For God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world,
but that the world might be saved through him.
God sent his Son Jesus as a rescue mission for humanity. In strict justice he might well have sent him as a mere confirmation of the condemnation which we had brought upon ourselves. But instead he sent him as a savior, to save us from what we had become. However, the first step to recovery required admitting that there was a problem, something we were loathe to do. Thus, when the light came, we preferred the darkness. We did not want to call sin what it was or to acknowledge the presence of darkness in our hearts. The light did not come to condemn, but it did, by virtue of existing in our midst reveal our fallen condition, our darkness and our sinfulness. Yet multiple responses to the light were possible. Rejecting it may have been the norm, but it was also possible to acknowledge what it revealed. Doing so opened up the pathway to the possibility of recovery. It could lead to salvation, in which state one would no longer need hide his works from the light. Instead, for such a one, "his works may be clearly seen as done in God".
In order to experience salvation we need to be humble enough to at least acknowledge that we have a problem. Our hearts don't always love as God would have us love. We don't even always love others to the lower standard of how we would have them love us. We often prioritize ourselves, but not in ways that conduce to our growth. We chose addictive behaviors and destructive patterns over constructive choices that can make us grow in virtue.
God didn't send the light of the world among us merely to punish us or make us suffer. He did so because he loves us and wanted to make us the kind of creatures fit for eternal life, actually capable on enjoying eternity with him forever. After all, all other goals are ultimately unsustainable. If we push too insistently into any other trajectory we will eventually crash and burn. Humanity in it's fallen state is a ship that is sinking, circled by sharks. Let's not waste our time discussing how the water does not in fact look so cold or how the sharks might in fact by dolphins. Jesus is waiting to bring us up into the ark of his Church where we can be safe from the fate that otherwise awaits us. But he will not force us. He'll allow us to go down with the ship of the fallen world if we choose. May we not do so.
Once we know the salvation of God our cozy relationship with the fallen world must change. The fallen world will inevitably try to drag us back down, just as the religious leaders threw the Apostles in jail to try to silence them. They didn't want to hear about the light. But the Apostles did not for that reason condemn them. Rather, because they were trying to love the world as God himself loved it, they did not abandon it in order to content themselves with having themselves obtained salvation. Even when they encountered what, from a human perspective, were insurmountable obstacles, the prison and the guards, they did not despair or give up. And because they did not the world found it was unable to stop or silence them, as it had been unable to stop or silence their Lord.
But during the night, the angel of the Lord opened the doors of the prison,
led them out, and said,
"Go and take your place in the temple area,
and tell the people everything about this life."
The world needs to know about this life, the life of Christian community that we enjoy in virtue of our baptism. We can't allow ourselves to be imprisoned or pushed aside into religious ghettos. We must take center stage, wherever that stage may be. For the Apostles it was the Temple. For us it will be the places of discourse where we interact with people of other viewpoints. And there is no sphere that can be excluded, including the public square. We can do this without fear. We may well encounter persecution and hardship. And yes, if our goal was ultimately about comfort that would be plenty of reason to fear. But that is not our ultimate goal when we want what God wants. When we do so he will absolutely empower us to do what he wishes and become what he desires us to be: his witnesses.
I will bless the LORD at all times;
his praise shall be ever in my mouth.
Let my soul glory in the LORD;
the lowly will hear me and be glad.
David W Morris - Let Us Exult His Name






