A JESUIT'S BLOG
Monday, 23 February 2026
Tuesday, February 24, 2026 - How will you acknowledge your dependence on God today? Is there someone who you think has hurt you whom you have not yet forgiven? Will you forgive that person today?
To read the texts click on the texts: Isa 55:10-11; Mt 6:7-15
The
three chapters beginning from 5:1 and ending at 7:29 contain one of the most
famous discourses of Matthew known as “The Sermon on the Mount”.
It
is important to have a brief background of the Sermon in order to appreciate
fully each separate text within it. The first point that we note about the
Sermon on the Mount is that it is the first of the five great discourses in the
Gospel of Matthew. Each of these five ends with the phrase, “and when Jesus had
finished…” (7:28; 11:1; 13:53; 19:1; 26:1). It begins by showing Jesus as a
Rabbi teaching ex-cathedra (5:1) and ends by showing Jesus as the Messianic
prophet addressing the crowds (7:28).
The
second point that must be kept in mind is that the Sermon is a composition of
Matthew. An analysis of similar texts in the Gospels of Mark and Luke indicate
that many verses found here in Matthew are found in Mark and Luke in different
contexts. This does not mean that Jesus did not say these words. It means that
Matthew has put them together in this manner.
The
third point is the theme, which will determine how one will interpret the
Sermon as a whole. Most are agreed that the theme of the Sermon is found in
5:17-20, in which Jesus speaks about having come not to abolish but to fulfill
the Law and Prophets, and issues a challenge to those listening to let their
“righteousness” be greater than that of the scribes and Pharisees in order to
enter the kingdom.
The
mountain is a “theological topos” in the Gospel of Matthew (Luke’s Sermon is
from “a level place” see Lk 6:17) and therefore means much more than simply a
geographical location. Matthew does not name the mountain, but by choosing it
as the place from where Jesus delivers the Sermon, he probably wants to portray
Jesus as the New Moses delivering the New Law from a New Mountain. While Jesus
in the Gospel of Luke “stands” and delivers the Sermon (Lk 6:17), in Matthew,
Jesus sits down. This is the posture that the Jewish Rabbis adopted when
communicating a teaching of importance or connected with the Law. In Luke the
crowd is addressed from the beginning of the Sermon and addressed directly,
“Blessed are you poor…” (Lk 6:20), but in Matthew, it is the “disciples” who
come to Jesus and whom he begins to teach.
The
section on Prayer begins in 6:5 and Jesus contrasts the prayer of his disciples
with the prayer of hypocrites who like to be seen by all and also Gentile
prayer which heaps words upon words and may also mean a prayer made to many
“gods” to placate them. This kind of prayer is only for self gratification or
to receive favours. The prayer of the disciple is to God who is Father and who
knows what they need even before they can ask. Thus, prayer is not simply to
place the petition before God who is all knowing but primarily to acknowledge
dependence on God for everything.
What
follows this contrast is the prayer that Jesus teaches his disciples and which
is commonly known as the "Our Father". However, a better term for
this would be "The Lord's Prayer". The reason for this is because
there are two versions of the same prayer. The other is found in Lk. 11:2-4.
There, the pronoun "Our" is missing and the prayer begins simply with
"Father". In Matthew this prayer is at the very centre of the Sermon
and must be read with that fact in mind. It begins with an address and then
goes on to make two sets of three petitions. The address of God as “Father”
brings out the intimacy of the relationship that disciples and God share. The
pronoun “Our” here indicates that God is not merely the father of individual
believers but of the community as a whole and therefore all in the believing
community are brothers and sisters.
The
opening petitions indicate that prayer does not begin with one’s needs, but
with the glory and honour due to God. God’s name is and will be honoured by all
men and women, since God as revealed by Jesus is primarily a God of mercy,
forgiveness and unconditional love. The kingdom of God has come in Jesus and is
also in the future when God will be all and in all. This is a situation in
which God will show himself to be king as he has done in the life, ministry,
death and resurrection of Jesus. As Jesus constantly did God’s will, so it will
continue to be done both in heaven and on earth. It is only when God’s will is
done rather than one’s own that there can be true and lasting peace and
harmony.
