"The glory has departed from Israel, for the ark of God has been captured." (1 Samuel 4:22)
Israel goes to battle against the Philistines and is routed. The elders ask: why did the LORD bring defeat on us today? Let us bring the ark of the covenant of the LORD from Shiloh. The ark comes into camp and all Israel shouts so loudly the ground shakes. The Philistines hear and fear: God has come into the camp. Who will deliver us? But Israel is defeated again and the ark is captured. Eli's sons Hophni and Phinehas are killed. When Eli hears that his sons are dead and the ark has been taken, he falls backward and breaks his neck. Phinehas's wife, in labour when the news arrives, gives birth and names her son Ichabod, no glory: The glory has departed from Israel, for the ark of God has been captured.
The Catechism identifies the loss of the ark as a figure of the absence of God's presence when his people abandon covenant fidelity: the outward form of religion without the inner reality of obedience cannot sustain the divine glory (CCC 2580). Israel treated the ark as a lucky charm and lost it. The glory cannot be commanded or manipulated; it comes and goes with the faithfulness of the people who bear it.
Brothers and sisters, they brought the ark into battle to guarantee the divine presence, but the divine presence cannot be deployed on human terms. God is not a weapon to be wielded; he is the King to be obeyed. The glory that departed because of Hophni and Phinehas's sin departs wherever those who bear the sacred office treat it as a means to personal advantage.
Lord God, do not let the glory depart from your people. Keep us from treating the sacred as a tool for our own purposes. Let the ark of your presence remain with a people who fear and love you. Through Christ our Lord. Amen.