Saturday, 30 November 2013
December 1, 2013 - FIRST SUNDAY IN ADVENT - “Today is the tomorrow you worried about yesterday”
To read the texts click on the texts: Isaiah 2:1-5;Rom.13:11-14; Mt 24:37-44
In this oracle of salvation Isaiah speaks of the
elevation or exaltation of Zion , the mountain of
the Temple of the
Lord. This elevation will result in the establishment of peace and justice
among all nations. The people will make a pilgrimage to Zion to learn the Lord’s ways and walk in his
paths. They will go to God’s holy mountain to learn from him. This instruction
will result in the instruments of war being turned into farming tools. Peace
will reign and so there will be no need to train for war.
In this part of his letter to the Romans, Paul
exhorts his readers because of the urgency of the times to wake up and live in
the light rather than darkness. This is done by giving up things done under the
cover of the dark and daring to appear in the light. Christians must express
through their words and actions the very presence of Christ.
The text from Matthew is part of his Eschatological
Discourse (24-25). To the question “When will Christ return?” Matthew’s answer
is “No one knows” (24, 36). As in the time of Noah life went on as usual with
no sign that judgement was going to come, so will it be at the Parousia (literally
“presence” but taken to mean the second coming of Christ). However, this lack
of knowledge about the exactness of the hour instead of becoming a cause for
concern must be the motivating factor to be ready at all times. In the metaphor
of the thief who breaks and enters the house, the point being made is that it
is the one who knows that the exact hour is unknown will be the one who will
remain vigilant and awake.
Many of us live in the future rather than in the
present. We want to know what will happen tomorrow and in the process do not
live fully today. This obsession with the future is because basically we are
frightened. We are frightened of what the future holds for us, we are
frightened of whether we will be able to cope with what the future brings and
we are frightened of whether the future will be better than or worse than our
present. The Gospel text of today is calling for exactly the opposite of this
way of living. It is calling for a total living in the present and doing what
we have to do in the now, with no useless worry about what the morrow will
bring. This is what it means to be ready at all times. A story is told of St.
John Berchmans {a young Jesuit who died when he was 22 years old} who when asked what he would do if he was told that he
was going to be called by the Lord at the moment when he was playing football
is said to have replied, “I will continue playing football.” The Latin phrase
“Age quod agis” “Do what you are doing” sums up his attitude and the attitude
expected of each of us who profess to be followers of Christ.
However, we will only be able to have such a kind of
confidence to continue doing what we are doing, if we give up the negative things that we
might be doing and the negative attitudes that we might carry and substitute
them instead with everything that enhances, builds up and is positive. Being good and doing good are
not be looked upon as a burden but something that comes naturally to the
Christian who has experienced the move from darkness to light and from fear to
love through what Christ has done through his life, mission, death and
resurrection. We must show through this kind of positive and fearless living
that we are indeed children of the light and have as inspiration the person and
message of Christ.
If we dare to live in this manner then the prophecy
of Isaiah which was fulfilled in the coming of Jesus 2000 years ago will also
become a reality once again today. We will become that mountain of the Temple of the Lord to
which everyone will look and learn the Lord’s ways. They will learn that to
live in the future is futile, that to be obsessed with what is not yet is to
fail to appreciate fully the present moment. They will realize that it is better
to be positive than negative, to enhance and build up rather than pull down and
destroy, to live fully and completely rather than die without ever having
lived.
Friday, 29 November 2013
Saturday, November 30, 2013 - St. Andrew, Apostle - Jesus is inviting you today with the words, "Follow me". What will your response be?
To read the texts click on the texts: Rom 10:9-18; Mt 4:18-22
Andrew was the brother of Simon Peter (Mt 4:18; Mk
1:16; Jn 1:40; 6:8) and along with his brother was a fisherman. According to
the Gospel of John, Andrew was a disciple of John the Baptist and was one of
the first to follow Jesus. The Gospels of Matthew and Mark state that Andrew
and his brother were the disciples to be called by Jesus to become “fishers of
men”; a phrase which was used to probably link it with their trade.
Though not in the group of the three disciples (Peter,
James and John) who seemed to have a special place in the ministry of Jesus, it
was Andrew who brought the boy who had five barley loaves to Jesus in the
Gospel of John (Jn 6:8) and who along with Philip told Jesus about the gentiles
(Greeks) who wished to meet Jesus (Jn 12:22).
Andrew is said to have been martyred by
crucifixion at the city of Patras. His crucifixion is believed to have been on
Cross that was shaped like the alphabet X. This Cross is commonly known as “Saint
Andrew’s Cross” today.
