Homily for Ordinary Time 2
January 18, 2026
God’s Glory Is Our Task
The
famous Indian peace activist Gandhi was a big fan of Jesus. Apparently he read
from the Gospels every day and really admired the Lord. But someone asked him
why he never became a Christian, and he replied, “Because you Christians are so
unlike your Christ.”
Our
readings today speak about Jesus’ mission to be the Light to the Nations – to
introduce all nations into a right relationship with God. Once Christ ascended
into Heaven, He passed that task on to His Body, the Church – not just priests
and deacons, but every baptized and confirmed Catholic. It’s a tremendous thing
– the eternal salvation of souls is now in our hands. And thus, we do
have a mission, but how well are we doing at making God’s salvation known to
the nations?
Other created
things glorify God just by being what they are. For example, a mountain tells
us of God’s majesty, the complexity of a cell shows God’s magnificent precision
and providence, a cute puppy might show the tenderness of God’s heart. But
human beings are the only creatures who can choose whether or not to glorify
God – when people look at you, do they see God’s love? His mercy? His
faithfulness, His wisdom, His holiness? Or do they see something that looks
very unlike God?
St.
Irenaeus once said, “The glory of God is man fully alive.” God receives the
most praise when we are fully human – but what makes you fully alive? Sitting
on a beach in the Bahamas? A deep conversation with a friend? All of these are
elements, but to be fully human is to be like Jesus Christ. As Pope St. John
Paul II said, “Christ reveals man to himself” – we only know what it means to
be fully alive when we look upon the only Man to fully live – Jesus Christ.
Jesus loved this world rightly – He enjoyed the company of others, He spent
time with His Father in prayer, He had a clear and passionate mission in life,
He knew how to love and sacrifice. This is how He was fully alive – this is how
we can be fully alive, too.
Our
Catholic Faith gives us a clear blueprint to this abundant life that glorifies
God – but it’s so crazy countercultural! In a couple weeks, we’ll be reading
through Jesus’ Sermon on the Mount, in which He calls the poor in spirit
blessed; in which He says that if our hand causes us to sin cut it off; in
which He says we must love our enemies.
Just being
“nice” isn’t being a light to the nations. No one will get to know God’s
passionate, radical holiness just because we hold the door open for someone.
No, it takes a much more countercultural discipleship to reveal God’s Heart to
the world. People sit up and take notice when you forgive a painful hurt; they
ask questions when you’re open to life and let God decide how many kids you
have; they stare in wonder when you prioritize Sunday Mass over Sunday sports,
or when you sacrifice some pleasure for the sake of Christ.
There’s
a great story of this from the life of St. Josemaria Escriva. He was an
ordinary teenage boy growing up in Spain in the early 1900s, with dreams of a
family and a career. But on one snowy day, he went out about the town when he
was shocked to see that there were footprints in the snow, and he caught a
quick glimpse of the clothing of a barefoot Carmelite priest – and he began to
consider, “If that priest can walk barefoot in the snow for love of Christ,
Jesus must be worth every sacrifice! How can I sacrifice my life for Him?” And
Josemaria became a priest, the founder of Opus Dei, and a saint – all because
one unknown Carmelite priest lived radically for Jesus.
My
friends, sometimes we think that as long as we save our souls, then we’ve done
our job. But our Catholic faith is about more – it’s also about God’s Name
being praised in us and through us. When people look at you, do they think,
“Oh, there goes that believer in Christ – his life shows that He’s living for
eternity.” Or would they be surprised to find out that you believed and say,
“Really? You’re a Christian? I couldn’t tell from the way you live.” Is God
glorified in you – or are you glorified in you?
I close
with a quote from a Christian writer named Brennan Manning, who said, “The
greatest single cause of atheism in the world today is Christians, who
acknowledge Jesus with their lips, and then walk out the door and get on with
their lifestyle. That is what an unbelieving world simply finds unbelievable.”