Mk. 4:
21-25: The word works secretly within the heart but when we discover the
transformation that is at work in our life, we readily proclaim Christ and make
known to others the secret that has made us happy. So Jesus wants us to read
the Gospel and challenge ourselves before we follow any further. Then we
produce fruit according to the Gospel in our life.
Tuesday, 30 June 2015
Monday, 29 June 2015
29. VI MON of Apostles – Sts. Peter & Paul
Jn
21: 15-19: Jesus reveals himself as the supreme shepherd because
he loves his people and that he appoint a shepherd to look after his flock. The
basis of his shepherd is love. So he confirms that love from St. Peter of his
love for him. As he affirms his love for him, Peter becomes the new shepherd of
his flock, when Jesus is absent from them physically.
Sunday, 28 June 2015
28. VI SUN of Apostles
Lk.
12: 57 - 13: 5: Jesus
speaks about individual conversion and to have that conversion at the earliest,
lest it is too late like that happened to those people upon whom the tower fell
and perished. A Christian must be prepared to face any eventuality to settle
things before the things go wrong.
Saturday, 27 June 2015
27. V SAT of Apostles – St. Irenaeus (28 Sunday)
Mk.
12: 38-44: Though the teachers of the law were not bad persons
and interested in religion and teaching people trying to be a saint, he becomes
a weak person. The very respect that people show leads them to overlook in
themselves many wrongs that in anybody else would be severely censured. The
poor woman is the personification of those uncountable poor, who made retribution
to God as one deserves. God calls on the poor give all that they have to live
on.
Friday, 26 June 2015
26. V FRI of Apostles
Mt. 13: 24-30, 36-43:
Because of the roots of wheat and weed are intertwine it is dangerous to put
out the weeds. In the same way virtue and vice are seen intertwined in our life
and it is, for us to see which direction we are moving forward. Because good
and evil mingle in this world we need vivid symbols and signs to serve as focal
points for our faith and our life.
Thursday, 25 June 2015
25. V THU of Apostles
Jn. 6: 60-63:
Jesus knew that some would not receive him and reject him with hostility. No
man can accept him unless he or she is moved by the Spirit of God. The word of
God that Jesus spoke is the key to this Spirit of God by which one can come to
God through Jesus.
Wednesday, 24 June 2015
24. V WED of Apostles – Birth of John the Baptist
Mk. 12: 1-12: The
early church saw what was told in the parable fulfilled. The Jewish people
rejected Jesus while the gentiles receiving him. The church is this new vineyard
of Christ being entrusted by Christ to cultivate, care for and to bring forth
fruits for God who is the rightful owner.
Tuesday, 23 June 2015
23. V TUE of Apostles
Mt.
11: 1-6 Jesus preached the gospel of divine holiness with
divine love. He was saying to the disciples of John (to whom the episode is
directed) “May be I am not doing the things you expected me to do. But the
powers of evil are being defeated not by irresistible power, but by
unanswerable love”. Jesus’ aim was to draw faith and hope from the disciples of
John. It is again a direction to his disciples too.
Monday, 22 June 2015
22. V MON of Apostles-Sts Fisher & Thomas Moore
Mt. 10: 16-22:
The passage gives us the experience of the generation of Christians after
Christ’s earthly life. The Christians were hunted by the state, rejected by the
religious establishment and ridiculed by their families. A great leadership was
demanded to unite them all as of today when the church faces religious
pluralism, affluence and secular hegemony. We have to struggle to keep
ourselves at spiritual peace.
Sunday, 21 June 2015
21. V SUN of Apostles
Lk
12: 22-34 It is not what we earn but what we give makes our
life a blessing to all. To explain the above, Jesus tells this parable of the
rich fool, in which the quantity of his wealth never saves him and never gives
him eternal security. So the one who trusts in the providence of God, will find
happiness in life, safety in the hand of God. He will forsake anxiety of heart
and seek the kingdom of God in all throughout his life.
