Saturday, May 24, 2025

Homily for the Sunday of the Blind Man in the Orthodox Church



 2 Cor. 4:6-15; John 9:1-38

  Christ is Risen!

            On this last Sunday of Pascha, we celebrate that the Risen Lord has brought us from the spiritual darkness of sin and death into the brilliant light of His heavenly Kingdom.  Even as Christ restored sight to the man born blind in today’s gospel reading, He illumines our darkened souls.  That is how the Lord enables us to know and experience Him as “partakers of the divine nature” by grace. 

Before the God-Man’s healing of our corrupt humanity, grave spiritual blindness was the common lot of the children of the first Adam, who were enslaved to the fear of death as the wages of sin. When the Lord spat on the ground to make clay for the man’s eyes in today’s gospel reading, He showed that His healing is an extension of His incarnation in which He has entered fully into our humanity as those made from the dust of the earth.  The blind man regained his sight after washing in the pool of Siloam, which is an image of baptism, which illumines us and restores our spiritual sight.  The man did not really know Who the Lord was when he first encountered Him, thinking that He was merely a prophet.  After the restoration of his sight, the Savior revealed Himself as the Son of God; then the eyes of the man’s soul were illumined to know Christ in His divine glory. “He said, ‘Lord, I believe.’ And he worshiped Him.”

The good news of Christ’s resurrection is even more extraordinary than the unprecedented restoration of sight to the man blind from birth, and it is not simply a religious teaching or a point of history.  Through His victory over the corrupting powers of sin and death, He opens the eyes of our souls, enabling us to know, experience, and be united with Him from the depths of our hearts by grace.   In order truly to confess His resurrection, we must become participants in the eternal life that He has brought to the world. We must become radiant with the light that shines from the empty tomb and illumines even the darkest corners of our lives.   

When Christ was asked whose sin was responsible for the man being born blind, He answered, “It was not that this man sinned, or his parents, but that the works of God might be made manifest in him.”  The Savior rejected the common assumption that such a terrible malady must be a punishment for a particular sin.  We simply do not know why many things happen in this life, but we may always respond to even the worst circumstances in ways that open our hearts more fully to the light of Christ. The Risen Lord has illumined even the tomb itself, making it an entrance into eternal life.  Our participation by grace in the joy of His resurrection is not a reward for morality, legality, or religiosity; it is no more a matter of getting what we, as opposed to others, deserve than was the healing of the blind man.  We stand in need not of justice, but of the infinite healing mercy that enables us to behold the glory of God.  If our spiritual blindness is being healed, then we will become radiant with the light of His mercy, providing a sign of hope to our neighbors in our darkened world.        

  In order to gain the spiritual clarity to do that, we must shut our eyes to all that would keep us stumbling in the darkness of sin and enslaved to the fear of death.  Because the eyes of our souls are not yet fully transparent to the light of the Lord, none of us has perfect spiritual vision.  We do not yet see or know God, our neighbors, or ourselves clearly, but in ways that are deeply distorted by our passions.  That is why we must struggle to become fully receptive to the brilliant divine energies of our Lord through the healing found in the sacramental and ascetical life of the Church.   As those who were born spiritually blind and have been illumined through the washing of baptism and the anointing of chrismation, we must remain vigilant against the persistent temptation to fall back into the comfortable ways of corruption.  There is so much within us that would prefer to hide in the darkness rather than to be illumined in God. The more that we are fully present to the Lord from the depths of our hearts, the more clearly we will know Him and ourselves. That is why we must pray daily, fast and confess regularly, serve our neighbors (especially those we find it hard to love) at every opportunity, and refuse to worship any of the false gods of this world (especially those we find most appealing). 

The blind man did not respond to Christ’s instructions with questions and reservations driven by fear or anxiety about the future course of his life.  He simply obeyed, washed, saw, and then moved forward to encounter challenges he could never have anticipated.  His example reminds us to cultivate the spiritual simplicity of obedience.  If we want healing, we must not allow anything to distract us from attending to our one essential calling of doing what it takes to open the eyes of our souls to the brilliant light of Christ.  Doing so is not simply a one-time experience but requires persisting in the eternal journey of becoming radiant with the divine energies of our Lord as we become more like Him in holiness. None of us can ever say that we have completed this infinite calling.  The Savior has conquered even death itself in order to illumine every dimension of our darkened souls with the light of heavenly glory.  The more receptive we are to His light, the more we will be aware of the darkness that remains with us.  That is not a moment to be discouraged or paralyzed by fear but instead simply to obey Christ in humility as did the man born blind.

As we conclude this season of Pascha, we must mindfully resist the temptation to allow the blindness of a world still enslaved to the fear of death to obscure our spiritual vision.  Those who criticized Christ for daring to heal on the Sabbath were so concerned with trying to use religion to serve their proud desires for position and power that they refused to open their eyes to the Light of the world. We must be on guard against the subtle temptation to identify ourselves with the Savior while welcoming darkness into our souls every bit as much as they did.  We may still mouth words about His resurrection and call ourselves Christians as we wander further into the dark night of entrusting ourselves to the false gods of this world.  If we are making money, possessions, physical appearance, food, drink, sex, the approval of others, or anything else to which we have a passionate attachment the driving purpose of our lives, then we are living as though Christ were still in the grave.  If we condemn any set of our neighbors and hope fundamentally in some arrangement of earthly success that promises to raise us up above the people we love to hate, then we are shutting the eyes of our souls to the brilliant light of the Lord, regardless of how religious or moral we may claim to be.

Our Lord, Who died as the innocent victim of violence at the hands of corrupt religious and political leaders, calls us to become living witnesses of His victory over even Hades and the tomb in the world as we know it today with all its appalling tragedies and bitter disappointments.   Nothing can keep us from doing so other than our own stubborn choice to persist in spiritual blindness.  As we prepare to bid farewell to the season of Pascha this year, let us persist steadfastly in the struggle to enter as fully as possible into the new day of the Savior’s resurrection as we turn away from darkness in all its forms and embrace the Light of the world from the depths of our hearts. Let us redirect the energy that we so commonly invest in gratifying our passions to repudiating the darkness as we open the eyes of our souls as fully as possible to the brilliant light of the Lord.  Let us become radiant with the divine light that shines brightly from the empty tomb, always keeping the joy of Pascha in our hearts. For that is truly the only way to live each day as those who know that their only hope, and the only hope of the world, is in the resurrection of our Lord, God, and Savior, for Christ is Risen!       

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