Jesus healing a blind manToday’s Gospel reading at Mass cites a unique incident from Jesus’ career: a two-stage healing.

When Jesus and his disciples arrived at Bethsaida,
people brought to him a blind man and begged Jesus to touch him.
He took the blind man by the hand and led him outside the village.
Putting spittle on his eyes he laid his hands on the man and asked,
“Do you see anything?”
Looking up the man replied, “I see people looking like trees and walking.”
Then he laid hands on the man’s eyes a second time and he saw clearly;
his sight was restored and he could see everything distinctly.
Then he sent him home and said, “Do not even go into the village” (Mark 8:22-26).

There are two things we can learn from this:

1. This is more historical proof of Jesus as a wonderworker. No Christian is going to make up an account about Jesus’ healing not quite “working” the first time, especially when so many of Jesus’ miraculous deeds (healings, exorcisms, nature miracles) happen instantaneously, at his word, even from a distance. This smacks of authenticity and eyewitness detail. Furthermore, this is more evidence that the evangelists didn’t feel free to “invent” incidents from the life of Christ, or feel free to “edit” accounts of Jesus’ life that were passed on by tradents and collected into the Gospels. If that were the case, this account would have almost certainly been “cleaned up” by the evangelist, with the healing working at once.

2. This is a “sacramental” healing. Jesus didn’t need to take spittle and use that to heal the man’s vision. But the fact that he did shows that God can use matter to communicate his grace – that is, his very life. This should be obvious when considering the Incarnation itself. The body of Christ communicated, and was the very vehicle, of the life of God on earth. And Christ continues to communicate his healing powers through the sacraments of the Catholic Church. The sacraments each take ordinary, physical materials – water, bread, wine, oil – and, in the case of marriage, the very bodies of the spouses themselves – to communicate the life-giving power of God. The Eucharist, of course, is the greatest of all sacraments, because, as Saint Thomas aquinas once said, in all the other sacraments, the power of Christ is present; in the Eucharist, Christ himself is present – Body, Blood, Soul, and Divinity.

The sacraments of the Church bring the power to see life and eternity – all of reality – in ever clearer and sharper focus. Like the blind man, we don’t always see this clearly at first, even after receiving the sacraments. We have to go “outside the village” and never go back in, like Christ led out the blind man – we must leave our old ways behind. And, as Saint Jerome taught, the “spittle” of Christ, which represents his word, his teaching, must be applied to our lives – that is, obeyed – for the healing of our lives to be complete.

2 replies
  1. Amk
    Amk says:

    I want to start off by thanking My Father, The Lord, for hniavg chosen me I know that He chose me for a purpose. I also want to thank you, Susan, for sharing your knowledge and for encouraging and guiding me in my spiritual walk. I was born a Hindu and I simply went through the motions of performing the rituals’ that my mum and other family members performed, without any understanding. I experienced a restlessness and an emptiness when I was in my 30 s and started exploring my spirituality. At the age of 37, in 1997, the vacuum was filled when I asked Jesus to be my LORD.This will be my third Daniel fast the first was a few years ago almost a haze. This year’s fast was different (with the help of your site) I grew spiritually I was more disciplined and diligent but during the course of this year, my spiritual walk became erratic and my quiet time has become very infrequent. I am trying to be more disciplined and I want to get back on track and draw closer to My Father and I believe the fast will help me to get back on track. I want to be effective in the Kingdom and I want to portray Jesus as my Savior and provider to my unsaved family. I am trusting God for my family’s salvation. I am also trusting God for a breakthrough in my business which I believe He called me into, after almost 30 years of being employed in a secure corporate business. I have been in business for just over two years now and the business has been struggling. I am praying for God’s favor over my business and I am trusting that God will use me to break the financial bondage that His people are trapped in. I know that God is in control but I often struggle with relinquishing control I am praying that through this fast I will be able to relinquish control completely. I know that I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me in my own strength, I can do nothing. I give God all the praise, glory and honor and I pray that He will always be glorified in and through me.

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  1. […] just recently started reading Cale Clarke’s blog and following him on Twitter.  I loved his post on “Sacramental Healing.”  Check it […]

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