promises of God.  He asks not for a plan or a program but for the nearness of God and his merciful love:  “Jesus, Son of David, have pity on me.”  Jesus hears this cry of faith.  He stops for Bartimaeus.  Jesus sends his disciples to call Bartimaeus.  “Take courage; get up Jesus is calling you.”  The energy to follow Jesus does not come from our own strength and abilities but the realization, like Bartimaeus, that God is calling me.  That Jesus has stopped for me.  He wants me.  It is an experience of God’s mercy that I am wanted, loved, and desired by God even when I have nothing to offer.  I am needy yet still loved. “He threw aside his cloak, sprang up, and came to Jesus.”  Here we see Bartimaeus doing what the rich man was unable to do.  He throws aside his cloak, which, for the poor beggar, would have been all that he had - his only possession - his only protection.  The ability to let go of our possessions comes from recognizing Jesus as the one who satisfies our heart.  Recognizing the love of God is what enables us to let go of our possessions and our possessiveness and reliance on our own strength.  Simply dispossessing ourselves of our stuff, as if we are working a program, is not going to fill us automatically with God’s love or fill us with joy.  (Often the opposite happens).  The love of God has to come first.  The rich man missed Christ’s merciful gaze on him - that Jesus looked at him and loved him.  He only heard the command, “sell what you have.”  Unless we are responding to love, the commands are too much to bear.  When Jesus asks the blind man, “What do you want me to do for you?”, Bartimaeus expresses the desire of his heart: “Master, I want to see.”  This is not merely a request for physical healing but an expression of faith: “I want you to fulfill the promises of God in my life”.  One of the promises associated with the coming of the Messiah is that the eyes of the blind would be opened.  He want to see God.  When we recognize God with us - his personal love for us (this is the response of faith), accepting our vocation and following him can be done without hesitation.  “Immediately he received his sight and followed him on the way.” 

          One of the nuances of this episode that I think is incredibly significant is the role of the crowd who at first tell Bartimaeus to be silent.  All of us have a desire for God in our heart.  We are made for communion with God, but our culture, in subtle and not so subtle ways, tries to suppress that desire and reduce what it means to be human to something that is merely biological, or it tries convince us that all our desires can be met by worldly things.  Those who recognize that we are made for more and seek out God can feel very lonely and confused in this world.  Jesus, hearing the cry of Bartimaeus, tells the crowd, including his disciples, “Call him.”  When I was living in this situation of knowing I was made for more but not sure what the restlessness in my heart meant and how it could be resolved, several people, some I was friendly with and some I hardly knew at all, said to me, “Have you ever thought of becoming a priest?”  “Have you ever thought of the priesthood?  I think you would make a good priest.”  When that happened more than a few times, it gave me the courage to get up and respond to God’s call.  I came to know that Jesus was calling me through people I met at Mass and other acquaintances.  Their questions helped me to see that there was an answer to my heart’s desire and that the priesthood was not a crazy idea that I thought up myself. 

          Our salvation comes at the point where the call of Jesus meets the cry of the human heart.  Jesus has not stopped calling, but we need help hearing the call.  We are helped by listening to our heart and being supported by the community of the faithful, the Body of Christ, who become instruments of Christ’s call and encourage vocations.  We don’t have to be perfect or have special abilities to be a priest or a religious.  Rather, Jesus, in his mercy, calls the weak and the humble, the beggars, those aware of their need and have nothing - those “beset by weakness” so that they can deal patiently with the ignorant and erring.  Only if we know God’s mercy can we be merciful.  It is through the experience of mercy that we know the call.  A vocation to the priesthood or religious life is not an honor that we take upon ourselves, but a path we follow only when called by God.  Let’s listen for his call, seek his face, and encourage others to do so as well.  When we recognize the great thing the Lord has done for us in his mercy, we are filled with joy.