🎧 [Listen to Sat 5:30 pm March 14 Homily: Audio]
📺 [Watch Sat 5:30 pm March 14 Mass: YouTube Video]
*** Play 9:30 am Mass March 15 pre-Parade Mass Livestream ***
[v.4] 2026-March-15 – Sat. 5:30 pm (Novena) 4th Sunday Lent ●● 1 Samuel 16:1b, 6-7, 10-13a ●● Psalm 23 ●● Ephesians 5:8-14 ●● John 9:1-41 ●●
During these
middle Sundays of Lent, we hear three Gospel readings that depart from the
usual pattern. This is the Year of Matthew, but on these Sundays the Church
gives us three important passages from the Gospel of John.
Last week we
heard John chapter 4, the story of Jesus and the Samaritan woman at the well.
This week we hear John chapter 9, the healing of the man born blind.
Next week we will hear John chapter 11, the raising of Lazarus.
Each of
these Gospels invites us to see
more clearly who Jesus is.
Last week
Jesus was in Samaria, in the northern region of Israel, speaking with people
who were often looked down upon by those closer to Jerusalem. Now, in today’s
Gospel, Jesus is in Jerusalem itself. And there is a serious debate among the
religious leaders about the man who has been healed of blindness.
The
disciples begin with a question that people still ask today.
They ask
Jesus:
“Who sinned, this man or his parents, that he was born blind?”
In other
words: Who is to blame?
The
disciples assume that suffering must be a punishment for sin. But Jesus rejects
that idea completely.
He says:
“Neither he
nor his parents sinned. It is so that the works of God might be made visible
through him.”
Jesus is
teaching us something very important. Suffering and difficulty are not always
punishments. Sometimes they become the place where God’s grace becomes visible.
In a
surprising way, Jesus is saying that there can even be an advantage to blindness.
An advantage
to not seeing everything perfectly.
An advantage
to not knowing exactly what will happen next.
If we knew
every difficulty that would come in the future, we might never take the first
step.
If a couple
knew every challenge that marriage would bring, they might hesitate before
saying “I do.”
If parents
knew every worry that comes with raising children, they might be afraid to
begin.
Sometimes
people hesitate to retire because they do not know what the next stage of life
will look like. Others hesitate to change jobs because they cannot see clearly
what lies ahead.
In a certain
sense, not knowing
everything can be a gift.
Because if
we knew every difficulty ahead of time, we might never move forward.
Faith often
means trusting even when we cannot see the whole picture.
Or to put it
another way:
God
rarely shows us the whole road. He gives us light for the next step.
[St. Joseph Novena] We see this very clearly in the life of Saint Joseph.
Joseph faced
a moment of deep confusion when he discovered that Mary was with child. From a
human perspective everything seemed wrong.
But God
spoke to Joseph in dreams.
One dream
told him not to be afraid to take Mary as his wife.
Another dream warned him to take the child Jesus and flee to Egypt.
Later he was told it was safe to return.
And finally he was guided to settle in Nazareth.
Joseph never
saw the whole plan at once.
Each dream
was simply a little
light for the next step.
And Joseph
trusted that light.
[St. Patrick's Parade Mass]
We see this
very clearly in the life of Saint
Patrick, whose feast we celebrate this week.
Patrick had
been kidnapped as a teenager and taken to Ireland as a slave. For years he
lived in isolation, tending sheep far from home.
During that
difficult time Patrick began to pray deeply, and his faith grew stronger.
Eventually
he escaped and returned home. But later he experienced a vision in which he
heard the voices of the Irish people calling him back.
Think about
that for a moment.
The very
place where he had suffered was now the place where God was calling him to
serve.
Patrick
could not see the whole plan. He did not know what the future would hold. But
he trusted the light that God gave him.
He returned
to Ireland as a missionary.
Churches and
monasteries were founded, and those monasteries became centers of prayer and
learning.
At a time
when much of Europe was falling into disorder, Irish monks were copying books
and preserving knowledge for future generations.
From
Patrick’s darkness came a light that spread far beyond Ireland.
Once again we
see the same pattern:
God
rarely shows us the whole road. He gives us light for the next step.
God often
works in the same way in our lives.
He rarely
gives us the whole map.
Instead, he
gives us enough light to take the next faithful step.
Many years
ago I experienced something like that in a very small way.
When I was
about seventeen years old, I had a part-time job umpiring Little League
baseball games.
It was not
exactly a major league assignment. I certainly did not go through a long
training program or a rigorous interview process.
But I found
myself standing behind home plate calling balls and strikes. And since I was
getting paid a little bit, I suppose I was accountable.
During one
of my first games, there was a very unhappy parent in the stands who was loudly
criticizing my ability to see the strike zone.
Apparently
he did not think my vision was very good.
As a 17-year-old
umpire, that made me pretty nervous.
But standing
behind the backstop was a friend of my father’s who quietly supported me. He
did not say much. At one point he simply rolled his eyes in a way that let me
know he understood what was happening.
It was a
small gesture, but it meant a lot.
In that
moment I felt less alone.
Sometimes
God works like that in our lives.
In moments
when we feel unsure, when we feel criticized, when we feel like we cannot see
clearly, God gives us small signs of encouragement.
A supportive
friend.
A quiet word.
A moment of reassurance.
A little
light for the next step.
The man born
blind in today’s Gospel eventually says something very simple and very
powerful:
“I
was blind, and now I see.”
Those words
may sound familiar because they are echoed in the hymn Amazing Grace, where
we sing:
“I once
was lost, but now am found;
was blind, but now I see.”
That hymn
reminds us that it is God’s
grace that saves us and sets us free, opening our eyes so that
we can see the presence of Christ in our lives.
That is the
journey of faith for every Christian.
We do not
always see clearly at the beginning. But as we walk with Christ, our vision
slowly changes.
So during
this season of Lent, we ask the Lord to open our eyes.
And we
remember this simple truth:
God
rarely shows us the whole road. He gives us light for the next step.
And if we
trust this light, Christ will lead us forward.