The Gospel text for the Feast is the call of the
first four disciples as narrated by Matthew. It is Jesus who takes the
initiative in this story and come to the brothers, Simon and Andrew. Jesus’
invitation is also a promise. The invitation which is “to follow” him, will result
in the brothers becoming ‘fishers of men and women’. It is an invitation to participate
in the saving work of Jesus.
The response of the brothers is immediate. They
leave everything to follow Jesus. While it was surely a risk to act in such a
manner, it is also true that the call of Jesus was so compelling, that they
simply could not refuse.
What does it mean to follow Jesus and accept his
invitation to follow? It means that one is willing to accept the challenge to
see God in all things and all things in God. It therefore means continuing to
follow when everything is going the way we want it to and also when our plans go awry and we cannot
understand why things happen the way they do. It means trusting at every moment
that we have to continue to what is required of us and leave everything else
(including the worrying) to God. It means trusting that God will never let us
down and that all that happens to us is for God’s glory and our good.
Thursday, 28 November 2013
Friday, November 29,2013 - Will you live today as if it were your last day on earth?
To read the texts click on the texts: Dan 7:2-14; Lk 21:29-33
The parable of the fig tree found in these verses is the last
parable that Jesus tells in the Gospel of Luke. This parable is found also in
Mark 13:28-29 and Matthew 24:32-33, but whereas Mark and Matthew speak only of
the fig tree, Luke speaks of “the fig tree and all the trees” (21:29). When
people can see for themselves that these trees have come out in leaf they know
for themselves that summer is near, so when they see the Son of Man coming in a
cloud (21:27) they will know that the kingdom is near.
Since Luke probably
thought that the end would come soon, he has added the last two sayings about
what will not pass away until “these things” have taken place. They are “this
generation” and the “words” of Jesus. These pronouncements must serve as a
reminder of the assurance of redemption for the believer.
Our job as Christians is not to bother about when the end will
be but to live fully in the present moment. If we do so then no matter when the
end comes we will always be ready.
Wednesday, 27 November 2013
Thursday, November 28, 2013 - If the end were to come today would you be able to hold your head high fearlessly? If No, what will you do about it today?
The text of
today, continues the Eschatological Discourse, but speaks now of the
destruction of Jerusalem and other cosmological signs which announce the coming
of the Son of Man. Josephus the Jewish historian recorded the horrors of the
Jewish war, which lasted from April until August of the year 70 C.E. It was a terrible
for all the inhabitants and many were killed during it. The Romans razed the
whole city to the ground.
The texts
states that once this happens and the other signs have come to pass signalling
the end that is at hand, the Son of Man will appear in a cloud, with great
power and glory. When he does appear, others might faint from fear, but the
disciples are asked to hold their heads up high, because their salvation has
indeed come.
In Luke, the
focus remains on the significance of the coming of the Son of Man and the way
the disciples are to receive him. For the disciples, his coming means an end to
the persecutions and terrors that have been described earlier. Whereas the Son
of Man will come to judge the wicked, his coming means deliverance for the faithful.
The Gospel
thus teaches that beyond the end of time stands the Lord, who has come among us
in the person of Jesus. Those whose lives are lived under Jesus’ Lordship can
live expectantly, filling each day with activity that is meaningful because of
its divine mandate and its contribution to the fulfilment of God’s purposes for
human life. Similarly, the end of time or the end of life holds no terror for
those who know God’s love because they know the one who determines the reality
that lies beyond what we can know here and now.
Thus those who
know Christ as the Son of God can approach the end with heads raised high,
knowing that their redemption is near (21:28).
These verses
also provide encouragement for the faithful when the very foundation of life
seems to be shaken. Reading Jesus’ words on the coming of the Son of Man brings
assurance that in the worst of times the Son of Man is near at hand, coming
“with power and great glory” (21:27). The message of the eschatological
discourse is one of hope: “Your redemption is drawing near” (21:28).
Tuesday, 26 November 2013
Wednesday, November 27, 2013 - If someone witnessed your actions all through today, would they conclude that you are a disciple of Jesus?
To read the texts click on the texts: Dan 5:1-6,13-14,16-17,23-28; Lk 21:12-19
These verses
are part of Luke’s Eschatological Discourse. The Greek word “Eschaton” is
translated as “the last things”, “the things of the next life”. The main point
of these verses is to prepare the disciples for the coming trial by exhorting
them to regard trials as an occasion for bearing witness.
