The occasional, often ill-considered thoughts of a Roman Catholic permanent deacon who is ever grateful to God for his existence. Despite the strangeness we encounter in this life, all the suffering we witness and endure, being is good, so good I am sometimes unable to contain my joy. Deo gratias!


Although I am an ordained deacon of the Catholic Church, the opinions expressed in this blog are my personal opinions. In offering these personal opinions I am not acting as a representative of the Church or any Church organization.

Wednesday, April 28, 2010

Homily: Wednesday 4th Week of Easter

Reading: John 12:44-50

Back in my Navy days, I served with a man who spent 2,099 days, almost six years, as a POW in North Vietnam. For him and his fellow POWs, those were long and bleak days, marked mostly by hunger, thirst, illness, torture and unbelievable cruelty. I remember him describing how it felt on the day of his release.

“It was like coming up out of a deep cave,” he said, “a place of utter darkness. You had been there so long, it was hard to remember anything else. And then suddenly, almost without warning, you’re thrust into the light, a light so bright you can hardly bear it. You want to take it all in, but you can’t. It’s too much to handle. And so you look away, you squint, you take in a little at a time, all the while reveling in the light. Freedom," he said, “is like that light. When we live with it, we hardly notice it. When we live without it and regain it, its power is almost overwhelming.”

Of course, this metaphor of freedom as light is nothing new. We see it in New York harbor where the Statue of Liberty stands holding aloft a lighted torch, a light of freedom, for all to see. Yes, freedom is a remarkable gift. It’s also a rare gift, so rare that relatively few people over the centuries have actually experienced it. Perhaps this helps explain why sudden, unexpected freedom, like that experienced by my friend, has such a powerful impact.

And yet, this freedom isn’t permanent. As history tells us, it passes. My friend would agree. For him it passed in a flash, as that missile exploded under his wing. That’s because it’s an earthly freedom, a flawed freedom, a freedom derived from our human imperfections. And so, the light of freedom, powerful though it is, doesn’t burn forever. Only one light does that, the light that Jesus brings into the world. It’s also a light of freedom, a light of eternal freedom, the freedom that only God can offer. For that’s what eternal life is, brothers and sisters; it’s true freedom, a freedom unlike anything we will ever experience here on earth.

Jesus doesn’t just carry the light; Jesus is the light. “I am the light of the world,” he tells us. And so, without Jesus, the world plunges into darkness. If you want proof of this, just pick up a newspaper. Read the headlines. Watch the evening news. Look at a world that tries its best to evict Jesus from it. And yet, because of our faith, we know that such attempts always fail. Jesus will not be denied. The light of the world cannot be extinguished. Just as the light from the rising sun pushes aside the darkness of night and exposes what’s been hidden, so the light from the Son of God, God’s Word, exposes the sinfulness of this world and leads all who will follow to the safety of the Father’s embrace.

It is Christ the Light who enables those with eyes of faith to see the truths of God's kingdom. How did Jesus put it? “You shall know the truth and the truth shall set you free.”And just as sunlight brings warmth and allows living things to grow, Jesus’ words produce life — the very life of God — within those who receive it with faith.

To see Jesus is to see God.  To hear his words is to hear the voice of God. He is the very light of God that has power to overcome the darkness of sin, ignorance, and unbelief. God's light and truth bring healing, pardon, and transformation. And this light shines in all directions; it is for everyone. God excludes no one from His love. It is we who exclude ourselves by rejecting that love, by rejecting His Son. Without the explicit light of Christ, accepted in the fullness of faith, there is only darkness and death.  We are of Christ or we are of the world. Those are really our only two choices.

Jesus warns that if we refuse his word or take it lightly, we choose to remain in spiritual darkness. He made it clear that he did not come to condemn us, but rather to bring abundant life and freedom from the oppression of sin, ignorance and evil. No, Jesus doesn’t condemn. We condemn ourselves when we reject God's wisdom and truth.  It’s one thing to live in ignorance due to lack of knowledge, but it’s something else entirely to reject the Word and those who are chosen by God to bring it to us. Jesus tells us that His Word which we have heard will be our judge. If God’s Word has the power to judge, it also has the power to change and transform our lives.

Step into the light, the light of Christ, the light of eternal freedom, and let the Word of God transform you. The alternative, brothers and sisters, is only darkness.

God's peace...

1 comment:

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    God Bless You

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