30th Sunday in Ordinary Time, Year B

We have two beautiful homilies by Father Hanly for
30th Sunday in Ordinary Time, Year B:
“Jesus Calls the Blind Man” and “The Blind Man Sees.”

Two Homilies:

 
Jesus Calls the Blind Man

Jesus Calls the Blind Man

In this beautiful homily for 30th Sunday in Ordinary Time, Year B, Father Hanly says Mark wants us to identify with the blind man and he wants us to imitate him

Readings for Thirtieth Sunday in Ordinary Time, Year B

  • First Reading: Jeremiah 31:7-9
  • Responsorial Psalm: Psalms 126:1-2, 2-3, 4-5, 6
  • Second Reading: Hebrews 5:1-6
  • Gospel: Mark 10:46-52

Recording

Transcript

(Apologies, beginning missing.)

… all these centuries ago and still exists there. The road is uphill and a winding path of seventeen miles to the city of Jersualem.

That’s very important because …

Do you remember last week when we talked about Jesus on the way to Jerusalem?

He only has one purpose this time to go to Jerusalem, and that is to be handed over by his own people to the Gentiles, who will scourge him, who will beat him, who will strip him of his clothing, who will hang him on a cross and drive nails through his hands and his feet. And, having killed him, he will be buried.

And Jesus says to them, “But I will rise again.”

Now, the disciples didn’t know what he was talking about, because two of them came up, the sons of Zebedee, his favourites, remember, and they said, “What we really want from you, Jesus …”

Not to give him sympathy, not to say, “I’m sorry, we will stay with you.”

“What we really want is to be top men in your new kingdom. That’s what we want. We want the best places.”

How desperate it must have been to hear this.

And now here is little Bartimaeus, and Mark is going to tell us something very important.

Bartimaeus is blind and he’s on the street in Jericho and Jesus is now leaving Jericho, as Mark says, “going to Jerusalem,” you see.

And Bartimaeus cries out, “Jesus, Jesus of Nazareth.” And then he says, “Son of David, have mercy on me, have pity on me,” knowing that you don’t have to love me, because pity is very often much stronger than love.

And that’s a great appeal from a beggar on the street, surrounded by people yelling at him.

And they’re yelling at him now, because he never should have said those words, “Son of David, Son of David,” and drawn attention to the situation, because “Son of David” is a Messianic title and reserved only for the Messiah.

And, of course, this is one of the reasons why Jesus’ enemies have crowded around to destroy him, because he is claiming that he has come from God and he is doing everything that the Messiah is expected to do.

And so it is the people are afraid that they might be surrounded by Jesus’ enemies as well. So they’re yelling at the little beggar and saying to him, “Keep quiet. Keep quiet. Don’t yell.”

And then Jesus sees him in the street and he stops and he calls him. Mark wants you to know he calls the blind man.

Jesus in the midst of this outrage and fear that people can, by coming together afraid, they can drive you back into being blind and hesitant.

And the poor little man is standing there.

And then, all of a sudden, the people say, and they are smiling now, they say, “Yes. Get up, get up and go to him, because he is calling for you.”

And then he decides that it doesn’t matter what happens. A blind man has nothing to lose. Whether you are arrested or not, it doesn’t matter. The one thing that matters is that Jesus calls and he calls him.

And he starts lunging towards the voice that he can hear, of the man he cannot see. And he throws his cloak aside as if all his whole previous life is being thrown away with the cloak. And he runs up to Jesus.

And Jesus smiles at him and he says to him, “What would do you want me to do for you?”

And then the little beggar says, “Lord, that I may see.”

And, suddenly, he can see. Jesus says nothing.

And he is so surprised and he blinks his eyes and he sees Jesus.

And Jesus says, “Remember this. Your faith has healed you. Your faith has healed you. And now go on your way.”

And Mark again is prodding us a little bit, because Jesus is on his way, and he invites the beggar to go on the beggar’s way, healed and maybe whole.

But the beggar, and Mark says immediately, the beggar stays. And the beggar goes with Jesus.

And where is he going?

He’s going on the road to Jerusalem, seventeen miles away, and there he will see the man that he worships as the Messiah nailed to a cross, abandoned by everyone.

And Mark wants you to know that, for Mark, he’s abandoned by everyone, but the little man who is now seeing and was born blind, he will remain with the small gathering at the foot of the cross.

Because his faith will have healed him and he will know in his heart that it’s only a passage and in three days Jesus will rise from the dead and it will begin a whole new world.

Why is Mark interested in telling us about the little blind man?

Because he wants us to identify with him.

He wants us to know that this is what a disciple is expected to do, not like the others who wanted to be first and second and third in the Kingdom, and get all kinds of honour and glory, and have success and salvation, whatever that might mean.

He wants us to know that we must imitate the little blind man. All he asked, the only thing he wanted, was to see.

