Lk. 13: 6-9: Just as the fig tree is given a final chance, a
period of grace, to bear fruit, so people are given time to repent and reform.
There is no space for self-complacency. Spiritual collapse is more
death-dealing then physical death because its implications are eternal. We can
direct ourselves to God or to sin. In either case we are responsible for what
we will have become.
Saturday, 31 December 2016
Friday, 30 December 2016
30. Mt. 9: 27-31
1 Mt. 9: 27-31: Against a few people who dislike their
weakness and if they are honest would have so say that they do not wish to lose
their sins. So Jesus had first of all to be sure that these men sincerely and
earnestly desired the healing he could give. So Jesus compelled these people to
see him alone. No medicine will do a man any good if he thinks he might as well
be drinking water. The way to miracle is to place one’s life in the hands of
Jesus Christ and say” I know that you can make me what I ought to be”.
Thursday, 29 December 2016
29. Mt. 12: 43-45
Mt. 12: 43-45: The church will most
easily keep her children when she gives them Christian work to do. Our aim is
not the mere negative absence of evil action but it is the positive presence of
work for Christ. If we are finding the temptations of evil very threatening,
one of the best ways to conquer them is to plunge into activity for God and for
our fellow-man.
Wednesday, 28 December 2016
28. Mt. 2: 13-18
Mt. 2: 13-18: As children killed at the time of the birth of
Moses, St. Mathew portrays that Jesus is the new Moses who came to save people.
In the wholly undeserved death, the children stand for the many innocent
victims perishing all over the world through malnutrition or violence by an
evil system run by people like Herod, who blindly pursue profit and power.
Tuesday, 27 December 2016
27. Jn. 21: 20-24
Jn. 21: 20-24: St. John the beloved disciple enjoys a more
fundamental mission. His mission is to remain in the love towards his master
and bear witness to the revelation of Jesus, linking the community to the Word.
Like John, we are advised to bear witness to the infinite and unfathomable
riches of Jesus.
Monday, 26 December 2016
26. Jn. 8: 12-19
Jn.
8: 12-19:
Jesus is the light. Those who follow Jesus will not be influenced by evil. If
we live according to Jesus’ teachings, we will be like people walking in full
day lights and will surely reach the goal of salvation. For in Jesus there is
the light as God has revealed his redemptive plan for the whole world.
Sunday, 25 December 2016
25. Lk. 2: 1-20
Lk.
2: 1-20:
Jesus’ birth against the background of Ceaser Augustus and the world-wide
census Luke brings out the significance of Jesus birth for the whole world. In
Jesus we find the real peace and salvation. Jesus as the first born brings his
significance as the one to be consecrated to God. Shepherds recognizing Jesus
in the manger, represent for the new community of God.
Saturday, 24 December 2016
24. Lk 12: 54-59
Lk 12: 54-59: People knew to read the signs of nature. So the
signs which are seen around Jesus are enough for the sincere ones to understand
that now is the time announced by the prophets to be converted and Israel must
acknowledge it savior. The urgency of conversion for Jesus must be done before
it is too late with a reconciliation between brothers and sisters because we
are in our way to God’s judgment so that we can take advantage of the right
situation we are then, if we are in the above said positions.
Friday, 23 December 2016
23. Jn. 7: 25-31
Jn.
7: 25-31:
Jews have their claim to know Jesus and from where he came. But their pride made them to remain in the
darkness interpreting everything according to their human views and closing
their hearts to the truth. Only a humble seeker of God can discover who Jesus
is.
Thursday, 22 December 2016
22. Mt. 5: 17-20
Mt. 5: 17-20: Jesus come to complete the law as a grown plant
draws out the power resident in the seed. ‘Law’ and ‘Spirit’ do not represent
conflicting testament or religions-those are two way of approaching God. With
law spiritual life is legal and salvation juridical. But spirit locates
salvation to our personal link with Jesus and others. Though both don’t save
but are only vehicles for the concrete expressions of a supernatural,
sanctifying relationship with Jesus.
Wednesday, 21 December 2016
21. Jn. 1: 43-51
Jn.
