Staying salty in an indifferent sea: Homily for the 5th Sunday of Ordinary Time

Homily for the Fifth Sunday in Ordinary Time (Year A).

Bagnoregio, Italy

After the Christmas break another Jesuit in our community returned to Rome after having had corrective eye surgery.  The surgery went so well that for a week after he returned, he wore sunglasses at all times of day, even indoors; of course, we gave him a hard time about imagining that he had become a movie star.  What happened was that, with his vision corrected, at first his pupils were letting in too much light—so much light that he couldn’t see.  For our eyes to work, we need light, but we also need contrasts.  Some parts of our field of vision must be lighter or darker than others, otherwise we’ll end up falling down the stairs and running into walls.

If there is no light, of course, we cannot see.  But too much light can blind us too.  In the Biblical world, before electric lighting, the risk of darkness was almost always greater than having too much light.  In the Bible the metaphor of light is usually good, though occasionally the light of God is overwhelming—think of Jesus appearing to St. Paul on the road to Damascus.  Paul is knocked over and blinded by the vision.  If we were to be hit right now with heaven’s light in all its purity, we would probably be paralyzed too.  In order to experience that light, we need to grow, to be re-formed—the same way my confrere’s eyes had to convert after surgery and our own eyes have to adjust when we step outside at midday.  We might, in fact, say that God’s light shines even on those in hell, and that their darkness is the result of eyes grown used to the shadows, forever unwilling to adjust to the daylight.  However, this world in which we live right now contains both light and darkness.  In order to navigate in this world, we need to be able to recognize the contrasts.

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