ÿþ<HEAD> <meta name="description" content="Homilies and scholarly articles of a Catholic Priest."> <meta name="keywords" content="Catholic, Byzantine, Orthodox, Religion, Pope, Homilies, Sermons, Bible, Orthdox, Orthodoxy, Catholicism, OTR, Radio"> <TITLE>FatherMichael.com: Homilies according to the Roman & Byzantine Calendars</TITLE> <link rel="shortcut icon" href="linkicon.ico"> <BODY BACKGROUND="back.jpg" TEXT=#000000 LINK=#7c6262 VLINK=#7c6262 alink=#7c6262> <FONT FACE="Maiandra GD"> <STYLE TYPE="text/css"> <!-- /* $WEFT -- Created by: Michael Venditti (admin@fathervenditti.com) on 7/20/2016 -- */ @font-face { font-family: Maiandra GD; font-style: normal; font-weight: normal; src: url(MAIANDR2.eot); } @font-face { font-family: Maiandra GD; font-style: oblique; font-weight: normal; src: url(MAIANDR3.eot); } --> </STYLE> </HEAD> <p align=center><img src="header_king2.jpg"> <table align=center border=0 cellpadding=10 cellspacing=0 rules=none width=95% cols=2> <tr> <td align=left valign=top width=20%><font face="Maiandra GD" color=#7c6262 size=+1><i>Lord, That I May See!</i> <p><hr noshade align=center color=#7c6262><p>The Thirtieth Sunday of Ordinary Time.<small><br><br>Lessons from the secondary dominica, according to the ordinary form of the Roman Rite:<br><br>" Jeremiah 31: 7-9.<br>" Psalm 126: 1-6.<br>" Hebrews 5: 1-6.<br>" Mark 10: 46-52.</small> <p><hr noshade align=center color=#7c6262><p>The First Class Feast of the Kingship of Our Lord Jesus Christ.<small>*<br><br>Lessons from the proper, according to the extraordinary form of the Roman Rite:<br><br>" Colossians 1: 12-20.<br>" Psalm 71: 8, 11.<br>" John 18: 33-37.</small> <p><hr noshade align=center color=#7c6262><p>The Twenty-Second Sunday after Pentecost; the Feast of the Holy Martyrs & Notaries Marcian & Martyrius; and, the Feast of the Holy & Just Tabitha the Merciful.<small><br><br>Lessons from the pentecostarion, according to the Ruthenian recension of the Byzantine Rite:<br><br>" Galatians 6: 11-18.<br>" Luke 16: 19-31.</small> </font><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><font face="Maiandra GD" color=#7c6262 size=-1><a href="index.htm">FatherVenditti.com</a></font><br><br><br> </td> <td valign=top width-80%><font face="Maiandra GD"><p align=justify><img src="blind.jpg" align=right hspace=15 vspace=5>8:18 AM 10/25/2015  We've spoken before about how the popular theology of the Jewish people in our Lord's time regarded a physical handicap as a sign of God's displeasure. The most explicit reference to this is when our Lord encounters the man born blind, and His own disciples ask him,  Master, was this man guilty of sin, or was it his parents, that he should have been born blind? (John 9: 2 Knox). The incident with Bartimæus, of which we read today, occurred much earlier in our Lord's public life, but we still see something of that same Semitic attitude toward physical imperfections, especially blindness, which explains a lot of the hostility our Lord receives from the Pharisees whenever He cures someone. The excuse given is usually something technical, such as violating the Sabbath; but, it's really the cure itself that's upsetting to them because it represents the forgiveness of sins. <br>&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;It's a little different than the so-called faith-healers of today, whatever you want to think of them. When some Protestant faith-healer lays his hands on someone and screams and shouts and appears to cure them of something, it may be a fraud and probably is but no one can accuse him of claiming to be God. That's not the case in the Palestine of our Lord's time: since the physical malady is believed to be the result of sin, it can only be taken away by God Who alone can forgive sin. That's not a problem for our Lord, since He is God, but it would be a problem for anyone who did not accept Jesus as God. <br>&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;So, there you have the context of this scene in which a blind man, sitting along the side of the road, hears a commotion and is told that Christ is passing by. Obviously, Bartimæus has heard something of Jesus before, and cries out, "Son of David, have mercy on me!" An interesting turn of phrase, is it not? Think back to our Blessed Lord's sermon in the Temple on the feast of Pentecost, and how many of those hearing Him rejected Him as the Messiah because the prophesy was that the Messiah had to come from Bethlehem, the city of David, and most people at the time thought that Jesus was a native of Galilee, a rather low-class area populated by a lot of non-Jews, prompting the Apostle Phillip's brother, Nathaniel, to say,  Can any good come from Galilee? I wonder how Bartimæus knew where Jesus was actually born. Perhaps it was because their meeting was destined from before creation. <br>&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;However he knew it, as soon as Bartimæus is told that Jesus is passing by, he calls out with an exclamation which pretty much implies that Jesus is the Messiah; which might explain why some of those around him are quick to try and shut him up. This event is very early in our Lord's public life; no one is talking about Jesus as the Messiah at this point. The only veiled reference to the idea was the prophesy of Simeon, made at the time of our Lord's Circumcision; but no one would have taken old Simeon seriously. <br>&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;I