Mark 10:46-52 · Blind Bartimaeus Receives His Sight
Blind Beggars All
Mark 10:46-52
Sermon
by Erskine White
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... he began to cry out and say, "Jesus, Son of David, have mercy on me!" (Luke 21:28)

The town of Jericho was already 8,000 years old by the time Jesus and John the Baptist walked its streets. Think of it! Here in America, we were all excited a few years ago about our nation's bicentennial, our two hundredth birthday. Jericho was already 8,000 years old by the time of Jesus Christ. It remains today the oldest continually-inhabited city in the world.

Jericho was built by the Canaanites as a fortified city, but in 1250 B.C., Joshua came and captured it for Israel. If you remember the story (and the words of the old Negro spiritual), Joshus's men blew their trumpets "and the walls came tumbling down." Then the Israelites looted the city and burned it to the ground (Joshua 6) - their first conquest in the Promised Land.

The area surrounding Jericho is a dry and forbidding desert, looking more like a lunar landscape than a place for people to live and work. But the town itself is lush and rich like an oasis, because it has been fed through the centuries by the cool, clear waters of Elisha's Spring (cf. 2 Kings 2:19-22).

The sky overhead is a deep and cloudless blue. The roads leading in and out of the city are lined with date palm and bougainvillea trees, and exotic flowers of every color and description. Merchants on the street sell the sweetest fruits and melons you have ever tasted. In Jesus' day as in our own, Jericho stands out like a sparkling green jewel amid the stark, reddish-yellow dirt of the Dead Sea desert.

Jesus often came to this historic and colorful city as He was going to or from Jerusalem, which is just fifteen miles away. He knew Jericho well and the people there knew Him well. The gospels record several occasions when huge crowds came out to greet Jesus as He passed through town.

In this particular episode, our text says that Jesus was leaving Jericho for Jerusalem; in fact, He was on the way to His crucifixion, although no one but Jesus knew it at the time. A "great multitude" was standing alongside the road, waving and cheering Him as He walked by. We can easily imagine the scene.

Somewhere in the crowd was a blind beggar named Bartimaeus. "Jesus, Son of David," he cried out in a loud voice (loud enough to be heard over the noise of the crowd), "have mercy on me!"

Immediately, others in the crowd rebuked him, telling him to be quiet, but Bartimaeus cried out with even more determination: "Jesus, Son of David, have mercy on me!"

Why do you think the crowd tried to silence this blind beggar? Maybe they thought Jesus was too important to be bothered by the likes of Bartimaeus. Maybe they didn't want anyone obstructing their own view of the Master as He walked by. Maybe they were hoping for a little publicity and didn't want anyone distracting Jesus from making some fiery statement to the crowd; then, if Our Lord wasn't guilty of a thought that took more than twenty seconds to express, that is, if He could speak in twenty second television "sound bytes," perhaps they would all make the evening news.

I suspect the real reason was that they didn't see themselves in Bartimaeus. They didn't see that they were just like him, blind beggars all, each and every one in the crowd. "Jesus, Son of God, have mercy on me!" Which one of us couldn't say that, were we to see Jesus walking through our town today?"

Certainly, there are many of us who could make that cry for a physical ailment we are suffering. "Jesus, have mercy on me - cure this arthritis which brings me such pain! Cure my back, my lame legs, the breathlessness in my lungs, the cataracts in my eyes." We are living longer lives today, thanks to the wonders of technology and medicine which money can buy, but we are not necessarily living better or happier lives. As often happens in our materialistic culture, we confuse quantity in life with quality of life. "Jesus, Son of David, have mercy on me! I've had this condition for many years; won't You make me well?"

Yet even those who are in perfect health could cry out as a blind beggar did for the mercy of Jesus Christ. As there are many physical ailments which can afflict us, there are that many more spiritual ailments which likewise need healing if we are to live in the fullness of health and grace.

"Jesus, Son of David, have mercy on me!" I am a slave to lusts and passions of the flesh which keep my mind from thinking of You, my eyes from seeing You, my feet from running to You and my hands from touching You, which keep my spirit from resting in You. Daily I sink deeper under the relentless weight of my degrading habits. I trade the promises of eternity for the pleasures of the moment. I hate myself as I do it, but I do it anyway, again and again. Jesus, Son of David, look upon me, blind beggar that I am, and make me well again.

"Jesus, Son of David, have mercy on me!" I am consumed by the daily rages of bitterness and resentment. I remember every wrong ever inflicted upon me; I count up every debt and trespass against me. My spirit is driven by anger and I do not try to forgive. There are people I once loved that now I won't talk to. I tell myself that they no longer matter to me, but I think about them just the same. Instead of being freed in charity, I am crippled by callousness and I know You did not die for me to live this way. Jesus, Son of David, look upon me, blind beggar that I am, and make me well again.

"Jesus, Son of David, have mercy on me!" I worship the prides and pretensions of this world. I live for the things my money can buy, instead of the things my soul can only receive for free. I keep an anxious eye on my neighbor, worried that I may be falling behind on the ladder of success. My heart whores after the vain riches of this world while neglecting the greater riches of the spirit. I put corporation above communion and selfishness ahead of service, Jesus, Son of David, look upon me, blind beggar that I am, and make me well again.

