
Living as Children of the Light
By Bishop Paul S. Loverde
Bishop of Arlington
(From the issue of 3/25/04)
The following homily was given by Arlington Bishop Paul S. Loverde
on the fourth Sunday of Lent at the Cathedral of St. Thomas More in
Arlington.
The images in today’s three scripture readings are concrete and real:
anointing with oil, light dispelling darkness and a blind man seeing clearly
and fully.
In today’s first reading from the First Book of Samuel, a handsome young
man named David is chosen by God to be the King of Israel and anointed
precisely to take over that leadership role. "There — anoint him, for this
is the one!" So spoke God to Samuel. " … and from that day on, the spirit of
the Lord rushed upon David."
In today’s second reading from St. Paul’s Letter to the Ephesians, the
image of light dispelling the darkness is dominant. "You were once darkness,
but now you are light in the Lord. Live as children of light."
In today’s third reading from St. John’s Gospel, a man born blind is
cured by Christ and given full sight. " … [Jesus] spat on the ground and
made clay with the saliva, and smeared the clay on his eyes, and said to
him, ‘Go wash in the Pool of Siloam’ — which means Sent. So he went and
washed, and came back able to see."
Each of these images relates to us as disciples of the Lord Jesus. Each
of us has been chosen by the Lord to belong to Him, to be a member of His
people. That choice was absolutely made at our Baptism when we were reborn
of water and the Holy Spirit. At our Baptism, we too were anointed with the
oil of catechumens and with sacred chrism. "We anoint you with the oil of
salvation … He now anoints you with the chrism of salvation." At our
Baptism, we too were called to be a light and given a lit candle to
symbolize this call to walk as a child of the light. "Receive the light of
Christ … . This child … has been enlightened by Christ … May he or she keep
the flame of faith alive in his or her heart." In Baptism, the blindness of
original sin — and for adults, of all personal sin — was removed, so that
from that moment on, we could see with the eyes of faith.
Lent is intrinsically connected with Baptism. For those of us already
baptized, Lent is the season for our reclaiming more firmly the identity and
mission given us when we were baptized into Christ Jesus. Lent is the time
for us to be cured of the blindness that sins have caused by coming to
Christ in prayer and penance, asking Him to remove the blindness of sin and
to restore us to sight — the ability to see again with the eyes of faith.
Lent is the time for us to allow Christ to be our Light and to recommit
ourselves to live as children of light with every kind of goodness and
truth.
For those not yet baptized, Lent is the time for the final preparations
and instructions prior to being baptized at the Easter Vigil. So, today our
catechumens are taking part in the second scrutiny. We continue to support
them with our prayer, asking the Lord to "free the elect from the false
values that surround and blind them." We ask that they may "rejoice in the
light, that they may see" with the light of faith.
In the end, the images in today’s three scripture readings are more than
images. They become reality for us as we respond more fully to God’s choice
that we belong to Him and renew more firmly our commitment to see with the
eyes of faith and to live as children of light, proclaiming Christ’s truth
and reflecting Christ’s love. Amen.
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