To read the texts click on the texts: Isa29: 17-24; Mt 9:27-31
Chapters 8 and 9 of the Gospel of Matthew are known
as the “Miracle Cycle” of Matthew, because in them we find ten miracles in
series of three miracles each. The fact that the Miracle Cycle follows
immediately after the Sermon on the Mount and that both are framed by a summary
statement in 4:23 and 9:35 is an indication that Matthew’s intention is to
show, through such placement, that Jesus is the Messiah, in words (through the
Sermon on the Mount) and in deeds (through the Miracle Cycle).
Many regard this story as a doublet of the healing
of blind Bartimaeus found in Mk 10:46-52.
Matthew’s story, however, has the healing of two blind men and does not
name them. A similar story of the healing of two blind men is found in Mt
20:29-34, and since, in both cases,
the one blind man of Mark has become two blind men in Matthew, he pieces the
story together with details and elements from his own sources.
The story begins with the blind men following Jesus.
While on the one level, this will mean walking behind Jesus, on the deeper
level, it means that they are doing what disciples are called to do. Their
address for Jesus: “Son of David” (this is the first time in the Gospel that
Jesus is called “Son of David”) and “Lord” indicates that they are believers.
They have faith. Though physically blind, they are able to see who Jesus is and
see the extent of his power to heal them. This faith is the reason why they
receive their sight.
The command of Jesus to the blind men not to tell
anyone what he had done is disobeyed by them. While some see the command as
retention of Marks’ messianic secret (the Markan Jesus tells some of those whom
he heals not to make it known, since he does not want people to mistake the
kind of Messiah that he has come to be), others see it as an illustration by
Matthew that not everyone who says “Lord” obeys the will of the Father
manifested in Jesus. These have faith, they themselves say, but yet they do not
do.
Blindness is not only an external ailment or
limitation. The fox says to the Little Prince in Antoine Saint De Exupery’s
book “The Little Prince”: “It is only with the heart that one can see rightly;
what is essential is invisible to the eye.” There is, thus, also blindness of
the heart. As a matter of fact, in many cases, blindness of the heart is worse
than blindness of the eyes. Heart blindness closes itself to another point of
view. It is a blindness that refuses to look anew at things, events, and
people. It prefers the pessimistic and dark side of life. Heart blindness can only be healed when one
turns in faith to God, manifest in his Son, Jesus.
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