Sunday, February 9, 2025

FIFTH SUNDAY IN ORDINARY TIME

(Isaiah 6:1-3.3-8; I Corinthians 15:1-11; Luke 5:1-11)

Today's readings are well known and full of meaning. They have to do with religious experience. This phenomenon overwhelms a person with the awareness of being in the presence of God. It confirms and deepens his faith so that he wants to share it with others.

A man once told the story of his experience of God. He said that his wife had just received a medical report that she had cancer. The man felt sadness and worry when he went to his parish to close the door as was his custom. Inside the building he stopped to pray for a few minutes. Then he felt an arm across his shoulders and heard the words: “Don't worry; everything will be all right.” He was at peace, and in fact his wife received treatment that overcame her cancer.

Religious experiences are not as rare as many think. Those who make a Cursillo de Cristiandad, an Emmaus Walk, or another type of retreat involving testimonies of faith and moving music often sense the presence of God. Participation in a sacrament can also become a religious experience. One convert told the story of his confession before being received into the Catholic Church. He said it was accompanied by many tears and the lifting of a great burden.

With these reflections on religious experience in mind let us look at the readings. The first is known as “the call of Isaiah.” It tells of the experience of the prophet in the Temple of Solomon some seven hundred years before Christ. He was praying when he had a vision of God Almighty on His throne surrounded by smoke and smell of incense. The seraphim attending Him began to cry out: “Holy is the Lord, God of hosts.” Isaiah trembled with fear because he realized that he was a sinner with unclean lips in the presence of God. He had probably told lies or eaten forbidden foods. Then he felt his lips being cleansed by a burning coal brought to him by a seraph. And when the Lord sought a messenger to reveal his will to the people, the prophet volunteered. He proclaimed, “Here am I, Lord, send me.”

Is the second reading a description of a religious experience? Probably not. Although St. Paul is telling of encounters with the Lord, the experiences are objective, not subjective like Isaiah’s vision or the man feeling the arm of the Lord. Religious experiences are by nature felt by the individual or small group with no way to verify them with witnesses or scientific instruments.

Peter in the gospel obviously has a huge catch. His experience can be classified as religious because he infers that the catch was caused by God. His faith in Jesus as a saint grows throughout the story. It began when he invited him into his boat to preach. It grew so that Peter called him “Master” when Jesus commanded him to put the boat out into the deep. And it was confirmed in the fishery when he threw himself at Jesus’ feet, calling him “Lord,” which means “God” or, at least, “Son of God.” From this moment until his martyrdom, Peter dedicated himself one hundred percent to Jesus.

It seems that God allows religious experiences to strengthen our faith commitment. Many of us would serve the Lord without experiencing his presence in an awe-inspiring way. However, with religious experience we are more determined to tell others about his love. The experience gives us the conviction that our life is to be lived doing more than satisfying personal desires. It verifies that we are sons and daughters of God destined for eternal happiness.