like to think that Bartimæus was granted a special Grace to call out the way he did & just like us, at times: we sit along the road of life, often blind to what's going on around us, when there comes a moment of Grace which ignites a longing for intimacy with Christ; and suddenly we realize that in this person or in that situation Christ is passing by. And, perhaps, we see, even if just for an instant, an opportunity to seek holiness; and we cry out in faith, "Son of David, have mercy on me!" <br>&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;But then comes the challenge, as it does for anyone who seeks after Christ passing by. When Bartimæus cries out, "Many of them rebuked him, says Saint Mark,  and told him to be silent" (10: 48 Knox). And who are these tempters which seek to keep us from Christ? Are they petty squabbles and arguments? Are they the easy way out? Are they pride and a desire for recognition? Are they a spirit of disobedience or the cancer of cynicism? Are they temptations against the flesh? Or are they simply spiritual laziness? We all have different ones or perhaps we have them all shouting at us to be silent, murmuring against our desire to meet Christ as he passes by. <br>&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;But Bartimæus doesn't listen. The temptations only stiffen his resolve to meet up with Christ passing by, and again he shouts out his messianic greeting. <img src="bartimaeus.jpg" align=left hspace=15 vspace=5>And Jesus was not hard of hearing: He heard him the first time. He ignored him the first time to see if he would persevere, just as He does with us. He waits a bit. He wants us to be convinced that we need Him; He wants us to persist in prayer in the midst of our troubles. And so St. John Chrysostom encourages us, saying, "Even if God does not immediately give us what we ask, even if many people try to put us off our prayers, let us still go on praying." <br>&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;Saint Mark goes on to say that  Jesus stopped and said, 'Call him' (10: 49 NABRE), but the word in Greek that Mark actually uses is <i>Æɽ®Ã±Äµ</i> ±PÄ̽, which is the imperative form of that verb. Jesus doesn't ask for this to happen; He commands it, because this is how Saint Mark understands the method by which Christ calls to us: our Lord is seeking us at every moment along that road from Jericho which is our life. Get up, He says to Bartimæus; get up off of your easy life, your petty selfishness, your silly little problems, your pride, your self-absorption, your obsession with your own desires. Get up from the ground where you are lying shapeless and without character. Muster some courage and shoulder the cross. Put on a spiritual maturity. <br>&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;The Evangelist goes on to tell us that Bartimæus  threw aside his cloak, sprang up, and came to Jesus (v. 50 NABRE). This is Mark's understanding of how we must respond to Christ's call: Christ cannot be reached without sacrifice. Every comfort and convenience that gets in the way must be thrown off; we must strip ourselves bare before Christ. Only after this has happened, does any real conversation with Christ begin; and, in this case, Saint Mark records it for us: "What do you want me to do for you?" & "Master, I want to see" (v. 51 NABRE). <br>&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;Now, Bartimæus, of course, is asking our Lord for physical sight, because he s blind. Sometimes we re blind, but in a different way. We want to see answers to life s questions. If we re beginning a new endeavor, like getting married or having our first child or even starting a new job, we want to see so there are no surprises; we want to know what to do so that it all works out. Life, of course, doesn t work that way; so, when we ask our Lord,  Master, I want to see, we have to be ready for whatever the answer might be. Like Bartimæus, we hear Christ passing by, we ask Him to stop and we invite Him into our lives, but there s no point inviting Him in unless we re ready to hear what He has to say. <br>&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;When we are perplexed by life s questions, we could do worse than to take Bartimæus as an example. Are we prepared to pray his prayer, ready to do whatever the Lord requires? As we sit by this proverbial road from Jericho which is our life, are we prepared to close our ears to the temptations that shout at us to be silent, to let Christ pass by without a word? Are we prepared to rise up off the ground of our spiritual shapelessness, to put on the character of spiritual maturity? Are we prepared to throw off whatever gets in our way? Do we have the courage to ask the Lord, face to face, to let us see what He asks of us? <br>&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;It is worth reflection because, at every moment of our life, in every situation in which we find ourselves or in any person we may meet along the way, Christ is passing by. <p align=center><img src="signature.jpg"> <blockquote> <font face="Maiandra GD" color=#7c6262><p align=justify><small>* In the extraordinary form, the last Sunday of October is always the Feast of the Christ the King. In the ordinary form, this feast occurs always on the last Sunday of Ordinary Time (the Sunday before Advent), this year falling on November 22nd.</small></font> </blockquote> <br><br> </tr> </table>