The text begins by
telling the disciples what they (the persecutors) will do namely arrest you,
persecute you etc. It then goes on to advise the disciples what they must do in
the face of this persecution, namely that they must bear witness but not be
obsessed with the anxiety of preparing their defence. The reason for this is
because of what Jesus will do, namely, give the disciples wisdom to counter any
argument of the opponents. The text ends with an assurance of God’s support and
protection on those who endure.
The
persecution of the disciples, however, does not exceed what Jesus himself will
experience. He, too, will be arrested and brought before Pilate and Herod. It
is Jesus himself therefore who will give the disciples the content of what they
are to say.
The gospel
offers not a way of predicting the end of the world but the spiritual resources
to cope with the challenges of life. In times of distress the disciples of
Jesus are called not to throw their hands up in despair, but to be unafraid. It
is a fact that following Jesus who is The Truth will have repercussions and
consequences, some of which may be disastrous. However, it is in these
circumstances that perseverance and endurance is called for. This is the test
of our faith and courage in the promises of the Lord.
Thus we can
opt for one of two ways of proceeding. One is to focus so much on prophesies of
the future, that they frighten us into idle speculation and inaction. The other
is to dare to commit ourselves and actions to make a difference here and now.
Monday, 25 November 2013
Tuesday, November 26, 2013 - St. John Berchmans SJ (1599-1621) - It is not the number of years, but HOW one lives those years that matters.
To read the texts click on the texts: 1 Jn 4:1-8; Lk 9:57-62
John Berchmans SJ Born in Brabant
(Netherlands/Belgium) on 13th March,
1599. He joined the Society of Jesus on 24th September 1616 when he was 17
years of age. After his first vows he was sent to Antwerp and a little later to
Rome to study Philosophy. He was in his third year of Philosophy, when he was
seized with a violent fever and died on 13th August, 1621.
Though he was a Jesuit for only a short period of
time and was not ordained a priest, he was known even as a young Jesuit for his
piety, devotion and focus. He learned the secret of living in the present
moment. He was known to do even the most ordinary and mundane tasks as if it
was to be the last task of his life. It was said of him that he did ordinary
things extraordinarily well. Because of his devotion to the Eucharist and his
regular service at the Altar he is the Patron of Altar Servers.
He was declared Blessed in 1865, and was canonized
in 1888. His statues represent him with hands clasped, holding his crucifix,
his book of rules, and his rosary.
The Gospel text for the feast is from the Gospel
of Luke and is about the would-be followers of Jesus, and Jesus’ warnings about
what discipleship will entail.
To the first would-be follower who promises to
follow Jesus wherever he goes, Jesus responds by stating clearly that unlike
even the foxes that at least have holes, he does not have anywhere he can call
his own. If the would-be follower is ready for this insecurity, he may follow.
The second person is called to follow by Jesus,
but responds by asking for permission to bury his father. This was a duty that
was binding on all devout Jews. Jesus’ response is harsh and demands that the
disciple be primarily concerned about the kingdom.
The third would-be follower puts conditions to his
following namely that he wants to say farewell to his family. However, here too
the response of Jesus is clear. Looking back while ploughing leads to a crooked
furrow.
In total contrast to the three examples of persons
mentioned in the text, John Berchmans was one who was ready to follow his Lord
in total poverty, and did not once look back once he put his hand to the
plough. He was focussed on the kingdom and kept that focus till the very end.
While it is not necessary to give up the state of
life one has chosen in order to follow Jesus, what is to be understood is that
following will necessarily mean changing one’s style of life. It will mean a
move from selfishness to selflessness, from acquiring material possessions to
sharing them with others and from anything negative to everything that is
positive.
Tuesday, November 26, 2013 - Are you so concerned about the next life that you are not living fully this life?
To read the texts click on the texts: Dan 2:31-45; Lk 21:5-11
Luke follows Mark 13:1-8 quite closely in these verses, though
he also makes some changes.
While in Mark 13:1 Jesus comes out of the Temple
and predicts its destruction when his disciples point to it magnificence, in
Luke, Jesus is within the Temple when he predicts its destruction when some
(not the disciples) speak of its magnificence (21:5-6). This is why unlike in
Mark 13:3 he is not on the Mount of Olives opposite the Temple, but within its
precincts when he is asked about when this will take place (21:7).
Mark 13:3
has Peter, James, John and Andrew who ask this question; Luke has the people
pose the question. Jesus responds by stating not the hour when this will take
place, but by issuing a set of three warnings.
The first warning is not to
allow oneself to be led astray and be led into believing that the ones’ who
come in his name are the Messiah. The meaning of this warning is
broad and encompasses being led to sin, being taught false teachings, and being
deceived regarding apocalyptic events.
