Bartimaeus in Fausset's Bible Dictionary
("son of Timaeus or Timai".) A blind beggar of Jericho, who
had his sight restored by Christ as He was going out of the
town (Mark 10:46); Luke (Luke 18:35; Luke 19:1; Luke 19:5)
describes the cure as Christ was entering Jericho the day
before. Probably the beggar, with the persevering faith
which characterized him, applied to Jesus first as He was
entering Jericho, and renewed his petition the next day, as
Jesus was leaving Jericho. Eliciting, as He was wont, first
of all from the blind man the expression of his want, "What
wilt thou that I shall do unto thee?" Christ next grants his
prayer, and praises his faith "Receive thy sight; thy faith
hath saved thee." Matthew (Matthew 20:29-34) describes it,
as Jesus was going from Jericho; and mentions two blind men.
Probably Bartimaeus, after applying on the day of
Jesus' entry into Jericho, was joined by the second blind
man while Jesus was passing the night with Zacchaeus; so
both shared in the cure on Christ's leaving Jericho.
Bartimaeus, being the more prominent, is alone mentioned by
Mark and Luke; just as they mention only the colt, Matthew
both the donkey (the mother) and the colt; Luke (Luke 24:4)
the two angels, Matthew and Mark the one alone who spoke.
Seeming discrepancies establish the independence of the
witnesses and the absence of collusion. Substantial
agreement of many witnesses, amidst circumstantial variety,
is the strongest proof of truth. Modes of reconciling
seeming discrepancies may not be the true ones, but they at
least prove the discrepancies not to be irreconcilable and
that they result only from our ignorance of all the facts of
each case.
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