"Jesus, Son of David, have mercy on me!" I am ruled by fear and my faith is half-hearted. I try to live as the Christian I am, but I am unwilling to do it all the way. I hold something back, for fear of what I might lose. I open some of the doors which are inside to let You come in, but I keep some of my inner doors locked as well. I declare the inner chambers of my heart off-limits to my Savior and so I fail to grasp the joy of salvation which comes from letting go. Jesus, Son of David, look upon me, blind beggar that I am, and make me well again."

In these and hundreds of other ways, we each can make our own personal pleas for Christ's help. And there is more, for what about the world as a whole? Is there not also a collective cry from the world: "Jesus, Son of David, have mercy on me!"

We have more than enough food to feed the world, but we let a quarter of our people starve. We have more than enough weapons to incinerate the earth, but we are too frightened to stop inventing new ones. We've been given a good and beautiful creation, but we treat it like a garbage dump for our short-term profit. If all the world's a stage and Jesus Christ is the script, then people everywhere are crying out today: "Jesus, Son of God, look upon us, a blind world begging; and make us well again."

Blind beggars all. Is it so hard to admit what we are, you and I, and our world as a whole? In this age of self-help religions and secular salvations, is it really so wrong to admit that we are blinder than Bartimaeus and in need of our Lord? To the secular man and woman, such a big dose of humility may be too hard to swallow, but to the Christian, it is just the medicine we need: "Jesus, Son of David, have mercy on me!"

It's important that we identify ourselves with Bartimaeus and recognize who we are, but it is equally important to remember how this story turns out, and the good news it brings to us.

First, we recall that when Jesus heard Bartimaeus' cry, our Lord stopped. He changed His plans. He delayed His journey, and in the midst of all those cheering, adoring people, Jesus stopped for the sake of one blind beggar.

He stops like that for us today. In this world, where we can so easily feel "folded, spindled and mutilated' like a number and not a name, where we can wonder whether our own individual cry for help isn't drowned out by the collective clamor and deafening din around us, Jesus stops to tend our need.

The message here is that each one of us is important to Jesus, and none of us are left behind. We matter to Him. As far as Jesus Christ is concerned, we will never be lost in the crowd.

If ninety-nine sheep are safely in the fold, the Good Shepherd will come after the one who is lost, even if that lost sheep is you or me (Matthew 18:12-14). If we are humble and honest enough to cry out to Him like Bartimaeus, He is concerned enough to stop and respond - to treat us at that moment as if we were all that mattered in the world. Isn't that good to know! Jesus is never to busy for us, and even more amazing: we are never too unworthy for Him to give us His time and love, we who are blind beggars by the side of the road.

We also recall what they said to Bartimaeus when Jesus heard his cry: "Take heart and rise; Jesus is calling you." Sweeter and more powerful words have never been spoken! "Take heart and be strong. Don't give up; keep the faith. Be of good courage and good cheer; Jesus is calling you!"

When Bartimaeus heard those words, he jumped up for joy because he knew that his redemption was drawing near. He knew that his long night of darkness was done and a new day's dawn begun. In fact, any of us blind beggars would do the same, because we know what Jesus can do - "Master, let me receive my sight. Master, see me through and make me strong. O Master, let me walk with Thee, just as I am, without one plea."

Finally, we recall how Jesus spoke to Bartimaeus in words every blind beggar longs to hear: "Your faith has made you well."

He tells us this about our faith even today. Our faith in Jesus will keep us on the right path when we are in danger of losing our way. Our faith in Him will keep us clear and certain when things seem cloudy and confused. It will keep us strong and victorious when our willpower is weak and our spirits feel defeated. Jesus didn't say to Bartimaeus, "Your good intentions" or, "The loudness of your voice" or, "Your perseverance has made you well." No, He didn't say that at all. "Your faith has made you well."

How do you live this faith? You keep your eyes set on Jesus and your desires fixed on Him. You keep thinking and praying and believing on Him, come what may. You keep acting like a blind beggar by the side of the road, calling to Him over and over again: "Jesus, Son of David, have mercy on me!"

Then suddenly He will stop. In the midst of the teeming multitudes, He will turn to you and let you know that right now, you are the most significant person in all the world to Him.

So, take heart and rise - all is not lost, because Jesus is calling you! He has picked you out from among the crowd to tell you that you matter; you are important. He has chosen you to let you know that your lonely voice is heard and your faith has made you well again. Blind beggars we all may be; but we believe in Jesus Christ, who comes to set us free. Amen

Pastoral Prayer

O Great and Good God, who sent Your Son to walk among us with eyes and ears and healing hands, make us more aware of the Bartimaeus within us. Help us to see ourselves as blind beggars too, that we may never let our pride stand between us and You. Make us more eager to wait by the side of the road, calling out our plea and confessing our need for You. Make us patient for Your reply, that we may gratefully receive Your many good gifts when our faith has made us well.

Most Righteous Lord and Judge, who loves justice and practices mercy, and who expects us to do the same, open our eyes anew to the beggars in our world today, the ones who have too little to eat, too little to wear, too little money to spend and no place to lay their weary heads. Make our ears more sensitive to their cries and our hands more generous to their need. Make Your church a place of succor and strength for those whom Jesus called "the least of these;" that those who now are last may someday be first in the eyes of the world, even as they are already first in the eyes of heaven. In Jesus' name we pray. Amen

C.S.S. Publishing Company, TOGETHER IN CHRIST, by Erskine White