1: 43-51:
The calling of the first disciple Jesus is inviting Nathaniel and all of us to
a higher vision: to see him as the new Bethel, the house of God, the person in
whom there is the plenitude of divine presence. If we steadily grow in our life
of faith, we will reach the climax of experiencing Jesus as he is.
Tuesday, 20 December 2016
20. Jn. 1: 6-13
Jn.
1: 6-13:
Jesus is the light shining in the world which is plunged into darkness of evil.
This darkness of evil power, tries its best to exterminate Jesus. Jesus the
light seals his victory over the darkness with his resurrection. John the Baptist
prepares the world to receive the light, the Christ,
Monday, 19 December 2016
19. Jn. 1: 1-5
Jn.
1: 1-5:
John is referring to Jesus as the eternal word, who created the world and now
enters into the world as part of creation. So the eternal word of God is
becoming creation. Therefore Jesus’ coming is a new creation and new beginning.
Jesus Christ is the word becoming flesh,
Sunday, 18 December 2016
18. Mt. 1: 18-24
Mt. 1: 18-24: Mary is
conceived by the Holy Spirit. Jews believed that the Holy Spirit brings God’s
truth to men. The Holy Spirit also enables men to recognize that truth when
they see it. The same Holy Spirit was active in the work of creation and is
active in re-creation. This passage high lights all the above beliefs of the
Jews.
Saturday, 17 December 2016
17. Jn 3: 31-36
Jn 3: 31-36: If anyone wants to be saved from divine rejection
and be able to see God’s face of merciful love, he or she must believe in Jesus
and live according to his teachings. The one who lives likewise will find inner
peace and tranquility in his or her heart.
Friday, 16 December 2016
16. Mk. 1: 1-8
Mk. 1: 1-8: John the Baptist announces the baptism of
repentance. It is only a preparation to receive Christ. John’s aim was to
connect men with the one who was greater and greater than he and men listened
to him because he pointed not to himself, but to the one whom all men need.
Where Christ is allowed to come the antiseptic of the Christian faith cleanses
the moral poison of society and leaves it pure and clean.
Thursday, 15 December 2016
15. Lk. 1: 67-79
Lk. 1: 67-79: In this canticle of Zachariah, we find his belief
that his son would be the one who prepares the way. We also find how a Christian
would have to be. A Christian is the one where life would be a preparation that
leads him to Christ. He knows God through Christ. Estrangement from God is
turned to friendship in Christ. This life will be a way of peace for Christian
Wednesday, 14 December 2016
14. Lk 16: 10-13
Lk 16: 10-13: Each of us has a god we serve. The question centers
upon which will attract our attention or devotion. Jesus reminds us that the
spiritual bonds of human friendship are more important than the simple
accumulation of things. We should use our time and opportunities to widen our
friendships. This is more so with God. The more we spend time and energy in our
life with God, the more we enhance our relationship with God.
Tuesday, 13 December 2016
13. Mt. 3: 1-6
1 Mt. 3: 1-6: People recognized John as a prophet
after long years of absence of such prophets in Israel. He was a light to light
up evil thing, a voice to summon men to righteousness, a signpost to point men
to God.
Monday, 12 December 2016
12. Lk 6: 43-45
1 Lk 6: 43-45: A man cannot be judged in any other
way than by his deeds. Teaching and preaching are both ‘truth through
personality’. Fine words will never take the place of fine deeds. The modern
secular movements can never be defeated by mere words, writing and so on than
proving that Christianity produce better man and woman.
Sunday, 11 December 2016
11. Lk 1: 57-66
1 Lk 1: 57-66: John the Baptist is named. The name
john indicates ‘God’s gift’ or God is gracious. They put that name as ordered
by God and the same name is the parent’s gratitude to God. Every child is a
bundle of possibilities. It is upon the parents and teachers as to how these
possibilities will or will not be realized. Every child is a gift and for which
to thank God and is one of the life’s supreme responsibilities.
Saturday, 10 December 2016
10. Lk. 11: 33-36
Lk.
11: 33-36:
Luke refers to the light of Christian mission as a beacon for new converts. He
exhorts the Christians to keep their inner eye fixed steadfastly on Jesus so
that his light may be refracted through them.
