Home
LIVING THE CATHOLIC FAITH IN THE 3RD MILLENIUM
A LAYMAN'S LOOK AT THE JOURNEY OF FAITH

4th Sunday of Lent - Light In the Lord

“You were once darkness, but now you are light in the Lord. Live as children of light...” 

These opening words from the letter to the Ephesians set the scene and focus on both of today's readings: the conflict between light and darkness - between good and evil. But before getting too comfortable, we should also realize that this message is also a wake-up call. The struggle is far from over. As "children of Light" we still must be strong and vigilant to do what is "pleasing to the Lord," and to "produce every kind of goodness."

manbornblindThe Gospel today gives us a vivid and dramatic miracle story. It is not only about the cure of the blind man, but the deeper light-giving that happens as the man faces opponents and naysayers to his experience. This is a pretty long story today. Yet if we listen to it attentively and reflect on its details, what should jump out at us is that this story is not just about the healing of a blind man. It is our story - our individual story and our community story as well.

We may not need the restoration of physical sight. But what we do need is vision — something to get us moving in the right direction. We need to see who we are before God, where we are going and what we must do along the way.

In the story Jesus changes the man’s condition. He cures two forms of blindness. He enables both the man to see and his disciples to get a different perspective. Jesus doesn’t just see one person who is ill. He sees another example of the human condition he has come to alleviate.

Blindness is a universal ailment that afflicts all of us. We are blind to God’s presence in our lives, to the needs of our neighbors, to people of other races, religions, nationalities etc. In our blindness, we would rather build walls of separation and construct social barriers than welcome the stranger into our midst and address the needs of the refugee.

The healing happens quickly. Jesus gives the man his physical sight, but that is just the first step on the man’s journey to spiritual sight. In the confrontation he has with the Pharisees the man will continue to progress from his newly acquired physical sight to spiritual sight.

This is a challenging gospel story and today we have another opportunity to check our own vision. We can look back and reflect on what choices we have made in our lives.

Like the blind man in today's story, our eyes have been opened. We can see that people of other races and nations (even those some name as enemies) are our sisters and brothers. We can see that having all we ever wanted can leave us dissatisfied and poor in God’s sight. We can see that even in sickness and old age there is great value and beauty. We can see that God is not someone on high to fear, but someone up close who walks our life with us in loving companionship. We can see the people we value are not always the ones others call “important.”

“You were once darkness, but now you are light in the Lord. Live as children of light...”

Welcome!

eCatholicism.org is a collection of Internet Resources with up-do-date and current information regarding the Church's interaction with the modern world, politics and society.

Besides being a resource for information, eCatholicism.org will also offer our visitors the ability to proclaim the Good News in new ways, to serve as witnesses to the Saving Power of our God and to re-affirm their identity as Catholic communities to a world which desperately needs to hear the Gospel message - now more than ever before.

CURRENT REFLECTION

CALLED TO RESURRECTION

transfigurationThe entire season of Lent points to one central theme: Resurrection. The Easter story is not only an account of Jesus’ resurrection from the dead; the story of Easter is also a living, continuing account of humanity striving to rise and live life to the full. The Easter message is not only about the Risen Lord, but also about humanity, whom God has saved all throughout salvation history.

Resurrection is a core element of our Christian faith and it is one defined by some very definite commitments. A continuous, daily shift of mind and heart is required, and it is this which makes the Easter story a daily story.

READ MORE

HEADLINES & ARTICLES OF INTEREST

  • THE FRANCIS DECADE – A POPE FOR A NEW EPOCH
    THE FRANCIS DECADE – A POPE FOR A NEW EPOCH

    It is impossible to make sense of this extraordinary pontificate unless we view it through the same lens as Francis himself does.
     

    MORE...
  • POPE FRANCIS' TEN-YEAR RENEWAL OF THE CHURCH
    POPE FRANCIS' TEN-YEAR RENEWAL OF THE CHURCH

    Cardinal Kevin Farrell, Prefect of the Dicastery for Laity, Family and Life, discusses a transformative decade, distinguished by the Pope's teaching us how to live the Gospel.

    MORE...
  • WHAT CATHOLIC WOMEN NEED TO HEAR FROM POPE FRANCIS — AND WHAT THEY DON’T
    WHAT CATHOLIC WOMEN NEED TO HEAR FROM POPE FRANCIS — AND WHAT THEY DON’T

    We have a ways to go before our church reaches equality. But I refuse to allow my faith to stall until the Holy Father catches up to the Holy Spirit.

    MORE...
  • POPE FRANCIS AT 10 YEARS: A REFORMER’S LEARNING CURVE
    POPE FRANCIS AT 10 YEARS: A REFORMER’S LEARNING CURVE

    With an agenda full of problems and plans Francis, 86, has backed off from talking about retiring and recently described the papacy as a job for life.
     

    MORE...
  • WE NEED MORE WOMEN IN THE LECTIONARY
    WE NEED MORE WOMEN IN THE LECTIONARY

    There are many strong and faithful women in the Bible whose stories Catholics never hear in the Sunday morning readings. In the past 50 years the lectionary for the Mass has been significantly updated only four times.
     

    MORE...
  • WHAT CONCERNS DO CATHOLIC WOMEN HAVE?
    WHAT CONCERNS DO CATHOLIC WOMEN HAVE?

    Pope Francis opened the floodgates when he invited submissions to the Synod of Bishops to address major issues facing the church. Now, the women have spoken. Over 17,000 women, in fact, from 104 countries.

    MORE...
  • A READING LIST FOR SEMINARIANS AND OTHER CATHOLIC CONSERVATIVES
    A READING LIST FOR SEMINARIANS AND OTHER CATHOLIC CONSERVATIVES

    Thinking you are better than others is a sign of pride and arrogance, he said, especially if you are passing judgment on a person’s thoughts and motivations, which you cannot see.

    MORE...
  • POPE FRANCIS SEEKS A SYNODAL CHURCH THAT IS ALWAYS REFORMING
    POPE FRANCIS SEEKS A SYNODAL CHURCH THAT IS ALWAYS REFORMING

    Theologians Serena Noceti and Rafael Luciana outline how the pontificate of Pope Francis initiates a new phase in the reception of Vatican II and recovers the conciliar image of an Ecclesia semper reformanda...

    MORE...