Mt.
4: 18-22: By calling the first disciples- Peter, Andrew,
life, renouncing all their possessions and family, and follow Jesus without
knowing where he is leading them. They develop a Master (Guru) disciple
(shishya) relationship of deep faith and trust on their Guru.
Monday, 30 November 2015
Sunday, 29 November 2015
29. Lk. 1: 5-25
Lk.
1: 5-25: In this remote corner of the world the Good News
begins with an elderly childless couple. Nothing is impossible for God. But we
must believe in His promises. John the Baptist whose birth is here announced
prepare the people that he will operate with the spirit of Elijah to obtain
reconciliation for all, through justice and faithfulness to God’s law.
Saturday, 28 November 2015
28. Jn. 12: 37-43
Jn. 12: 37-43:
Even the unbelief of certain people, are in the scheme of God. ‘All that he
blesses is our good’ God is so great that there is nothing in this world, not
even sin, which is outside his power. And yet some prefer to stand with men
rather than with God. It is true wisdom and prudence to prefer the good opinion
of God than of men. It is right James and John by Jesus, we are told to turn to
God with a change of heart. Their conversion makes a decisive change of to be
on the side of eternity than on time.
Friday, 27 November 2015
27. Lk. 19: 45-48
Lk. 19: 45-48: The greatest gift we have to set before God is
not a building but our lives. By cleaning the temple Jesus gives this message
precisely that he would make His kingdom one for all people and nations, a
place of justice where there would be no hypocrisy.
Thursday, 26 November 2015
26. Jn. 17: 2-19
Jn.
17: 2-19: The cross was the glory of Jesus because it was the
completion of his work and also by obeying God he glorified God. Eternal life
is what we know God and his son Jesus Christ. So Jesus reveals the true nature
and character of God and thereby brought man closer to God.
Wednesday, 25 November 2015
25. Mk. 12: 18-27
Mk.
12: 18-27: The Sadducees are silenced by Jesus by proposing
to have faith in the power of God by highlighting their shallow understanding
of their scripture. God is powerful to overcome death and give life – the
resurrected life will enjoy uninterrupted communion with God. Our hope in
resurrected life is based on the character of the ever-living God (v. 26 &
27).
Tuesday, 24 November 2015
24. Mk 5: 25-34
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.
Monday, 23 November 2015
23. Mt. 6: 19-21
Mt.
6: 19-21: Although both God and wealth play a vital
role in our lives, one of them will be the lens through which we view the
world. If wealth is the centre of our lives then religion become a subtle way
of insuring the survival of what we have stored. If God is at our center, then
the things we own enhance the way we give glory to God. Whichever serves as our
lens, will colour our view of the rest of the world.
Sunday, 22 November 2015
22. Mt. 22: 41-46
Mt.
22: 41-46: Jesus here makes his greatest claims. In
him there came, not the earthly conqueror like that of David, but the son of
God who would demonstrate the love of God upon his cross. The disciples felt a
shiver in the presence of the eternal mystery. They had the feeling that they
had heard the voice of God, and for a moment, in this man, Jesus, they glimpsed
God’s very face.
Saturday, 21 November 2015
21. Lk. 9: 10-17
Lk. 9: 10-17: The
multiplication of the loaves of bread foreshadows the Eucharist. If Jesus could
multiply the bread for the poor people, then he could feed and nourishes the
faithful with his own life. This is the way Jesus answers to the question of
Herod ‘who is this man?’
Friday, 20 November 2015
20. Jn. 18: 28-37
Jn.
18: 28-37: The trail of Jesus by Pilate is central
in the Gospel of John. The account moves every man to decide what we will do
with Jesus-accept him or reject him. No one can compromise with Jesus; no man
can serve two masters. We are either for Jesus or against him. We are expected
to come out of the captivity of human circumstances to follow Jesus. Pilate was
a captive of his office.
Thursday, 19 November 2015
19. Mt. 22: 1-14
Mt.
