Saturday 28 October 2017

28. Jn 15: 18-25

Jn 15: 18-25: If love is the essential nature of the disciple of Christ, hatred is of the world and it’s ruler the Satan. When a person begins to live a more responsible and committed life he or she meets with opposition and hatred from the other. This is the beginning of persecution of the Christians or Christ’s followers who is committed to Christ and his word. Jesus makes his disciples of this incoming persecution and must be prepared to suffer like that he suffered in this Gospel passage. 

Friday 27 October 2017

27. Mt. 16: 5-12

Mt. 16: 5-12: The Pharisees saw religion as a set of laws and commandments, outward rituals and purity. The Sadducees involved in politics. So Jesus says not to identify the kingdom with outward goods and actions but what matters really is the state of man’s heart. So one should not forget his or her inner state of the heart.

Thursday 26 October 2017

26. Lk. 9: 46-48

Lk. 9: 46-48: Children were least important members of society. Jesus indicates that whoever is prepared to spend his or her life in serving and helping people who do not matter much in the eyes of the world is serving Him and the Father in heaven. They are the people of God who works for unity.

Wednesday 25 October 2017

25. Mt 25: 14-30

Mt 25: 14-30: How we live in this world, as well as how we pray in the church, can be apostolic and powerfully evangelistic. This parable of the talents, both used and unused speaks on several levels to us on our life. It can be applied spiritual, intellectual and material opportunities. Gifts unused remain unused and for every gift we received we are responsible. Through the members of the church enormous abundance of gifts for the spread of the Gospel are received. Often a fearful attitude that seeks only to preserve the past and not to launch out into the future has hindered the growth of the Gospel.

Tuesday 24 October 2017

24. Jn 11: 1-16

Jn 11: 1-16: Death is an inescapable reality. Consciously or unconsciously we confront death everyday: every minute we die a little – we realize that we are limited. In today’s Gospel Jesus is seen preparing the disciple to that realization so that they may believe in the resurrection and with him of all who believe in him may be resurrected. Jesus is the light and whoever walks with him will not ‘stumble’ to death but will be always be in the light and in the life eternal. 

Monday 23 October 2017

23. Mt 24: 3-14

Mt 24: 3-14: In this last discourse on the eschatological times, Jesus refers two events that speaks all about the destruction of Jerusalem. Jesus concludes the end of the world also together with. Jesus never entertains the curiosity of the disciples, but warns them that the end of the world cannot be calculated. He instills in them to have a heart that is prepared to face the events at any time. 

Sunday 22 October 2017

22. Mt 8: 23-34

Mt 8: 23-34: The presence of Jesus is power. The disciples realized it only in the dire need to calm the storm. But the people of the town failed to convert the power of the presence of Jesus into faith due to fear. Jesus is with us in the very middle of the storm. In the complexity of our lives, we seldom have the date we would like to make a decision. The best way for us is to consult, pray, decide and then go forward. Having done our best, we can be assured that Jesus remains with us in whatever follows. Jesus gives us strength to survive the storm of our life. 

Saturday 21 October 2017

21. Lk. 9: 18-20

Lk. 9: 18-20: Jesus wanted to know whether the disciples understood what he said and done. So he asks ‘who do they say I am’? Peter responds that he is the fulfillment of Old Testament hopes and that he is the MESSIAH. In order for the kingdom to become public, we must first experience its glory within our lives. 

Friday 20 October 2017

20. Lk. 16: 1-8

Lk. 16: 1-8: The parable is not about the dishonesty of the steward but about the genius with which he plan for his own future. Jesus remarks that we should be enterprising to exploit spiritual opportunities for our own life. We have to learn to deal creatively and maturely with the Holy Spirit that we have received.

Thursday 19 October 2017

19. Mt 25: 1-13

Mt 25: 1-13: The parable of the ten virgins –five wise and five foolish teaches us that we Christians are not expected to behave like idle spectators, just waiting for the coming of the Lord; we have to work for it; we have to persevere and persist. We have at all times to be always ready, living the word of God, bearing the torch of Christ. 

Wednesday 18 October 2017

18. Lk 10: 1-9

Lk 10: 1-9: The sending out of the 72 brings out two important messages for the preachers. The urgency of preaching the Gospel is seen in v.4. He is required to have haste and single-mindedness: they should not waste time on social pastimes (v.4) be fastidious about food out shelter (v.8) they must concentrate on healing and blessing (v.9). Jesus also warns the 72 in v.3 that they will have to face hostility and persecutions if they really involved in the ministry. 

Tuesday 17 October 2017

17. Lk 4: 38-44

Lk 4: 38-44: Jesus is ready to serve and heal people always. This made the people to realize that the favours they received were to serve further others in return. So is Peter’s mother-in-law who after being cured by Jesus ‘gets up and serves them’. Jesus attends the needs of men because first he must become companied with God. So it was his habit to rise up ‘early in the morning and went out to be alone’. Prayer is great but in the end human need is greater.

Monday 16 October 2017

16. Jn 10: 1-15

Jn 10: 1-15: Jesus warns the disciples of ‘false shepherds’ who pretend to guide others without being mandated for it. Jesus is the ‘good shepherd’ who leads them out to green pastures, to happiness, to genuine blooming out, to real nourishments ‘who calls his own sheep’ by name, who fights against ‘anonymity’. Jesus is the one who opens for mankind a new ‘vital space’. Without him one is closed within oneself without ideology, theory, religion which delivers one from fatality.

