The message given in the Sunday night service in the Gettysburg United Methodist church. The Bible verses used are Mark 10:35-52.
Do you pray regularly?
I hope you do. If you’ve ever been to any
church anywhere, you know how much churches believe in prayer. We believe
everyone should pray. But here’s the question: why?
Do you ever think about that? When you
come right down to it, why do we really need to pray? After all, the
Bible says that God knows our every thought. The Bible says God knows
what we need before we ask. So, if God already knows how we feel, and if
God already knows what we need, why should we bother to pray?”
It's a
legitimate question, but I think there is an answer to it. Actually,
there's probably more than one answer, but there's one I want to give
tonight. Even though God already knows what how we feel and what we need,
we still need to pray because one of the things the act of praying does for us
is it clarifies our own faith. It reveals to us what we really think
about God.
I think our
Bible reading for tonight shows that. We heard two little stories.
Those stories are often dealt with separately, and there's value from doing
that, but I also think they come back-to-back in the gospel of Mark for a
reason. There are things the two stories have in common, and so I think
there's also value to be gained by looking at them together.
In both of
them, we have people asking Jesus for something. James and John come up
to Jesus and ask for something, and Bartimaeus comes up to Jesus and asks for
something.
But of
course, the way they ask is completely different, right? James and John
come up to Jesus and almost demand that he do something for them. They
say to Jesus, “We want you to do whatever we ask.” Bartimaeus, on the
other hand, goes to Jesus and says, “Jesus, son of David, have mercy on
me.”
Now, that's
two totally different ways of approaching Jesus. James and John seem to
feel like they’re entitled to Jesus' help. They call him “Teacher”, but
at the same time, they talk to him more like he's their servant. That's
sometimes called the vending machine approach to prayer. We make our
requests, we push the button, and boom, God is supposed to give us what we
asked for.
Bartimaeus,
on the other hand, does not seem to feel entitled to anything. He's
begging. He's pleading. He's hoping desperately that Jesus will
hear him and will do what he asks. He does not act like Jesus owes it to
him to help. But he knows that the only chance he has is if Jesus somehow,
for some reason, decides to have mercy on him and help him.
Two
completely different ways of asking. And yet, Jesus' response to them is
exactly the same. In both cases, he asks, “What do you want me to do for
you?”
Does that
seem like kind of an odd question to you? It does to me. “What do
you want me to do for you?” Jesus surely knew what they wanted,
right? Jesus is God, the divine Son. It seems like he'd have known
what they were going to say before they said it.
And yet,
Jesus asked the question. Even though he already knew what they wanted,
he wanted to hear it from their own lips. Why?
I don't
know the whole answer. But here's something for us to think about.
Have you
ever had a thought or an idea or something like that in your head, and it made
sense to you while it was in your head, but then you went to tell somebody else
about it, and when you did it sounded totally different when you said it out
loud than it did when it was still in your head? I've done that.
I've gone to say something, and all of a sudden this thought or this idea, this
thing that seemed like it was totally reasonable and sensible when it was in my
head, sounded really stupid or arrogant or hurtful when I put it into words and
said it to somebody else. It happens because I really have not thought
through all the meanings and implications of what I'm thinking. And when
I have to explain it to someone else, all of a sudden those meanings and
implications become clear. And it's not always a very pleasant
experience.
I think that's one of the reasons Jesus asked
“What do you want me to do for you?” It's one of the reasons we need to
pray, too. We need to put our feelings into words. We need to put
our requests of God into words. We need to do that so we can fully
understand them. We need to do that so we can really understand the
meanings and implications of what we're asking of God.
I wonder, when James and John actually said to
Jesus, “Let one of us sit at your right and the other at your left in your
glory,” how did they feel? When they actually said that out loud, when
they had to put it into words and say it to Jesus, were they proud of
themselves? Or were they a little ashamed of themselves, suddenly hearing
what it sounded like when they said it? Did they realize that this
demand, which sounded so good and reasonable in their heads, sounded really
arrogant and almost condescending to Jesus when they said it out loud? I
mean, here they were, telling Jesus they wanted him to put them above all the
other disciples and to put them into positions of power and glory. Did
they realize how that was going to sound to Jesus and to the others? The
act of having to put their request into words revealed what they really thought
about Jesus, and it did not sound particularly good.
Now, Bartimaeus did not have that same
problem. What he asked for did not sound stupid or arrogant or
hurtful. Still, it revealed what he really thought about Jesus, too.
Bartimaeus does not say to Jesus, “I want you to
do whatever I ask.” He just says, “Have mercy on me.” Bartimaeus
does not think Jesus owes him anything. He has no real reason to think
Jesus will do anything for him. He does not even know whether Jesus will
pay any attention to him. After all, he'd never met Jesus. As far
as Jesus was concerned, he'd just be some guy on the side of the road, trying
desperately to get Jesus to notice him.
When Jesus stopped and said he'd talk to Bartimaeus,
how do you think Bartimaeus felt? Was he excited? Was he
scared? Probably both, and some other things, too. He had no idea
what Jesus was going to say. For all he knew, Jesus might be going to
chew him out. He might be going to say, “Who do you think you are,
yelling at me like this? Get out of here.”
But Bartimaeus came up to Jesus. And Jesus
asked him the same question. “What do you want me to do for you?”
That must have seemed to Bartimaeus like a
really odd thing for Jesus to say. I wonder if anybody'd ever asked him
that question before. You know, blind people were not treated very well
in that society. They were pretty much shunned by everyone. They
were considered to have been cursed by God in some way. Once in a while
someone might've take pity on Bartimaeus and given him something, but no one,
at least no one respectable, would become his friend. No one would've
cared about Bartimaeus to ask him what he wanted.
But Jesus did. Bartimaeus must have been
stunned. It probably took him a second or two to react at all. He'd
been so desperate just to get Jesus' attention that he probably had not really
thought about what he'd actually say to Jesus if he got the chance. He
probably had an idea, but he'd never put it into words before, even in his
head. What did he really want Jesus to do for him?
Finally, he stammered it out. He said,
“Rabbi, I want to see.”
Again, the act of having to put his request into
words revealed what he really thought about Jesus. He believed that Jesus
had power that came from God. He may not have known exactly what that
meant, he may not have known that Jesus was truly the divine Son of God and all
that, but he knew that Jesus was a man of God in some way. He truly
believed that Jesus could make him see. And he knew that the only reason
Jesus would do that is if Jesus had mercy on him.
So, what do you want Jesus to do for you?
And what do I want Jesus to do for me? Our answer to that question
reveals what you and I really think about Jesus.
Do we come to Jesus arrogantly? Do we come
to him demanding that Jesus give us whatever we ask, acting as if Jesus somehow
owes that to us? Or do we come to Jesus desperately, knowing that Jesus
owes us nothing, and that the only reason Jesus would pay any attention to us
at all, much less do what we ask, is because of the great love and mercy that
Jesus has for us?
Jesus did not
give James and John what they asked for. In fact, he said he could not
give it to them. He did not get mad at them, and he did not give up on
them. But he did use the chance to give them a lesson about humility and
what greatness is really all about.
Jesus did give
Bartimaeus what he asked for. I have to think that Bartimaeus’ attitude,
which truly was an attitude of humility, had something to do with that.
Yes, God
knows our every thought, and God knows what we need before we ask. But
our prayers reveal what we think about God. They clarify what we actually
believe and what we really want. And that’s one of the reasons why we
need to pray.
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