Sunday, 21 September 2025

Homily For Monday, Twenty-Fifth Week in Ordinary Time, Year C, 22nd September 2025

 

Reading: Ezra 1:1-6; Ps. 126; Luke 8:16-18
Rev.  Fr. Emmanuel Emenike  Onyia

YOU ARE A LIGHT THAT ILLUMINATE THE DARKNESS OF THIS WORLD


Light is a very familiar word in the scriptures; light is a symbol that represents awareness, knowledge, and understanding. Light clarifies, Illuminates, Inspires, defeats darkness, shines fully and freely, it guides, stimulates and motivates, provokes action, irritates those who like darkness, confirms truth, purifies, exposes sin, warms and assures us of safety and also facilitates progress. 

Little wonder, Jesus in our Gospel passage today said: No one lights a lamp to cover it with a bowl or to put it under a bed. No, he puts it on a lamp-stand so that people may see the light when they come in. For nothing is hidden but it will be made clear, nothing secret but it will be known and brought to light.

So, as people who have been purified by the light of Christ through our baptism, we are entrusted with the mission of illuminating the darkness around us. During our baptism, we were given candlelight which we are to keep brightly burning as a flame of faith in our hearts as we journey with others towards our heavenly kingdom. This, therefore, clearly defines our role in the mission of Christ, which is to illuminate darkness and reflect the glory of God in the darkness of the passing world. 

Hence, every Christian is called by God to influence the world positively through the light of our faith, just like Cyrus, king of Persia, in our first reading, who was the light that illuminated the darkness in the midst of the people of Israel who were in exile. 

For he ordered the people to go back to Jerusalem and rebuild the temple of God, and so free them from the darkness of exile and slavery, and brought the light of hope to the people.

Dear friends, the focus of today’s message is that all of us are called to positively influence the lives of humanity by our attitude and character which should be like that of purifying light. Where there is darkness we should let the light of Christ illuminate. Where pride, selfishness, corruption and greed have brought darkness, let the light of our good attitude and character illuminate it once again. 

Where sin and immorality have made humanity filthy and ugly, let our light of holiness purify. Therefore, we must not let our lights be hidden under the darkness of this passing world; rather, we must let them shine wherever we find ourselves.

LET US PRAY: Heavenly Father, as we struggle every day to truly carry out the mission entrusted to us, give us the grace and courage to dedicate ourselves, our time, our energy and effort to becoming true light that illuminates our families, society and the world filled with darkness of sin and evil. We ask this through Christ our Lord. Amen. Wishing you a fruitful week.

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