Altar Ordinary Time Colours

30th Sunday Ordinary Time October 27, 2024

Posted : Oct-24-2024

Readings: Jeremiah 31:7-9 Hebrews 5:1-6 Mark 10:46-52

Master, I want to see! What a wonderful request to make of our Lord. I want to see can be the theme for this Sunday. I want to see people return to God. I want to see people rejoicing in living out God’s word. I want that I myself can rejoice when I suffer for the sake of the Lord. I want to understand how Jesus Christ is my High Priest and intercedes for me. I want to see how Jesus Christ is always present in His Church even when there is so much sinfulness in the members of the Church. I want to see how Christ loves me even when bad things happen to me.

Our spiritual lives are like exile much of the time. We find ourselves away from God, away from our own values, away from the people who help us walk with joy and gladness. We fail to be the gift that God has created us to be. Yet God constantly assures us that we are always invited to return to Him, no matter how often we go away from him, no matter how frequently we are taken captive by sin and temptation.

Jesus is God and yet he is human like us. He himself is beset by weakness and so, for this reason, must make sin offerings for himself as well as for the people. The difference, of course, is that He never gives in to the weakness and never sins. We do give in and we do sin. Thus Christ intercedes for us and always offers us forgiveness. Just the thought of this God who always loves us increases our joy and our capacity to live without fear.

Bartimaeus had the courage to ask to see. People tell him to be quiet. We are not supposed to annoy the powerful, even the spiritually powerful. Yet Bartimaeus knows that he must cry out for healing. He wants to see. Do we want to see? What do we want to see? Are we willing to cry out and to insist? Do we let others silence us? Let us have courage today and ask to see. Let us ask to see the Lord and to know His ways. Let us ask to see all that we need to see so that we may rejoice in the Lord!

 Fr. Terry