A JESUIT'S BLOG
Saturday, 4 April 2026
Easter Sunday - April 5, 2026 - Every Area Starts To Enter Renewal
To read the texts click on the texts: Acts 10:34, 37-43; Col 3:1-4 John 20:1-9
The story is told of a
child who began to read the Gospels. Like billions before her. She quickly
became charmed by Jesus. Suddenly, she ran out of her room crying hysterically.
She ran into the arms of her alarmed mother. She cried: "They killed him.
They killed him." Her mother comforted her and then whispered to her,
"Now go back and finish the story."
Death is not the end of
the story. After Jesus it can never be the end. There is one more chapter. This
is the most important chapter because, as the saying goes, they who laugh last
laugh best. And in the last chapter of the story of Jesus we see him rise from
the dead in all glory and majesty. He is vindicated. His enemies are shamed and
confused. Jesus regains his eternal glory with the Father. He is the Lord, who
will prevail over all humankind, his enemies included. For us his followers
this is good news. The story of the suffering and death of Jesus on Good Friday
seems at first glance to be the story of the triumph of falsity over truth, of
injustice over justice, of evil over goodness. Easter turns the tables. Really
truth has triumphed over falsity, justice over injustice and goodness over
evil. Death has been conquered. Life now triumphs even over death.
This is why Peter advised
his Gentile audience that the message that God sent is characterized by radical
inclusion, for God is a God of the living not of the dead. He is a God of
acceptance and not favoritism or partiality. The Easter message is also
unapologetically comprehensive and universal: Jesus is "Lord of all".
Finally, according to Peter, the message that God sent is good news about
peace, not violence, and forgiveness of sin, not its condemnation.
This is also why the text
from the letter to the Colossians exhorts the Colossians and us who are an
Easter people to focus not on the negatives and narrow parochialism but
universality as God himself has revealed in Christ. Our focus and thoughts
ought to be on things which enhance and build up, things which give life and
unity not which cause death and division. By looking in love upon the one who
is truly good and radiant with every grace and virtue we come by this grace to
be re-fashioned in his likeness.
This positive focus was
not easy to have especially when Mary Magdalene saw the stone rolled back and
not only decided that the tomb was empty but even that the body of Jesus had
been taken out of the tomb. It is a picture of dismay and loss of hope. Peter
and the beloved disciple go to the tomb not knowing what to expect, but surely
not expecting the resurrection. However, even as the beloved disciple sees the
linen wrappings from outside the tomb and as Peter sees these as well as the
cloth that had been on Jesus’ head, faith dawns.
In presenting the
disciples and not the risen Christ in this scene, John gives us a picture of
the Church which is struggling to come to hope even in her despair, to come to
trust in her doubt and to come to life even in her death. It is important to
note here that this change of heart is communicated from one to another and
even as this communication is taking place faith is increasing and light is
being shed on the mystery. We have each a part to play in the dawning of faith
for those with whom we live and converse, by what we say, the faith we profess,
but also by how we attend to each other, treat each other. The life of faith is
necessarily collaborative. The Good News of the resurrection is not something
discovered and proclaimed by only one of the disciples, by Peter, by the
beloved disciple or by Mary. But the experiences of each together give rise to
the common faith of the Church.
The collateral
implications of this basic message are radical and comprehensive. Anticipation
displaces dread. Regret gives way to equanimity. Cynicism vanishes before
creativity. Self-control conquers addiction. Purpose usurps futility.
Reconciliation overtakes estrangement. Inner peace calms disquiet and
distraction. Creativity banishes boredom. Darkness has turned to light, fear to
confidence, anxiety to calm, and despair to hope and death has indeed turned to
life in all its fullness. These collateral implications are something like the
fulfillment of one’s deepest desires, one’s wildest dreams, one’s fondest
hopes, and one’s secret wishes, only in this scenario one’s desires, dreams
hopes, and wishes originate from the heart of God rather than from the human
heart curved in on itself. The Easter message shatters and subverts
conventional human wisdom. We will, in fact, cheat death. The physical,
material world is not all that exists, which is to say that spirit transcends
matter, and that for all the many gifts that science has given us, it is not
always the best way to know or the only way to know. Knowledge is a gift and a
pleasure, but love is more powerful still. Despite the shadows of death that
darken our world, if we look carefully we see Easter resurrection breaking out
everywhere. When we see a tree in full blossom and hear the laughter of a
child. When we give and share and live in communion with each other. In our
reaching out to those who have lost hope and communicating hope to them. In the
self-sacrificial goodness of so many people the world over. Then Easter happens
again and again. Magic is in the air. Easter joy, hope, peace and life are for
all.