22: 1-14: The only table of Christ that Christians
usually know is the Eucharist. Our meeting together at Mass has to remind us
that God calls us to prepare in our daily lives, for the banquet reserved by
him for all humankind. Ours is the task of uniting and reconciling all people.
We are also reminded that as Christians we are to wear the garment – a life of
justice, honesty and trustworthiness!
Wednesday, 18 November 2015
18. Mt 16: 21-28
Mt
16: 21-28: V.26 resounds all over the world – many
people of different cultures changed, converted by hearing this verse. We all
can lose ourselves in events. We all play a variety of roles with family,
friends and co-workers. By entering on Christ we can allow Jesus to become our
central point of balance in this rapidly changing world. The God of the
galaxies chose us to a special covenant so that His Eternity can by our own.
Tuesday, 17 November 2015
17. Lk 8: 1-3
Lk 8: 1-3: Women could not
become disciples of a rabbi and so also of Jesus. But several women took Jesus’
words and attitude as a call to freedom. They joined Jesus’ followers and became
witness and supporters of his ministry. Later they would be honoured witnesses
of his death and resurrection. Here we have a fundamental testimony to the
freedom which the Gospel brings to people in different cultures.
Monday, 16 November 2015
16. Lk 11: 1-4
Lk
11: 1-4: The disciples ask Jesus as to how to ask
things of God. He then teaches them the prayer of ‘Our Father’. It is a prayer
by which we acknowledge and submit to God’s sovereignty and providence. Then
only we place our particular need within that great design. What we often do is
that we reverse that order by presenting our needs in that context of divine
providence. The things in our life that we cannot control we submit to the
providence of God in whom we should have faith and confidence.
Sunday, 15 November 2015
15. Jn 2: 13-22
Jn
2: 13-22: Cleansing of the temple by Jesus happened
because of God’s house being desecrated. Together with this action Jesus made
the people think that the whole paraphernalia of animal sacrifice was completely
irrelevant. To explain further Jesus indicates of a new temple- his own
sacrifice-which would come what this present temple at Jerusalem would have
been. In the street, in the home, at business, on the hills in the church we
have our inner temple, the presence of the RISEN CHRIST for ever with s
throughout the whole world.
Saturday, 14 November 2015
14. Lk 22: 24-30
Lk
22: 24-30: What the world needs is service and it is
the foundation of the church as well. The one who serves more or ready to serve
longer time qualitatively risk high in esteem and in position. Authority is
give to serve rather than for authority’s sake. Jesus finished his warning by
promising his disciples that those who had stood by him through thick and thin
would in the end reign with him.
Friday, 13 November 2015
13. Jn 14: 1-7
Jn 14: 1-7: There is only one
way to God. ‘No one comes to the Father except through me’ (v.6) in him we see
what God is like. He leads to this ONE without fear and shame. He speaks this
to the disciples honestly and it is for this he came to this world i.e. ‘to
prepare a place for us’ (v.2b) in him we end our journey. Heaven is where Jesus
is. “Where I am, there you will also be” (v.3)
Thursday, 12 November 2015
12. Lk 10: 8-16
Lk 10: 8-16: To reject God’s word
invites condemnation. There is a sense in which every promise of God that a man
has ever heard can become his condemnation. If he receives these promises they
are his greatest glory but each one that he has rejected will someday be a
witness against him.
Wednesday, 11 November 2015
11. Mk. 10: 28-30
Mk. 10: 28-30: Correct ritual alone
or good intentions alone are incomplete. Both must be validated by how we live
our life. It may be to simplify our life style or to engage in a more active
prayer life or to expand ourselves in a wider service to an individual in need.
In this way Jesus promises a qualitatively greater reward not only in this life
but in the next as well.
Tuesday, 10 November 2015
10. Jn. 6: 47-53
Jn. 6: 47-53: Jesus is the bread of life. He is essential for
life. So the refusal of his invitation would mean missing of life and death.
The fathers who died in the wilderness not only missed the Promised Land but
also missed the life to come. Jesus gives life to those who believe in him.
