The Blind Leading The Way

Mark 10:46-52

They came to Jericho. As [Jesus] and his disciples and a large crowd were leaving Jericho, Bartimaeus the son of Timaeus, a blind beggar was sitting by the roadside. When he heard that it was Jesus of Nazareth, he began to shout, “Jesus, Son of David, have mercy on me!” Many sternly ordered him to be quiet, but he shouted even more, “Son of David, have mercy on me!” When Jesus heard him he stood still and said, “Call him here.” So they said to the blind man, “Take heart. Get up. He’s calling to you.” Throwing off his cloak, the blind man sprang up and came to Jesus. Jesus said to him, “What is it you want me to do for you?” He said to him, “My teacher, let me see again.” And Jesus said to him, “Go. Your faith has made you well.” And immediately, he regained his sight and followed him on the way.


I want to think about the miracle of Bartimaeus differently this time around than I ever have before. And I want to start by wondering a pretty simple thing. What if there wasn’t anything “WRONG” with Bartimaeus? Think about that for a minute. What if there wasn’t anything “WRONG” with Bartimaeus? Yes, he’s blind. Sure, he wanted to see again. Yes, Jesus gives him what he asks for. But what if it doesn’t have nearly as much to do with what Bartimaeus needed as with what everyone else who was there to witness this miracle back in the day – needed to see, in the end? (And you and I, too, of course.)

What I mean is – and some of you have heard me talk about this in the context of other healing miracles before – the First Century world view, the limited scientific understanding, the lack of medical wisdom of the day led people to view anyone with a physical difference or illness or so-called “disability” as sinful in some way; broken somehow; under judgement, even, by the God they supposedly offended in some way.

And as silly as that seems to us now – to assume that a person who is blind or deaf or sick is being judged and punished by their lack of a sense or by some kind of illness – as silly as that sounds, I wonder if we don’t still manage to approach this story with that same mentality when we presume there’s something wrong with Bartimaeus; or at least that he’s lacking something – that he’s less than – because he can’t see with his eyes. We able-bodied people … you and I with typical abilities and intact faculties and all of our modern-day wisdom, scientific understanding and medical insight … still might be failing to really see the point of this miracle and the challenge for us in this story.

You and I, so wrapped up in and blind to our own privilege as part of the majority – people who can see with our eyes, in this case, anyway – make all kinds of assumptions about Bartimaeus’ desire to regain his sight. We make some pretty self-centered presumptions about the source of his longing. Like, that his life is less than… that he’s missing out on so much that we enjoy. What a pity. How sad. What a shame it is not to be able to see. “What a shame it is not to be able to see.” Do you notice how close that notion is to the ancient worldview and limited understanding that connects SIN and SHAME to differing abilities, so-called “disabilities,” and even illness. “What a shame…” Really?

And there’s a word for this in the 21st Century. It’s called ableism and it’s the discrimination of and prejudice against people with different abililities based on the belief that typical, majority-type abilities are superior. Ableism implies that people with differing abilities (notice I’m trying really hard not to call them “disabilities”) require “fixing” – or healing, if you will – and it often defines people and limits their status and potential as a result. In other words, they are “less than,” “inferior,” “other,” unless or until they find a way to be more like the rest of us. And praise be to God when that happens!

But, again, what if there’s nothing WRONG with Bartimaeus, just because he’s blind?

I ask this with the writing of Helen Keller in mind. Helen Keller, most of us know, lost her hearing and her sight when she was just 19 months old but eventually learned to read, write, and even speak thanks to the patient, faithful, wise, work of her teacher and friend, Anne Sullivan. (Among other things, Helen Keller published 12 books, was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom, and was elected to the National Women’s Hall of Fame.)

Anyway, I dug up a piece Helen Keller wrote in 1933 for The Atlantic, where she mused about how much we seeing people don’t see, don’t understand, or don’t appreciate about the world around us.

Simply put, Helen Keller wrote this, “…Recently I was visited by a very good friend who had just returned from a long walk in the woods, and I asked her what she had observed. ‘Nothing in particular,’ she replied. I might have been incredulous had I not been accustomed to such responses, for long ago I became convinced that the seeing see little.

