The Lord never abandons His people, even when sin has led us into exile. In today’s first reading from the Book of Ezra, we witness the extraordinary moment when King Cyrus, moved by God, proclaims freedom for the Jewish people: “Go up to Jerusalem, back to your native land, and build a house for the Lord.” After seventy years in Babylon, the exiles are told to return and rebuild the Temple that had been destroyed because of their disobedience. What once seemed like punishment becomes the setting for restoration.
The same is true in our lives. The Lord sometimes allows us to endure trials, exile, or suffering—not as meaningless pain, but as discipline that leads to renewal. The Catechism teaches, “God permits evil in order to draw forth some greater good” (CCC 412). When we face the valleys of suffering, we must ask, not “Why, Lord?” but “What are You trying to teach me?” These moments, painful though they may be, become the very means by which God reorients us toward Himself.
The Gospel reminds us that the light we receive through Christ is not meant to be hidden. Jesus says, “No one who lights a lamp conceals it with a vessel or sets it under a bed. Rather, he places it on a lampstand so that those who enter may see the light” (Luke 8:16). Our wounds, like the wounds of Christ after His Resurrection, can become radiant signs of God’s glory if we allow His grace to transform them.
Consider the example of St. Ignatius of Loyola. A cannonball shattered his leg, ending his worldly ambitions. Yet it was in that suffering that he encountered the lives of Christ and the saints. He discovered that worldly pleasures fade, but Christ’s joy endures. His exile became a beginning, his wound became a gift, and through him the Jesuits went on to set the world ablaze for Christ.
What exile or trial are you walking through today? Do not hide your lamp. Let the Lord rebuild your heart into a living temple, founded not on pride or self-reliance, but on Christ alone. In the Eucharist, He gives us the strength to begin again—today.
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