Tag: simeon

  • Learning to See the Light

    Learning to See the Light

    December 29, 2025 – Monday, 5th Day in the Octave of Christmas

    Click here for the readings (https://bible.usccb.org/bible/readings/122925.cfm)

    After the joy of Christmas Day, after the lights and songs, the Church gently asks us today an important question. Do we still know how to see the light, and are we willing to live by it?

    In the Gospel, we met Simeon, an old man who had waited his whole life for this moment. He carried no title, no power and no influence. What he had was patience, faith, and a heart trained to recognize God’s presence. When Mary and Joseph brought the child Jesus to the temple, Simeon saw what many others did not. He saw salvation and the light. And holding the child, he said, “My eyes have seen your salvation, a light for revelation.”

    Simeon teaches us something important. Seeing the light is not about having sharp eyes, but about having a faithful heart. Many people were in the temple that day. Only Simeon recognized the Messiah. Why? Because he waited, listened, and remained open to God even when the years were long, boring and quiet.

    However, Simeon also spoke words that were hard to hear. He told Mary that this child will be a sign of contradiction, and that a sword will pierce her heart. Indeed, Christmas joy is real, but it is not shallow. The light that comes into the world will reveal what is true in every heart. Hence, as light brings comfort to us, but it also exposes. As light gives warmth, but it also demands a response from us.

    This is where the first reading from the First Letter of John speaks clearly to us. John told us that knowing God is not just about words or feelings. “Whoever says, ‘I know him,’ but does not keep his commandments, is a liar.” These are strong words, but they are honest. Thus, faith that remains only in speech is incomplete. And love that is not lived becomes empty.

    Now, John even went further. He said that those who walk in the light do not hate their brother or sister. It is when we linger to hatred, resentment, jealousy, and indifference that we belong to darkness. Because they blind us and make us stumble without even realizing it. This is very close to our daily lives. We may celebrate Christmas, attend Mass, and speak about love, yet still carry anger, silent grudges, or coldness toward others.

    Hence, the message of today is simple but challenging. We are reminded that to see the light of Christ is to choose to walk in love. This tells us that light is not just something we admire from a distance. It is something we follow.

    Like Simeon, we know what it means to wait. Waiting can make us tired. Sometimes it can harden our hearts. But Simeon showed us that waiting with faith sharpens our vision. It teaches us to recognize God even in small and ordinary moments.

    Today, Jesus is still presented to us not only in the temple or in our Churches, but in people. Jesus comes to us in those who are difficult to love, in those who test our patience, in those who need forgiveness. How we respond to them reveals whether we are walking in light or still choosing darkness to linger in our hearts.

    As we continue the Octave of Christmas, let us ask ourselves honestly, “Do my actions reflect the light I claim to see? Do my relationships show that I am walking in love?”

    May Simeon teach us patience. May John teach us integrity. And may Christ teach us how to live as children of the light not just in season, but every day in our ordinary lives. Hinaut pa.