Sunday 15 October 2017

15. Lk 8: 41b-56

Lk 8: 41b-56: We find again a man Jairus by name who could pocket his pride within himself to present his need and request for help from Jesus. We also find a woman who dares to touch Jesus’ cloak in her dire need. Both people showed immense faith in Jesus. The woman is not the last in the crowd to receive a favour from Jesus. Jesus treats her as if she is the only one in the crowd. So God loves each one of us as if there was only one of us to love.

Saturday 14 October 2017

14. Jn 4: 46-54

Jn 4: 46-54: Here is a courtier who came to a carpenter in Cana from Capernaum which is 20 miles away. It gives the message that if we want the help which Christ give, we must be can humble enough to swallow our pride and not to care what others may say. In the courtier we find the one who refuse to be discouraged at Jesus’ remarks and Jesus makes sure that he has the faith and he proves that he has the faith needed for the request to be granted.

Friday 13 October 2017

13. Lk. 20: 27-40

Lk. 20: 27-40: Jesus confronts the question of resurrection. It is God’s gift to ‘those who are considered worthy’ to enter into the other world. The body is the physical expression of the soul. Salvation does not consists in the liberation of the soul from the body, but in the liberation of the whole human person (body and soul) which is achieved through resurrection.

Thursday 12 October 2017

12. Lk 9: 28-36

Lk 9: 28-36: It was as if the princes of Israel’s (Moses and Elijah) life and thought and religion approve to go ahead of the salvific act during the transfiguration of Jesus. The passage comes with a vivid message in the verse ‘when they were fully awake they saw his glory’. In life we miss so much because of our minds sleeping because of our prejudices to new ideas, because off our mental lethargy for strenuous thought with our unexamined life and because of our love for ease that shut our minds against any disturbing thought. So transfiguration of our Lord teaches to be awake to grasp the meaning and significance of things around us and the events in our life

Wednesday 11 October 2017

11. Lk. 11: 24-26

Lk. 11: 24-26: The purity of the external dimension without the purity of the spiritual power always invites the evil and demons. No one can take away the Holy Spirit away from us. We are the only ones who can cut off His influences.

Sunday 8 October 2017

8. Mt. 20: 1-16

Mt. 20: 1-16: The late workers were paid as much as the early workers here in this passage. The message of the parable is to show that God rewards not according to the time of work but according to one’s entry to God’s call. Applying to ourselves it means that God does not compare us with known or popular saints. The Lord looks at what we have done with what we have. He examines how we have used the opportunities and skills we have been given. We fashion our own spiritual life or death.

Saturday 7 October 2017

7. Lk. 10: 17-21

Lk. 10: 17-21: The disciples are seen overjoyed about the subjecting of the demons in the name of Jesus. Jesus is more powerful than Satan they understood. This power of casting away of demons are received by those who try to live and preach the Gospel with sincerity. By this power, they can set an individual free to become the son and daughter of God by which he or she was destined to be at birth it is by this way one restore the original order of creation.

Friday 6 October 2017

6. Lk. 21: 7-19

Lk. 21: 7-19: Jesus warns about the imposters and persecutions of many ways that the church will have to face. The persecution in our country takes the form of a subtle nature. We are subjected to a barrage of stereotyping through the media, attacks upon the institutions of the church-career and professional discrimination against Catholics. The old colosseum of persecution has now become the board offices, universities, television studios, classrooms, government offices and legislatures and so on.

Thursday 5 October 2017

5. Jn. 5: 39-47

Jn. 5: 39-47: ‘If another comes in his own name, him you will receive’ (v.43b) Jesus attacks the imposters who come and preached what people desire – victory and material prosperity but Jesus preaches the cross. The characteristic of these imposters are to offer the easy way while Jesus offers the hard way to God. The imposters perished while Christ lives on. This knowledge of the way to the kingdom of God is being given only to the Jews then. It become their privilege but failed to use them and thereby had become their condemnation. Responsibility is always the other side of privilege

Wednesday 4 October 2017

4. Lk 9: 1-6

Lk 9: 1-6: Jesus pronounces the missionary command. It requires a life style which is a combination of strategy, customs and trust in God. It also requests us to have a trust deeper into the faith we have received and requires our experience as a community of Jesus. Our own realization of the gift of faith should enable us to contribute to the missionaries who are working elsewhere.

Tuesday 3 October 2017

3. Mk. 9: 42-48

Mk. 9: 42-48: Jesus encourages us to get rid of ourselves of those things that encumber spiritual growth. The difficult but fulfilled venture we call discipleship is exemplified in the saints. If we are to know real life, real happiness and real peace the blocking elements must go. This may sound bleak and stern, but in reality it is only facing the facts of life.

Monday 2 October 2017

2. Mk. 8: 31-38

Mk. 8: 31-38: Peter’s reaction to Jesus’ suffering and death seems to be the satanic opposition to God’s will. Peter represents the natural reaction of all people to suffering and failure. Jesus’ instruction stresses the role of service. Jesus goes on telling the disciples that the one who follows him also likewise suffer so that God can raise him up.

Sunday 1 October 2017

1. Mt. 15: 21-28

Mt. 15: 21-28: The Canaanite woman is ‘low caste’ in two ways. By birth she belongs to another religion. Being a woman she is oppressed under men. But she has the humility to accept what she is and thereby Jesus acknowledges her faith though she belongs to a different religion. So Jesus teaches us to appreciate the goodness in others whether they belong to different caste, religion or status.