To read the texts click
on the texts: Acts 10:34, 37-43; Col 3:1-4 John 20:1-9
The story is told of a
child who began to read the Gospels. Like billions before her. She quickly
became charmed by Jesus. Suddenly, she ran out of her room crying hysterically.
She ran into the arms of her alarmed mother. She cried: "They killed him.
They killed him." Her mother comforted her and then whispered to her,
"Now go back and finish the story."
Death is not the end of
the story. After Jesus it can never be the end. There is one more chapter. This
is the most important chapter because, as the saying goes, they who laugh last
laugh best. And in the last chapter of the story of Jesus we see him rise from
the dead in all glory and majesty. He is vindicated. His enemies are shamed and
confused. Jesus regains his eternal glory with the Father. He is the Lord, who
will prevail over all humankind, his enemies included. For us his followers
this is good news. The story of the suffering and death of Jesus on Good Friday
seems at first glance to be the story of the triumph of falsity over truth, of
injustice over justice, of evil over goodness. Easter turns the tables. Really
truth has triumphed over falsity, justice over injustice and goodness over
evil. Death has been conquered. Life now triumphs even over death.
This is why Peter advised
his Gentile audience that the message that God sent is characterized by radical
inclusion, for God is a God of the living not of the dead. He is a God of
acceptance and not favoritism or partiality. The Easter message is also
unapologetically comprehensive and universal: Jesus is "Lord of all".
Finally, according to Peter, the message that God sent is good news about
peace, not violence, and forgiveness of sin, not its condemnation.
This is also why the text
from the letter to the Colossians exhorts the Colossians and us who are an
Easter people to focus not on the negatives and narrow parochialism but
universality as God himself has revealed in Christ. Our focus and thoughts
ought to be on things which enhance and build up, things which give life and
unity not which cause death and division. By looking in love upon the one who
is truly good and radiant with every grace and virtue we come by this grace to
be re-fashioned in his likeness.
This positive focus was
not easy to have especially when Mary Magdalene saw the stone rolled back and
not only decided that the tomb was empty but even that the body of Jesus had
been taken out of the tomb. It is a picture of dismay and loss of hope. Peter
and the beloved disciple go to the tomb not knowing what to expect, but surely
not expecting the resurrection. However, even as the beloved disciple sees the
linen wrappings from outside the tomb and as Peter sees these as well as the
cloth that had been on Jesus’ head, faith dawns.
In presenting the
disciples and not the risen Christ in this scene, John gives us a picture of
the Church which is struggling to come to hope even in her despair, to come to
trust in her doubt and to come to life even in her death. It is important to
note here that this change of heart is communicated from one to another and
even as this communication is taking place faith is increasing and light is
being shed on the mystery. We have each a part to play in the dawning of faith
for those with whom we live and converse, by what we say, the faith we profess,
but also by how we attend to each other, treat each other. The life of faith is
necessarily collaborative. The Good News of the resurrection is not something
discovered and proclaimed by only one of the disciples, by Peter, by the
beloved disciple or by Mary. But the experiences of each together give rise to
the common faith of the Church.
The collateral
implications of this basic message are radical and comprehensive. Anticipation
displaces dread. Regret gives way to equanimity. Cynicism vanishes before
creativity. Self-control conquers addiction. Purpose usurps futility.
Reconciliation overtakes estrangement. Inner peace calms disquiet and
distraction. Creativity banishes boredom. Darkness has turned to light, fear to
confidence, anxiety to calm, and despair to hope and death has indeed turned to
life in all its fullness. These collateral implications are something like the
fulfillment of one’s deepest desires, one’s wildest dreams, one’s fondest
hopes, and one’s secret wishes, only in this scenario one’s desires, dreams
hopes, and wishes originate from the heart of God rather than from the human
heart curved in on itself. The Easter message shatters and subverts
conventional human wisdom. We will, in fact, cheat death. The physical,
material world is not all that exists, which is to say that spirit transcends
matter, and that for all the many gifts that science has given us, it is not
always the best way to know or the only way to know. Knowledge is a gift and a
pleasure, but love is more powerful still. Despite the shadows of death that
darken our world, if we look carefully we see Easter resurrection breaking out
everywhere. When we see a tree in full blossom and hear the laughter of a
child. When we give and share and live in communion with each other. In our
reaching out to those who have lost hope and communicating hope to them. In the
self-sacrificial goodness of so many people the world over. Then Easter happens
again and again. Magic is in the air. Easter joy, hope, peace and life are for
all.
