“Who is the liar?” According to a very interesting study about human behavior, an astounding conclusion was made as to the number one reason why people lie: They do not tell the truth because lying does not matter … to them. The liar, then, is that person who realizes and believes that by telling the truth, their lives must be somehow unalterably changed, sometimes forever. This makes perfect sense given the text of our First Reading today from St. John, the beloved Apostle: “Who is the liar? Whoever denies that Jesus is the Christ.”
Another St. John today, that being John the Baptist, adds even a more telling, rich, and gut-wrenching fabric to our reflection. “I baptize with water, but there is one among you whom you do not recognize, the one who is coming after me, whose sandal strap I am not worthy to untie.” These words would cost him his earthly life at the hands of one of the most notorious liars in Biblical history, King Herod the Madman. You see, Herodias, and by extension, her second husband, Herod, would not accept the message of the Baptist and the One who was to come and therefore attempted to snuff out the truth with a lie’s most awful and horrendous logical conclusion, death.
In these literally first few hours of the New Year, we have been invited, once again, to live in the light of truth and never look back. That Light is Jesus, and His words are Truth: “And now, children, remain in him, so that when he appears, we may have confidence and not be put to shame by him at his coming.”
“Truth is, by nature, self-evident. As soon as you remove the cobwebs of ignorance that surround it, it shines clear.” Mahatma Gandhi