Despite
petitioning God for something as stupendous as the kingdom, the disciple also
acknowledges dependence on God for something as regular and ordinary as bread.
God’s forgiveness is unconditional and without any merit on the part of the
disciples. However, in order to receive this forgiveness which God gives
graciously and gratuitously, the disciple will have to remove from his/her
heart any unforgiveness, resentment, bitterness or anger that might be present
there. The prayer ends with a final petition that God, who always leads the
people, will not bring them into a time of testing, when the pressure might be
so great as to overcome faith itself, but that he will save them from the
ultimate power of evil.
The
Lord’s Prayer is not just a prayer; it is also a way of life. The words of the
prayer communicate the attitude that one must have toward God and others. While
we must acknowledge our dependence on God for everything that we need and
regard him always as the primary cause, our attitude to others must be one of
acceptance and forgiveness.
Sunday, 22 February 2026
Monday, February 23, 2026 - Will the life of one person be better today because of you?
To read the texts click on the texts: Lev 19:1-2,11-18; Mt 25:31-46
The
Gospel text of today is a passage about the "kingdom" of God, about
all those who are kin to God, and, therefore, who are kin to each other. We are
each of us kin to one another. We are all indeed one. The deepest expression of
this truth, on this side of life, is a spirituality in which there is no split
between our devotion and our deed; no split between mystery and commandment; no
split between piety and ethics and no split between being and doing. Like
mystery and commandment, interwoven as they are, Jesus is one with the hungry
and the thirsty, is one with the stranger and the prisoner, and is one with the
naked and the sick. To care for these, is to care for Jesus. To care for them
is to reach back into the very essence of life and to touch the God who takes
shape in the hungry, in the thirsty, in the naked, in the sick, in the
stranger, in the prisoner. "And then the king will answer them, 'Truly I
tell you, just as you did it to one of the least of these, who are members of
my family, you did it to me.'" The text, thus, is not so much about the condemnation
of God, as it is really about the universal vision of the love of God, about
the very scope of God's love in Jesus for the whole world. Jesus remains the
model of unconditional and eternal love. This was shown in the most powerful of
ways by Jesus himself, when in total obedience to the Father, he dared to
spread his arms on the Cross in total surrender of self. Therefore, God raised
him.
This
understanding is important to avoid any kind of misinterpretation that might
arise due to a person thinking that it is his/her deeds that earn merit and
reward. The righteous who reached out to the least of their brothers and
sisters, did so because of the necessity to help, love, serve, visit and feed.
They dared to listen to the promptings of the Spirit and responded to these
promptings. They did not do what they did for reward. It was not the condition
of their good deeds, but its consequences. They did not earn the kingdom but
inherited it. Inheritance is determined by the giver not the receiver. The
kingdom remains a free gift of God.
Though
the unrighteousness also address Jesus as Lord – a title used in Matthew’s
Gospel only by those who at least have some faith - it is not enough. Their
address remains at the theoretical level and is not translated into action.
They did not act because they did not believe that God could hide himself in
the poorest of the poor. They did not believe that God could be present in the
scum of society and in those who live on the margins. They believed that God
could be present only in a beautiful sunset or in the stimulating fragrance of
a rose or in the silence of one’s heart. They did not realize that our God had
been made visible in Jesus, who taught all who were willing to listen, that God
was primarily a God of the poor, and that though he was king, he came only to
serve.
The
sufferings borne by the least of our brothers and sisters continue to summon
and challenge us as Church today. They continue to ask us to dare to be
credible and authentic witnesses of the Gospel. They invite us not merely to
preach acts of loving kindness but to do them. However, what we need is not
merely more action, more doing for the sake of doing. No! What we need is a
universal unity of love and togetherness. It is a togetherness that transcends
all of our frontiers, the frontiers of our mind and of our heart, the frontiers
of our creeds and doctrines, the frontiers of our ideas and concepts. This is a
radical call to transcend all of those externals that keep us apart, that keep
us separated and split.
The
challenge for us today is to forget our own needs for love and happiness and to
reach out in love to make someone else happy who may be in greater need. For
whatever we do to the least of these needy children of God, these brothers and
sisters of Jesus, we do to Jesus Himself.