Friday, 3 April 2026
Holy Saturday, April 4, 2026 - THE SEVEN SORROWS OF MARY
BEING WITH MARY
During the course of our meditation this
morning, when all over the world is Holy Saturday, we will spend this time with
Mary by going through the mysteries of her life as mother of Jesus, as mother
of God and see what fruit we can draw from the manner in which she responded.
There are so many things that one could say about Mary but for our reflection
this morning I will take, what is commonly called the 7 sorrows, the 7 dolours
of our Blessed Mother.
The first of these is the prophecy of Simeon, Lk 2:34-35 - Jesus is brought by Mary and his foster father to the temple to be presented to God, to be gifted to God, to be handed over to God. And even as he is presented, Simeon who was waiting for the Lord’s kingdom realizes that it has come in this child. And his response on encountering Jesus is to address his mother, He speaks to Mary and tells her in prophecy that Jesus will be a sign that is accepted, and rejected, a sign that will frighten those who are corrupt and dishonest, a sign that will wake people up from their slumber and a sign that will be rejected and killed. And even as he says that, he brings Mary into salvation history when he speaks of a sword piercing Mary’s heart as well. Mary will be a collaborator with her son in achieving salvation history. And through this prophecy of Simeon brings to our attention the fact that just because God has favoured her, just because God has chosen her, just because God has given her the privilege and honour of being the mother of Jesus does not necessarily mean that everything will be smooth sailing. As a matter of fact it means she would have more difficulties than others who were not chosen. So often in our lives we might tend to lose hope, we might tend to think God is not on our side, we might tend to think that God is punishing us and we might ask “where is God in all of this?” If we reflect on the prophecy of Simeon addressed to Mary we will realize God is constantly present. So let the first sorrow of Mary be an inspiration for us that no matter how many trials we may have to undergo, no matter how many swords pierce our own hearts, we will look to Mary for consolation and strength.
The second sorrow is traditionally narrated as the flight into Egypt Mt. 2:13-15. It speaks you might say of displacement, it speaks you might say of uprootedness, it speaks you might say of change and transformation, it speaks you might say of Mary and Joseph’s world being turned upside down; it speaks of instability, it speaks of the fact that they are unable to make their home in one particular place, and have to constantly to be like pilgrims moving from one place to another. Many of us are fortunate to be living in the same place for a number of years, many of us are fortunate to have stable homes, many of us are fortunate to live in countries in which the political situation is stable and there is no threat of a war; and yet I want you to reflect on the instability of your life, of sometimes your own life is turned upside down and upheavals in your heart, when you are having marital discord for example, when your children go astray for example, when your parents don’t understand you for example, when in the community of religious you feel that you are isolated and alone, when as the Superior of the community or as the Parish Priest as in a parish, you feel that the parishioners, the members of your community don’t understand you, hen you go through these upheavals, there’s unprootedness I would like you to bring to mind the flight into Egypt, and you will see and reflect on how Mary and Joseph were so obedient to God’s word because they knew that God’s plan for them was better than the plan they would have for themselves. The flight into Egypt is a sign that God is in charge. So no matter how many upheavals there may be in your life, no matter how many times you might be uprooted in your hear, keep in mind that at these times the Lord is with you.
The third sorrow is commonly called the finding in the temple Lk 2:41-52 and even though it seems that it was Mary who found Jesus, my own interpretation is Jesus was never lost. It was Mary who was lost without Jesus, because the answer, the response of Jesus to his mother “Why did you look for me, you ought to know where I can be found. I can be found doing my Father’s business,” Mary was, at least in the beginning, looking in the wrong place and then she realized that Jesus is found when we do God’s will. And that is why in the gospel of Luke; Mary is portrayed right from the time of the Annunciation in Lk 1:26-38, till the end of the gospel, as a woman who constantly does God’s will. She learnt, you might say, from that incident of finding in the temple that if she had to be a disciple of her son, she to constantly do God’s will. And so I ask you where are you looking for Jesus? If you are looking for him only in the tabernacle, if you are looking for him only in the church, if you are looking for him only in holy places, you are looking for a very, very, limited places because the Lord in the words of Teilhard de Chardin, the Cosmic Christ, the Lord is now the Risen Christ, the Lord must now be found in all things, in all persons, in all situations. And primarily, as the Lord tells us in Mt 7:21-28, the Lord can be found when you do God’s will.
