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3rd Sunday in Ordinary Time (A)  - “A Light in the darkness"

Where does Jesus choose to begin his public ministry?  Where does he choose to begin to make himself known?  St. Matthew tells us in today’s Gospel:  “He left Nazareth and went to live in Capernaum by the sea, in the region of Zebulun and Naphtali…”  This is not a random choice, Matthew explains, but it is so the prophecy of Isaiah might be fulfilled.  Matthew then makes reference to the passage from Isaiah that we hear in the first reading today: “the people who sit in darkness have seen a great light, on those dwelling in a land overshadowed by death, light has arisen.”  The significance of this reference would have been very clear to the Jewish audience of the first century.  Zebulun and Naphtali were the regions in the Northern Kingdom invaded by the Assyrians 900 years earlier.  The Assyrians were the enemies of Israel.  They came in, crushed Israel’s army, and carried the people off into exile.  The Israelites in that region were deported to a foreign land and were essentially made slaves of their enemy.  It was a time of great darkness and humiliation.  This came about, we read in the account in the Second Book of Kings, “because the Israelites sinned against the Lord… and because they venerated other gods”  (2 Kings 17:7).  They did not heed the warnings of the Lord through the prophets to repent of their evil ways and to return to the covenant the Lord had established with their fathers.  The imagery is clear in the way God works: the place of great darkness, sin, and humiliation, will be the place where the Lord is discovered and begins to be made known, where the light will begin to shine, and where the kingdom that was lost will begin to be restored.  God goes to the depths of human darkness and suffering to bring the light of life.  What we experience as the worst possible thing is not beyond redemption.  God is not absent in our darkest moment, but he is there calling us, “Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand.”  At those moments, we have a choice either to curse at the darkness or turn to the light.  We should not be afraid of the darkness because in fact we may actually need the darkness in order to see the light.  To use an analogy, the astronomers need to go where there is a dark sky in order to see the stars more clearly.  The light of Christ often stands out more clearly when we are surrounded by darkness. 

          I began to discern my vocation to the priesthood at a particularly dark time in my life.  I was not happy at work.  I didn’t know what I wanted to do with my life.  I didn’t have a plan.  Very little that I did, even the little “successes” I had at work, gave me any lasting joy.  The harder I worked, the more fruitless things felt.  I did not see a way out of this situation.  I was afraid of failure.  I told myself that I was happy because I was following my idea of what would lead to happiness, but those around me could tell I was dwelling in a land of gloom.  It was actually within a few days following the end of a failed political campaign I was working on and a few days after the death of my grandfather, a great loss for me and my family, that the light of Christ broke into my darkness.  It was literally overnight that my life was changed.  I heard his call.  “You think you have nothing to offer, but I want you.  Come follow me.”  “You keep focussing on the failures and what you think you have to do to make things better.  Let that go.  Stop focussing on yourself and your mistakes.  Instead, focus on me.  Follow me, and I will make you what you are meant to be.”  I’m sure God was calling me for sometime, but it wasn’t until I was in the darkness that I could “see the light” - what really mattered in life.  The awareness that I’m desired, wanted, and loved even in my failure and sin - that I’m not defined by my mistakes - was worth more than anything the world could offer.  When those first disciples heard Christ’s call and were met by his merciful gaze, they immediately left their business and family and followed Jesus.  I get it.  From that moment in my life, I began “to sing a new song” - follow a different tune.  My perspective changed from seeing life as a series of obstacles that I had to navigate to overcome  - something very negative and burdensome - to an adventure of discovery: “I believe that I shall see the bounty of the Lord in the land of the living.”  Despite the darkness, the Lord had something good for me.  His presence and call gave me hope - that I could “wait for the Lord with courage”.  Even if I didn’t see where the path was headed, I believed that there was something good for me on the path - the path the Lord had prepared for me.  I just had to keep on following.  That event changed the way I look at the darkness.  I can look at it now with hope. 

          Do you see the light in the darkness today?  Where are you looking for it?  I often see that light - the light of Christ - when I meet young people following the Lord.  On Friday night, I stopped in to visit with the group that is taking a course on the sacraments of initiation sponsored by the Archdiocese that we are hosting here at St. Charles.  I met a group of young adults who were there to study and to learn.    What is going on that they are willing to spend two hours on a Friday night reflecting on the Catechism of the Catholic Church?  What is it that they see?  Who is it that they see?  Several weeks ago on the day that I spend with my parents, I went to concelebrate Mass at a local parish.  A newly ordained priest is assigned there.  His enthusiasm and the joy with which he preached were a reminder of the Lord’s continued call and presence in the world.  The young priest was a light - a sign of hope.  He reminded me of what the Lord had done with me more than twenty-five years ago.  Jesus is “the light of the human race; the light shines in the darkness, and the darkness has not overcome it.”  Events like World Youth Day, the growth of new religious communities, and the recent conversion of Hollywood actor Shia Lebeouf, are signs that his light continues to shine in the darkness of the  world and that the darkness has not overcome it.  The Church throughout its 2000 year history has gone through many dark times, but the Lord always raises up saints in those times of darkness who will be lights for others.  The darkness, we can say, makes them saints.  In these moments of darkness, the Lord is calling us to be saints.  Will we curse the darkness or be attentive to the light?