Once
upon a time, there was a Duck and Hen who lived together in a house by the
seaside. Their food was the rotten fish that the fishermen threw away. Every
day they saw a Heron swimming up and down the sea, catching and eating fresh
fish. This made Duck desire to have some fresh fish. But Hen said to Duck,
"Why do you desire what you can't have? The Heron is a sea-bird. Her body
is light. We are land-birds and land-birds do not swim. If you enter the sea
with your heavy body you will sink like a stone and that will be the end of
you." Duck believed Hen. So they
went on eating their rotten fish. But this did not stop Duck's hunger and
inborn desire for fresh fish.
One
very hot and humid day, Duck couldn’t eat anything at all because the rotten
fish smelled so bad. She just went and sat by herself, quietly looking at the
sea. In a moment the Heron came sailing by and saw the Duck in such a pitiable
condition. Heron asked what was wrong, and Duck told him everything: how she
always longed to swim and eat fresh fish but, unfortunately, the Creator had
made her a heavy land-bird. It was then that Heron explained to Duck that
sometime in the past, even he himself was not a swimmer, but that he was forced
by hunger to jump into the sea and then he discovered he could swim.
Heron
invited Duck to jump into the sea and give it a try but Duck was afraid. With
more encouragement from Heron, Duck overcame her fears and stepped into the
sea. To her surprise Duck saw that she was not sinking; she was floating. With
time Duck learned to swim well and catch and eat as much fresh fish as she
wanted.
The
story is really about how the duck came to discover and realize her God-given
identity and potential as a swimmer. It is about how the flower bud blossoms
into the beautiful flower that it is destined to be.
Similarly
the story of Bartimaeus in today's gospel is about how a nobody begging by the
roadside came to realize his God-given dignity as a human being and child of
God; how he blossomed.
Mark's
story of the healing of blind Bartimaeus has aroused the curiosity of bible
scholars because this is about the only place in the Synoptic Gospels where the
name of a person who was healed by Jesus is given. Mark mentions the name not
only once but twice: "Bartimaeus, son of Timaeus," first in Aramaic,
then in Greek. This very unusual emphasis on the name is a clue that the name
is important for the reader to understand the point Mark is trying to make in
the story.
In
the ancient Semitic world, a name was not just a label to identify a person. A
name expressed the personality or destiny of a person. So
what does Bartimaeus mean? Literally, it comes from the Aramaic and means
"son/person of defilement (tame')." This could, therefore, be a
nickname given to him because he was a blind beggar. Popular
theology among the Hebrews held blindness to be a punishment from God for sin
or defilement (John 9:34).
But
the Greek version of the name could also be understood as "son/person of
honor" (timÉ). This would indicate the man's inner nature and destiny. By
giving us the name Bartimaeus with its double meaning, Mark could be telling us
that here is a man who is supposed to be a man of honor and dignity (timÉ)
living in a state of dishonor and shame (tame'). What Jesus did for him, therefore, was not
simply restoring his physical sight but, over and above that, restoring his
God-given human dignity. We can liken it to what the Heron did for the Duck,
enlightening and empowering someone to realize their God-given potentials and
dignity.
Like
Duck by the seaside or like Bartimaeus by the wayside, are we sometimes bored,
feeling that there must be more to life than we are getting at the moment? Do
we sometimes feel like we are born to be swimmers and yet here we are idly
walking and eating rotten fish by the seaside?
Do
we sometimes feel, like Bartimaeus, that we should be following Jesus in his
enthusiastic campaign to save the world and yet we find ourselves all day long
doing nothing but the same boring routine of trying to find food? The
good news is that Jesus is passing by. He can heal and take away whatever
weakness or handicap that holds us down. Do not pay heed to friends who, like
the Hen, will say that you are daydreaming. Bartimaeus did not heed those who
tried to dissuade him. Jesus is here to heal the blindness that has immobilized
us, to empower and transform us from passive bystanders to his active and
enthusiastic followers in the otherwise boring journey of life.

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