The fourth sorrow of Our Lady which is not really narrated by the scriptures is Mary encounters Jesus carrying his cross. Even though none of the scriptures speak about Jesus meeting his mother on the way to Calvary or Golgotha, tradition is clear about this encounter because the Gospel of Luke tells us Jesus meets the women of Jerusalem on his way to Jerusalem. So surely he would have met his mother. What kind of an encounter do you think it would have been? Do you think that Mary would have been feeling sorry for herself; do you think she would have been feeling sorry for er son, do you think she would want to reach out to Jesus and wipe his battered face? Do you think that she would want to help Jesus carry the cross? What kind of an encounter would this have been? I invite you to spend a few moments reliving this scene, seeing in your mind’s eye the Mother and Son. I would like to think that they would each be consoling the other. I would like to think that they would each be strengthening the other; I would like to think that they would each be reaching out to the other rather than being concerned about their sorrow. And so this encounter might be summarized in one word ‘selflessness’. It might be termed as a reaching out. When you reach out even when you’re sad and you feel the whole world is conspiring against you, when you reach out in sympathy and empathy to someone else, when you avoid making yourself the focus and saying ‘Oh, look at me, how I’m suffering for my sins and for the sins of the others”. When you avoid doing that and look outside of yourself then you are being like Mary focusing on Jesus, and focusing on others.
The fifth sorrow is Jesus dies on the cross Jn19:25-27 narrates this scene where Mary and the beloved disciple are standing at the foot of Jesus’ cross. And Jesus, before his last breath in the Gospel of John hands over his mother to the beloved disciple and hands over the disciple to his mother. Who then is the beloved disciple? The beloved disciple is anyone who loves Jesus. So if you love Jesus you cannot but take Mary into your home, if you love Jesus you cannot but honour his mother and ours. If you love Jesus, you cannot but make Mary an integral part of your life. As a matter of fact in the Gospel of John this is how Church is described. The Spirit of Jesus (which he breathes before his death), the beloved disciple (anyone who loves Jesus) and the mother of Jesus. These three elements make up church. These three are what church is all about in the Gospel of John. So today let us realize that we cannot really have a full church, the church of the Lord unless his mother is in that church as well. I am fond of saying that if Mary had to say NO we would never have had Jesus, and you would not even be listening to this talk of mine. So the fact that you are listening to the talk has its origin in Mary. And once again I repeat the beautiful words of the Memorare “It was never know that anyone who fled to her protection was left unaided.” And proof of that is again in the scriptures where the mind of Jesus has changed because of the intervention of Mary at Cana, Jn 2:1-12.
The sixth sorrow is Jesus is handed over to his mother, the pieta of Michael Angelo. And if you can google this, put down ‘pieta’, you will get a number of images of this beautiful scene, you will a number of images of this beautiful scene portrayed. So beautifully by Michael Angelo and so many artists after and before him of Jesus lying dead in the lap of his mother. And Mary is not a woman who’s going to shed tears for herself; Mary is not a woman who’s going to shed tears for her son, Mary is a woman who’s going to continue the mission because she knows that her son has done all that was required of him and that she is to do all that is required of her. And that brings me once again to how so many of us unfortunately cry at the death of a loved one as if the person is never going to rise again, how many of us cry at the death of loved one for years after the person has gone simply because we do not believe in the Resurrection. If you are one of those who is crying for a dead parent, or a dead relative, or a dead friend, then I need your you to understand that our God is not a God of the dead, but a God of the living. And so today is not a day when you shed tears. Today is a day when you give thanks that God did through your parent, through your friend, through your relative who is now living with God all the beautiful things. And now you have to let go, now we have to leave it in the hands of God, now you have to believe that the person is in a much, much better place and situation than ever before.
