Jesus has come to destroy all the enemies of our fullness of life with God, and restore humanity’s trust in the love of the Father, which Adam and Eve had rejected. But he respects our freedom and waits for us to ask in trust, to open ourselves in trust to his grace and power, and to receive in trust all that he longs to give us.

Bartimaeus is a blind beggar. His physical eyes see no light; but his eyes of faith see clearly that Jesus is the Promised One, the one who will reestablish the Davidic Kingdom, the Messiah, his only hope. So he cries out for help, even as others tell him to stop, “Jesus, son of David, have pity on me!” His trusting faith is the source of his persistence. And Love stops for him and calls him. In response, Bartimaeus throws off the one thing that belongs to him, the only protection he has, the one thing he can depend on – his cloak – and allows himself to be led to Jesus. Jesus asks him what he wants and listens to his desire. “Master, I want to see,” Bartimaeus says simply, in confident faith. And with a word from the Lord, he can see.

What Bartimaeus does next is the key to understanding the whole story. On receiving his sight, we are told, Bartimaeus “followed him on the way.” When faith is engaged, when we trust fully, when our eyes are opened, we must follow the Lord.

Where do we need Christ’s healing in our lives, our minds, our hearts? Where is our faith weak, our trust flailing, our eyes clouded? What do we need to lift up in trusting faith to Love’s powerful gaze? What cloak of self-sufficiency do we cling to, that might be holding us back from a blind confidence in God’s loving Providence? How willing are we to throw it aside to be led to Christ?

Lord, fill us with the same trusting faith in Your Love that Bartimaeus had, and give us the courage to cry out to You with our needs, knowing that You are the One Who can do all things!

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