Pentecost 23B (Reformation Sunday)
October 27, 2024
Mark 10:46-52
INTRODUCTION
Usually on Reformation Day, we get two sets of texts to choose from: the regular lectionary texts, or the Reformation themed texts. I chose a little of each – the first two readings and Psalm are from the Reformation set. They talk about Christian freedom and grace and all those things Lutherans love to talk about. But I stuck with the Gospel reading from Mark, which provides some closure to the series of gospel readings we’ve been hearing these past weeks.
Here's why: it has to do with an important part of Mark’s structure. This Gospel is sort of in two acts, with a hinge in the middle. The first half, is all about healing and teaching. The last six chapters are the Passion story, which for Mark is the point of this whole story. And in the middle, we get this hinge, chapters 8-10, which are really at the heart of saying who Jesus is. These three chapters include Jesus’ three passion predictions, and several difficult teachings about discipleship, which the disciples misunderstand every time. We’ve been working through these chapters the past 6 weeks or so.
Bookending this centerpiece hinge, are two stories in which Jesus heals a blind man. In the first, it’s a bit of a false start (the guy says, “I see people, but they look like trees walking.”). In contrast, the second, which we’ll hear today, Bartimaeus immediately understands and springs up to follow Jesus. Immediately following this story, Jesus will walk triumphantly into Jerusalem, as Mark begins telling the story of Jesus’ Passion.
Though recovery from blindness can be a problematic metaphor, it is also a powerful one. The point of these bookending stories is that Jesus has, over these weeks, brought clarity to his mission and to the role of discipleship. And we will see today, not only in the story of Bartimaeus but in all of our readings, that such clarity brings restoration, renewal, understanding, healing, and hope.
Blind Bartimaeus hears Jesus coming – as you listen today, listen for Jesus’ hope and renewal for you. Restored Bartimaeus springs up to follow Jesus – as you listen today, consider how you will approach Jesus, the source of life. Let’s listen.
"Bartimaeus," by Gurdon Brewster. http://www.gurdonbrewster.com/gbbartimaeus.html |
[READ]
Grace to you and peace from God our Father and our Lord Jesus Christ. Amen.
“Throwing off his cloak, Bartimaeus sprang up and came to Jesus.”
I have been geeking out about this short story all week, but this is the line that keeps capturing my attention. It’s really a fascinating story, serving as both a bookend to this section of Mark in which we learn some important things about who Jesus is, and as a gateway into Part 2 of Mark’s Gospel (the passion narrator). In the very next scene, Jesus will enter Jerusalem, and everyone will be throwing aside their cloaks onto the roadway, and calling Jesus “son of David” just like Bartimaeus does. There’s all kinds of neat scholarship around his name – he is the only person Jesus heals who is named, and his name is said twice, since Bartimaeus means “son of Timaeus.” (See one interpretation HERE.) Bartimaeus also has parallels to characters all throughout the Gospel – the blind man who started this section back in chapter 8 who did not immediately regain his sight, the rich man from a couple weeks ago (more on the later), James and John from last week (to whom Jesus asks the same question, “What do you want me to do for you?” and they get it wrong), the naked man who runs away during Jesus’ walk to Golgatha, and some scholars even believe the angel clothed in white who meets the women at the tomb is Bartimaeus, now fully clothed once again in a baptismal garment. I mean trust me, this story is a Bible nerd’s dream.
Yet I keep coming back to this strange little detail Mark includes: “throwing off his cloak, he sprang up and came to Jesus.” Why would Mark, known for his brevity and rapid-fire storytelling style, pause to give us this detail?
I think Bartimaeus’s cloak can tell us a lot, both about stewardship, as we are now just over halfway through our fall stewardship campaign, and about our celebration of Reformation Day, and about a life of faith more generally. Come along, let’s explore!
First, let’s go back to earlier in this chapter, the story we heard a couple of weeks ago: the story of Jesus and the rich man. The man comes to Jesus asking what he must do to inherit eternal life, and do you remember what Jesus told him? He tells him to sell everything he owns and give the proceeds to the poor. And the man’s response to this difficult teaching? Mark tells us “he went away grieving, for he had many possessions.” Now here at the end of that same chapter, we have another man who is the opposite: he is poor, a beggar, he is blind, and he has a single possession to his name – this cloak, which serves as his warmth, his bed, and the place where he gathers money, so, his livelihood. It is everything. And he’s opposite in another way: where the rich man has so much he can’t bear to give it up, Bartimaeus doesn’t just “leave” is sole possession, he “throws it aside.” He is eager. He sees (or rather, hears) someone who can give him the life he longs for. The rich man asked Jesus how to get the life he wanted, but Bartimaeus knows before he asks: life is with Jesus, not the cloak.
I don’t know about you, but I’m a lot more like the rich man in this comparison. I’m much more likely to depend upon my possessions to satisfy me. I’m more likely to put my trust in things I can see concretely right before me – my bank account, my property, certain people. But maybe that’s the difference between me and Bartimaeus – I rely on what I can see… but he can’t see. He isn’t distracted by all the things demanding his attention. So he relies on the Jesus he hears, the Jesus he feels, who is active around him, the Jesus who promises him life, who makes him whole.
Now, I can’t (and don’t want to) give up my sight, but there are other things I can do to actively put my trust in Jesus, and one of them is what this stewardship season is all about: generosity! Letting go! And it’s why we ask you to state your intent for giving: the statement of intent form for how much you will give to the church does help us, practically speaking, but it is also a way to make a promise to God, a way to say, “I do trust you. I trust you so much that I’m willing to throw aside this bit of security, and perhaps, give a little more than I originally planned, even a little more than is comfortable at first, so that I will put my trust in you, instead.” In pledging to give to God through St. Paul’s, we are, in this way, throwing our cloaks, our visible security, aside, in favor of trusting Jesus.
Of course, this metaphor applies in more ways than just money, and we would do well to reflect on this Reformation Day on some of those ways. Mark’s Gospel often uses the cloak as symbolic of a dramatic shift, often toward a new way of life. Maybe that shift is or needs to be a financial one – thinking differently about where we find our security, and placing our treasure where we want to see our heart go, and see, in turn, how our heart changes or reorients. This is certainly a powerful shift, and a concrete one, and it is why financial generosity is such an essential spiritual practice.
Or perhaps the cloak that needs to be cast aside, is in a perspective or belief about something controversial. As the election nears and voting begins, people are digging their heels in on their opinions, but what would happen if we simply listened to why someone believes the way they do? It likely won’t change our opinion, but it could at least help us understand where they are coming from and grow compassion in our hearts.
Or maybe we need to cast aside the cloak of judgment, whether that judgment is of ourselves, or of others, or of our circumstances. That judging voice we all know so well, that labels things as stupid, or silly, or bad – it is the cause of so much stress, and it would happily stifle our joy if we let it! Maybe it is time to cast that voice aside, by recognizing it in action, naming it, and then taking a different route.
What cloak do you as an individual need to cast aside? What cloak do we as a congregation, or even as a whole Church, need to cast aside?
Bartimaeus knew that Jesus would bring him abundant life. On this Reformation Day, let us consider what old ways we need to leave behind, so that we, too, could walk toward that new and abundant life with the eagerness of a blind man about to be made whole.
Let us pray… Reforming God, we cling to what we believe will provide our security, sometimes missing the ways you are calling us toward something new. Give us the courage of Bartimaeus, that we might spring up, cast aside our cloaks, and come to you. In the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit. Amen.
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