“How was it possible, I asked myself, to walk for an hour through the woods and see nothing worthy of note? I who cannot see find hundreds of things to interest me through mere touch. I feel the delicate symmetry of a leaf. I pass my hands lovingly about the smooth skin of a silver birch, or the rough, shaggy bark of a pine. In spring I touch the branches of trees hopefully in search of a bud, the first sign of awakening Nature after her winter's sleep. I feel the delightful, velvety texture of a flower, and discover its remarkable convolutions; and something of the miracle of Nature is revealed to me. Occasionally, if I am very fortunate, I place my hand gently on a small tree and feel the happy quiver of a bird in full song. I am delighted to have the cool waters of a brook rush through my open fingers. To me a lush carpet of pine needles or spongy grass is more welcome than the most luxurious Persian rug. To me the pageant of seasons is a thrilling and unending drama, the action of which streams through my fingertips.”


Bartimaeus was like Helen Keller in this way. See, blind Bartimaeus already saw and knew, he perceived and understood things the world around him was so very blind to. It matters that he so loudly and clearly and defiantly cried out to Jesus by name, calling him “Son of David.” This is the first and only time in all of Mark’s Gospel that anyone identifies Jesus by this title that carries with it so much weight, and history, and power and faithfulness. Bartimaeus identifies Jesus as the promised Messiah, The Son of God, The Savior of the world, and all the rest. Even without his eyes, Bartimaeus could see and know, understand and appreciate just exactly who Jesus was.

In other words, there was absolutely nothing WRONG with Bartimaeus. Bartimaeus isn’t the one who needed to see differently. It was everyone else who was blind to what mattered – to who Jesus was – to what God was up to in and for the sake of the world.

So, I can’t help but wonder if Bartimaeus didn’t want to see again – not because he missed his vision – but because he was treated so differently because of what he lacked by the world’s estimation. He was relegated to begging by the roadside after all, very likely alongside the other outcasts of his day – the widows, people who were crippled, deaf, sick with leprosy, mentally ill, and more. And who wouldn’t want to be liberated from that kind of exclusion; that sort of discrimination; that measure of unmitigated, unmerited, unbearable shame?

So, I imagine his plea to Jesus, “My teacher, let me see again,” was as much – or more – about being freed from his oppression, liberated from his “otherness,” plucked out of his poverty, as it was about simply, physically seeing. I suspect what was more powerful and appealing to Bartimaeus than being able to lay eyes upon the ugliness of the knuckleheads who treated him so poorly, was the prospect of being seen, himself, as a whole and worthy, valuable and loved child of God.

There was nothing WRONG with Bartimaeus. He was just different … a minority in a culture that refused to see, to accommodate, to make room for, and to love him – not in spite of his differences – but because of them, which is what Jesus did.

All of which is to suggest that this story isn’t just a story of hope for blind people, but a challenge for those who were silencing Bartimaeus that day when he got loud, shouting after Jesus for help. What if it’s more for the disciples who were just fine, following after Jesus on their way out of Jericho and on to the next town, but not paying attention to the likes of Bartimaeus, along the way. What if it’s for those who deemed Bartimaeus and the other blind guys, lepers, widows and lame ones outcasts or outsiders or worse. What if the ones who really need the miracle – who need to learn to see again and differently with the loving eyes of faith – are you and me?

What if we’re called to marvel, not that Bartimaeus became more like us? That seems kind of arrogant and privileged and simple, really. So what if we were to wonder – more humbly – what it would take for us to become more like him? What if we are called to marvel at the miracle of what he could see all along – even without his sight – and which we miss so much of the time, in spite of our own?:

…That you don’t need eyes to recognize love. That you don’t need sight to see God. That even when we have eyes and vision, we can miss what’s right in front of us. Even when we see, we don’t always pay attention. Even when we look, we miss what matters most a lot of the time.

What if we looked to and listened for what the “others” and the “outcasts” in our world were searching for – the blind, the brown, the Black; the poor, the imprisoned, the unpopular, the lost? And what if we wondered why? And what if we helped them find it? I think we might find ourselves along the way, behind the likes of Bartimaeus, and always following Jesus.