The second warning follows the first: they
must go after these false Messiahs.
The third warning is not to be terrified
when they hear of wars and insurrections, because they are part of God’s plan
in bringing about the kingdom and must out of necessity happen before the final
coming.
In times of great danger, stress, and hardship it is natural for
persons and communities of faith to turn to God and to the future for hope, for
the promise of deliverance. However, idle preoccupation and speculation of what
will happen at the end times is not called for. It is a distortion of the
Gospel message of Jesus who asks that we concern ourselves not with gossip and guesswork,
but in how we must do what we have to do in the present.
Sunday, 24 November 2013
Monday, November 25, 2013 - Will you forego one meal this week and give what you save to someone less fortunate than you?
To read the texts click on the texts: Dan 1:1-6,8-20; Lk 21:1-4
Jesus’
comment on the widow’s offering follows immediately after his condemnation of
the scribes, who “devour widow’s houses”. Luke omits most of Mark’s
introduction to the widow’s offering (see Mark 12:41).
In the new
scene, which Luke brings about by his comment that “He (Jesus) looked up and
saw”, Luke introduces two sets of characters: the rich contributors and a poor
widow. The action of both is the same. However, the size or amount of the gifts
of the rich contributors is not mentioned, but it is explicitly stated that the
widow put in two lepta, the smallest copper coins then in use. It would have
taken 128 lepta to make one denarius, which was a day’s wage. Two lepta would
therefore have been worthless. In a twist reminiscent of many of Jesus’ parables,
Jesus states that the widow who put in what seems like a worthless amount has
put in more than any of the rich contributors. The following statement
clarifies how this could be. They contributed out of their abundance, but she
out of her poverty. They contributed gifts she contributed herself.
We are
challenged by Jesus’ praise of the widow. When we give, do we give with
complete devotion and selflessness that marked the widow’s gift or do we give
expecting something in return? By what
measures do we calculate our actions? By what standards do we judge ourselves
and others?
Beyond the
obvious, however, Jesus’ example teaches his disciples that part of seeking the
kingdom requires vindicating the poor, the widows, and the orphans. Jesus
recognized their inherent worth and called on the community to care for the
weakest and neediest in their midst. He recognized that those who were often
sustained by the gifts of others could themselves give gifts of great value.
Without knowing it, the widow gave others a timeless example of selfless
devotion to God.
Small gifts
are often easily overlooked. Jesus, however, was able to SEE and RECOGNISE one
of the neglected and her magnanimity.
The first observation that might be made
about this scene is that Jesus noticed one of the neglected. By singling out
the widow as exemplary, Jesus also rejected the subtle presumption that those
who gave the great gifts were more important or better than the one whose gift
was small because her means were limited.
In a
society in which wealth is the measure of success and happiness, the wealthy
are often esteemed and given special treatment, while the poor are judged as
failures who could have done better if they had tried. A person’s value or
worth as a human being is, therefore, measured by the evidence of his or her
prosperity and possessions. Just as in the parables, Jesus’ pronouncement here reverses
the norms and standards by which we are accustomed to living. He turns our
world’s standards on their head. A widow or a homeless person’s gift to God or
to others may be more important than the gifts of the wealthy.
Saturday, 23 November 2013
READ THE READINGS FOR THE FEAST OF CHRIST THE KING FOR THE ANSWERS - (NEW RSV TRANSLATION)
Click here for the texts
Sunday, November 24, 2013 - CHRIST THE UNIVERSAL AND ETERNAL KING - What one action will you do today to show that you are readying to receive Christ the King?
To read the texts click on the texts: 2 Sam 5:1-3; Col 1:12-20; Lk 23:35-43
The feast of Christ the Eternal King was introduced through
the encyclical Quas Primas – (“In the first”) of Pope Pius XI on December 11,
1925. One main purpose of the encyclical
was to communicate hope to a world which seemed to be giving into despair. Another purpose was to give the world a whole
new idea of kingship, dominion and authority. There could be no better model of
kingship which the Church could put before the world than Jesus Christ. Jesus
Christ, the servant king.
This feast is celebrated every year on the last Sunday in
Ordinary time. It brings to a close the Ordinary time of the liturgical year
and it begins the preparation for Advent and the coming of the redeemer child
at Christmas.
The readings for today all speak of Kingship. The first
reading tells of the kingship of David who had been anointed king over Judah and now, over the northern tribes of Israel . Thus,
David becomes king over all of Israel .
