Homily For The 4th Sunday Of Lent (Laetare Sunday), Year A.
1
Samuel 16:1.6-7.10-13; Psalm 23:1-6; Ephesians 5:8-14; John 9:1-41.
“THE CHOICES OF GOD”
By: Rev. Fr. Charles Onyeka Ezejide.
· Today,
which is the 4th Sunday of Lent, is traditionally known as the
“Laetare Sunday”. It is so-called because the church wants us to rejoice in the joyful anticipation of Easter. Since Easter is closer to us than
when we started this Lenten journey, we must rejoice because our redemption is
close at hand.
· Today,
more than ever, there are many reasons why we should be joyful. We should be
joyful because God’s ways are not the ways of man, and if men were God, then
maybe we would have all perished.
· This
is exactly what we see in the choice of God for David in the first reading (1
Samuel 16:1, 6-7, 10- 13) over the rest of his brothers. Humanly speaking,
David fell short of the requirements to be King in Israel, but here we see that
while men look at physical appearance, God looks at the heart, hence the choice
of David.
· Dear
friends in Christ, the choices of God are sometimes mysterious and funny, but
the truth is that God sees what men do not see. We must realise that from the
choice of David, that once the hand of God is upon you, there is nothing that
can change that.
· David
became the choice of God because he had been destined for greatness, and he
continued to cooperate with the will of God to bring about the fulfilment of
that destiny.
· My
dear brothers and sisters, we too have been carefully chosen by God for
greatness, but the sad reality is that a lot of us find it difficult to
cooperate with the will of God. We cannot be said to be doing the will of God
if we continue to live in sin and recklessness.
· This
is exactly what the responsorial Psalm (Ps. 23:1-6) is trying to instil in us.
That we will do bravely if we acknowledge God as our shepherd and we are his
sheep. As his sheep, if we listen to his voice and follow his commands, then he
will surely lead us to our destination.
· Dearly
beloved, it does not matter how obscure you have been, it does not matter how
sinful you have been, it does not matter how your past has been; what is important
is your future and where you go from here and the decisions you make from
today.
· Remember
that David was hidden in the pasture, and yet the hand of God located him and
anointed him for greatness. The second reading (Ephesians 5:8-14) tells us that
we were once in darkness and now we have been brought to light; hence, we must
live like children of Light. To live as children of light means obeying his
commandments and avoiding sin.
· For
how long shall we continue to dwell in sin? For how long shall we continue to
resist the voice of God calling us to repentance? For how long shall we
continue to live in regret as the aftermath of sin? We must decide to repent
now before it is too late because “the things that are done in secret are
things that people are ashamed even to speak of, but anything exposed by the
light will be illuminated, and anything illuminated turns into the light” (Eph.
5:12-14).
· Our
various inclinations to sin must have made us weak; our ability to resist and
say “NO” to sin must have been crippled. We may desire to take the walk of
faith to walk out of sin and enter God’s wonderful light, but the sooner we decide
that, the deeper we get into sin.
· The
Gospel reading (John 9:1-41) offers us hope that Jesus is passing our way today,
and he will lift us, he will heal us, cleanse us, and will restore us to our
original innocence so that we can become his choicest choice again.
· Dear
friends in Christ, you are still a wonderful choice of God. God wants to use you
to achieve great things if only you let him. You may have been blinded by sin,
blinded by work, blinded by wealth, blinded by friends, blinded by influence,
blinded by family, etc. Let your encounter with Jesus today at this mass become
a life-changing experience for you. May he heal you of all blindness and make
you again the choice after his heart.
· Jesus
said to the blind man, “Go and wash in the Pool of Siloam” (John 9:7), and his
sight was restored so that he could see the light of God. Today, he is also
saying to us who have been blinded by sin to go and wash at the sacrament of
penance so that we can be renewed and restored to wholeness again.
· Dear
friends in Christ, the God we serve is a God who breaks human protocol for our
sake. In the first reading, his choice was against human expectation and in the
gospel reading, he broke the Sabbath protocol to restore the blind from
darkness into light, from death to life. If we too, surrender to his will, be assured
that protocols are already being broken for your sake.
· May
God give us the grace to repent of our sinful passions and inclinations so that
we can become wonderful choices of God and enter into his blessing, testimony,
and wonderful light through Christ our Lord, Amen!
· Happy
Sunday!!!
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