Mark 10:46-52 · Blind Bartimaeus Receives His Sight
Playing Golf at Midnight
Mark 10:46-52
Sermon
by King Duncan
Loading...

A man named Charley Boswell was blinded in World War II while rescuing a buddy from a burning tank. Charley had always been a great athlete so, after the war, he took up golf. And he was astoundingly good at it. In short, Charley Boswell won the National Blind Golf Championship 16 times, once shooting a score of 81.

In 1958 Charley went to Ft. Worth, Texas to receive the coveted Ben Hogan Award in honor of one of the greatest professional golfers in history. Mr. Hogan agreed to play a round of golf with Charley. Charley said, “Would you like to play for money?”

Hogan said, “That wouldn’t be fair!”

Charley said, “C’mon, Mr. Hogan, are you afraid to play a blind golfer?”

Hogan was really pretty competitive so he said, “Okay, I’ll play for money. How much?”

Boswell said, “$1,000 per hole.”

Hogan said, “That’s a lot. How many strokes do you want me to give you?”

Boswell said, “No strokes. I’ll play you heads up.”

Hogan said, “Charley, I can’t do it. What would people think of me taking advantage of a blind man?”

Boswell smiled and said, “Don’t worry, Mr. Hogan, our tee time is tonight at midnight!”  (1)

Charley Boswell was a remarkable man. He did not let his disability deter him from having a fulfilling life.

Today we want to talk about another remarkable man who was also blind. Mark calls him Bartimaeus.

The story takes place just outside Jericho. When most of us think of Jericho we think of Joshua and the battle of Jericho. That, too, is a wonderful story, but it’s no more thrilling than the story of Bartimaeus. Remember Jesus and his disciples are making their way to Jerusalem for the Passover. Mobs of people are heading to Jerusalem for the same reason.

Jericho is very near to Jerusalem. That means the streets of Jericho were filled with people on their way to the Holy City. That was important to Bartimaeus. These were primitive times and--through no fault of his own--Bartimaeus was a beggar. Crowded streets meant that he might receive a generous day’s wage for his work as a beggar. As you are probably aware there were no government programs to aid a blind person in Bartimaeus’ day. Unless he had a family to look after him, life would be cruel.

By the way, do you know where the word “handicapped” comes from? Until relatively recent years there were no programs to help the disabled. Their only possible source of income was to stand beside the road with their cap in their hand begging. Thus the word “handicap.” Handicap is a demeaning word that we need to eliminate from our vocabulary.

There are many people in our society who have severe disabilities who are nevertheless quite productive. We discussed one of these last week, the amazing Stephen Hawking. People like Hawking certainly wouldn’t want a handout. All they want is an opportunity to be productive. If Bartimaeus were alive today, I believe he would be one of those productive people.

But in the day in which he lived opportunities for work for a blind man other than begging were nonexistent. At least on the day our story takes place the streets would be clogged with people, giving Bartimaeus the opportunity to receive more than the usual paltry amounts he normally received in alms.

Little did Bartimaeus realize that this would not be a normal day. An itinerant teacher was passing by the place where Bartimaeus was begging. His name was Jesus of Nazareth. Obviously Jesus’ reputation had spread to Jericho because Mark tells us that as soon as Bartimaeus heard that it was Jesus passing by, he began to shout, “Jesus, Son of David, have mercy on me!” Somehow he knew enough about Jesus to know Jesus was of the house and lineage of David and that Jesus could help him. Perhaps Bartimaeus was already one of those who believed Jesus was the Messiah.

His shouting made many of his fellow bystanders uncomfortable. They rebuked Bartimaeus and told him to be quiet, but he shouted all the more, “Son of David, have mercy on me!”

Then something dramatic happened. Jesus stopped and said, “Call him.” How did Jesus possibly pick Bartimaeus out in that crowd? How does Christ pick us out when we make our requests of him?

So they called to Bartimaeus, “Cheer up! On your feet! He’s calling you.” Then Bartimaeus did something quite unusual.  Mark tells us that “throwing his cloak aside, he jumped to his feet and came to Jesus.”