Monday, 9 November 2015
9. Mt. 19: 16-22
1 Mt. 19: 16-22: The
rich young man is advised to go beyond the commandments. Jesus tells him to
break with the crowd, to leave all he has and to follow. The young man could
not do this. Our relationship with Jesus is any other relationship-the more
time we spend the more our conversation with him become intimate, rewarding and
profound. To such he is ready to do much more unlike the person who meets him
once or twice and with him our conversation would be more formal and strained.
We are invited to level of spiritual life as that of the former type i.e. to go
beyond the commandments.
Sunday, 8 November 2015
8. Mt. 12: 1-13
1Mt. 12: 1-13:
Jesus sets priority to human needs. All other needs of worship, ritualistic
life and liturgy and so on are important but human needs come prior to them
all. He defends the disciples than he defends himself. Christian freedom is
established from the enslavement of oneself from the tyrannical regulations.
Saturday, 7 November 2015
7. Lk 5: 1-11
Lk 5: 1-11:
The call of Simon to be a fisher of men and women remind us that the church was
created by Jesus to help us attain perfect wisdom and spiritual insight. The
teaching of the church is very pivotal. It is through the documents and papal
teachings that the successors of St. Peter, the Pope teaching us. The all
enable us not to be content with spiritual mediocrity but to push out into
deeper waters.
7. Lk 5: 1-11
1 Lk 5: 1-11:
The call of Simon to be a fisher of men and women remind us that the church was
created by Jesus to help us attain perfect wisdom and spiritual insight. The
teaching of the church is very pivotal. It is through the documents and papal
teachings that the successors of St. Peter, the Pope teaching us. The all
enable us not to be content with spiritual mediocrity but to push out into
deeper waters.
Friday, 6 November 2015
6. Lk. 19: 1-10
1Lk.
19: 1-10: Zacheus was not an evil man but defrauded many as a
tax collector of Jerico. His meeting with Jesus changed his heart and he
willingly compensates the damages done and gave half of his profits to the
poor. Salvation comes to us with a change of heart for Jesus.
Thursday, 5 November 2015
5. Mt. 9: 35-38
Mt. 9: 35-38: Having
a feeling of compassion for the ‘sheep who have no shepherd Jesus struggles
through with his healing and teaching ministries in ‘towns, villages, and in
their synagogues’. Such struggles to find God in lives can be termed as ‘dark
night of the soul’ and ‘spiritual aridity’. If we pursue such times to their
conclusion, we can emerge from them with deeper and cleaner insight. What we
learn through our struggles with darkness can help others to see light. It can
be our way of bringing in the harvest.
Wednesday, 4 November 2015
4. Lk. 8: 26-39
1.
Lk. 8: 26-39: A man
possessed with a legion (6000) of demons was cured by Jesus. The demon enjoyed
a routine way of life in the man. Jesus comes there to disturb that routine.
Life went peacefully on till there arrived this disturbing Jesus. They
complained to Jesus; they hated him. More people hate Jesus because he disturbs
them of their wrong doings. They don’t accept Jesus by saying “Go away and let
us be in peace.” Those who come out from their routine life, serve the church
but Jesus says they must start from their home.
Tuesday, 3 November 2015
3. Lk. 21: 1-4
1Lk.
21: 1-4: The poor widow who put a few pennies to the treasury
is a symbol of the poor and dispossessed. The few pennies she contributed meant
a great deal to her. It came from her heart and signified sincerity and
authority. Jesus comments really make us to know that traditions live through
people and not through books.
Monday, 2 November 2015
2. Lk. 20: 1-8
1Lk.
20: 1-8: The authority of Jesus is questioned. The
emissaries of the Pharisees didn’t want to face the truth which would confront
them with a sore and to refuse to face it makes them even more a difficult
situation. By their own refusal to answer the question which Jesus asked them
about John the Baptist, made them frustrated and discredited in the crowd.
Sunday, 1 November 2015
1. Mt. 16: 13-19
Mt. 16: 13-19:
The foundation of the church is faith in Jesus, the Christ and Son of God. The
above text points to the primacy of Peter among all the apostles. The church
always needs a visible head. This we believe is the successor of Peter, the
Pope.
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