However, even as he is anointed king, he is reminded of the kind of king that
the Lord wants him to be, namely a Shepherd king. He began life as a shepherd of
the flocks of his father. Now, he is
shepherd over the people. Like the shepherd looks after his flock and leads
them, so David will look after his people and lead them. The anointing of David
as king is not something done on a mere whim. It is the Lord who ordained it. It is the Lord who said that David would be shepherd
and rule over Israel .
David had shown his care for his people when he led them out and brought them
to the glory that they now experience.
The kingdom that God established in David promised newness.
The shape of power in this kingdom will be governed by shepherding and covenant
making. Israel ’s
future hope has, for the moment, become its present hope. This present hope was
made even more visible when God chose and anointed Jesus to be king, not only
over Israel
but over the whole of humanity. Like David before him, Jesus would also be a shepherd
of the people. The covenant that he made
with God would be a covenant on the Cross. It would be an eternal covenant, one
that no amount of negatives could ever erase.
The Gospel text of today brings out this truth powerfully.
Through the irony of the taunts of the leaders and soldiers, Luke highlights
both Jesus’ real identity and the true meaning of his death. The leaders and
soldiers think that they are ridiculing Jesus. They think that they are making
fun of him. However, even as they do
this, they are unaware that this is exactly the kind of king that he has come
to be. Just as Jesus had taught that
those who lose their lives for his sake would save them, so now he is willing
to lose his life so that all might be saved. Jesus’ death did not contradict
the Christological claims; it confirmed them. For him to have saved himself
would have been a denial of his salvific role in the purposes of God. Both what
is said and what is done at the cross, therefore, confirm the truth about the
one who is crucified: He is the Christ, the King of the Jews, the Saviour of the World.
This salvation that Jesus effected on the Cross is made
even more visible and more tangible in the response of Jesus to those crucified
with him. Though rebuked by one of the thieves, Jesus does not react
negatively. He is willing to accept even this taunt. The pronouncement that
Jesus makes to the thief who asks for remembrance is solemn. It is the last of
the six “Amen” sayings in Luke and the only one addressed to a person. It is also
the last of the “Today” pronouncements. That “Amen” and “Today” have been used
together is an indication that the pronouncement is emphatic and that there is
to be no delay. What Jesus promises will
happen now.
The salvation pronounced to one of the thieves on the Cross
is also the salvation being pronounced to each of us who are willing to receive
it. This is
because, through his passion and death, Jesus has rescued us, as the letter to
the Colossians points out. He has
rescued us from the power of darkness and sin.
He has transferred us into the kingdom of light and all that is good. It
is therefore, in the visible image of Jesus Christ that we can comprehend who
God is and what God wants to do for each of us. God wants the whole of creation
to be reconciled in Jesus. God wants all of creation to be saved in the
shepherd and self-sacrificing king.
As we come to the close of another liturgical year, and as we prepare to
welcome Christ our eternal king, we need to realize that our king can come only
if we are willing to open our hearts and minds wide to receive him. We can do
this by removing from our minds and hearts anything that will prevent us from
receiving and accepting him. We can do this by removing selfishness and
self-centeredness that makes us seek only our own good rather than the good of
others. We can do this by reaching out in love and forgiveness as he did, even
when on the Cross. Will we ready our minds and hearts to receive our King?
Friday, 22 November 2013
Saturday, November 23, 2013 - If you were told that your life after death would be determined by the life you live now, what changes would you make in this life?
To read the texts click on the texts: 1 Macc 6:1-13; Lk 20:27-40
The
Sadducees were a group of Jews who did not believe in the resurrection. The
question they ask Jesus assumes the practice of Levirate marriage, where
according to Deut 25:5, the brother of a deceased man was to take his brother’s
widow as his wife. The Sadducees extend the situation to the point of ridicule
by speaking of seven brothers who marry the same woman. The question is whose
wife she would be in the resurrection. While in Mark, Jesus first rebukes the
Sadducees, in Luke he begins to teach them immediately. Jesus’ response is that
life in the resurrection will not simply be a continuation of the life, as we
know it now.
In the
second part of his response, Jesus calls the attention of the Sadducees to the
familiar story of the burning bush, in which the point is that God is not God
of the dead but of the living.
Jesus’
words on life after death reveal a God who created human life and has also
provided for life after death for those who have cultivated the capacity to
respond to God’s love. The biblical teaching is that life comes from God. There
is nothing in or of the human being that is naturally or inherently immortal.
If there is life beyond death, it is God’s gift to those who have accepted
God’s love and entered into relationship with God in this life: They “are
children of God, being children of the resurrection”. Our responsibility to the
privilege of life that God has given us is to live every moment as fully as we
can without having regrets about what could have been or obsession with what
will be.