And to see…

What the little blind man wanted to see wasn’t just with his eyes. He wanted to see the one who could give him eternal life. He wanted to see the Messiah who was going to free the captives and make the blind see, not with their eyes, but with their hearts.

It is often said, and Jesus himself has said it, and he says it to us. Every time we hear it, we must think that he is speaking it to us.

He was saying it to the people of his day: “You have eyes, but you’re blind, you don’t see. You have ears, but you’re not listening.” And he would add, “And you have hearts to love, but you do not love.”

And Mark wants us to understand, today, that in a few short weeks we will finish our little journey with Mark into Jerusalem, where he will be hailed with the song they sang this morning, our choir did, “Hosanna, hosanna, hosanna to the King of David.”

And that we, too, might, with great faith, ask God to help us to see clearly, to feel deeper, and to love with a greater love.

And for this reason, at the end of his novel “The Little Prince,” the French author quoted the final words of the little prince, in this lovely book that came out a long time ago.

And the little prince says to the world, “It is only when you see with your heart, that you will see anything that is important and good in the world.”


 
The Blind Man Sees

The Blind Man Sees

In this beautiful homily for 30th Sunday in Ordinary Time, Year B, Father Hanly invites us to follow the example of the blind man and to open our eyes and see.

Readings for Thirtieth Sunday in Ordinary Time, Year B

  • First Reading: Jeremiah 31:7-9
  • Responsorial Psalm: Psalms 126:1-2, 2-3, 4-5, 6
  • Second Reading: Hebrews 5:1-6
  • Gospel: Mark 10:46-52

Recording

Transcript

This is the one of the most charming of all the stories that Mark the Gospel writer writes for us.

Do you remember, Mark worked for St Peter. He took care of St Peter’s writing, because in those days not everybody could read and write like they do today. Anyhow Mark has written the first Gospel.

And it is the shortest Gospel. If you go home and start to read, you want a good read for about a half hour. You begin at the beginning and you open the page to Chapter One, Verse One, and you start reading it quickly, from beginning to end, it will take you about thirty-five minutes, believe it or not.

And you get this incredible impression of the writer of Mark. He wastes no time and he almost says to you all, “This is it. Take or leave it. I don’t care. I’m going home to have lunch.” But he loves Jesus and he loves the apostles and so we have these sweet stories.

And now this is the story of Bartimaeus. It’s all about being blind and seeing things. And this is one of Mark’s best stories about Jesus, from his final journey to Jerusalem.

Jesus is now walking away from this lovely city of Jericho, where he has spent a little bit of time, and he is making his final journey along a bit of land that leads from Jericho to Jerusalem.

It’s all uphill, not only literally but figuratively, because Jesus is on his final journey to Jerusalem, and his final journey means he is going to his death.

But today, he and his disciples are in Jericho, the oldest city in the world. If you go there, it’s a wonderful tourist site as well, because the old Jericho that we’re going to talk about, on top of the old Jericho is the newer Jericho, and it’s a beautiful place, because it’s in an oasis area with lots of water around.

Anyhow, today, he and his disciples are in Jericho, only seventeen miles away from the Holy City, so this is their last leg. He has already told his disciples what awaits him.

He reminds them that they’re on the way to Jerusalem where he will be rejected by his own people, who hand him over to his enemies and who in turn will mock him, will scourge him, crown him with thorns and crucify him. But after three days, Jesus tells his disciples, he will rise from the dead.

The disciples still don’t get it. They still don’t understand. But they believe he is the Son of God and the mere cutting his toe on a sidewalk is a terrible thing for them even to think about, never mind to see him tortured and crucified on a cross, so they wiped it from their minds.

In Jericho, a crowd gathers very quickly, for Jesus of Nazareth has become a celebrity and, wherever he goes, the crowds press upon him. And the crowds include many of his enemies who want to see him destroyed, as well as the many people who long to hear him tell his stories and meet with them.

Suddenly, a blind beggar, Bartimaeus by name, cries out from his place by the roadside. He is a beggar. He’s a ragged little man. He has no home, no place, no hope, no anything, and yet he’s the hero of today’s story.

He cries out in a loud voice, “Jesus, son of David, have pity on me.”

There’s an old saying: pity is stronger than love. If you look for love, you’ll be terribly disappointed, but pity is something that we hand out quite nicely. So he figures he will appeal, not to the fact that he’s a decent man, but that Jesus from Nazareth, he had pity on him.

The people tell him to keep quiet. They’re getting very nervous.

Why?

Because Son of David, Son of David, that title is a Messianic title and they’re afraid the blind man’s loud cries will draw the attention of all his enemies who are plotting against him for claiming to be the Messiah.

The Messiah is the Holy One, the Anointed One of God, who is expected by all the Jewish people down through the ages as the Saviour of the world.