Amen

Squid Game

Mark 10:17-31

As Jesus was setting out on a journey, suddenly a man ran up and kneeled down before him and said, “Good Teacher, what must I do to inherit eternal life?” Jesus said to him, “Why do you call me ‘good’? No one is good but God alone. You know the commandments, ‘You shall not murder.’ ‘You shall not commit adultery.’ ‘You shall not steal.’ ‘You shall not bear false witness’ ‘You shall not defraud.’ ‘Honor your father and mother.’” The man said to Jesus, “Teacher, I have kept all of these since my youth.” Jesus, looking at him, loved him, and said, “You lack one thing. Go and sell all of your possessions and give the money to the poor and you will have treasure in heaven. Then come and follow me.” When the man heard it, he was shocked and went away grieving, for he had many possessions. 

Then Jesus turned and said to his disciples, “How hard it is for someone who is wealthy to enter the kingdom of God.” The disciples were perplexed by these words and Jesus said, again, “How hard it is to enter the kingdom of God. Truly I tell you, it is harder for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for someone who is rich to enter the kingdom of God.” The disciples said to one another, “Then who can be saved?” And Jesus said to them, “For mortals it is impossible, but not for God. For God all things are possible.”


Peter began to say to him, “Look, we’ve left everything and followed you.” Jesus said to them, “Very truly I tell you, there is no one who has left house, mother and father, sister and brother, children and fields – for my sake and for the sake of the good news – who will not also receive a hundredfold, now, in this age – houses, brothers and sisters, mothers and children and fields, with persecutions – and in the age to come, eternal life. For many who are first will be last and the last will be first.” 

Have you heard about “Squid Game,” yet? It’s the latest, hottest, hippest Netflix series all the kids are watching. (These are things you learn when you get locked-in with 20 teenagers, overnight on a Wednesday, which I did last week.) Anyway, the show is all about a contest where hundreds of players, from different walks of life, and each in their own kind of financial trouble, are kidnapped and carted off to an unknown location to play a set of children's games (like Red Light, Green Light), with the goal of winning billions South Korean dollars. (It takes place in South Korea.) The twist to this dark, titillating, horror/game show, is that losers get killed as part of each game and the prize money grows by millions of those South Korean dollars with each death that comes to pass.

I won’t recommend it – unless you want to know what your kids or grandkids may be watching – because I’ve only seen a few episodes. The vibe of it all is something like 1984 meets Mad Max meets Saw and War Games and Survivor.

Squid Game A.jpg
Squid Game C.jpg

It is SOOOO not for everyone – least of all the squeamish or faint of heart – for lots of reasons left best to the imagination here.

But it made me think about this morning’s Gospel because of how both – “Squid Games” and Jesus – make me wonder about the place and power of money in our lives. See, each of the contestants in Squid Games has been sought out for this deadly competition because of their debts and their desperation and their desire to “be saved” from their struggles in the world. Like the guy who approaches Jesus, you might say they’re looking for eternal life on this side of the grave and beyond – or at least they’re looking to save their own behinds and to survive another day. And like the contestants in the Netflix series, the guy who comes to Jesus has known the rules – and kept them – since his youth.

And the rules are as straight forward as a children’s game of “Red Light. Green Light.” ‘You shall not murder.’ ‘You shall not commit adultery.’ ‘You shall not steal.’ ‘You shall not bear false witness’ ‘You shall not defraud.’ ‘Honor your father and mother.’ And Jesus’ new, wannabe friend dares to suggest that he’s followed all of these rules.

But Jesus gives him more to think about. He tells him there’s a big something he’s been missing all along. Jesus says, “Even if you have kept them all, you’ve dropped the ball on a big one. Sell all your stuff and share the profits with the poor. Give it all away and you’ll win the game. Give it all up and you’ll have treasure in heaven. Give it all away and you’ll know what it really means to follow me.”

It was a hard thing to hear. It was hard for the man who asked the question – he left with his tail between his legs, remember – shocked and grieving. It was hard for the disciples, too. It left them ‘perplexed’ and ‘greatly astounded.’ So what does it do for you and me, this command to give it all away?