And the last sorrow is when Jesus is laid in the tomb, Even as we stand watching them lay Jesus in the tomb, let us stand with Mary and us stand with confidence, let stand with courage, let us stand with trust and faith and hope
Let us remain quiet and as we see the
stone being rolled to close the tomb, let us together recite the Hail and Holy
Mary. Hail Mary, full of grace, the Lord is with you, blessed are you among
women, and blessed is the fruit of your womb, Jesus. Holy Mary, mother of God,
pray for us sinners now and at the hour of our death. Amen
Thursday, 2 April 2026
Friday, April 3, 2026 - Good Friday - Love conquers death
To read the texts click on the texts:Isa52:13-53:12; Heb 4:14-16; 5:7-9;Jn18:1-19:42
We
celebrate today what is traditionally known as Good Friday. And it would seem
strange first of all that we celebrate the day on which Jesus died, and
stranger still that we consider such a day Good. What really is the reason why
we celebrate? And why is the day on which Jesus died called “Good”? The answer
to both these questions can only be found if we focus as all the Evangelists
and especially John has done on the Passion and death of our Lord from the
perspective of the Resurrection. Because if Christ were not resurrected, if he
were not raised from the dead, his death would have no meaning, his death would
have been the end. But it is only because he rose again, that his death took on
a new meaning, a meaning that death never possessed before.
It
is in the light of the resurrection therefore that we must look at the death of
Christ and what it means for us today … and yet, we must remember that the
Passion and Death of Jesus were indeed historical events, that Jesus had to
suffer and die. That Jesus had to go through the ignominy of the cross before
his resurrection.
In
yesterday’s liturgy, the Eucharist of Maundy Thursday, we witnessed how in a
very symbolic way Jesus brought his whole life together by giving to his
disciples two important symbols – the washing of the feet and the breaking and
sharing of bread and wine. These two powerful symbols were his way of showing
them that on the one hand their lives too had to be lives of service and
reaching out just as his life had been, and on the other hand that they must be
lives in community, lives in union with each other, lives not as individuals,
but as a group of people all moving toward God. And on the day on which he
died, the day following the last supper, Jesus made those symbols a reality. He
not only symbolically washed his disciples’ feet and shared not just bread and
wine, but rather his very self, his very being, his very life. And what is more
important is that he gave his life willingly. This going to his death
willingly, was in a way a summary of his whole life, a bringing together of his
whole life, a life which had always been a life of giving, a life of sharing, a
life for others, a life of love. Besides being narrated so beautifully for us
in the Gospel of John that we just heard, it is also narrated equally
beautifully in the Song of the Suffering Servant from the book of Isaiah that
we heard as our first reading. This song though written 550 years before Jesus
was never really understood till the Passion and Death of Jesus. When Isaiah
uses the double expression, “that which has not been told” and “which they have
never heard”, he is not repeating himself, but rather intends to bring to our
attention how incredible, how incomprehensible the whole mystery is. The whole
thought of the people of that time, their world would have been turned upside
down. He was a man of sorrows and grief because he bore our own sorrows and
grief. In the face of violence from those who despised him, he submitted
willingly. Not only did people pay no attention to him, they positively
despised him, rejected him and yet the man to whom they refused fellowship was
truly one of them. We are told my dear brothers and sisters, through the Song
of the Suffering Servant that God protects and saves not through war like
aggressiveness, but through humility. Redemption is through the mystery of
suffering. We must be confident therefore even in the midst of suffering
because Jesus himself experienced trials and tribulations, suffering and
ignominy, and is thus able to share with us our own. The priest of the Old
Testament, as we heard in the letter to the Hebrews offers sacrifices other
than himself for the forgiveness of sins, Jesus offers his very self. Jesus
became the High priest through the mystery of his Passion, Death, Resurrection
and Exaltation. Since he gave his life for others, his Father gave him back his
own life. Jesus died believing that the Father would raise him on the third day
and He did.
And
this is why we celebrate today, and this is why the day on which Jesus died is
called Good.
In
view of all this what is the relevance for me today? What does Good Friday mean
for me now, here, in my situation? In answering these questions I must point
out first of all how difficult it is to understand how we can be so moved at
the Passion of our Lord, and oblivious to the Passion of our next door
neighbour. It is difficult to understand how we can shed tears at the suffering
and death of Jesus, and not be moved one bit at the anguish and suffering of
our brothers and sisters around us. It is difficult to understand how we can
look up at the cross of Christ and be overcome with pity and shame, but
untouched by the numerous crosses that we see people carrying everyday. The
relevance of Good Friday lies in being able to see Christ crucified today. We
can only do this if our lives are modelled on the life of Christ, lives that
are lived for others. To live for others means first of all that we have to
forget ourselves, that we have to get rid of the Ego, the I, that we have to
think of others before we think of ourselves. The Israelites of old were called
as we heard yesterday to be a contrast community, a chosen people, a nation set
apart. We are called to be that contrast community today, not in the way that
we dress, in the food that we eat or in the language we speak, but rather
through our way of proceeding, in our way of behaving, in our way of being, in
our way of love. Christ is calling us today not so much to die for him, but to
live for him. Are you willing to live for Christ?
