4th Sunday of Lent A 15 March 2026 Live in the light
If we had to form a visual concept of heaven, I don’t think many people would think of heaven as ever being in the dark. No dark, not even shadow.
By the time we get to Heaven we will have finished with darkness. You were darkness once, but now you are light in the Lord… have nothing to do with the futile works of darkness. (Ep 5 ,8-14 second reading)
Our Lord gives the man sight, for the first time. It was an exercise of that same power by which He created all things.
He was showing how powerfully and how rightly God can intervene.
And the man would have received perfect vision too. God does all things well!
What does this miracle mean for us?
Jesus is restoring our spiritual sight, so that we can tell night from day when it comes to right living, making right decisions.
We see with the eyes of faith, and things previously strange suddenly seem to make more sense (like the need for the sacrifices we make, for instance.)
If we had
perfect spiritual sight we would never sin; our judgment would be accurate at
all times and in all matters.
This is how it would have been for Our Lady, the perfect eyes of faith leading to the best possible way of living this life.
Our adherence to moral truth would work the same as with physical sight we keep to a well-defined path and do not go toppling off to the side
Somehow it is different when we get to moral sight; we wander off the path quite freely and do not seem to consider that a bad thing.
Due to there being so much sin in the world there is much distortion when it comes to perceiving reality. Wrong judgments are made, and many wrong turnings, leading to much disorder.
Jesus shows us the difference between good and evil, leading us to choose the good which eventually becomes obvious.
In Lent especially we are looking for the light which is eternal and infinite, to be ‘children of light, so that our deeds are good’ (Ep 5,8)
How can we acquire so much clarity? Different elements come together - . prayer, good works, sacraments, study, discipline etc.
All these things will restore our sight, and make it easier for us to take the obvious right course.
We break free from all distortions and come to see our need for grace and mercy from God.
Whatever truth we grasp we can build upon and habitually make better choices.
We will have eyes to see the glory of God, as much as our nature can absorb.
It is the light that God Himself emanates. It will have a beauty beyond anything we can see or imagine here.
The city lights will lose their appeal - the passing and often false lights of our world. We will seek instead the purer light of Heaven.
Heavenly light inspires us with its beauty, greater than any earthly light.
Lord, that I may see (Mk 10,51)- the blind man by the side of the road.