1 Jn. 5: 1-18:
“I have no one to put me into the pool” v.7. If the above verse is the tragic
fate of the poor even today v.17 is the hope for them all “My Father goes on
working, and so do I”. Creation is a dynamic process which continues by the
preservatory action of God. As the Father, so is Jesus perfecting creation
bringing salvation (3:16).
Monday, 29 February 2016
Sunday, 28 February 2016
28. Mt. 21: 33-44
1 Mt. 21: 33-44:
Priests and Pharisees- the leaders of Jews killed the prophets of Israel and
the Son of God who corrected and guided them time to time. Now the owner will
entrust the vineyard (the people of God) to the care of the apostles under
Peter. We are the ‘tenants’ and the ‘vineyard,’ if we are to produce the fruits
of Gospel and Holy Spirit. We are to be
controlled and guided by the Holy Spirit.
Saturday, 27 February 2016
27. Mt. 21: 28-32
1 Mt. 21: 28-32:
Many people receive the message of Jesus in their life and are ahead of the
priests, who were indifferent to and felt neither the desire nor the need to
change. So also do many uncommitted Christians, who neither work as
missionaries nor receive them, believing they do not need conversion.
Friday, 26 February 2016
26. Mk. 12: 18-27
1 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).
Thursday, 25 February 2016
25. Mk. 12: 35-40
1 Mk. 12: 35-40:
Jesus comes out of the selfish title which the Jews had given to the Messiah
(the son of David in Mt. 1:1 restrict his mission only to the Jews like King
David) by quoting Psalm 110:1. He says Jesus’ sonship is more than a matter of
human descent and will sit in his kingdom at the right hand of his heavenly
Father by his passion and resurrection.
Wednesday, 24 February 2016
24. Mt. 5: 43-48
1 Mt. 5: 43-48:
The antitheses of the Sermon on the Mount reach their climax in the last one
dealing with the scope of our love. “You must be perfect”(v.48) which
means that God loves his people with a
mind of universality and single-mindedness. God loves all of us and each one of
us totally.
Tuesday, 23 February 2016
23. Lk. 21: 29-36
1 Lk. 21: 29-36:
During winter the figs shed their leaves and anyone will feel it is dead. So is
the church which comes to life due to the grace of God from its death like
winter (Joel2:22). The kingdom of God is life, fruitfulness of the church in
her activities and mission.
Monday, 22 February 2016
22. Mk. 12: 28-34
1 Mk. 12: 28-34:
Although the question is about the first commandment, Jesus adds to it a
second: Deut. 6:4-5 and Lev. 19:18. In effect he makes of the two precepts one
dual commandment. For him, love of God is to be expressed in the love of human
beings.
Sunday, 21 February 2016
21. Mt. 20: 17-28
1 Mt.
20: 17-28: Jesus paid in full as a ransom for us.
There is the absolute truth that without Jesus and his life of service and his
death of love, we would never have found our way back to the love of God. Jesus
gives everything to bring man back to God. And we must walk in the steps of Him
who loved to the uttermost.
Saturday, 20 February 2016
20. Mt. 11: 16-19
1 Mt.
11: 16-19: We are asked not to judge people and
institutions by our own prejudices’ and perversities. If we are to thank them
for bringing people nearer to God, by their methods that often may not fit into
ours, we have to do so as a Christian, who must be always crystal-clear in
judgments.
Friday, 19 February 2016
19. Mk. 11: 27-33
1 Mk. 11: 27-33:
The counter question about John the Baptist by Jesus made the religious
authorities (who cooked up charges of blasphemy against Jesus) got themselves
trapped. The ingenuity and scheming of the human agents of the anti-kingdom
serve only to highlight the divine origin of Jesus and his authority. The
programme of his kingdom cannot be defeated.
Thursday, 18 February 2016
18. Mt. 5: 33-37
1 Mt.
5: 33-37: Jesus condemns the use of oaths and
religious language for self-centered, manipulative and evasive purposes which
are hollow and empty in its results. If we are to become a new creation, the
change envisaged will reflect in our conversations, cloth, home and use of our
leisure times.
Wednesday, 17 February 2016
17. Mt. 9: 1-8
1 Mt. 9: 1-8:
V.8 indicates the sacrament of reconciliation in which people “praised God for
giving such power to men” It was for this reason that Jesus is accused (Mt.
26:65) The teachers of the law saw in Jesus as an ordinary man (“This man is
blaspheming”) The crowd saw in this man God Himself. “The priest is the sign
and the instrument of God’s merciful love for the sinner” (v.6 & Jn 5:27
& ccc 1465).
Tuesday, 16 February 2016
16. Mt. 7: 7-12
1 Mt.
7: 7-12: God answers our prayers in His way, in
His wisdom and in love. We are asked to bring to God an undiscouraged life, of
prayer which often tests the rightness of the things we pray for and our
sincerity for asking them. In that way we learn to treat others with love and
concern for them.