Thursday, 21 November 2013
Friday, November 22, 2013 - If the Lord were to come to the Temple of your heart, would he find selling and buying or would he find himself there?
To read the texts click on the texts: 1 Macc 4:36-37,52-59; Lk 19:45-48
The cleansing of the temple is one of the few incidents that are narrated by all four Gospels. However, the distinctiveness of Luke’s account stands out more clearly when it is compared with Mark. In Marks account, Jesus enters Jerusalem and the temple, and then withdraws for the night to Bethany.
The cleansing of the temple is one of the few incidents that are narrated by all four Gospels. However, the distinctiveness of Luke’s account stands out more clearly when it is compared with Mark. In Marks account, Jesus enters Jerusalem and the temple, and then withdraws for the night to Bethany.
In contrast, Luke has Jesus proceed directly to the Temple. The cleansing in
Luke is greatly abbreviated, omitting Mark’s references to those who were
buying, overturning the tables, selling doves and forbidding anyone to carry
anything through the Temple. While in Mark Jesus’ action is part of his
prophetic announcement of the destruction of the temple, in Luke, the cleansing
prepares his “father’s house” to serve as the site for Jesus’ teaching in the
following section (19:47 – 21:38). While in Mark Jesus leaves the Temple
definitively after the cleansing, in Luke, Jesus continues to teach in the
Temple even after the incident. Since the people were spellbound by the words
of Jesus, the chief priests, scribes and the leaders could do nothing to him.
The related scenes of Jesus weeping over the city (Lk 19:41-44) and driving
out the merchants from the Temple speak poignantly of God’s judgement on human
sinfulness. These are passages heavy with pathos and tragedy. Jesus weeps,
laments, and sounds warnings that fall on deaf ears.
Will we hear that call today?
Wednesday, 20 November 2013
Thursday, November 21, 2013 - The Presentation of the Blessed Virgin Mary - Is Jesus pointing to you as his brother/sister? If yes, Why? If no, why not?
To read the texts click on the texts: Zech 2:14-17; Mt 12:46-50
The feast of the Presentation of the Blessed Virgin
Mary is associated with an event recounted not in the New Testament, but in the
apocryphal Infancy Narrative of James. According to that text, Mary's parents,
Joachim and Anne, who had been childless, received a heavenly message that they
would bear a child. In thanksgiving for the gift of their daughter, they
brought her, when still a child, to the Temple in Jerusalem to consecrate her
to God. Mary remained in the Temple until puberty, at which point she was
assigned to Joseph as guardian. Later versions of the story (such as the Gospel
of Pseudo-Matthew and the Gospel of the Nativity of Mary) tell us that Mary was
taken to the Temple at around the age of three in fulfilment of a vow.
Tradition held that she was to remain there to be educated in preparation for
her role as Mother of God.
The Gospel text chosen for the feast of today
contains a pointer as to who make up the true family of Jesus. Unlike in Mark,
where the “crowd” is pointed out to as the true family of Jesus, in Matthew, it
is the community of disciples who make up the true family. The point being made
in this text is not so much about the mother or brothers and sisters of Jesus,
but about who will be regarded as true members of Jesus’ family. The action of
stretching out his hand has been used earlier to portray Jesus as compassionate
(8:3) and also an act, which will be used later to show him as the great
deliverer who comes to the aid of his disciples (14:31). In the concluding
statement, the Matthean Jesus makes clear that discipleship and being a member
of his family is not merely a matter of verbal profession even proclamation,
but doing the will of God. This aspect makes anyone a brother or sister of
Jesus.
We may imagine that because we have been baptised
into the faith we can take for granted that we are members of Jesus’ family.
This need not be so, since we need to keep renewing our commitment to Jesus and
his cause every day. While verbal proclamation does have its place, it alone is
not enough. We must show through our deeds whom we believe in.
Tuesday, 19 November 2013
Wednesday, November 20, 2013 - How will I show through my life that I have opted for Jesus the king?
To read the texts click on the texts: 1 Macc 7:1, 21-30; Lk 19:11-28
The parable in the text of today is from the common source of
Matthew and Luke known as “Q”. However, Matthew (Mt 25:14-30) presents it
differently. While in Matthew there are three servants who are given five
talents (a talent was equivalent to 20 years wages for a common labourer), two
and one talent respectively, in Luke there are ten servants who are given one
mina each (a mina was about three months wages for a common labourer). The
amounts in Luke are much smaller than in Matthew. Though there are ten
servants, we are told only about three. The first of the three has earned ten
minas with the one he was given, the second has earned five and so these are
given charge of ten and five cities respectively. The third returns the mina to
the king because he was afraid of him and knew him to be a harsh man. After
berating the man for not putting the mina into the bank, which would have
earned interest, the king commands that his mina be given to the one who
already has ten.
