Living These Days

Sacred Text

Mark 8:22-38
Tree People


Every time I bump into today’s passage from Saint Mark, I encounter a bit of spiritual discomfort.


It’s a familiar account of Jesus using spit and dirt as salve for a blind man’s eyes.


When checking in with the patient, Jesus hears that full healing has not occurred.


“I can see people, but they look like trees, walking, ” the blind man tells Jesus.


This is where discomfort enters.


What is this? An incomplete miracle, requiring further action?
Even though a second “treatment” from Jesus is at hand, I am confused by the need for it. Jesus doesn’t need do-overs. What gives?


But maybe it’s similar for all of us. Maybe it’s why some go to church every Sunday: A maintenance check.


Why some listen to old-time Gospel music in the quiet of their home late at night, and let the tears fall without apology: A much-needed catharthis.


One night years ago I was part of a parking lot service, attempting to offer God’s healing in that place, the site of a recent brutal murder. As we began to sing Amazing Grace, a man lurched from the crowd now gathered. Ragged and dirty from years on the street, his perfect baritone voice joined with ours: “I was blind but now I see.”


I guess that’s how it can be in our relationship with God: Some days, when we’re trying to forge our own way, alone, maybe all we can see are “tree people.”


We need a refueling of the sort that can only come from above, before we can see things as they are.


Discover more from livingthesedays.me

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

Comments

Leave a Reply