First Presbyterian Church
November 3, 2024, Pentecost 22B
Revelation 21:1-6; Mark 10:46-52
Finally, Someone Gets It!
What makes a saint?
This isn't about the technical qualifications for sainthood in the Roman Catholic church, nor even those qualities that we attribute to "saints" in a more informal sense, the types who would be first in line to get into that Holy City depicted in our verses from Revelation. Maybe you've seen the paintings, utterly pure-looking with eyes cast longingly upward, as if in constant seeking prayer. Even when the painting is depicting the martyrdom of such a saint, you can count on those eyes being directed piously upward.
This is, of course, not a tradition in which all corners of the church participate. Presbyterians, for example, don't "do" saints; if they did, however, you could probably find a large swell of support for one Rev. Fred McFeely Rogers, once ordained by a presbytery in the Pittsburgh area with a charge to minister to children and their families through the media. You might have heard of that show, ultimately titled Mister Rogers' Neighborhood.
So what is it about Mister Rogers, for example, or about anyone who comes to have so touched so many with good, to the point of being so highly regarded by so many?
Perhaps in its simplest form, these "saints" get it, in ways that so many of us do not.
The gospel of Mark gives us a lot of examples of Jesus’s disciples demonstrating that they just don’t get it. Chapters 8-10 in particular bring this point about the disciples home with extra force, as they falter again and again in the face of Jesus’s repeated insistence on his coming suffering and death. Even the rare occasion of one of them seeming to “get it,” Peter’s proclamation of Jesus as the Messiah back in chapter 8, is immediately followed by Peter’s demonstration that he really doesn’t get it. As we noted two weeks ago, Jesus isn’t going to give up on them, since at that point he is literally in the process of giving his whole life, his very being, his soul for them. Still, you have to figure that it got frustrating.
We (along with Jesus) finally get a break from this relentless downer streak in today’s reading, when at long last we encounter a person who, in ways that are rare in this gospel, gets it. And it’s a person you might least expect to do so, to boot.
This passage begins curiously, with the terse statement that “they came to Jericho” followed immediately by the declaration that “as he (Jesus) and his disciples and a large crowd were leaving Jericho…”. What happened in Jericho? Is this like that popular line that got its start in TV commercials, the one about how “what happens in Vegas stays in Vegas”? What happened in Jericho that suddenly there is this large crowd traveling along with Jesus and the disciples? What do they think is going to happen, so that they choose to drop whatever they’re doing and follow Jesus? What do they want from Jesus? Do they get it any better than the disciples do?
Whatever the case may be, this newly enhanced crowd is making its way out of Jericho and comes within the range of a common fixture, one we ourselves can see often enough: a beggar on the side of the road. Mark gives us his name, Bartimaeus, and also helpfully translates the Aramaic name to tell us that he is “son of Timaeus.” We also learn that Bartimaeus is blind.
Somehow, in the hubbub of the crowd, Bartimaeus picks out the fact that this person passing by is the one called “Jesus of Nazareth.” At this he springs into action. Notice that in his calling out, he doesn’t cry out to “Jesus of Nazareth,” but to “Jesus, Son of David.” Now that sounds like a common enough reference to us Christians two thousand years later, but this is the first time that term is used in the whole gospel of Mark. The second time it comes up is in the next verse. The only other time it appears is a couple of chapters from now, when Jesus is in dispute with some of the religious scribes and authorities. And as far as Mark is concerned, that’s it. It’s not a typical name for Jesus, at least not in this gospel, and that tells us right away something about Bartimaeus.
In a way that almost nobody in this gospel has shown so far, Bartimaeus gets it.
To call Jesus “Son of David” is to tap into some of the deepest, longest-held prophetic teaching of Judaism at this time. It reaches back, obviously, to one of the most revered figures in Hebrew scripture. It ties Jesus not only into a royal line, but also into one of the most treasured promises of that scripture, the promise of a deliverer, a redeemer, who would come to save his people Israel. A Messiah, in other words.
We can’t claim that Bartimaeus gets everything, but he gets that much, and determines to call out to this Son of David. Getting shushed and shamed by the crowd (beggars weren't supposed to be this noisy) only jacks up his determination that much more. He calls out “Son of David, have mercy on me!” even more loudly.
And Jesus stops.
The crowd, quite likely, grows quiet at this unexpected stop.
Jesus says, “Call him here.”
The crowd, up to now the ones shushing and shaming Bartimaeus, now calls him forward, and Bartimaeus does not hesitate. He throws off his cloak – quite likely his only earthly possession – and springs up from his blind-beggar position and makes his way to Jesus.
Jesus says, “What do you want me to do for you?”
We’ve heard this before, just a few verses earlier in this chapter, when James and John come to him with their request for seats of honor in glory, a request born of their spiritual blindness. That’s what Jesus asks them, and Jesus asks that question again here, to a man pleading from his position of physical blindness.
Bartimaeus keeps it simple. “My teacher, let me see again.” Notice: my teacher. Not the generic “Teacher” more commonly heard throughout this gospel, even from Jesus’s disciples. My teacher. Again, to a degree not seen so far in this gospel, Bartimaeus gets it. We still don’t fully understand just how much he gets it, not quite yet, but somehow, more than what we’ve seen so far, Bartimaeus gets it.
And Jesus seems to realize this. The last time he restored a blind man’s sight, back in chapter 8, the process was rather involved: spitting in the dirt to make some mud (sounds like an awful lot of spitting), applying that mud to the blind man’s eyes, then repeating the touch when the man reported seeing people looking like trees walking around. Not this time. The striking reply comes: “Go; your faith has made you well.” Then, Bartimaeus could see – no rinse-and-repeat necessary. One moment he couldn’t see, the next he could.
Still, though, that wasn’t the final evidence that this once-blind man understood. That comes in the final phrase; once Bartimaeus had regained his sight, he “followed him on the way.” So far as we are told he didn’t even pick up his cloak. Leaving behind what, again, was probably all he owned, he followed Jesus. If this sounds like an inverse echo of the story of the rich man from earlier in this chapter, the one who left sorrowing at the thought of selling off all he owned, you’re right. Unlike that rich man (so far as we know), Bartimaeus gets it, and not only does he get it, but he also acts upon that understanding.
Maybe this is our caution for the day. Whatever image of "saints" we may carry around with us, be they the pious ancient saints of those paintings or the ever-so-upright "saints" of our more recent church history, they probably don't include a blind beggar sitting on the side of the road. And yet it was exactly that man who "got it," and acted upon it, when so few others did.
For, finally, the one who got it, and what he teaches us, Thanks be to God. Amen.
Hymns (from Glory to God: The Presbyterian Hymnal): #326, For All the Saints; #517, Hear, O Our Lord, We See You; #772, Live Into Hope