Monday, 15 February 2016
15. Mk. 7: 14-23
1 Mk.
7: 14-23: Cleanness and uncleanness are affairs
of the soul and not of the body. If a person has hate in his heart, a thousand
papal blessings will be powerless to help him. If a person is filled with the
loves of Jesus, a million curses and spells will be harmless. Nothing can
separate us from the love of the Lord.
Sunday, 14 February 2016
14. Mt. 7: 21-27
1 Mt.
7: 21-27: Jesus points out that a prophet’s
spiritual pyrotechnics (exorcisms, miracles, charismatic experiences) do not by
themselves guarantee the fullness of spiritual life and it comes exclusively
from the personal union with God. It comes from the solid base of internal
transformation in how we think and act, guided by his teaching.
Saturday, 13 February 2016
13. Mt. 6: 9-15
1 Mt.
6: 9-15: The Lord’s Prayer offers us as a model
prayer as what a prayer should be like. It spans the whole human existence. It
points to the right priorities that we orient first to God and then teaches us
to pray for all our needs – economic (bread), social (forgiveness) and
religious (fidelity to God).
Friday, 12 February 2016
12. Mt. 7: 1-6
1 Mt. 7: 1-6:
We are forbidden to condemn people because good or evil is a matter not of
external behavior but of the intention of the heart which only God can see (Mt.
5: 21-48) and since all of us are sinners, none of us has the right to condemn,
for it makes us unease with ourselves. We discuss the teachings of Jesus among
those who can understand the subtlety of what is being expressed.
Thursday, 11 February 2016
11. Mt. 6: 25-34
1 Mt. 6: 25-34:
A Christian is the one who trust in God and setting all his hearts on the
kingdom of God and His justice. If we truly commit ourselves to God’s cause,
all the rest that we need for our happiness will be given to us.
Wednesday, 10 February 2016
10. Mt. 6: 5-8
1 Mt. 6: 5-8:
Prayer is not merely reciting formulas but entering into a relationship with
God. It is not the quantity of words we utter but the attitude of faith and
love we develop. To pray is not to talk a lot, but to surrender our lives into
God’s loving hands.
Tuesday, 9 February 2016
9. Mt. 5: 38-42
1 Mt.
5: 38-42: Against the backdrop of the Old
Testament saying (Leviticus 24:19: Exodus 21:22 ‘tooth for tooth’), Jesus gives
the new rule not simply to avoid retaliation but to forgive. Forgiveness is the
only way to interrupt the endless and destructive recycling of hatred and
revenge.
Monday, 8 February 2016
8. Mt. 5: 17-26
1 Mt. 5: 17-26:
Jesus is proposing a new spirituality of love which fulfils the teachings of
the Old Testament and the prophets. His teachings never intend to reform or
improve but offer us a new way of life which will do all that the law intends
to do in a far superior way. Love for Jesus has the absolute value to which all
else is subordinate.
Sunday, 7 February 2016
7. Mt. 4: 1-11
1 Mt. 4: 1-11:
Filled and guided by the spirit is what one feels in prayer life. Not by giving
bread but by giving the ‘word’ that he is going to prove himself to be the Son
of God. Not by testing God but by trusting in God that one must reach God. To
obey God till death and to give himself as expiation for sin is his way – the
cross. Divine Sonship is not for compromising to the world but is a way of
service to save the world.
Saturday, 6 February 2016
6. Lk 11: 14-23
1 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.
Friday, 5 February 2016
5. Mt. 25: 31-40
1 Mt. 25: 31-40: The
purpose of the passage is to tell us what we must do in order to be saved. The
passage is as much a parable of separation (the sheep and the goats) like the
wheat and the weeds in 13: 24-30 or the net and the fish in 13: 47-50. It is
also a description of judgment.
Thursday, 4 February 2016
4. Mk. 9: 33-37
1 Mk. 9: 33-37:
A disciple is to serve the powerless and the needy, just like a ‘child’ who is
not acknowledged or had no rights at that times. The ‘children’ are to be
welcomed who are in need and helpless. By this one will ultimately welcomes God
in his or her life.
Wednesday, 3 February 2016
3. Mt. 12: 15b-21
1 Mt. 12: 15b-21:
By quoting Isaiah 42: 1-4 Mathew
pictures Jesus as the servant of God, who filled with holy spirit, worked
silently with the oppressed, weak, wounded and the poor who believed in Jesus.
Thereby he fulfilled the law. The gentiles believed in Him while the Jews
rejected Him. This is a prophecy of Hope.
Tuesday, 2 February 2016
2. Lk. 2: 22-38
Lk. 2: 22-38: Simeon foretells
the rejection of Jesus by his own people. So salvation is extended to all in
the world. St. Luke ascribes new motifs
concerning new identity and mission of Jesus
Monday, 1 February 2016
1. Lk. 5: 12-16
1 Lk. 5: 12-16:
Many came to Jesus: the blind, the lame, the lepers and the sinners. They all
came to be cleaned. We too are faced with the same question ‘Do I wish to be
made clean, whole, holy?’ there are some areas of our life that need to be
healed, to put into a correct mode and so on. Jesus can make everything clean,
whole and holy!
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