Luke 18, 35-43
It happened as he approached Jericho: a certain blind man was sitting by the road begging. Hearing the crowd going by, he wanted to know what was happening, and they told him Jesus of Nazareth was passing by. He cried out in a loud voice: “Jesus, Son of David, have mercy on me!”
Those leading the way threatened him and wanted him to be quiet. But he cried all the louder, “Son of David, have mercy on me!”
Jesus stopped and had him led to him. And Jesus said to him, “What do you want that I should do for you?”
He said to him, “Lord, that I may look up and see again.”
And Jesus said to him, “Receive your sight. Through your faith and your trust, the power for healing has been awakened in you.” (Your faith has healed you.)
In that moment his eyes were opened. He followed Him and thus revealed the working of the divine within the human being--and all who saw it praised God.
August 21, 2016
Luke 18, 35-43
In today’s reading, a human being, blind and begging, hears Christ Jesus passing by. He recognizes an opportunity for healing. What he asks for is to be able to ‘look upward and see once again.’ This implies that he wants to ‘raise his sights’. It implies the restoration of something lost.
We can perhaps remember a time in our own lives, perhaps in childhood, when everything we looked at was kissed by the ineffable. Everything sparkled with a kind of gentle magic. Part of the underlying sorrow of adolescence is due to the loss of the numinous. A kind of blindness sets in that makes everything now seem common and ordinary, colorless.
What created the magic was a child’s lingering relationship to the living world of the divine spirit. We still partially saw through heavenly eyes.
It was part of the course of human evolution that we should lose this kind of connection in order to gain our freedom and self-awareness. The sense of being cut off and blind is a necessary step on the way to seeing again in a new kind of way.
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