Friday, 9 December 2016
9. Lk 1: 46-56
Lk 1: 46-56: The magnificat has been a great hymn of the church.
Mary sings of a moral revolution Christianity is the death of pride when a man
set his life beside of Christ. It demolishes the castle of pride. It puts an
end to the world’s labels and prestige. The social grades are not there in
Christianity. Mary thus sings of social justice in which no man dares to have
too much while others have too little. Every man gets only to give away.
Thursday, 8 December 2016
8. Lk. 1: 46-55
Lk.
1: 46-55:
The magnificat of Mary speaks of a threefold revolutions both within us and in
the world. ‘He scatters the proud in the plans of their hearts’, ‘he casts down
the mighty and exalts the humble’ and ‘he has filled those who are hungry and
those who are rich he has sent away empty’. It all started with the Immaculate
Conception.
Wednesday, 7 December 2016
7. Lk. 1: 34-38
Lk.
1: 34-38: By
accepting God’s plan to become the mother of God, Mary expresses her faith and
her surrender to God. In her we find the Christian attitude of faith, hope and
charity. God achieves at this moment of transforming humankind to His image.
Tuesday, 6 December 2016
6. Lk. 10: 21-24
Lk. 10: 21-24: The simple mind could receive what learned minds
cannot take in. We should not be interested in knowing about Christ but must be
interested in knowing Christ. To know this, we need not require earthly wisdom
but the heavenly grace. In this prayer we find Jesus announces this great and
unique relationship between Jesus and God. Jesus tells us that he is the
consummation of all history.
Monday, 5 December 2016
5. Jn 14: 11-14
Jn 14: 11-14: Jesus announces that the disciples would be doing
everything Jesus has done for the people and that they, will be doing even
greater things. In fact the disciple did so in the early days of the church and
later with the new techniques. Jesus again announces that God the Father will
grant everything they ask in the name of Jesus.
Sunday, 4 December 2016
4. Lk 1: 26-38
Lk 1: 26-38: Mary was in two extreme situations to accept God’s
will or to embrace material well being. By embracing the will of God, she for
saw many trouble, risk involved. By accepting God’s will she gives the message
to every Christian that one should always accept God’s will above all other
petty wishes, fancies in life. It is way to freedom and truth – a way to the
supreme power of God.
Saturday, 3 December 2016
3. Mk 6: 7-13
Mk 6: 7-13: To begin with, a disciple of Christ must be under
utter simplicity, complete trust, and the generosity which always gives not
demanding tone. It is also the hallmark of anyone who follows Jesus. St. Francis
Xavier also is an example who preached Jesus in India.
Friday, 2 December 2016
2. Mt. 13: 12-17
Mt. 13: 12-17: The purpose of teaching in parables is explained by
Jesus. Parables are earthly stories to convey the message of the eternal
truths. The listener is advised to make a judgment freeing oneself from
personal defenses. The listener being heard the parables from outside, see
his/her situation from within. All may not go through these processes because for
them parables are only mere stories.
Thursday, 1 December 2016
1. Mt. 24: 45-51
Mt. 24: 45-51: The spirit which leads to disaster is the spirit
which says that there is plenty of time. It is the comfortable delusion of the
servant when he thinks that he will have plenty of time to put things to rights
before his master returns. Rejection to the kingdom is based on his failure in
duty and reward depends upon the fidelity. So Jesus wants us to be employed and
be faithful in doing our duty.
Wednesday, 30 November 2016
30. Mt. 4: 18-22
Mt. 4: 18-22: By calling the first disciples- Peter, Andrew, James
and John by Jesus, we are told to turn to God with a change of heart. Their
conversion makes a decisive change of 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.
Tuesday, 29 November 2016
29. Lk. 1: 18-20
Lk. 1: 18-20: Zachariah accepted his personal tragedy, so
vehemently to his heart that he blocked all his faculties to believe God’s message. Though he wanted it dearly, it came suddenly,
strongly beyond his comprehension that he was not able to break open from the
cocoon of his personal tragedy.
