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Home » Free Books » Bonar, Horatius » Light & Truth: The Gospels !
Chapter 33 - Mark 10:52 - Christ's Recognition of Faith Light & Truth: The Gospels by Bonar, Horatius
Quick Access Chapter 1 - Matthew 1:1 - Very Man... Chapter 2 - Matthew 1:16 - Jesus the See... Chapter 3 - Matthew 2:3 - Jesus the Trou... Chapter 4 - Matthew 3:10 - The Desert Vo... Chapter 5 - Matthew 4:23 - Jesus in Seas... Chapter 6 - Matthew 5:45 - His Sun... Chapter 7 - Matthew 8:1-3 - Human Lepros... Chapter 8 - Matthew 8:34 - Man's Dislike... Chapter 9 - Matthew 11:28 - The Rest and... Chapter 10 - Matthew 11:29 - The Three E... Chapter 11 - Matthew 12:41 - Nineveh and... Chapter 12 - Matthew 13:25 - The Two Sow... Chapter 13 - Matthew 19:6 - Herod's Ball... Chapter 14 - Matthew 19:15-16 - Man's Wa... Chapter 15 - Matthew 14:24-31 - The Help... Chapter 16 - Matthew 17:17 - The Graciou... Chapter 17 - Matthew 18:1-4 - The Peerag... Chapter 18 - Matthew 18:2; Luke 19:10 - ... Chapter 19 - Matthew 21:44 - The Stone o... Chapter 20 - Matthew 22:42 - The Things ... Chapter 21 - Matthew 24:12 - The Chill o... Chapter 22 - Matthew 24:42, 44 - True Vi... Chapter 23 - Matthew 25:3 - Religion wit... Chapter 24 - Matthew 25:31, 33 - The Gre... Chapter 25 - Matthew 24:70 - The Denying... Chapter 26 - Matthew 27:4 - The True Con... Chapter 27 - Mark 3:35 - Relationship to... Chapter 28 - Mark 4:39 - The Great Calm... Chapter 29 - Mark 5:36 - Only Believe... Chapter 30 - Mark 6:6 - Jesus Wondering ... Chapter 31 - Mark 6:33, 34 - Christ's Te... Chapter 32 - Mark 6:53-56 - Jesus and Hi... Chapter 34 - Mark 11:13 - The Fruitless ... Chapter 33 - Mark 10:52 - Christ's Recog... Chapter 35 - Mark 11:22 - Faith in God... Chapter 36 - Mark 13:33 - Watch and Pray... Chapter 37 - Mark 13:34-37 - The Master ... Chapter 38 - Mark 14:62 - The Coming of ... Chapter 39 - Luke 4:16-31 - The Gracious... Chapter 40 - Luke 6:19 - Health in Jesus... Chapter 41 - Luke 7:36-50 - Much Forgive... Chapter 42 - Luke 11:13 - How Much More!... Chapter 43 - Luke 15:2 - Jesus Watching ... Chapter 44 - Luke 15:10 - God's Joy Over... Chapter 45 - Luke 15:20 - The Father's L... Chapter 46 - Luke 15:22 - God's Free Lov... Chapter 47 - Luke 17:26, 27 - Noah Days... Chapter 48 - Luke 19:11-27 - The Lowest ... Chapter 49 - Luke 14:40 - Christ Must ha... Chapter 50 - Luke 21:28 - Signs of the T... Chapter 51 - Luke 21:36 - Deliverance in... Chapter 52 - Luke 22:18 - The New Wine o... Chapter 53 - Luke 22:19, 20 - The Heaven... Chapter 54 - Luke 23:32-43 - The Three C... Chapter 55 - Luke 24:29 - The Disciples'... Chapter 56 - John 1:12, 13 - Reception o... Chapter 57 - John 3:2 - The World's Need... Chapter 58 - John 3:14, 15 - Life in Loo... Chapter 59 - John 3:29 - The Filling Up ... Chapter 60 - John 3:34, 35 - The Fullnes... Chapter 61 - John 4:10 - The Living Wate... Chapter 62 - John 5:39, 40 - Bible Testi... Chapter 63 - John 6:17 - Night with Jesu... Chapter 64 - John 6:50 - The Bread of Im... Chapter 65 - John 6:51 - Christ's Flesh ... Chapter 66 - John 7:37 - Come and Drink... Chapter 67 - John 7:53; John 8:1, 12 - J... Chapter 68 - John 8:31, 32 - Truth and L... Chapter 69 - John 8:54 - The Father Hono... Chapter 70 - John 11:40 - The Honour Giv... Chapter 71 - John 12:12 - Inquiring afte... Chapter 72 - John 12:32 - The Great Attr... Chapter 73 - John 12:35-36 - Light and i... Chapter 74 - John 12:46 - Light for the ... Chapter 75 - John 12:48 - The Judging Wo... Chapter 76 - John 14:8-10 - The Revelati... Chapter 77 - John 13:16, 17 - The Abidin... Chapter 78 - John 14:26 - The Mighty Com... Chapter 79 - John 14:27 - The Divine Leg... Chapter 80 - John 16:25-28 - Christ in H... Chapter 81 - John 16:33 - Tribulation, P... Chapter 82 - John 17:26 - The Declaratio... Chapter 84 - John 18:28 - Ritualism and ... Chapter 84 - John 19:2 - The Greater Sin... Chapter 85 - John 20:17 - Christ's Work ... Chapter 86 - John 21:5 - The Tender Love... Light & Truth - The Gospels - Footnotes...
