Text: Ephesians 5:8
Date: Lent IV + 3/30/14
In our Lenten discipline of the catechumenate so far we have learned that to be a Christian means to enter a spiritual battle with the devil. But we do not fight that good fight by our own powers alone but by a new birth, being born again. Being a Christian means becoming a brand new person. We discovered that baptism is the foundation of this new birth, as Jesus said, “by water and the Spirit.” Our attention to water then expanded our understanding that faith is that living water, that our new person is the creation of God the Holy Spirit. Today our focus shifts from the image of water to the image of light and darkness. As new persons of God’s re-creation and new birth, today we consider everything in life that is against God as darkness and the grace and salvation of God as our light. St. John takes the entire ninth chapter of his Gospel to tell us the story of a man born blind and how Jesus’ gift of gaining his sight allowed him to see the true darkness, the blindness of sin, and to discover the vision of saving faith, saying to Jesus the same confession that we are asking of you, “Lord, I believe.” St. Paul comments in our Epistle today, saying, “For at one time you were darkness, but now you are light in the Lord. Walk as children of light.” Come, let us walk in the light of the Lord. Continue reading “Children of Light”

