1 Mt. 18: 6-9 Sometimes, it is an individual who leads others to sin at other times it is society itself with its corruption, violence and unjust social structures. Jesus invites us to be aware of sin personal and social. There will be evil in this world, but we must make sure that we do not contribute to it or let it flourish through our inactivity.
Tuesday, 31 May 2016
Monday, 30 May 2016
30. Jn. 6: 30-36
Jn. 6: 30-36: It was God who gave manna to the people; of Israel in the wilderness. It was only symbolic of bread of life. The real bread from heaven is to be found in the one who came from heaven, i.e. Christ himself. In him we find not only satisfaction from physical hunger, but life also. Jesus was claiming that the only real satisfaction was in him.
Sunday, 29 May 2016
29. Lk. 10: 25-37
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, 28 May 2016
28. Jn. 6: 1-15
1 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 have not more to bring, it is no reason to fail
to bring. Little is always more in the hands of Jesus.
Friday, 27 May 2016
27. Jn. 6: 45-50
1 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, 26 May 2016
26. Jn. 6: 51-59
1 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, 25 May 2016
25. Jn. 6: 37-44
1 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, 24 May 2016
24. Jn. 6: 64-71
1 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, 23 May 2016
23. Jn. 11: 17-27
1 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 Christless 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.
Sunday, 22 May 2016
22. Lk. 7: 36-50
1 Lk. 7: 36-50 Simeon’s reception of Jesus was without any love in his heart. But the sinful woman’s was a service of love by washing his feet with pure nard oil while Simeon did not even wash his feet. Jesus loves sinners, outcastes which Simeon criticizes. It is love that forgives sin and when sins are forgiven that love grows. Jesus teaches all those assembled there this great lesson. He also teaches us that the real knowledge is to recognize that we are sinners. God’s love follow us to redeem us.
Saturday, 21 May 2016
21. Jn. 6: 25-29
1 Jn. 6: 25-29: Jesus is sealed by God, he is God’s truth incarnate and God alone can truly satisfy the eternal hunger of the soul which he created. For this Jesus offers us a relationship of service, purity and trust in God. When we do that, Jesus satisfies us from our eternal thirst and hunger.
Friday, 20 May 2016
20. Lk. 7: 11-23
1 Lk. 7: 11-23: We, the ministers of the church are called to summon all who are spiritually, ecclesiastically, canonically, intellectually dying people to new life. The church should be a place not where people come to die but where they can come to receive new vigor and life.
Thursday, 19 May 2016
19. Jn. 2: 13-25
1 Jn.
2: 13-25: With the trade and the entire ritualism
in the temple what happens in the temple was a mere ritualistic worship while
the hearts of the people are far from God. So Jesus reacts and cleanses the
temple like that of the Old Testament prophets. Unless there is a connection
between our piety and our everyday living, our devotions and liturgical
services are pure hypocrisy which God rejects.
Wednesday, 18 May 2016
18. Mt. 13: 31-35
1 Mt. 13: 31-35: Small beginnings lead to mighty end. The parable of the ‘Yeast’ also brings out the same message. With the added insight or faith, Christianity spreads as it were by infection from persons caught up by the new experience of God and who communicate it spontaneously to others. So the end result is big enough to be seen.
Tuesday, 17 May 2016
17. Mt. 20: 29-34
1 Mt.
20: 29-34: Many people get material and spiritual
benefits from God through Jesus, but forget to say thanks to him. Ingratitude
is the ugliest sin of all. Here we find these two blind men after receiving
sight give due loyalty to him. We can never repay God for what he has done for
us but we can be grateful to him.
Monday, 16 May 2016
16. Mt. 11: 25-30
1 Mt. 11: 25-30
It is the Christian conviction that in Jesus Christ alone we see what God is
like and Jesus can give that knowledge to anyone who is humble enough and
trustful enough to receive it. Jesus is compassionate to those people trying to
find God to be good and doing so, driven to weariness and despair.
Sunday, 15 May 2016
15. Jn. 16: 5-15
1 Jn. 16: 5-15 Holy Spirit gives freedom and sanctifies our souls. Moses received the message of freedom in the presence of fire that doesn’t consume the plant on mount Horeb (Ex. 3:2; 9-10). The pillar of fire travelled at night in front of the Israelites (Ex. 13:21). It is the tongues of fire (Holy Spirit) that guided and inspired the disciples. Fire has always been symbolical to the Holy Spirit both in OT and NT. The Holy Spirit is seen empowering the disciples in the Gospels. Holy Spirit teaches about sin, justice and last judgment as found in the Gospel of today.
Saturday, 14 May 2016
14. Mt. 18: 23-35
Mt. 18: 23-35: Readiness to forgive those who injured us is demanded for a Christian living. Jesus not only urges us to forgive without limit (v.21-22) but shows us how our forgiveness is always related to God’s forgiveness (v.23-34).
