For those who have not noticed, I am now
wearing eyeglasses all the time. This was a Christmas gift from my eye doctor –
although, it wasn’t much of a gift because I had to pay for them. I’ve worn glasses
for reading and computer work for years, but a change was needed in order for
me to see more clearly all the time. And that is precisely the message for us
in today’s gospel (Mark 9:41-50).
The text we heard this morning is extremely
powerful, as long as it’s not taken out of context. The danger of this gospel
is when people take the words literally and start cutting things off and
plucking things out. But Jesus isn’t instructing us to hurt ourselves. After all,
the body is sacred because we were made in God’s image. But the true meaning of
the gospel goes much deeper than the physical – it goes directly to the eyes of
our hearts.
If we can put on our spiritual glasses, we
would be able to see how each of us needs to change. We would clearly see how we
sometimes neglect to treat others as sisters and brothers of Christ. We would
clearly see how we sometimes focus on our own needs and wants instead of the
needs and wants of others. We would clearly see how we sometimes abuse others
by our actions and language, or how we manipulate others so that we have power
over them. Sometimes, we lose sight of who we are because we become blinded by a
society who tells us who we ‘should’ be. If we could clearly see and believe that
deep down, we are all good – but sometimes, we just make bad choices.
Today is our wake-up call. Let us begin this
day with a new set of eyes. Let us clearly see that we need to change, to
become better people, better listeners, better friends, better neighbors, and
better disciples. Let us not make a “spectacle” of ourselves by focusing on us,
but truly see life through the “lens” of God so we know how we are called to
live.
If we want to find true peace in this life, we
need to put our hope in the Lord. Only then will we be able to clearly see.