It’s not news, I hope. We talk pretty faithfully about stewardship and possessions and sharing what we have around here. And I hope most of us have heard that bit about how hard it is for a camel to go through the eye of a needle. And about how the odds of a rich person entering the kingdom of God are even slimmer.

We’ve heard all that before. I’ve preached about it many times over the years. But it’s always something that challenges my faith and my life whenever I consider it. I hope it does yours, too. My first temptation is to prove how rich I’m not. But, even though there are plenty of people who make more money than me, statistically, the vast majority of people on the planet will never see the wealth of food and money and possessions that are mine – or yours – as we sit here today.

Another temptation is to pull out the tithing chart and my tax returns and do the math. If Jesus really wanted to know, I could show him the 12% or so of my family’s income that we give to Cross of Grace every year. (And, in case you think I’m bragging about that, please know that I’m quick to point out that that 12% isn’t anywhere close to the “all” that Jesus asks for this morning.)

But Jesus doesn’t want us to compare stuff or crunch numbers or run statistics. Jesus just wants us to give generously. It’s as simple as that. Jesus wants us to share what we have, to help our neighbor and to rid ourselves of the money and the things that threaten to keep us from a real relationship with God – and from real relationships with one another, too.

Think for a minute about how the world around us uses money to keep us from each other – the haves from the have nots; the rich from the poor from the middle-class; the Republicans from the Democrats and everyone’s pretend surprise and outrage over “the debt-ceiling”; and all the other ways we have of drawing lines of separation and building walls of division between one another just by crunching the numbers.

So the thing that always stands out for me about this story, is that moment when Jesus first responds to the man who kneels before him. When the man suggests that he’s done all there is to do in order to inherit eternal life – that checklist of commandments he’s kept since his youth? – Jesus looks at him, loves him and then tells him to give all of his possessions away to the poor. He looks at him, loves him, and then tells him what it will take to experience the kingdom of God – not then and there, but here and now.

All of his talk about giving away stuff and money and more for the sake of others, is said always and only out of love where Jesus is concerned, because he knows it will change everything for whoever believes it and for whoever has the faith and courage to give it a go.

What it means is that our contentedness won’t be tied to the things we own. What it means is that our joy won’t be determined by the stock market. It means our success won’t be measured by the standards of anyone but us and the God of our salvation. It means we won’t compete with or compare ourselves for one more minute to our neighbors, or to our co-workers, to our classmates, or to our cousins, either.

It means we’ll be liberated to be simply grateful for all that God has given to us. And if you’re sitting here now, in this place, at this time, in those clothes, having rolled out of whatever bed you woke up in and arrived in whatever vehicle sits in that parking lot – then you have more to be grateful for – and more to give away, too – than most people in this world, no matter what you, or the world, does to try to convince you otherwise.

And what Jesus says to the man in this morning’s story, Jesus says to every one of us, just the same: that our lives will be changed for the better; that our relationship with God will be magnified immeasurably; that the world around us will be transformed into something like the Kingdom of God – right here and now – when you and I stop measuring ourselves by the standards of this world and start imagining that we’re already citizens of another.

See, Jesus doesn’t need our money as much as our eyes need to see it at work in the world – helping the poor, building up the Church, serving others. The Church doesn’t need our commitments as much as we need to make them. God doesn’t need our gratitude as much as God wants our hearts to be transformed when we humble ourselves enough to offer it. And when we achieve that kind of generosity…that kind of service to others… when we break down the dividing walls of wealth and poverty, of winners and losers among us…we get a glimpse of the kingdom of God right where we live.

I don’t know how “Squid Game” will end. I’m not banking on a profound, life-changing epiphany to come from it all. But it’s always worth wondering about the power and place of wealth in our lives – something Jesus talked and taught about more than anything else, in all of Scripture. And it’s worth hearing, again, God’s call to use our resources – all of them or as much of them as we can manage – for the blessing and benefit of the world.

And mostly, it’s worth remembering that every bit of this calling comes from God’s love for us, God’s desire for us to share and to experience that kind of love for the sake of others, and God’s promise that eternal life has already been won, on our behalf so that, because we know how THIS story ends – with resurrection, grace, and good news – we can live differently – more generously, more courageously, more kindly, more full of hope, in the meantime.

Amen