His Eminence Metropolitan Cleopas of Sweden’s Homily on the Sunday of the Blind Man

His Eminence Metropolitan Cleopas of Sweden’s Homily on the Sunday of the Blind Man

His Eminence Metropolitan Cleopas of Sweden’s Homily on the Sunday of the Blind Man

St. George Cathedral of Stockholm

Sunday, May 17, 2026

Dearly Beloved Brothers and Sisters in Christ,

Christ is Risen!

As the Church leads us toward the glorious feast of the Ascension of our Lord, she places before us today the profound Gospel account of the healing of the man born blind. This miracle is not merely the restoration of physical eyesight; it is a revelation of the spiritual condition of humanity and of Christ Himself as the Light of the world.

The man in today’s Gospel had never seen the light of day. From birth he lived in darkness. Yet the Fathers of the Church teach us that this blindness is also an image of the spiritual blindness that afflicts fallen humanity. A person may possess healthy eyes and still remain unable to perceive God, truth, grace, or the meaning of life itself.

For this reason Christ proclaims: “I am the Light of the world.” He did not come merely to teach morality or philosophy. He came to illumine the human person. He came to open the eyes of the soul.

Saint John Chrysostom explains that when Christ made clay from the dust of the earth and anointed the blind man’s eyes, He revealed His divine creative power. Just as God formed Adam from the dust in the beginning, now the Son of God fashions sight where sight did not exist before. This is more than a healing; it is a new creation.

Then Christ sends the blind man to wash in the Pool of Siloam. The Fathers see here a clear image of Holy Baptism. The blind man goes, washes, and returns seeing. Likewise, through the sacramental life of the Church, the human person is enlightened by divine grace. In the ancient Church, Baptism itself was called “Holy Illumination,” and the newly baptized Christian was known as “the enlightened one.”

Today’s Gospel can also be beautifully connected with another powerful event of the Resurrection season: the journey to Emmaus.

Two disciples walk along the road in sorrow and confusion. The Risen Christ Himself draws near and walks beside them. He speaks to them, explains the Scriptures to them, and yet the Gospel says that “their eyes were restrained, so that they did not know Him.”

What a mysterious and profound moment this is. Christ is present before them, yet they cannot recognize Him.

And perhaps the same thing happens to us. How often does Christ walk beside us in our daily lives, and yet we fail to perceive Him? How often does God act within our lives while we remain spiritually blind?

The disciples on the road to Emmaus heard Christ’s voice but did not yet recognize Him. In the same way, the man born blind needed divine intervention in order to receive sight. Both accounts reveal that true vision comes not merely from the senses, but from the grace of God.

And when were the eyes of the disciples finally opened? At the breaking of the bread. In the Eucharistic fellowship. In the sacred mystery of Christ’s presence.

Here the Church reveals a great spiritual truth: Christ is known through illumination by divine grace. We do not truly know Him through intellect alone, nor through study alone, but when the eyes of the heart are opened.

This is why the spiritual life of the Church is a continual journey from darkness into light. Through prayer, repentance, confession, fasting, and participation in the Holy Mysteries, the soul gradually becomes illumined. A person begins to see differently. He sees his neighbor not as an enemy, but as an icon of God. He sees suffering not merely as punishment, but as an opportunity for salvation and transformation. He sees life not only in earthly terms, but in the light of eternity.

Saint Gregory Palamas teaches that illumination is not simply an emotional or psychological experience, but participation in the uncreated Light of God. When the heart is purified, the human person begins mystically to behold the presence of God.

And notice something extraordinary in the Emmaus account: the moment the disciples recognized Christ, “He vanished from their sight.” Why? Because physical sight was no longer necessary. Christ had already revealed Himself within their hearts. They had received spiritual vision.

This is the great miracle of faith: not simply to see with the eyes of the body, but to see with the eyes of the soul.

My beloved brothers and sisters, all of us resemble the man born blind. All of us also resemble the disciples on the road to Emmaus. We often walk beside Christ without recognizing Him. We attend the Divine Liturgy, hear the Gospel, receive the Holy Mysteries, and yet our hearts sometimes remain closed.

Therefore, today the Church calls us to ask Christ for the greatest miracle of all: spiritual sight.

May He open the eyes of our hearts, so that we may recognize Him in the Holy Eucharist, encounter Him in our neighbor, perceive His presence in our daily lives, and walk always in the light of His Resurrection.

And then, together with the healed blind man, we too shall be able to say: “I believe, Lord.” Amen!


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