The point, which Luke seems to make in this parable, is that
responses to Jesus the king have a decisive role in human destiny, for
responses to him determine life and death. There is no “safe” position. The
only road to success is to take risks as taken by the first two servants.
Monday, 18 November 2013
Tuesday, November 19, 2013- What one action will you perform to show that you have repented TODAY?
To read the texts click on the text: 1 Macc 6:18-21; Lk 19:1-10
The story of Zacchaeus’ encounter with Jesus is exclusive to the
Gospel of Luke and is the last encounter of Jesus with outcasts before he
enters Jerusalem. It takes place when Jesus is passing through Jericho and on
his way to Jerusalem. Zacchaeus is the name of the tax collector who Luke
informs us is “rich” (19:2). He desires to see Jesus, but there are obstacles
to his desire. The first is the crowd and the second is his own short stature.
These are interconnected. If there were no crowd, his short stature would not
have mattered and if he were tall the crowd would not have mattered. Zacchaeus
does not allow thses to hinder him and does what no grown man at his time would
do: he runs. Worse: he climbs a tree. Through this Luke indicates that
Zacchaeus was willing to face ridicule and being mocked by the crowd in order
to do what he had set about to do. He gives up his self-importance and dignity,
because all that matters to him is to see and encounter Jesus. When Jesus comes
to the place where Zacchaeus he asks him to hurry and come down. Zacchaeus
obeys instantly.
The reaction of the crowd is to grumble that Jesus would go to
the house of a sinner. Zacchaeus on the other hand responds with generosity and
uses the visit of Jesus to redeem himself. Jesus responds by confirming
Zacchaeus’ status as a “son of Abraham”, not because he was born one, but
because of his repentance. In the last verse of the story, Jesus pronounces
salvation on the house of Zacchaeus and reaffirms his own mission as Son of
man: to seek and save the lost.
The desire of Zacchaeus to see Jesus is a genuine one. He shows
it is genuine by his willingness to overcome any obstacles that come in the way
of his seeing. He is willing to persevere and do all that is required of him.
His perseverance is rewarded by his meeting Jesus and being transformed by him.
Sunday, 17 November 2013
Monday, November 18, 2013 - What is it that prevents me from seeing good in others? Do I want to receive back my sight?
To read the texts click on the texts:1 Maccabees 1:10-15,41-43,54-57,62-64; Lk 18:35-43
The text of today is also found in the Gospels of Matthew and
Mark, but whereas in Matthew there are two blind men and in Mark the name of
the blind man is Bartimaeus, in Luke there is one blind man who is not named.
However, what is common to all three Gospels is that the blind man/men cries
out to Jesus with a messianic title, “Son of David”, and perseveres in his plea
despite being told by the people to quiet down. Though the question that Jesus
asks the blind man seems redundant, it is necessary for Jesus to ask the
question to indicate his respect for the freedom of the man. While on the
physical level the man is blind, on the spiritual level he has insight because
despite his physical blindness, he is able to recognise that Jesus of Nazareth
is also the Messiah, which those who have physical sight are not able to do.
Jesus attributes the recovery of his sight to his faith.
We might tend sometimes to close our eyes to the good that there
is in others, and we might also prefer to close our eyes to the injustice that
we see around us. We might close our eyes to the suffering of people around us
and we might prefer to close our eyes to the needs of others. Having eyes we
might prefer not to see.
Saturday, 16 November 2013
THE READINGS OF SUNDAY ARE TO BE READ CAREFULLY TO FILL IN THE BLANKS - READ THE NEW RSV VERSION
Sunday, November 17, 2013 - THIRTY SUNDAY OF THE YEAR - ARE YOU PREPARING TO RECEIVE THE KING? HOW?
To read the texts click on the texts: Mal 3:19-20; 2 Thess 3:7-12; Lk 21:5-19
One Sunday before the end of the liturgical year, when
we ready ourselves to receive Christ the Eternal King, the Church invites us,
through the readings of today, to reflect on our preparedness for the coming of
the king. Even as she does so, the Church does not expect that we will only
gaze into the future. Rather, she
expects that we will realize that it is our present that determines our future.
On the one hand, this Sunday’s readings focus on the future coming of the Lord
and the end times. On the other hand,
the readings point out that our future is in the present and we must live that
present fully so that we will do the same with our future.