Let
us pray then as we unveil the cross of Christ in a few moments from now that
our celebration of the Passion and Death of Jesus will transform our lives into
lives that resemble his, so that like Jesus, we too in our own ways may be men
and women for others. It is only in this context that suffering and pain and
death take on a new meaning as they did in the life of Christ. Amen.
Wednesday, 1 April 2026
Thursday, April 2, 2026 - Maundy Thursday - To love as Jesus loved, to live as Jesus lived.
To read the texts click on the texts: Ex12:1-8,11-14; 1 Cor 11:23-26; Jn 13:1-15
The
English word Maundy comes from the Latin Mandatum which means command. And the
reason why Maundy Thursday is so called is because the church celebrates this
as the day in which Jesus gave his love command. What Jesus was in effect doing
was summarizing his entire life. In bending down to wash the feet of the
disciples in Jn 13:1-13, Jesus brings together all that he was, all that he is,
all that he does. With Jesus there was no dichotomy, there was no separation between
his being and his doing. Jesus did who he was. Jesus said what he did
And
so, on this Maundy Thursday we are called through this event of the washing of
the feet, to ask ourselves some serious questions, and the first of these is
“Is there a separation between my being and my doing?
Am
I one of those persons who say one thing but does another? Or am I a person who
does not do what he says?
Am
I a person who cannot be trusted to fulfil an obligation?
Am
I a person who is known for not keeping his word? Another area that we can look
at, is the area of our conditional, of determined love?
Is
my love barter exchange? Do I expect something in return for my love? Is my
relationship with people a matter of “you give me, I give you”? Is it a matter
of how much can I get out of this person rather than how much can I give?
Another
theme that we can look upon during this reflection is the prophetic gesture
that Jesus performs when he washes the feet of the disciples. Many interpret
this gesture as an action of a slave. However, John is very clear that the
washing was not before the meal as slaves would do but when they were in the
midst of the meal. And even though Jesus knows that Judas is going to betray
him, even though Jesus knows that Peter is going to deny him, he washes their
feet. And this is what is prophetic about the gesture. First, that it was done
after the meal had begun, something totally unexpected, and second, that he
could wash the feet of the betrayer, of a denier and of the others who ran away.
So there was nothing within the disciples that would have prompted anyone to
wash their feet; there was nothing within the disciples that would have made
anyone reach out to them. It was what was in Jesus that made him even to look
at the disciples with the eyes, the heart, the mind, of love. And even as he
washed the feet of Judas and Peter, he was loving, forgiving and accepting
them. This is the true meaning of forgiveness; it is the true meaning of love,
it is the true meaning of Maundy Thursday.
So,
If Jesus was able to bring together his being and his doing, his word and his
action, I need to ask myself whether I can do that myself. If Jesus was able to
love unconditionally, expecting nothing in return, I need to ask myself whether
I’m capable of such love. If Jesus was able to love, forgive, and accept and
pardon even those who he knew would reject him, deny him, betray him, am I
capable of such forgiveness and acceptance? This is the theme of the life of
Jesus, of the ministry of Jesus and of what Jesus is calling us to do before we
enter, to reflect on his passion. And we need to ask ourselves what have I done
for Christ, what am I doing for Christ, what ought I do for Christ?
During
this time and before we can enter the passion proper, our hearts, our minds,
our whole being must get ready for this challenge. In the gospel of Lk 9:57-62,
we read about the would-be disciples of Jesus, those who had the intention, may
be even the desire of following, but those who had excuses ready why they could
not follow. Am I like those would be disciples, am I like those who are ready
with an excuse why I cannot love or cannot forgive, am I like those who are
ready in fact that being and doing do not coincide and so can find an excuse.
Or am I going to rise up to that challenge of Jesus who invites me today to
take up your cross and follow him. And even as I spoke about love and
forgiveness, I want to speak about your own love and forgiveness; I want to
speak about your own love for your husband or your wife, for your children or
parents, for your neighbour or your colleague, and I would like to ask you
whether your love is unconditional or whether it can be termed barter exchange.