Saturday, 21 February 2026
Sunday, February 22, 2026 – First Sunday in Lent – Do you usually take the easy way out or the right way out?
To read the texts click on the texts: Gen 2:7-9;3:1-7; Rom 5:12-19; Mt 4:1-11
Lent
is a forty-day period of fast and abstinence before Easter. It begins on Ash
Wednesday and ends on Holy Saturday when we go into Easter. Sundays are not
counted as part of these forty days, since Sundays commemorate the Resurrection
of the Lord.
While
Lent means the spring season, it translates the Latin term “quadragesima” which
means “forty days” or literally the “fortieth day”. The forty day period is
symbolic of the forty days that Jesus spent in the desert, a detail mentioned
by all the synoptic gospels. “By the solemn forty days of Lent the Church
unites herself each year to the mystery of Jesus in the desert." (CCC
540).
In
all three of the synoptic gospels the scene of the temptation of Jesus in the
desert, follows immediately after the baptism and thus must be seen in
connection with it. In Matthew, at the baptism of Jesus, the voice from heaven
speaks in the third person and so reveals Jesus as Servant King to the people.
The temptation scene which follows is therefore about whether Jesus will be
faithful to this mission entrusted to him or whether he will cave in and give
up. It is a lesson on how this revealed Messiah conquers every kind of temptation
that comes in the way of being who he is, and so conquers Satan as well. The
disobedience of the first human beings is set right through the obedience of
Jesus. The temptation of Jesus is fundamentally the same as the temptation of
Adam and Eve: to become one’s own god. By overcoming the same temptation that
the first human beings had, Jesus brought to the fore both the field and the
focus of his mission: liberation from sin and its destructive and enslaving
effects.
Of
the three Synoptic gospels, Mark does not narrate the “three temptations”, only
Matthew and Luke do. However, the order of the second and third temptations is
different in these Gospels. It seems that Luke has changed the order to have as
the third temptation the challenge to Jesus to jump down from the pinnacle of
the Temple. This allows Luke to have the climactic scene to occur at the Temple
where his Gospel begins and ends.
The
temptations in Matthew begin after the forty day period of fasting, and while
the presence of the Spirit with him during these days will have strengthened
him, the physical fast will have made Jesus hungry.
The
first temptation is addressed directly to this aspect, but has deeper
overtones. It is about the means that Jesus will use to fulfill his mission. By
asking Jesus to turn “stones” (not “this stone” as in Luke) into bread, the
temptation is not merely about alleviating Jesus’ hunger, but also about
conforming to the popular expectations of the Messiah as one who would provide
for the material needs of the people. While Matthew does narrate two feeding
miracles (14:15-21; 15:32-38), the response of Jesus here is that true
nourishment comes not merely from physical bread that is eaten but from
obedience to God’s word.
The
second temptation seems to concern sensationalism and probably even a desire to
“test” God’s providence. Jesus responds by quoting Deut 6:16 that he will
refuse to test divine providence. He will trust completely and needs no proof
of God’s providence. He does not need God to give him a sign.
The
third temptation is the offer to Jesus of “all the kingdoms of the world and
the glory of them”. This is a challenge to accept the ways of the world namely:
to use domination rather than service, to accept selfishness rather than
selflessness and to be crowned with gold rather than thorns. Jesus’ response is
to reaffirm the mission he received at his baptism and to refuse to follow
anything else except the will of his father. Here, however, before Jesus can
quote the scripture to disprove Satan, he adds his own words, “Begone, Satan!”
(not in Luke) through which Matthew indicates that Satan has indeed been
defeated and though Jesus and his disciples will continue to be tempted, Satan
will not have the same power.
Someone
once said to me tongue in cheek, “The best way to overcome temptation is to
give in.” While we might smile at the humour we also realize that while this
was what our first parents did, it was not the way of Jesus. The overcoming of
the temptations by Jesus stands in stark contrast to the first human beings
capitulating to the guile's of Satan as narrated by the first reading. This is
the theme of Paul’s hymn to God’s unconditional love and grace. Through his
overcoming sin and therefore death, Jesus has attained for all humans for all time
the grace of God. He is the one who justifies us. No one will now condemn.