The expectation of something that is unknown can
bring up two kinds of feelings in the hearts of the ones expecting. For those
who expect that the coming event will result in some reward, the feelings will
be of joy, hope, and expectation. For those who expect that the coming event
will bring judgement and maybe punishment, the feelings will be of fear,
trepidation, and apprehension.
These are the feelings that Malachi speaks about in
the first reading of today. He states that the day that is coming will bring,
for the arrogant and the evildoers, judgement and punishment. It will be a day
that will burn them. However, for the righteous, he states that it will be a
day of joy and hope. It will be a day of healing and elation.
These are also the feelings that Jesus addresses in
the Gospel text of today which is part of Luke’s Eschatological Discourse. The
disciples might tend to get frightened, even terrified, when they hear about
the last things. They might tend to fear when calamities befall them, but they
are not to do so. They must remain unfazed by the events that signal what might
seem like the end time. What is required from them is endurance and
perseverance. What is required of them is fearlessness and courage. The reason
for this is that the end time will be for them, a day of vindication and
victory. It will be a day of triumph and accomplishment. Even in the face of
all odds and evidence to the contrary, they are called to believe.
Through these instructions, Jesus offers his
disciples, not a way of predicting the end of the world, but a strategy to use
so that whenever that day comes, they will be ready. Consequently, the
disciples have to focus, not so much on what is to come and when it will come
but, on what they have to accomplish at the present moment, in the here and
now.
Paul’s exhortation to the Thessalonians in the second
reading of today says just this. Paul sets himself up an example of what it
means to do what one has to do in the here and now. Paul worked night and
day, doing what he was called to do. He was not a burden to anyone. He did not
engage in idle speculation about the future and what it might bring. He lived and worked in the present moment.
The challenge to live fully the teachings of Jesus
and to bear the consequences of such a life continues to confront us today. It
is easy to speculate about the future or to project a “pie-in-the
sky-when-you-die” to those who are undergoing adversity. However, to face these
challenges squarely is another matter.
Is there a plausible response that the readings’ of
today give to those for whom life seems, at most times, a burden? Do the
readings of today address the problems of how we must handle difficulties when
they come our way? Do the readings of today give us an insight into how we are
to prepare for the Lord’s coming? The answer to all these questions is a
resounding “yes”.
First, life is only as burdensome as we want it to
be. One important reason why life becomes burdensome is because we often live
in the future rather than in the present. We keep thinking about what we could
have rather than what we do have. We fret about wanting more rather than using
what we have joyfully. This is why Jesus tells his disciples not to be led
astray and look for salvation in this or that fad or this or that thing.
Salvation comes only from the Lord.
Difficulties in life are only difficulties if they
are seen as such. We can instead look on them as opportunities to show that we
can persevere. We can look on them to show that, no matter what the difficulty
might be, our response will be one of courage and fearlessness. We can look on
them and know that, even in the face of the most severe persecution which may
even result in death, not a hair of our head will perish.
Thus, as we get ready to welcome Christ our eternal
King, the readings of today invite us to see that it is Christ, present in the
here and now, not Christ who is expected in the future who continues to shape
and inspire our lives. He is not a king of the morrow or of later, but a king
of today, a king of now.
Friday, 15 November 2013
Saturday, November 16, 2013 - Do you give in too easily when your prayers are unanswered? What keeps you from persevering in prayer?
To read the texts click on the texts: Wis 18:14-16;19:6-9; Lk 18:1-8
This is a parable found only in the Gospel of Luke. While some
focus on the judge and term it as the Parable of the Unjust Judge, others focus
on the widow and so call it the Parable of the Persistent Widow. Luke
introduces this parable as a parable on prayer. The judge is described as
a man “who neither feared God nor had any respect for people” (18:2). It is
difficult to imagine how such a man can be worthy of being a judge. The widow
is introduced as someone who is going repeatedly to the judge for justice. The
text does not state the nature of her complaint, nor does it tell us why the
judge refused to listen to her for a while (18:3-4). The judge finally relents
and decides to grant her justice, because the woman is constantly bothering her
and because he does not want to be worn out by her constant petitions.
If one focuses on the judge, then the point of the parable is
that if the judge who was unjust could grant the woman justice, then God who is
just and judge over all will surely heed the cries of those who call on him.
If on the other hand the focus is on the widow, then the parable
calls for persistence in asking and not giving up or giving in.
The final verse of this section ends with a question from the
Lucan Jesus about whether he will find faith on earth when he comes. Since Luke
introduces the parable as one, which speaks about persistence and constant
asking, he may have felt the need to end with the question of faith.
Prayer can and does “change” the mind and heart of God.