Is. 9:1-4; 1 Cor. 1:10-13, 17-18; Mt. 4:12-23
On a cold evening during the Second World War, a small village lay in darkness under a strict blackout. Inside a modest home, a frightened child noticed a single lamp glowing in the distance. “Why would someone risk lighting a lamp now?” he asked. His mother replied softly, “Because someone else needed hope more than safety.” That solitary light did not end the war, but it pierced the darkness and changed a heart forever. The Gospel today begins in a similar way—not with armies or palaces, but with a light dawning in darkness and a simple invitation spoken to ordinary people: “Follow me.”
When Jesus hears of John the Baptist’s arrest, he withdraws to Galilee. Matthew carefully notes that Jesus settles in Capernaum, in the land of Zebulun and Naphtali, fulfilling Isaiah’s ancient prophecy: “The people who sat in darkness have seen a great light.” Galilee was considered insignificant. Yet it is precisely there that God’s light shines first. This tells us something essential: God’s call does not wait for ideal conditions. Jesus enters places of confusion, pain, and uncertainty.