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XXXIII.
Christ's Recognition Of Faith.
"And Jesus said unto him, Go thy way; thy faith hath made thee whole.
And immediately he received his sight, and followed Jesus in the way."
-Mark 10:52.
The Lord is going about on his errands of grace, as one whose heart was full of love, and his hands of blessing.
He came, not to condemn, or to curse, or to smite; but to pardon, to bless, to heal, to save.
He has to do with body and soul; with the soul specially, but with the body also, both for its own sake, and also to furnish out a type of that which is spiritual, both in the sickness and in the cure.
He comes as the physician to the sick; not with the balm of Gilead, or the skill of its physicians, but with the balm of heaven, and the skill of heaven.
Let us look at this sick one here, and his cure.
We may learn much.
The disease symbolizes something more terrible than itself; a deeper darkness; a sadder blindness; a more incurable deprivation.
To be blind to man and this world is sad; but to be blind to God and to the world to come, infinitely sadder.
Man has no idea of the terribleness of such a blindness; a disease that shuts him out from all that is glorious, and beautiful, and divine.
O blindness of the soul how terrible art thou!  Rendering us incapable of seeing and knowing God!
With thee what would heaven be to us! Heaven without seeing God! Let us mark,-
     I.
The application.
Conscious of blindness, he longs for eyesight.
Incapable of curing himself, despairing of cure from his fellow-men, he betakes himself elsewhere.
Necessity brings him.
(1.)
He applies in the right quarter.
Quitting man, he comes to God.
He has heard the fame of Jesus; the cures that He has done; and he concludes, this is the healer for me.
He is one who can do what only God can do.
He recognizes the necessity for a divine healer.
Such is the healer we need; one who is divine; who can do mighty miracles.
(2.)
He applies in the right spirit.
He has no promise to trust in, but what he has heard calls up faith.
He comes in faith.
He comes earnestly.
He comes defying opposition and hindrance.
He casts away his garment in haste.
Earnestness, coupled with confidence in Jesus,-these are the feelings with which he comes.
He knows exactly what he wants.
He is in good earnest about the matter; and he has confidence in Jesus.
He will take no denial.
He presents what Bunyan calls his "note of necessity."
(3.)
He applies at the right time.
When Jesus was passing by.
I would not say that any time can be a wrong time; but there is truth in what Rutherford says, that a man is converted just "in the nick of time."
There is a tide of which it behoves us to take advantage.
"Seek while He may be found; call while He is near."
II.
The reception.
It was just such as we should expect count upon.
It was-
     (1.)
Most gracious.
Jesus stood still and commanded him to be brought; when he comes He receives him lovingly, and grants his request at once.
He does not keep him waiting.
It is truly the grace of Him who said, "Come unto me."
He came without a promise; but that matters not.
(2.)
Most satisfactory.
He got the very thing he wanted.
He got it immediately.
He got it without price or grudge.
It was a full response to his appeal.
He got good measure, pressed down, and poured into his bosom.
It was thus that the divine physician did his work on earth.
It is thus he does it still.
For he has carried up into heaven all his love, and skill, and accessibility.
He waits for the blind soul; He stands still; nay, He commands him to be brought.
We can use the words which the bystanders did to the blind man of Jericho,-"Be of good comfort, rise, he calleth thee."
Poor, blind sinner, rise,-come!
Make haste, throw away every impediment, carry your blindness to this heavenly healer.
Trust Him for the cure.
You will meet with as gracious and satisfactory a reception as did the blind man here.
III.
The effect of the cure.
He followed Jesus in the way up to Jerusalem.
He did not return to his own house or friends, but at once attached himself to Jesus.
The love of Christ constrained him.
He could not remain behind; he must follow.
Thus gifts from the hand of Jesus attach us to his person.
They form a link between us and him.
They are as a magnet to draw us.
He followed Jesus; and so does each one whose eyes He opens.
He follows Him in the way.
Jesus was on his way to Jerusalem, and Bartimeus follows him thither.
And thus we follow Him too,-to the heavenly Jerusalem,-his home and ours.
He did not say to the blind man, Follow me; yet he did it; love compelled him: he did not need a command.
Unbidden the healed one follows; so follow we.
He leads the way; we follow.
Anywhere; it matters not where; enough if Jesus leads the way, though it be to the wilderness or to the cross.
How much more blessed when it is to Jerusalem that He is going.
Thither we follow Him; and there we shall abide with Him.
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