But for those at this time, to call Jesus the Messiah is a blasphemy and punishable by death. So they tell him to calm down, to shut up and be quiet, because they’re afraid that the enemies of Jesus will strike.

But the little blind man, he was crying out at the top of his voice, even louder now, until finally Jesus himself hears him as he’s leaving Jericho and he stops.

And he turns around and he says to the man next to him, “Call him. Call him to me.”

And there’s a moment of silence and the blind man hesitates, because the mood of the crowd now spins from threatening him to urging him on. And they’re saying things like, “Come on now, have courage, get up. Jesus himself is calling you.”

And what does the little blind fellow have to lose?

He doesn’t have anything to lose. And therefore he throws off his raggedy cloak, as if it was part of something in the past and he would never wear it again, and he starts running towards Jesus’ voice, because he still can’t see.

And then he throws himself at the feet of Jesus. And he hears the voice of Jesus speaking to him and the voice says, “My little friend, what do you want me to do for you?”

And Bartimaeus says, “Lord, that I may see.”

And Jesus says to him right away, “Go your way. Your faith has saved you.”

And immediately, Mark says, the beggar receives his sight and follows him along the way.

Along the way doesn’t mean he’s going home. Along the way means to walk along the way with Jesus on a journey to Jerusalem.

Very simple and lovely story told by Mark to let us know that we, too, are called to follow the courageous little blind man’s example.

And then you say, “What? But I’m not blind.”

And Jesus will smile and say those famous words, “You have eyes to see, but you do not see. You have ears to hear, but you’re not listening.” And he might add, “And you have hearts to love, but you do not love.”

And Jesus, he himself, has come to open our eyes and open our hearts to God’s world, not our world, a world that is quite different.

And he will help us to see as he sees, to listen and to understand as he listens and understands. But most of all, Jesus will teach us how to love each other as he loves, as God loves.

And that is what Mark means when he says that the blind man, who now sees, follows Jesus along the way — along the way that leads to everlasting life, an invitation to journey with Jesus, an invitation never to be separated from him and to face the things that he faces and to be, deep down inside, healed.

Mark says to us at this time, because Mark is telling this story not to some strangers or because the story is a nice story, he’s telling us the story because he’s talking to you.

“Open your eyes,” he is saying, “open your hearts, open your ears.”

For Jesus, as he did the little blind man, the little blind man he called, he is now calling you. He is calling you and I, and he says those famous words this morning to all of us: “Come, follow me.”

Someone gave me this yesterday and it’s about blindness, blindness that Helen Keller…

How many of you have heard of Helen Keller?

When I was a young man, Helen Keller was the greatest woman in all the United States.

And why was she so great?

She couldn’t read. Well, she could read. She couldn’t hear. She was blind and deaf. It happened to her at eighteen months old. She never saw the world again and never heard another sound.

And this is what Helen Keller said to a friend:

“One day I asked a friend of mine who had just returned from a long walk in the woods what she had seen. She replied, ‘Nothing in particular.’

“’How was this possible?’ I asked myself, ‘when I, who cannot hear or see, find hundreds of things to interest me through mere touch.’

“I feel the delicate shape and design of a leaf. I pass my hands lovingly over the rough bark of a pine tree. Occasionally, I place my hand quietly on a small tree, and if I’m lucky, feel the happy quiver of a bird in full song.

“The greatest calamity that can befall people, is not that they should be born blind, but that they should have eyes, yet fail to see.”

 

FAQ for Homily for 30th Sunday in Ordinary Time, Year B

When is 30th Sunday in Ordinary Time, Year B, in 2024?27th October 2024
What is the title of Father Hanly’s homily for Thirtieth Sunday in Ordinary Time, Year B?"Jesus Calls the Blind Man" and "The Blind Man Sees"
What is the next homily by Father Hanly in this Liturgical Cycle?
All Saints’ Day, Year B
Who was Father Hanly?Father Denis J. Hanly was a Maryknoll Missionary
How can we find other homilies by Father Hanly?By Liturgical Calendar or by topic or by title

Information about Father Hanly’s homilies for 30th Sunday in Ordinary Time, Year B

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If you would like to use our transcripts of either of these sermons (updated 2023), please contact us for permission.

Father Hanly's sermon for 30th Sunday in Ordinary Time, Year B, "Jesus Calls the Blind Man" was delivered on 25th October 2009. Father Hanly's sermon for 30th Sunday in Ordinary Time, Year B, "The Blind Man Sees" was delivered on 28th October 2012. It is sometimes hard to accurately transcribe Father Hanly's reflections, so please let us know if you think we have made a mistake in any of our transcripts, and let us have your suggestions.

We hope that Father Hanly’s homilies, always kind, always wise, always full of love, will restore you to peace and harmony through a new understanding of what is important in this world. We believe these homilies are inspiring for everyone, not only for Roman Catholics or other Christians.

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