Scholars tell us that for a blind man to throw aside his cloak in a busy crowd was risky. What if he wasn’t able to retrieve it? His cloak may have been the only thing he, a blind beggar, owned. He depended on his cloak in winter to allow him to be out in the street begging. Could it be that Bartimaeus had enough belief in Jesus that he thought that perhaps he would be healed and would no longer need his cloak for begging? Or was he was so enthusiastic about Jesus calling for him that he simply acted without thinking?

“What do you want me to do for you?” Jesus asked him.

Bartimaeus said, “Rabbi, I want to see.”

Notice this. As extraordinary as this request was, Bartimaeus wasn’t asking for anything beyond that which you and I take for granted. He just wanted his eyes to work properly. He wasn’t asking for a cushy lifestyle. He wasn’t asking to meet the woman of his dreams. All he was asking was for the opportunity to be able to see so he could find a job and enjoy the beauties of life that all of us enjoy.

Jesus knew the kind of man Bartimaeus was and he granted Bartimaeus’ request.

“Go,” said Jesus, “your faith has healed you.” 

Mark tells us that immediately Bartimaeus received his sight and followed Jesus along the road.

There are some things about Bartimaeus that jump out at us as we read his story.

The first is, obviously, that he was disadvantaged. Many great people have fallen into that category. Bartimaeus probably was not only disadvantaged but, because of his disability, was also made to feel rejected. Even his name, Bartimaeus simply means “Son of Timaeus.” We don’t even know Bartimaeus’ given name. He was not even important enough for them to have called him by any name except “Son of Timaeus.”

Religious people were probably small comfort to his feelings of rejection. As you know from reading the New Testament, there were many people, in that time, who felt that a physical disability was a punishment by God. In their ignorance and superstition, they felt that someone surely sinned if a child was born with a condition such as blindness. How many hearts have been broken because of someone’s outrageous interpretation of adversity?

Probably Bartimaeus had to put up with some of this. He was blind, and he was a beggar, and he was probably a social outcast.

His situation was like that of a cat that was found in London. Its finders advertised to find the owners. Here’s how they described the cat in their advertisement:

“Found kitten with white paws and bib. Very affectionate. Answers to the name ‘Go Away.’” I like that: “Come here, Go Away.”

There must have been times when Bartimaeus felt his name was “Go Away.”  Most of us don’t like to be approached by a beggar. It makes us feel uncomfortable. We don’t know how to respond. It’s easier just to pass the beggar by.

Bartimaeus was disadvantaged. All of us are, to a certain extent. We all have our shortcomings. They may not be physical, they may be emotional. Perhaps one of the most dangerous disabilities is that of living a privileged life, because we never develop the mental, and emotional and spiritual toughness that is required for dealing with life situations.

Bartimaeus was disadvantaged, but look at something else; Bartimaeus was not defeated. When Jesus came by Bartimaeus started shouting, “Jesus, Son of David, have mercy on me.” And when Jesus called for him, he threw off his cloak and jumped to his feet. I love that picture: a blind man leaping in anticipation.

Bartimaeus was disadvantaged but Bartimaeus was not defeated. He was not going to let people tell him to be quiet. When he saw the opportunity for healing, he jumped at it. He wasn’t like the rich young ruler who came to Jesus asking, “What must I do to be saved?” then turned away sadly when he learned that he would have to choose between his wealth and Jesus. Neither was Bartimaeus like the man beside the pool of Bethesda, who, when Jesus asked him if he really wanted to be healed, made excuses for his situation.

Bartimaeus wanted to see, and he was willing to pay any price to achieve this goal. He would not be defeated. What a difference such an attitude makes in life. Thank God for the Bartimaeuses of this world who will not be denied by their circumstances.

 I read recently about the building of the famed Brooklyn Bridge in New York City. It is an engineering marvel. Completed in 1883 and known for its granite towers and steel cables, the bridge took 14 years to construct. At least two dozen people died in the process of building the bridge, including its original designer. (2)

That designer was an engineer named John Roebling. When Roebling came up with the idea of building this massive suspension bridge over New York City’s East River to connect the boroughs of Manhattan and Brooklyn, everyone thought he was crazy. But John and his son Washington set out to prove it could be done. After only a year of construction, though, John Roebling was killed in an unfortunate ferry accident. This left his son, young Washington, an inexperienced engineer, in charge of the bridge. But this is just one of the tragedies that befell the Roeblings.

