May 28, 2026 – Feast of Our Lord Jesus Christ, the Eternal High Priest
Click here for the readings (https://bible.usccb.org/bible/readings/052826.cfm)
Life itself is a journey. Every day, we are all walking somewhere. Students walk carrying dreams and pressures about their future. Parents walk carrying responsibilities for their children. Workers also walk with exhaustion, worries about income, and anxieties about tomorrow. Many people continue walking even while carrying hidden pain, disappointments, and unanswered prayers.
Aware of this reality, we ask, “Whom are we following on the road of life?”
Today’s Gospel presents to us Bartimaeus, a blind beggar sitting by the roadside. He was not only physically blind, but, was also socially rejected. During that time, many believed that sickness and poverty were punishments from God. If you were suffering, people assumed you must have sinned. That is why Bartimaeus was treated as insignificant and unwanted.
Sadly, this mentality still exists today. Many are quickly judged because of their failures, weaknesses, addictions, family situations, or poverty. We sometimes act as though suffering people deserve to be ignored. Even our expressions like “karma” or “gaba” can make us think more of punishment than mercy.
Yet, Our Lord Jesus Christ, whose feast we celebrate today, as our Eternal High Priest, reveals a very different face of God.
When Bartimaeus cried out, “Jesus, Son of David, have pity on me,” many tried to silence him. For the crowd, Bartimaeus was only a disturbance. But for Jesus, he was a person worth stopping for.
Indeed, Jesus stopped for someone whom everybody else ignored. This tells us something important about following Jesus. To follow Him means learning to see people not as burdens, not as useless, but as persons loved by God.
Bartimaeus also teaches us what true faith looks like. His faith was not passive. He shouted even louder despite rejection and humiliation. He refused to lose hope because he believed that Jesus could change his life.
Then, Jesus called him. The Gospel says Bartimaeus immediately threw aside his cloak and came to Jesus. That cloak was precious to him. It was his protection, his comfort, and the only thing he owned. Yet, he left it behind because something greater was calling him.
This is the heart of discipleship. Following Jesus always requires letting go. Sometimes what prevents us from following the Lord are not evil things in themselves, but our attachments that slowly control us. This is pride, resentment, unhealthy relationships, obsession with success, addiction to comfort, the need for constant approval, or fear of being vulnerable.
Jesus asked Bartimaeus, “What do you want me to do for you?” The Lord already knew he was blind. Yet Jesus wanted Bartimaeus to speak honestly about his need.
This means that healing begins when we stop pretending. In fact, we could be physically strong but spiritually exhausted. Some smile outside but carry deep loneliness within. Others are imprisoned by anger, jealousy, insecurity, or hidden wounds. But like Bartimaeus, we are invited to come honestly before the Lord and say: “Lord, I want to see again.”
In the first reading, Peter reminds the Christians that they are “living stones” chosen and precious before God. This means that our faith is not merely a private devotion. We are being built together into a community that reflects the goodness of God.
This is where both readings meet beautifully. Bartimaeus did not remain sitting by the roadside after his healing. The Gospel says, “He followed Jesus on the way.”
This tells us that faith is not only about receiving blessings from God. Faith is about walking with Jesus afterward. To follow Jesus on the way means choosing compassion over indifference, humility over pride, truth over lies, and hope over bitterness.
Especially today, when many are becoming harsh, divided, judgmental, and easily indifferent to the suffering of others, Christians are called to walk differently. Not as people who merely go to church, but as people who carry the heart of Christ wherever they go. Because the road of faith begins not when life becomes easy, but when we choose to walk with Jesus every day. Hinaut pa.






