RT Article T1 ‘Spiritual Blindness’ in the Bartimaeus Pericope (Mark 10:46–52): ward Decentering Ableist Readings JF Biblical interpretation VO 32 IS 1 SP 52 OP 70 A1 O'Connor, M. John-Patrick LA English PB Brill YR 2024 UL https://ixtheo.de/Record/188216704X AB It is commonly acknowledged that blindness and seeing play an important role in the theology of the Gospel of Mark. Typically, readers interpret “spiritual blindness” as the moral thrust of the discipleship discourse in Mark 8:22–10:52. While the disciples fail to see their teacher as the Christ, blind Bartimaeus appears to identify Jesus as the “Son of David” (10:46–52). However, centering blindness-as-vice not only plays on an unfortunate ableist binary but also renders Mark’s more marginal characters as insignificant. Research on blindness in antiquity demonstrates how socioeconomic status was a leading factor in determining social perceptions of the blind. This article contends that Mark’s Bartimaeus pericope should be read accordingly. Instead of serving as a metaphor for “spiritual blindness,” physically blind characters are raised to the status of insider as a condemnation of mistreatment of the poor—a motif found within the broader terrain of Mark’s moral landscape (6:30–44; 8:1–10; 12:38–44; 14:1–11). K1 Disability Studies K1 Ableism K1 Seeing K1 messianic secret K1 Blindness K1 Discipleship K1 Gospel of Mark DO 10.1163/15685152-20231721