Monday, 28 November 2016
28. Lk. 9: 37-43a
Lk.
9: 37-43a:
Coming back to the valley from the mountain experience of transfiguration
everything down seems to be out of control and people are shattered. This is
visible from the predicament of the father of the unclean spirited boy. When we
see our life out of control, it is the master of life Jesus himself that we can
approach to. He will bring everything under control.
Sunday, 27 November 2016
27. 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, 26 November 2016
26. 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 to be on the side of eternity than on time.
Friday, 25 November 2016
25. 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, 24 November 2016
24. Jn. 17: 12-19
Jn. 17: 12-19: 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. All what he did was
for our joy. It is also a warning that the world will hate those who love
Christ.
Wednesday, 23 November 2016
23. 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, 22 November 2016
22. 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, 21 November 2016
21. 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 center 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, 20 November 2016
20. 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, 19 November 2016
19. 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, 18 November 2016
18. 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, 17 November 2016
17. 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, 16 November 2016
16. 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, 15 November 2016
15. 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, 14 November 2016
14. 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, 13 November 2016
13. 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, 12 November 2016
12. 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, 11 November 2016
11. 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, 10 November 2016
10. 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, 9 November 2016
9. 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, 8 November 2016
8. 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, 7 November 2016
7. Mt. 19: 16-22
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, 6 November 2016
6. Mt. 12: 1-13
Mt. 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, 5 November 2016
5. 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.
Friday, 4 November 2016
4. Lk. 19: 1-10
Lk. 19: 1-10: Zacheus was not an evil man but
defrauded many as a tax collector of Jericho. 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, 3 November 2016
3. 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, 2 November 2016
2. Lk. 8: 26-39
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, 1 November 2016
1. Lk. 21: 1-4
Lk. 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, 31 October 2016
31. Lk. 20: 1-8
Lk.
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, 30 October 2016
30. 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.
Saturday, 29 October 2016
29. Jn 9: 17-23
Jn
9: 17-23:
One may not put the things in words theologically about Jesus but can witness
to what Jesus has done for his or her life. Even when a man cannot understand
with his intellect, he can still fell with his heart. It is better to love
Jesus than to love theories about him.
Friday, 28 October 2016
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.
Thursday, 27 October 2016
27. 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, 26 October 2016
26. 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, 25 October 2016
25. 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, 24 October 2016
24. Mt 24: 3-14
Mt 24: 3-14: In this last discourse on the eschatological times,
Jesus refers two events that speak 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, 23 October 2016
23. 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, 22 October 2016
22. 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, 21 October 2016
21. 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, 20 October 2016
20. 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, 19 October 2016
19. Lk. 11: 37-42
Lk.
11: 37-42:
Jesus does not condemn the ritual and external observances but insists that the
heart of ritual is faith. The heart of every ritual and religious practices are
faith and love. If external observance is the limit of our religion, then sin
becomes as superficial as the righteousness that such a faith would seek. So
faith brings prayer and ritual to life.
Tuesday, 18 October 2016
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.
Monday, 17 October 2016
17. Mt. 18: 10-14
Mt.
18: 10-14:
Jesus instructs his faithful and disciples not to preoccupy with ranking
themselves but with serving the rest. The lost sheep teaches us that though
there is joy in finding the strayed one but we must be more concerned to go
behind the wandering ones to seek them out and to bring them back to the fold.
Sunday, 16 October 2016
16. 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, 15 October 2016
15. 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 nourishment ‘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.
Friday, 14 October 2016
14. 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, 13 October 2016
13. 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, 12 October 2016
12. 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.
Tuesday, 11 October 2016
11. Lk 11: 14-23
Lk 11: 14-23: The cosmic dimension of that ultimate battle took
local form in the ministry of Jesus. Jesus is accused of destroying the kingdom
of God! So he experiences another form of poverty – misunderstanding,
misinterpretation and his words or intentions distorted. In this controversy
Jesus stresses the importance of unity. Division leads to failure and
destruction. So Jesus, who establishes unity and destroy the failure of
everyone who has faith in Him.
Monday, 10 October 2016
10. Lk 10: 38-42
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.
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