Since part of the bridge was being built underwater, many workers began to suffer from decompression sickness due to the difference in pressure below the water and above it. Young Washington, himself, suffered from this condition to such an extent that he became paralyzed, deaf, and mute. Can you imagine what this would have been like? But this wasn’t going to stop him from building his father’s bridge.

Able to move just one finger, Washington devised a system by which he could tap on his wife’s arm and communicate with her. He continued to direct the construction of the bridge from his bed, giving instructions to his wife, who then passed them along to the crew building the bridge. For the next eleven years, Washington continued to work in this way, until 1883, when the Brooklyn Bridge was completed and opened for use.  And what a success it was! Today, 135 years later, the Brooklyn Bridge still carries more than 150,000 people each day safely to their destinations. (3)

You have to admire any person, who through faith and determination, refuses to be defeated. Blind Bartimaeus was one of those people. Bartimaeus was disadvantaged. But he refused to be defeated. And he was rewarded for his determination.

Jesus asked him, “What do you want me to do for you?”

Bartimaeus said to him, “Master! Let me receive my sight!”

Jesus said, “Go your way. Your faith has made you well.”

What a wonderful gift Christ gave him. You and I take our vision for granted. We shouldn’t. The gift of sight is one of the most precious gifts that God can bestow upon us.

James L. Kraft, in his book, Adventure in Jade, tells about a great turning point in his life. He was fourteen years old at the time, one of a family of eleven children living on a farm in Canada. Because of a serious problem with his eyes James could not distinguish objects clearly. He compared his vision to a blurry image of a boat seen from under water. Just as discouraging, his nearsightedness was so acute and so distressing that he also suffered continuously from furious headaches.

But, in the providence of God there was an eye doctor vacationing in the vicinity of James’ home. Young James began taking care of the eye doctor’s horse and buggy. Noting James’ extreme nearsightedness, the eye doctor insisted that the boy go to the city with him to be fitted with a pair of glasses as his gift. James did so. Here is how he described what the gift of improved vision meant to him. He said of the eye doctor, “He gave me the earth and all that was in it, completely in focus and beautiful beyond anything I could have dreamed . . . . I cannot think of another act of human kindness in my lifetime which can compare with his.” (4) Bartimaeus would have known how young James felt. His world was totally dark when Jesus gave him the gift of sight.

This is why he became a follower of Jesus. Listen to the last few words of this story: “Jesus said to him, ‘Go your way. Your faith has made you well.’ and immediately [Bartimaeus] received his sight and followed him on the way.”

Bartimaeus became a follower of Jesus Christ. How could he do anything else? All his life Bartimaeus had been blind and finally this man Jesus set him free. He could see. What greater gift could Jesus give him than that?

 Fanny Crosby, the great Gospel hymn writer, lost her sight as a child but in many ways she could see so much more than others.  Many feel that it was the story of blind Bartimaeus that inspired her to write the beloved hymn:

Pass me not, O Gentle Savior,
hear my humble cry.
While on others thou art calling,
do not pass me by.

It’s a wonderful hymn, but we need to know Christ will not pass us by if we are truly seeking him. He sees our need whatever it may be. Bartimaeus was disadvantaged, but he was not defeated. He came to Jesus and Jesus healed him. And he became a Christ follower. May we see what Bartimaeus saw--that Jesus is the giver of every good thing in life. I hope we are as wise as he. May we, too, follow Jesus all the days of our life as well.


1. Jon Forrest, https://www.fccclovis.com/blog/blindness.

2. https://www.history.com/topics/brooklyn-bridge.

3. Stawicki, Michal; Ingraham, Jeannie. 99 Perseverance Success Stories: Encouragement for Success in Every Walk of Life (Kindle Edition).

4. Charles W. Koller, Expository Preaching Without Notes (Grand Rapids: Baker Book House), p. 81.

Dynamic Preaching, Collected Sermons, by King Duncan