Homily
4th Sunday of Lent A2
15 March 2026
St. Ann Catholic Church - Prairie Village
AMDG
Do you need to have your eyes checked? The Jayhawks certainly do after shooting an ungodly 24% last night in the Big 12 tournament.
I certainly do as well. I've had bad nearsightedness my whole life. I live in fear of a detached retina from my eyes being so drastically corrected so many times. In the area of visual intelligence, I am special needs. My mind doesn't take pictures and it's hard for me to remember faces. I would be the worst witness to a crime. I'm the worst at spatial relations and seeing how things like puzzles fit together. It's torture for me.
I need to have my eyes checked. How about you?
How about the meaning of my life? Do I see it clearly? Let's see.
Why did God make me?
The Baltimore Catechism took a good crack at it. God made me to know, love and serve Him in this life and to be together with Him in the next.
Today's Gospel has a better answer I dare say. Why do you exist? You exist for the glory of God. You exist to be transfigured by His light. You exist to make God visible!
It's why the man in today's long Gospel was born blind. It's the reason you were born blind, without the light of faith in you. It's so that the glorious works of God might become visible in you!
The glory of God is you being fully alive. The shame of God is you remaining dead in your sins. Whoever has the light of Christ given in baptism, deepened by Confirmation, fed by the Eucharist and restored by confession is a new creation. Which means you are a unique and unrepeatable star in the constellation of heaven, a reflection of the invisible glory of God that can only be visible in you.
You are an image of God, destined to grow in His likeness. That's why you exist. To make God visible.
Whoever sees this in faith sees the most dramatic and glorious thing that has ever transpired in human history, you being reborn in baptism and coming back from the dead to new life. Whoever does not see this is blind.
Why do I encourage everyone to have their babies baptized at Mass? It's so we have a chance to know each other, in a spousal way, as those who become the intimate adopted family of God by baptism.
But there's another reason. It's because you keep forgetting the dignity of your baptism, and why you exist, and the most dramatic thing that has ever happened to you and is being made more visible at this very liturgy.
If you don't see the glory of your baptism being illumined by the light of the Gospel and fed with the food of the Eucharist, you are blind. You need to get your eyes checked. My sight on its own is very limited in its perspective. Yet I walk by faith and not merely by human sight. If I walk in the bright light of the Holy Spirit dwelling within me, I see the big picture, and my place in the most brilliant story ever written.
We baptize children so that we can see clearly that unless the light of the Holy Spirit dwells within us, we are simply existing not living. We put ashes on our forehead to make visible that unless we walk by faith not by sight, we are dead men walking.
Why do you exist? To reflect the glory of God!
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