Saturday, November 30, 2024

Receiving Christ at His Nativity like a Blind Beggar: Homily for the Twenty-third Sunday After Pentecost & Fourteenth Sunday of Luke in the Orthodox Church

 


Ephesians 2:4-10; Luke 18:35-43

On the last couple of Sundays, our gospel readings have reminded us what not to do if we want to prepare to welcome Christ into our lives and world at His Nativity.  The rich fool was so focused on money and possessions that he completely neglected the state of his soul.  The rich young ruler walked away in sadness when it became clear that he loved his wealth more than God and neighbor.  The weeks before Christmas are the most commercialized time of the year when we are all bombarded with messages that this season is primarily about having lots of money to spend on our perfect families and good-looking friends.  Since the Lord warned so clearly of the folly of seeking first anything other than His Kingdom, it is sadly ironic that the celebration of His Nativity so often occurs in ways that tempt us to the idolatry of worshiping the good things of this life as ends in themselves.     

In contrast, today’s gospel reading gives us a model of how to receive the Lord for our healing.  The blind beggar was the complete opposite of the rich, powerful, and popular people of any time and place.  He had to sit by the side of the road and beg; there was no realistic hope that the course of his life would ever change.  He surely had no illusions about his circumstances, for he was defined in that setting by his disability.  But when told that the Savior was passing by, the poor man grasped at his one chance for healing and a new life.  That is why He refused to stop calling out loudly for Christ’s help even when others criticized him, saying “Jesus, Son of David, have mercy on me!”  The more they criticized him, the louder he shouted.  He did not care what others thought of him in that moment, but was determined to do all he could to receive the Lord’s healing mercy.  And after Christ restored his sight, the man followed Him and gave thanks to God.

One of the reasons that we need these weeks of the Nativity Fast in preparation for Christmas is that, unlike the blind beggar, we often lack a sense of urgency about presenting our darkened souls to Christ for healing. We have learned to ignore our spiritual blindness by distracting ourselves in the vain effort to find fulfillment by abusing God’s blessings to gratify our self-centered desires.  Since we are not literally blind and destitute, it is much easier for us to ignore our true state than it was for him. In our affluent society, we do not have to be rich in order to wrap ourselves in a warm blanket of creature comforts as we indulge in food, drink, entertainment, and other pleasures to distract ourselves from seeing clearly where we stand before the Lord and in relation to our neighbors.  We are often so much in the dark that we feel no sense of urgency to call out to Christ from the depths of our hearts for His healing mercy.  

The blind beggar shows us how to open the eyes of our darkened souls to the light of Christ.  The man “cried, ‘Jesus, Son of David, have mercy on me!’  And those who were in front rebuked him, telling him to be silent; but he cried out all the more, ‘Son of David, have mercy on me!’”  He provides us with the basis of the Jesus Prayer, the heartfelt plea for healing, help, strength, and restoration that we should use often.  Others told him to be quiet, but this fellow called out to the Lord with even greater intensity.   When we pray the Jesus Prayer or otherwise cry out to the Lord from the depths of our hearts, we will very likely be tempted strongly to think about or do something else.  There is much within us all that would rather embrace some distraction that will enable us to stay in the dark and gratify our passions.  When that happens, we must pray with even greater intensity and humility as we lift up our conflicted and compromised hearts to the Lord. 

Christ asked the blind beggar, ‘”What do you want me to do for you?” He said, “Lord, let me receive my sight.”  And Jesus said to him, ‘Receive your sight; your faith has made you well.”’  We must open our darkened souls to the brilliant light of the Savior in order to gain our sight, in order to know the Lord from the depths of our hearts as we share more fully in His blessed eternal life.  We are preparing to receive Christ more fully into our lives at His Nativity, and what better way is there to do that than to be present to Him with our minds in our hearts as we call for His mercy?  Fasting and almsgiving will strengthen our prayers in this regard.   Struggling with both disciplines will reveal our weakness before our passions and should fuel our humility and sense of urgent need for the Lord’s healing.  They are also practices that help to purify the desires of our hearts and direct them toward fulfillment in God.  They teach us that we actually can live without gratifying every self-centered desire. The less focused we are on catering to our taste buds and stomachs, the more resources we should have to share with those in need.  Growing in selfless compassion for our neighbors is an essential dimension of being illumined with the light of Christ.  There is no more direct way to serve Him than by limiting our self-centeredness and self-indulgence in order to help “the least of these” with whom He identified Himself.

As we prepare to celebrate the birth of the God-Man at Christmas, we must be distracted neither by obsession with earthly cares nor by an unhealthy focus on the darkness that remains within us.   As St. Porphyrios taught, “Don’t occupy yourself with rooting out evil.  Christ does not wish us to occupy ourselves with the passions, but with the opposite.  Channel the water, that is, all the strength of your soul to the flowers and you will enjoy their beauty, their fragrance and their freshness.  You won’t become saints by hounding after evil.  Ignore evil.  Look towards Christ and He will save you.”[1]  In the remaining weeks of the Nativity Fast, we must look toward Christ with the urgent expectation of that blind beggar who let nothing stop him from persistently calling for mercy from the depths of his heart.  If we do so, then we will have the eyes to behold the glorious light of the Lord when He is born for our salvation.  

We must be careful, however, to resist the temptation to distort the spiritual disciplines of this season into legalistic religious requirements that we imagine could somehow impress or appease God.  St. Paul reminded the Ephesians that such a mindset has nothing at all to do with how we may share in the life of our Lord, “For by grace you have been saved through faith; and this is not your own doing, it is the gift of God—not because of works, lest any man should boast.”  The Lord’s restoration of sight to the blind beggar conveys clearly that we need something of a completely different order than even the strictest type of legal or moral observance.  The blind man required nothing less than unfathomable divine mercy to regain his sight. The Savior’s healing ministry reveals that He came to restore and fulfill us in holiness as His living icons, neither to give us what we deserve nor simply to inspire us to better behavior.

After he received his sight, the blind man “followed Jesus, glorifying God; and all the people, when they saw it, gave praise to God.”  The same must be true of us, for as the Apostle taught, “we are His workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared beforehand, that we should walk in them.” We must embrace our identity as those who have been illumined by Christ in baptism and not fall back into the blind idolatry of serving only ourselves. Let us do precisely that as we continue to pray, fast, give alms, and confess and repent of our sins during the Nativity Fast.  There is no other way to prepare to welcome Christ into our lives at His Nativity than to become like that persistent, humble blind beggar who knew that he needed nothing other than the lovingkindness of the Lord and who then glorified God in thanks for his healing.  

 



[1] St. Porphyrios, Wounded by Love:  The Life and Wisdom of Saint Porphyrios, 135.

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