Unlike
the first human beings who disobeyed God and in their pride tried to define for
themselves what was good and evil, Jesus continued to remain obedient and
because he was confident of his intimate relationship with the Father did not
need any miraculous signs of that presence. Nor did Jesus have to prove his own
status by being a wonder working, spectacular and dominating King. His kingdom
will come through service, selflessness, helplessness and through the cross.
Friday, 20 February 2026
Saturday, February 21, 2026 - How will you celebrate today your call to be a disciple of Jesus?
To read the texts click on the texts: Isa 58:9-14; Lk 5:27-32
The
call of Levi the toll collector and his response to that call is the text for
today. Toll collectors like Levi was were those individuals who paid the Roman
authorities in advance for the right to collect tolls. Since they decided the
value of the goods being brought in, they could abuse the system and many did.
Due to this also because they were seen as colluding with the Romans, they were
despised by the people and made targets of scorn and ridicule. The calling of
Levi is a revolutionary act on the part of Jesus. When almost everyone else
would have seen Levi as a thief and corrupt individual, Jesus was able to see
him as a potential disciple. This is an indication not only of the deep insight
into people that Jesus had but also of God’s grace which is given without any
merit on the part of the individual. It is a gift and not earned but gifted.
Levi
on his part accepts this call. He leaves “everything” for the privilege of
following Jesus. Luke’s Gospel alone mentions the word “everything” to stress the
total sacrifice that Levi was called to and made. It is an indication that he
left his old way of life behind to take on a new kind of life that Jesus was
calling him to. He then arose and followed Jesus. The sequence of the actions
of Levi is interesting. He gets up and follows, only after giving up.
Levi
then gives a feast in his own house to celebrate his call. The scribes and
Pharisees complain about the scandal of sitting at table with tax collectors
and sinners. By doing so those who sat at table with them were making
themselves unclean, but they were also showing social acceptance of a group
that was considered as outcasts. Jesus’ response is in and through a proverb
and a statement. It is obvious that the services of a physician are required by
those who are sick not be those who are well. The mission of Jesus is very
clearly directly to those who need him: the sinners. Repentance is not the
condition for following Jesus; it is his purpose for coming into the world. He
has come in order that sinners might be transformed
The
call which Jesus made to his disciples and here to Levi is startling brief:
“Follow me”. This is because his call was a call to a personal commitment to
him. It was not a call to a set of values or principles. It was not a call to
any kind of philosophy or theology. It was not a call to a particular political
programme. It was a call that had as its base and origin Jesus himself. The
only reward that one could expect from such a following was that others would
be drawn to Jesus because of one’s own commitment and perseverance.
The
call is made here to Levi, who was considered as an outcast and one who was
beyond the bounds of God’s mercy. This indicates that no one is excluded from
the Mission of Jesus. Everyone has a place, all are called. Like Levi it is
important to give up the former way of life and then to get up and follow. This
requires God’s grace surely, but also human response.
Thursday, 19 February 2026
Friday, February 20, 2026 - Do you often do the right thing at the wrong time or the wrong thing at the right time?
To read the texts click on the texts: Isa 58:1-9; Mt 9:14-15
The question of fasting is raised by the disciples of John the Baptist. They want to know why they and the Pharisees follow the rule of fasting, but the disciples of Jesus do not. Jesus’ first response is that the guests at a wedding do not fast at the wedding. It would be absurd to do so. Since the coming of the kingdom has often been portrayed as a messianic banquet, Matthew seems to want to insist that Jesus is the messianic bridegroom and with his coming the wedding feast has begun. There will be a time when the bridegroom is taken away and that will be the time to fast. The “taking away” of the bridegroom refers to the death of Jesus.
The
book of Ecclesiastes points out wisely that “there is a time for everything”.
There is a time for feasting and a time for fasting. But here is the rub: To
know which time is for which. Even as we discern about the times for suitable
actions, we must keep in mind that rules and regulations can never be ends in
themselves. They are only means to an end. All rules are at the service of
humans no matter how good or noble they may be. If the rule becomes an end in
itself, it loses its relevance and meaning. Also, if following the rule makes
one less tolerant of others and leads to pointing out the faults of others,
then it may be better to give it up.