LIVING THE CATHOLIC FAITH IN THE 3RD MILLENIUM

A LAYMAN'S LOOK AT THE JOURNEY OF FAITH

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2nd Sunday in Ordinary Time - Bruised Reeds and Smoldering Wicks

The prophet Isaiah is dominant in our liturgical readings as we begin our new year. The reference in last week's passage is most significant..."Here is my servant...my chosen one upon whom I have put my Spirit...he shall bring forth justice...not crying out, not shouting...a bruised reed he shall not break, and a smoldering wick he shall not quench." This week we hear God's promise: "I will make you a light to the nations, that my salvation may reach to the ends of the earth." And next week we discover the promise fulfilled: "The people who walked in darkness have seen a great light; upon those who dwelt in the land of gloom a light has shone."

John the Baptist also has a prominent place during these weeks: Last week, John protests his unworthiness at the baptism of Jesus - this week he boldly proclaims: "Behold, the Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world." Finally, next week, we will see John arrested - his mission fulfilled.

It is at this moment that Jesus begins his public ministry - and the rest of Isaiah's vision is fully realized. He went about his ministry with passion, revealing the love of His Father to all and being especially tender and patient with the sick, the seekers and the sinners. These were bruised reeds. He did not handle them roughly, mistreat them or break their spirits. He listened, he was patient, he healed, he challenged them to wholeness.

Jesus met so many who were smoldering wicks - people whose fire had almost gone out - people in the darkness of doubt and despair - people who had just about given up hope...But he did not quench the feeble spark by harsh legalism, by cold demands, by insensitivity to human weakness. No, he fanned the spark into flame by caring and concern, by a deep sense of compassion, by a loving acceptance of even the worst of human failures.

All of us are bruised reeds and smoldering wicks. We are far from perfect, and rather consistently plagued by failure and selfishness. We are much too easily hurt, too easily discouraged. We fall short of expectations; we display our frailty like open wounds. Yet despite this, the Lord has confidently chosen us to complete His work.  We need to realize that we are living in a sacred space, populated by a multitude of folks who - like us - desperately want to be faith-filled: who sometimes get defeated, who sometimes get battered by life and bested by trials, and yet somehow, throughout it all, still cling to their faith. 

The gift of faith is given us in Baptism; it is nurtured by the example of family, the zeal of teachers, the power of prayer and sacrament. It is tested by our own personal search for freedom and independence: it is challenged by those who have no faith, by those whose only concerns are those of this world, by our own failures and disappointments. But it is also sustained by Christ's promise of presence and love.

And because of this promise, our mission to proclaim the good news of salvation to all becomes just a little easier.  We can heal the broken-hearted – because we first have felt the healing power of Christ in our lives; we can forgive those who have sinned against us and against the world, because we first have been forgiven; we can enable others to experience the presence of Christ in their lives, because we first have been found by Him, we are known to him and we have been loved by Him in ways that we could never imagine.  We can become Christ’s light to the world, knowing full well that even the smallest and most insignificant of flames is far more powerful than the darkness itself.

In a culture that is increasingly more fragmented and torn apart, giving ourselves over into His hands, learning to follow Christ, to find God in our daily lives and to truly live the life of discipleship is no easy feat. It is only when we allow our own ordinariness to be transformed by the hand of God, that we will be able to enter into the grace-filled living to which people of every age have been called.

It is only when we allow His touch to transform our lives that the words of Isaiah can become a concrete reality in this world - only then can we carry "the Light" to the nations.