Vigils Reading – 4th Sunday of Lent
COME TO CHRIST
From a commentary by St Ambrose
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You have heard that story in the gospel where we are told that the Lord
Jesus, as he was passing by, caught sight of a man who had been blind from
birth. Since the Lord did not overlook him, neither ought we to overlook the
story of a man whom the Lord considered worthy of his attention. In particular
we should notice the fact that he had been blind from birth. This is an important
point.
There is, indeed, a kind of blindness, usually brought on by serious illness,
which obscures one’s vision, but which can be cured, given time; and there is
another sort of blindness, caused by cataract, that can be remedied by a
surgeon; he can remove the cause and so the blindness is dispelled. Draw your
own conclusion: this man, who was actually born blind, was not cured by
surgical skill, but by the power of God.
When nature is defective the Creator, who is the author of nature, has the
power to restore it. That is why Jesus also said: As long as I am in the world, I
am the light of the world, meaning: all who are blind are able to see, so long as I
am the light they are looking for. Come, then, and receive the light, so that you
may be able to see.
What is he trying to tell us, he who brought human beings back to life,
who restored them to health by a word of command, who said to a corpse, Come
out! And Lazarus came out from the tomb; who said to a paralytic, Arise and
pick up your stretcher, and the sick man rose and picked up the very bed on
which he used to be carried as a helpless cripple? Again, I ask you, what is he
trying to convey to us by spitting on the ground, mixing his spittle with clay and
putting it on the eyes of a blind man, saying: Go and wash yourself in the pool of
Siloam (a name that means “sent”)? What is the meaning of the Lord’s action in
this? Surely one of great significance, since the person whom Jesus touches
receives more than just his sight.
In one instant we see both the power of his divinity and the strength of his
holiness. As the divine light, he touched this man and enlightened him; as a
priest, by an action symbolizing baptism he wrought in him his work of
redemption. The only reason for his mixing clay with the spittle and smearing it
on the eyes of the blind man was to remind you that he who restored the man to
health by anointing his eyes with clay is the very one who fashioned the first
man out of clay, and that this clay that is our flesh can receive the light of eternal
life through the sacrament of baptism.
You, too, should come to Siloam, that is, to him who was sent by the
Father (as he says in the gospel, My teaching is not my own, it comes from him
who sent me). Let Christ wash you and you will then see. Come and be baptized,
it is time; come quickly, and you too will be able to say, I was blind, and now I
can see, and as the blind man said when his eyes began to receive the light, The
night is almost over and the day is at hand.