3rd Sunday in Ordinary Time: January 25, 2026
Readings: Isaiah 8:23–9:3; Psalm 27:1, 4, 13–14; 1 Corinthians 1:10–13, 17; Matthew 4:12–23
Whom do we follow today? The person of integrity, sincerity and of trust? We live in a trust-deficient world. Often, those whom we believe are trustworthy, people of integrity and sincerity, let us down with their hidden agendas, wicked deeds and unconcealed evil ideas. There is a scarcity of people whom we consider as generous, people of others and people of God. There are also people with no selfishness and don't accumulate wealth in this world for themselves. They are joyful and find meaning in doing good, letting themselves go so that others are happy. They are content in the company of others. Their benevolence is noticed by their life. In this context, we have beautiful readings on the 3rd Sunday in Ordinary Time. Even without knowing Jesus, people trusted him when he called them. He invited them to join his company. The overflowing goodness and other-centredness marked their lives.
1. Jesus meets where people are
The Gospel of Matthew 4:12–23 opens in a quiet, unsettling moment: John the Baptist is arrested, and Jesus withdraws to Galilee. Jesus enters another world of preaching. Unlike John, Jesus is on the streets, valleys, mountains, seaside, etc., meeting with the ordinary. Jesus has no fixed place or fixed people. He moves into the periphery. He meets people where they are. It is not people who come in search of him at this moment, but he meets people in their workplaces. The surroundings of the Sea of Galilee become his place of work, in place of the river Jordan, which John the Baptist had chosen. Jesus' world is bigger, clearer, and nearer to people. That is how Jesus encounters four of his first disciples. All of them are working people, perhaps workaholics. Until Jesus calls them, they are busy mending their nets.