Lord, Mercy Me! (Mark 10:46-52)

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Lord, Mercy Me! (Mark 10:46-52) 22nd Sunday after Pentecost (October 24, 2021) Mercy is a word permeating in our culture today; at least audibly, even though rarely witnessed visibly. “Have a little mercy, Man!” a taxpayer pleads with a new invigorated and almost militarized IRS. “Can’t you show a little mercy?” the small Mom and Pop grocery store pleads with the Big Box Store gobbling up the entire market share. This word mercy is also profanely thrown around as if it is just another catch phrase or verbal emoji: “Lord, have mercy! I didn’t expect that!” It is being utilized to describe the purposeful ending of a sufferer’s life. They refer to it as “mercy killing.” Mercy is utilized in a favorite southern expression “mercy me!” Why it is even part and parcel of the name of a contemporary Christian music band; “MercyMe.” All this aside, it is worth our time to contemplate where we would all be without God’s mercy! We regularly plead for it: “Lord, have mercy!” What are we actually asking for? What is this mercy exactly? Is it an emotion or an action? Can we be saved without it? Can we live without it? How do we obtain mercy? The holy evangelist Mark records for us that on one occasion as Jesus was making His way to Jerusalem, He passed through the infamous city of Jericho. As He and his disciples, along with a great crowd, exited the city proper, a blind beggar by the name of Bartimaeus “was sitting along the roadside. And when he heard that it was Jesus of Nazareth, he began to cry out and say, ‘Jesus, Son of David, have mercy on me!” Our liturgical use of “Lord, have mercy!” has its origins right here in this Biblical narrative with Bartimaeus, as well as with two other blind men who earlier in Jesus’ ministry also cried out for that same mercy (Matt. 9:27), and the Canaanite woman who pleaded after Jesus to heal her demon possessed daughter (Matt. 15:22), and the father pleading for Jesus’ help for his demonized son (Matt. 17:15), and the ten lepers on the border of Galilee and Samaria wanting more than anything to be cleansed (Luke 17:13). Taken together all of these pleas for Jesus’ mercy teach us that mercy is not merely a condition of the heart like compassion might be. In fact, this plea ought literally be translated, “Jesus, mercy me!” This blind beggar sees, pardon the pun, that mercy is an action of Jesus he desires toward him. Clearly, Jesus understands this. He doesn’t reply to this poor man’s plea for mercy by saying, “Well, my good man, I do have mercy for you.” No, Jesus calls upon the crowd to “call” the blind man to come to Him. The crowd certainly recognized mercy when they saw it. They said to Bartimaeus, “Take heart. Get up; He is calling for you.” It was almost as if they assured him, “Hey, get up. Good fortune has come your way today. Jesus more than notices you. He’s going help you!” There was no disappointment for Bartimaeus, either. When he approached Jesus, He literally asked the man, “What for you do you desire I do?” Jesus did not just have


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