A very good way to find that out is to ask yourself this question – Do I love
this person? Is it because of an obligation, is it because of a duty, is it
because many years ago I made a commitment in the church, and so now I have to
stick to that commitment? If that is the case, then it is very likely that your
love is a barter exchange. But, if your love is without any kind of wanting
from the other person then it can be like the love of Jesus.
And
even as you are unable to forgive, I would like to direct your attention to
this beautiful scene, and picture in your mind’s eye of Jesus washing the feet
of Judas, looking at him possibly, looking at his eyes and seeing in there the
betrayal, and yet having the ability to wash his feet and forgive. If you can
think, reflect, pray and know in your heart that you are capable of such love,
then you can enter with the Lord into his passion.
Tuesday, 31 March 2026
Wednesday, April 1, 2026 - Do you often blame God and others when things do not go the way you want them to go? Will you grow up and accept responsibility for your actions today? Do you often play “the blame game”? Do you not realize that when you point one finger at someone there are three pointing back at you?
To read the texts click on the texts: Isa 50:4-9; Mt 26:14-25
The
text on the day before Maundy Thursday invites us to reflect on the initiative
taken by Judas in going to the chief priests and agreeing to betray Jesus, the
preparation for the Passover and the prediction of Judas’ betrayal.
Matthew’s
reason for the betrayal by Judas is greed. Judas wants something if he agrees
to betray Jesus and agrees to the thirty pieces of silver offered to him, a
detail mentioned only by Matthew. Unlike in Mark where the money is promised,
in Matthew Judas is paid on the spot. Some see the reference to the thirty
silver pieces as taken by Matthew from Zech 11:12-13 in which there is an
obscure reference to the wages of a shepherd, who puts money back into the
treasury. In Exod 21:32 thirty silver pieces is the price of an injured slave.
According
to Exod 12:1-20, the Passover lambs were to be killed on the afternoon of the
14th of Nisan, and the festival itself began with the ritual meal on the
evening that began the 15th of Nisan. The Festival of Unleavened Bread began on
the 15th and continued for seven days, during which no leaven should be found
in the house. By the first century, the two festivals had merged and their
names were used interchangeably. In addition, the pious practice of removing
leaven one day early, the 14th, had become common.
Preparation
for the Passover involved (1) locating an appropriate place within the city
walls of Jerusalem, the only legitimate location for eating the Passover meal;
(2) searching the room for leaven and removing any items that might contain
yeast (bread crumbs, etc.); (3) obtaining a lamb and having it ritually
slaughtered by the priests in the Temple; (4) roasting the lamb and preparing
it with the other necessary items for the meal in the place previously arranged.
While it is important to Matthew for theological reasons that the last supper
was a Passover, he narrates none of the details associated with the Passover
meal and ritual, concentrating his interest on the meal of the new covenant to
be celebrated.
While
Judas’ question to the chief priests focuses on himself and what he can gain,
the disciples question to Jesus focuses on Jesus and what he wants them to do.
After
Jesus takes his place at the table, he announces the fact of his betrayal by
one of the Twelve. This announcement leads to distress on the part of the
disciples. Each asks in turn whether he is the one. Jesus responds by
indicating that one of those who eat with him will betray him, but does not
explicitly identify Judas. Judas’ question is left till after Jesus’ response.
The
dialectic of divine sovereignty and human responsibility in the passion is
brought out strongly in Jesus’ comment that it would be better for the betrayer
if he had not been born. Jesus is fully aware of who it is that will betray
him. God is not taken by surprise in the betrayal that leads to crucifixion; it
goes according to the divine plan expressed in Scripture. But this does not
relieve the burden of human responsibility. God is fully sovereign, humanity is
fully responsible.
Judas
who is in the process of betraying Jesus asks if he is the one. Unlike the
other disciples who address Jesus as Lord, Judas addresses him as Rabbi
indicating that he is not an insider but an outsider. Jesus’ response “You said
it” is a clear affirmation that Judas is indeed the one.
There
are some, who because they find it easier, prefer to lay the blame at God’s
door for their “misfortune”. These are people who have not yet grown up. If
children blame others for the mistakes they make or refuse to accept
responsibility it can be understood, but when adults do that it is a sign of
not having grown up. While it is true that God remains sovereign, it is also
true that we as humans have total freedom and thus must accept responsibility
for our actions. We are always free to act as we see fit, but we must also
realize that our every action has consequences which we must be willing to
accept.