Saturday, 20 June 2015
20. IV SAT of Apostles
Mk 1: 40-45:
All who had skin diseases were considered lepers at Jesus’ times and thereby
unclean and are outcastes. By curing
such a one is a conspicuous and significant feature of the ministry of Jesus.
Jesus brings back the lost dignity of man into the warmth of human communion.
Friday, 19 June 2015
19. IV FRI of Apostles
Mk.
5: 21-24 & 35-43: Jairus wanted a physical contact with
Jesus-but Jesus looked beneath the surface touch to the deeper contact of
faith. Through faith we make contact with Jesus. We can contact the same Jesus
and be healed by the same saving power through faith and the sacramental
liturgical life of the church.
Thursday, 18 June 2015
18. IV THU of Apostles
Mk.
7: 24-30: Jesus
is seen here in healing and preaching without looking into the people’s
background especially of religion or caste. Jesus wants us to avoid all kinds
of disparity from our minds and in matters of service; he wants us to be more
generous. In this gentile woman also Jesus finds faith and he praises it in
front of others.
Wednesday, 17 June 2015
17. IV WED of Apostles
Mt. 14: 22-33:
‘Walking on water’ is considered a divine act from Old Testament times. The
disciples failed to understand the significance of this divine act even after
‘the multiplication of bread’. Only the final acts – the cross and the
resurrection of Jesus could invoke some understanding in the minds of his disciples.
Thereafter all deeds of Jesus were understood by the disciples probably with
the help of the Holy Spirit.
Tuesday, 16 June 2015
16. IV TUE of Apostles
Lk
10: 38-42: Two sisters respond differently but authentically
to the Lord. Martha is busy serving and Mary listens to the Word. Jesus
approves what Mary has done. We all develop spiritual and sacred shorthand by
which we standardize our efforts and responses to events. Such an approach is
much easier in a busy world that seeking out the uniqueness of individuals that
come our way. Mary reminds us to make time to examine the special features of
our family, Social and professional loves. Each situation caries its own
individual potential for Grace and Life.
Monday, 15 June 2015
15. IV MON of Apostles
Mk
5: 25-34: Jesus manifests his lordship over life and death,
which no doubt is another sign of his kingdom. A missionary is asked to support
life enhancing programmes of health, environment, housing, food production,
clean water and so on. The Jews regarded this woman ‘unclean’ but for Jesus,
she is the owner of immense faith and dares to defy all Jewish regulations.
Sunday, 14 June 2015
14. IV SUN of Apostles
Lk
6: 27-36 Love your enemies in v.27 apply first to his
persecutors of Christians in his communities. Jesus doesn’t ask for a mere
tolerance but active love. More specifically the above verse 27 applies to the
possessors of his community. They are not to show a mere reciprocity but to be
uncalculating in their giving. In any society, the rich, the middle class, the
poor and the poorest need conversion to Jesus’ words though in different
degrees, manners and terms.
Saturday, 13 June 2015
13. III SAT of Apostles – Immaculate heart of Mary
Lk. 2: 41-51:
‘He went home and he was obedient to them’. The fact that he was God’s
Son made him the perfect Son of his human parents. The real man of God does not
despise earthly ties; just because he is God’s man, he discharges human duties
with supreme fidelity.
Friday, 12 June 2015
12. III FRI of Apostles – Sacred Heart of Jesus
Jn. 19: 30-37:
Water that flowed from the side of Christ stands for the powerful new life as
well as the spirit. Blood expresses the saving power of Jesus’ death. The
Salvific power is displayed in these symbols of blood and water.
Thursday, 11 June 2015
11. III THU of Apostles – St. Barnabas, the apostle
Mt. 10: 16-22:
The passage gives us the experience of the generation of Christians after
Christ’s earthly life. The Christians were hunted by the state, rejected by the
religious establishment and ridiculed by their families. A great leadership was
demanded to unite them all as of today when the church faces religious
pluralism, affluence and secular hegemony. We have to struggle to keep
ourselves at spiritual peace.
