FOURTH SUNDAY OF LENT - A
ENTER INTO LIGHT
Close your eyes for a moment,
concentrating on the darkness that engulfs you. How do you feel with eyes tight shut? Do you think you can do anything in
this condition? Can you walk home, eat your food or work on the computer? Do
you enjoy being like this?
The answer is obvious. We don’t want to be blind or to be
trapped in the darkness. The blind
want to be able to see. Those in the dark want to emerge into light. Many of us
are afraid of the dark because in the dark we do not control our environment
and our own movement.
Jesus was not afraid of the
dark. He came to encounter the
darkness of this world. He came to lead the blind to an experience of color and
images and action. Jesus is the God who entered the darkness of this world and
the darkness of each of our lives in order to set us free.
As we speak of darkness today, we
do not primarily refer to physical blindness. Many of us live each day in interior darkness. Our eyes are
open and yet we cannot see what needs to be done with our present or our future. Our eyes are open but we cannot
distinguish right from wrong. Our eyes are clear and yet so narrow is our
vision of the road out of anger, un-forgiveness and pain. The road exiting from
guilt is not visible; the way out of the cycle of sin is non-existent.
Sin is the worst interior
darkness. It has power to rob our
lives of light and of delight. It cripples us so that we cannot move forward
and change ourselves. It makes us weak to fight for what is right.
A blind person cannot cure
himself. The darkness cannot produce light. Sin cannot lead to holiness. We
need someone to meet us and touch us. In Jesus we have someone who speaks to
the blind, touches his eyes with mud, directs him to wash and to return with
perfect sight.
Jesus is doing this same thing
again and again today in the sacrament of Confession. He knows we need him to guide us toward the light so he
speaks to us, touches us and sends us away with peace and joy. In the sacrament of Reconciliation, we
experience the same liberation that flooded the blind man’s life.
If you have not been to
confession for a long time and if you have been living in a particular
darkness, interior darkness, due to sin and human weakness, do not hesitate to
approach the Lord. Allow the Lord
to show you his love and express to you his mercy. If you regularly go to
confession, continue doing so and as an act of charity, invite others to do so
out genuine concern for them.
In the end, like the blind man,
who made a definite stand to follow Jesus, the Messiah, the Savior, may we also
have the confidence and renewed optimism to venture into life with hope. May Confession bring us closer to the
Lord, who is the Light of the world, and light of every human heart.
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