To read the texts click on the texts: 1 Sam 16:1,6-7,10-13; Eph 5:8-14; Jn 9:1-41
Some time ago, a young man came
to see me to pour out his heart. He was a self-admitted workaholic, because of
which he was increasingly distancing himself from his wife and two children.
His marriage was on the verge of breaking up, since he could not find time to
spend with his family. He was caught in a vicious circle. He worked hard in
order to provide for his family and the harder he worked and the more time he
spent in the office, the further was he moving away from his family. As he
poured his heart out, I simply listened. His job had become his obsession. He
wanted to give his wife and children things he had never had as a child and
this effort to gain all things for his family became an enemy of the persons he
loved most. He finally looked up at me and exclaimed, “I’ve lost sight of
everything that matters most!”
The fox says something similar to the Prince in
the book titled “The Little Prince” by Antoine de Saint-Exupery “And now here
is my secret, a very simple secret; it is only with the heart that one can see
rightly, what is essential is invisible to the eye.” The young man realized
that he had lost his vision. He had not lost his external sight or vision, but
the inner vision, the heart vision, which enables one to see clearly. He left
my room with a promise to set his priorities right and thanked me for
listening.
The loss of vision, which
the young man above experienced, is similar to the one experienced by both
Samuel as narrated by the first reading of today and the Pharisees in the
Gospel text. In the case of Samuel, the reason for the loss vision is due to mistaken
perception and judging by outward appearances alone. However, God makes it clear
to him that he judges not by the external but looks at the heart. In the case
of the Pharisees, the loss of vision was caused by their set opinions and
understanding. They wanted to follow the law as thoroughly as they could but
did not realize that they had mixed it up with their interpretation and
preconceived ideas and thus had shut the door to any kind of revelation that
God was constantly making in Jesus through his Spirit. They were so sure of
everything ---- that God did not work on the Sabbath, that Moses was God's only
spokesperson, that anyone born blind and anyone who broke the Sabbath had to be
a sinner, that God did not work through sinners, that God did not work on
sinners and that furthermore no one could teach them anything.
In this context,
it must be noted that John makes abundantly clear in this text that physical
illness is not the effect of sin. Rather sin here is connected with spiritual
blindness and anyone who rejects the true light who is Jesus is guilty of sin
and so is spiritually blind. This is an even more dangerous blindness than the
physical one. The man born physically blind comes to both physical sight and
spiritual sight in his being able to see and recognize Jesus as the one who is
sent. Through opposition and persecution the blind man moves from a confession
of “the man Jesus,” to “prophet,” to “one from God” and finally to a confession
of Jesus as the Son of Man and Lord.
The second reading of today reminds
the Ephesians and us, that like the man in the Gospel who represents all of us,
we were also blind and stumbling in darkness.
But now we live in the light of Christ and his Good News. And that light
is seen in the way we behave, in the way we relate with other people in
"complete goodness and right living and truth". Our lives are to have a transparency where
there is no darkness, no hidden behaviour which we would be ashamed to reveal
to others.
We have been “enlightened”
through baptism and are commissioned to confess and witness to our faith..
Imitating the journey of the man toward greater insight about Jesus, we
progress to an inner enlightenment so they can ultimately confess the crucified
one as the Son of Man, who, when lifted up, will draw all things to himself.
Lest the Pharisees be too harshly blamed, we must ask about their own
blindness. Of course, acknowledging our own spiritual blindness can be
embarrassing, painful, and threatening. To confess our own groping darkness and
howling demons, our frustrations, fears, and failures, unnerves us. And as
unsettling as that confession is to make to our own selves, there is the added
anxiety of what others might say, think, or do. Whether it was tradition,
jealousy, or legalism, something blinded the religious leaders and prevented
them from seeing the obvious. What blinds us to the truths that we should be
seeing? Regardless of what it is, Jesus offers to remove the blindness and show
us the light.
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