Friday, 13 May 2016
13. Mt. 24: 7-14
1 Mt. 24: 7-14 A true missionary and disciple of Jesus will be hated by the people, will be handed over for suffering by the people and Jesus says that the one who endures till the end will be saved. It is not about the time of suffering that Jesus speaks about but the fullness of suffering.
Thursday, 12 May 2016
12. Lk. 14: 25-35
1 Lk. 14: 25-35
The man who follows him should not be on the way to worldly power and glory,
but must be ready for loyalty which would sacrifice the dearest things in life
and for a suffering which would be like the agony of a man upon a cross. It is
the Christian way to salvation. But he won’t be alone. He who called him to the
steep road will walk with him every step of the way and be there at the end to
meet him.
Wednesday, 11 May 2016
11. Jn. 17: 1-5
1 Jn. 17: 1-5 For Jesus life had a climax and that was the cross. To him the cross was the glory of life and the way to the glory of eternity. Facts from the history shows that how they died showed people what and who they really were. Fro Jesus, the cross was the glory as it was the completion of his work. “I have accomplished the work” he says.
Tuesday, 10 May 2016
10. Lk. 12: 13-21
1 Lk.
12: 13-21: Professional success is what one gets
rich to oneself while spiritual success as one grows rich in the sight of God.
Wealth is not a thing that we can rely upon. As it disappears we become more
relying upon God – that is what we mean ‘growing spiritually rich’. Trust in
God orients one’s attitude toward the world. It determines whether we see the
world as an essentially hostile place to live in for our spiritual life.
Monday, 9 May 2016
9. Jn. 4: 3-15
1 Jn. 4: 3-15:
Jesus, overcoming racial and social prejudices, begins to talk with a Samaritan
woman with the intention of bringing her to salvation. Her immediate concern
was to quench the thirst with water from the well of stagnant water. But Jesus
promises her of the living water which is the word of God as wisdom and the
Holy Spirit who give eternal life. Once one possesses it as a reality within
one’s heart, all thirst for happiness will be satisfied.
Sunday, 8 May 2016
8. Mk. 16: 14-20
1 Mk. 16: 14-20: The church has a healing task and a source of power. The church is never left alone to work. Always Christ works with it, in it and through it. The Lord of the church is still in the church and is still the lord of power. The Gospel of Mark ends here with this message of presence of this power of Christ.
Saturday, 7 May 2016
7. Mt. 3: 7-12
1 Mt. 3: 7-12:
The coming of Jesus Christ necessarily involves separation for Christ or
against him according to the response one makes and this choice cannot be
avoided. The one who is for Christ will be illuminated warmly, protected and
purified as fire does to anyone – the one who is baptized with the holy spirit
and fire.
Friday, 6 May 2016
6. Jn 3: 31-36
1 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.
Thursday, 5 May 2016
5. Lk. 24: 44-53
1 Lk.
24: 44-53: The disciples are instructed to
continue his message and his presence. They are to proclaim his name everywhere
and be witnesses of the Christ-event to others. Having said this in his last
instruction, Jesus ascends to his Father. Luke’s gospel ends where it began in
the house of God, where the disciples spend their times in prayer in order to
be strengthened by the Holy Spirit.
Wednesday, 4 May 2016
4. Jn. 15: 11-17
1 Jn. 15: 11-17:
Jesus says “You have not chosen me but I have chosen you” it was not we who
chose God, but God who in his grace, approached us with a call and an offer
made out of his love. We are chosen for joy, for love to his friends, to be his
ambassadors (to send you out) to be his advertisements (to bear fruit) with a
privileged member status of the family of God.
Tuesday, 3 May 2016
3. Jn. 14: 1-6
1 Jn.
14: 1-6: If we have true faith in God the Father
and in Jesus Christ we will be liberated from all our sufferings. The ‘rooms’
show the intimate communion, sharing the very life of God, reaches it’s
culmination in the life with God after our death. It starts with the present
life in which Jesus is the Way, the truth and the life.
Monday, 2 May 2016
2. Mt. 23: 23-28
1 Mt. 23: 23-28: Jesus criticizes the scribes and Pharisees for their lack of authenticity. There is no compassion and love in their hearts. From outside they seem to b e ‘honorable’ or show themselves to be so but inside of them are full of extortion and rapacity. So they are compared to a cup or plate that is washed from outside and white washed tombs.
Sunday, 1 May 2016
1. Jn. 17: 20-26
1 Jn. 17: 20-26:
Jesus prays for all his followers. He prays for unity among them as he
experiences the unity with the Father. This unity that he has with the Father
and reflected among his followers will always remain a ‘challenge’ to this
divided world. This unity which is established on love and understanding will
be the conscience of the world. This must be the thrust and endeavor of the
church always.
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