The First Reading from 1 Samuel 16:1b, 6-7, 10-13a recounts God's rejection of outward appearances in choosing David as king. Samuel, grieving over Saul, is sent to Jesse's household. He nearly anoints the eldest son based on impressive stature, but God reminds him: "Not as man sees does God see, because man sees the appearance but the LORD looks into the heart." This choice of the youngest, overlooked shepherd boy highlights divine wisdom that pierces beyond the surface.
This theme resonates deeply with the Gospel from John 9:1-41, the healing of the man born blind—a lengthy, dramatic account central to Lent Year A (and used even in other years for the scrutinies). Jesus declares Himself the "light of the world" and heals the blind man with mud and washing in the Pool of Siloam (meaning "Sent"). What follows is a profound exploration of spiritual blindness: the Pharisees' refusal to see the miracle, their interrogation, and ultimate rejection of Jesus despite evidence. The healed man grows in faith, boldly professing, while the religious leaders descend into deeper blindness. Jesus concludes: "I came into this world for judgment, so that those who do not see might see, and those who do see might become blind."
The Second Reading from Ephesians 5:8-14 reinforces this shift: "You were once darkness, but now you are light in the Lord. Live as children of light." Paul urges awakening from sleep and rising to Christ, who gives light.
The Responsorial Psalm (Psalm 23) beautifully ties these together: "The Lord is my shepherd; there is nothing I shall want." The Good Shepherd guides, restores, and anoints—echoing David's anointing and the healing mud on the blind man's eyes.
Personal Reflection
These readings challenge us during Lent to examine where we are spiritually blind. Like the Pharisees, we can cling to preconceptions, rules, or appearances—judging others (or ourselves) by externals—while missing God's action in our midst. God doesn't choose or heal based on merit or impressiveness; He looks at the heart and calls the lowly, the overlooked, the broken.
The man born blind models the journey of conversion: from ignorance to curiosity, to bold witness, to worship. His healing isn't just physical; it's revelatory. He "sees" Jesus as Lord. In contrast, the Pharisees' sight becomes their stumbling block because they refuse to admit need.
Laetare Sunday reminds us that Lent isn't endless gloom—it's preparation for resurrection light. Even in penance, we rejoice because Christ the Light is coming. As Ephesians says, "Awake, O sleeper... and Christ will give you light."
In our daily lives, where are we blind to God's presence? In judging others by appearance? In resisting change or admitting fault? Or perhaps in failing to see the dignity in the marginalized, as God sees the heart of the "least" like David?
Let us pray for the grace to let Christ anoint our eyes anew, washing away cynicism or pride in the waters of baptismal renewal. May we emerge as witnesses, proclaiming, "One thing I do know is that I was blind and now I see" (John 9:25). And in seeing truly, may we walk as children of light toward Easter joy.
Lord Jesus, Light of the World, open our eyes to see as You see. Heal our spiritual blindness and lead us to rejoice in Your saving mercy. Amen.
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