Jesus said to him in reply, "What do
you want me to do for you?"
The blind man replied to him, "Master, I want to see."
The blind man replied to him, "Master, I want to see."
Mark 10:51 - 52
American novelist and essayist Flannery
O’Connor (1925 – 1964) was a Catholic writer who wrote from the depth of the
American South and indeed from the depth of her faith. Her writing often
focused on questions of morality and ethics. What makes her writing
exceptional, however, is ‘how she challenged the self-assurance of her Catholic
and secular readers. Her stories expressed her sense of sacrament and of the
possibility of redemption in the midst of the strangeness of ordinary life’
(Richard O’Brien).
It is not that either sacrament or the
sacred are missing from our ‘ordinary lives’, it is usually because we fail to
see it there. For the community of Mark the evangelist, Jesus reveals himself,
sometimes ‘secretly’, until his mission is fully unveiled. Indeed it is more
through action than word that Jesus is truly revealed.
The story of Bartimaeus (Mark 10:46 – 52),
in fact, epitomizes the way in which Mark ‘feeds out’ information – the crowd
is trying to keep this blind beggar from calling our for Jesus. He is rebuked
but he persists in calling out for Jesus, and he reveals Jesus’ messiahship in
calling out, ‘Jesus, son of David!’ Bartimaeus is healed and he follows Jesus.
There are many levels to this story from
the literal to the allegorical, but I like the idea, that like Flannery
O’Connor, there is a narrative waiting to be told.
Undoubtedly we all want to have sight, but
to see and understand, to have
insight is something that we learn. On 21 October Pope Benedict XVI canonized
seven new saints, including the first (north) American native saint, Kateri
Tekakwitha and the second Filipino saint, catechist Peter Calungsod. And while
these lives have extraordinary merit and now recognition, it is in our own
ordinary lives that Jesus walks with us. His vitality reaches into our acts of
charity through to our concern for our neighbor and our care for the poor, into
our conversations with the lonely, into the advice and encouragement of our
children and those we mentor, into the generosity with which we give our
talents to the community and into the joyfulness in the way we accept what life
gives us.
It takes insight to see the hand of God at
work, as each action ‘feeds out’ a sense of his presence, and those who
recognize that hand do call out, ‘Jesus, son of David!’ and in doing so
acknowledge the redeeming power of God, of the possibility of salvation. It is
in the strangeness of our ordinary lives that God is truly revealed.
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