Homily: March 17, 2026, Tuesday of the Fourth Week in Lent (Water)

 “Wherever the river flows, every sort of living creature that can multiply shall live… wherever this water comes the sea shall be made fresh.”

Where there is water, there is life.

The prophet Ezekiel in today’s first reading, tells us with great detail the prophetic vision he had, about the water of life which flowed from the temple.

If you have read the book The Covenant of Water by Abraham Verghese, you would know something about my home in India, the state of Kerala. It is a small state. Iowa is almost three times the size of Kerala. But Kerala has a lot more water than Iowa.

The Western Ghats is a mountain range that runs 1,600 km along the western coast of India, covering several states including Kerala. It is an important watershed, keeping in the rain clouds thus bringing much rainfall, and feeding many rivers. Because of that, Kerala has forty-four major rivers. Forty-one of them flow toward the Arabian Sea and three toward the east. Rain is plentiful throughout the year except for a couple of summer months. In fact, we suffer floods and landslides when it rains too much.

Ireland, where St. Patrick preached the Gospel, is also known for abundant rain, lush greenery, and flowing rivers. People living in such places hardly have to worry about lack of water.

But the biblical world where the Israelites lived were very different.

The prophet Ezekiel lived during the Babylonian exile. Babylon was where modern Iraq is now. It was dry and arid land. Water was scarce and thus very precious. So when Ezekiel described the vision of water flowing abundantly, bringing life to fish, trees, animals, and people, it must have sounded incredibly refreshing and beautiful to those who heard it.

The vision was a promise of good life, the hope of a better future. God was telling His people that their exile would not last forever.

Just as water refreshes dry land, God Himself would refresh their lives. He would restore their lives, return them to their homeland, and re-ignite their joy.

Have our faith life become dry and barren too?

Do we harbor resentment, unforgiveness and bitterness? If we do, our heart becomes like a desert, dry, hard, brittle and infertile. No love, no life, no joy can grow there.

But when the water of life flows through, everything begins to change. This water is God’s grace.

Jesus too speaks about giving us the living water — the grace of God that fills our hearts and leads us to eternal life.

So where in your life do you need God’s living water? 

Present it to the Lord and let His grace flow through. Let His living water bring refreshment to the dead and dry areas of your life. Open your heart to Him and let Him resuscitate you.

Where there is grace, there is renewed life.

Amen.


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