“God, what do You want me to do for You?”

30th Sunday in Ordinary Time

Jesus asks Bartimaeus today, “What do you want me to do for you?”  Bartimaeus’s request is granted, he receives his sight, and he follows Jesus on the way.  Being a disciple of Jesus is being in a relationship with Jesus, and a relationship is a two-way street.  When Jesus asks us that question, we are called to respond from the depths of our heart with what we really, really want Jesus to do for us.  But as now-country artist Jelly Roll sings: do we only talk to God when we need a favor?  Are we sometimes one sided or overly self-focused in our interactions with God?  As disciples of Jesus, in a relationship with Him that is a two-way street, do we also ask the question often and frequently, “God, what do You want me to do for You?”

The Typewriter

29th Sunday in Ordinary Time

Life in a fallen world brings us all plenty of suffering, and our readings today take up that theme of suffering.  Our sufferings – wether mental, physical, emotional, spiritual, or some combination thereof – have varying levels, but the key to all of it is that I have a choice in the midst of my suffering, I can choose to respond in one of two ways: one way is the common response to suffering, the other way was modeled by Jesus in His suffering. Which one will we choose to confront our sufferings today?