Wednesday, 10 June 2015
10. III WED of Apostles
Jn.
4: 39-42 The Samaritans were introduced to Christ by the
woman. The word of God must be transmitted by man to man. We also find in
Samaritans a nearer intimacy and growing knowledge of Christ. Soon their growth
in knowledge in Jesus came to discovery and they surrendered to Christ as the
savior of the world. What they found in Jesus, John writes later in 1 John 4:
14 and gives Jesus this title ‘par
excellence’
Tuesday, 9 June 2015
9. III TUE of Apostles – Mar Aprem
Mt.
5: 13-20 Jesus gives three missionary images to explain the
role of these who follow him. They are to be salt, light and a city built on a
hill. This means that they are to be a grout of peoples who will be highly
visible because of the unusually dedicated character of the lives, who will
illuminate the world as light does, and who sanctify, purify and preserve the
world in its relationship of God lie salt.
Monday, 8 June 2015
8. III MON of Apostles-Bl. Mariam Thresia
Mt. 25: 31-40: The purpose of the
passage is to tell us what we must do in order to be saved. Jesus instructs his
people to give simple help to the people who they meet every day. Those who
thus help people, whom they meet, did not think that they were helping Christ
and thus piling up eternal merit; they helped them because they could not stop
themselves. This should be the nature of a Christian advocated by Jesus. Bl. Mariam
Thresiawas an example for us.
Sunday, 7 June 2015
7. III SUN of Apostles
Lk.
10: 25-37: The Jewish conception of a neighbor originates
from ‘flesh’ and ‘blood’. Jesus corrects
this by establishing that the neighbor is the one who is close to any brother
or sister in need. Loving the neighbor must not be only in the thought but also
in deed as we see in this parable of Good Samaritan.
Saturday, 6 June 2015
6. II SAT of Apostles
Jn. 6: 1-15:
Jesus needs what we can bring to him. It may not be much but he needs it. If we
would lay ourselves on the altar of service, there is no saying what we could
do with us and through us. We may be sorry and embarrassed that we may not have
more to bring, it is no reason to fail to bring. Little is always more in the
hands of Jesus.
Friday, 5 June 2015
5. II FRI of Apostles
Jn. 6: 45-50:
Jesus is the bread of life. Bread is very essential for life. Those who refuse
to Jesus are those who miss life in this world and in the world to come. Those
who accept Jesus will find this life worth and glorify God in the world to
come.
Thursday, 4 June 2015
4. II THU of Apostles- The Body and Blood of Christ
Jn.
6: 51-59 In a general sense Jesus speaks of eating his flesh
and drinking his blood. The flesh of Jesus means his complete humanity. In
Jewish concept blood means ‘Life’. So it means that we should have the humanity
and life of Jesus. John meant more that this general sense. He was saying if
you want life, you must come and sit at that table where you eat that broken
bread and drink that poured-out wine which somehow, in the grace of God brings
you into contact with the Lord and life of Jesus Christ.
Wednesday, 3 June 2015
3. II WED of Apostles
Jn. 6: 37-44: Life
in Jesus is life in time and life in eternity. In him we find new satisfaction.
The hunger and thirst are gone in him. The human heart finds what is was
searching for and life ceases to be mere existence and becomes a thrill and peace
and even beyond life we are safe in him.
Tuesday, 2 June 2015
2. II TUE of Apostles
Jn. 6: 64-71: Peter has a personal relationship with Jesus
though he did not understand many things he spoke. So Christianity is not a
philosophy we accept, nor a theory to which we give allegiance but a personal
response to Jesus. It is this personal allegiance and love one is motivated to
surrender his heart, mind and soul to Christ.
Monday, 1 June 2015
1. II MON of Apostles
Jn. 11: 17-27:
When one believes in Jesus, he or she is freed from the fear of godless life;
from the frustration of sin-ridden life; from the futility of Christ less life.
Life is raised from sin’s death and becomes so rich that it cannot die but must
find in death only the transition to a higher life.
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