A JESUIT'S BLOG
Wednesday, 27 May 2026
Thursday, May 28, 2026 - Our Lord Jesus Christ, the Eternal High Priest - We can be united even in our diversity
To read the texts click on the texts: Isa 6:1-4,8; Heb2:10-18; Jn 17:1-2,9-14-20
The feast of Our Lord
Jesus Christ, The Eternal High Priest was instituted in 2013, to remind us of
the High priesthood of Jesus Christ and the effect of that priesthood on the
whole world. John tells us succinctly of the purpose of God’s sending his Son
into our world “‘For God so loved the world that he gave his only Son, so that
everyone who believes in him may not perish but may have eternal life. ‘Indeed,
God did not send the Son into the world to condemn the world, but in order that
the world might be saved through him” (Jn 3:16-17). This is why God chose the
name Jesus for his name because the name means “God saves” (Mt 1:21). God in
Jesus is Saviour.
Besides being Saviour, he
is also high priest., When he spread his arms on the cross, he did it to
embrace the whole word. Paul explains this well when he says to the
Corinthians, “in Christ God was reconciling the world to himself, not counting
their trespasses against them, and entrusting the message of reconciliation to
us” (2 Cor 5:19).
The Gospel reading chosen
for the feast is from the latter part of the Priestly prayer of Jesus in Jn 17.
In these last verses, Jesus prays for his disciples and for us who will believe
because of the disciples’ word. If the content of this party of the prayer can
be summarized in one word, it would be Oneness, Harmony, Unity, Union. Just as
the Father, Son and Spirit are distinct yet united, so are we called to that
Unity even in diversity. We do not need to eb uniform to be united., We can be
separate and distinct and yet we can be united. We can be of different colours
and creeds, we can be of different nationalities and backgrounds and yet we can
be one united humanity.
In our world which is
torn because of division and strife, we pray that the feast of Our Lord Jesus
Christ, the Eternal High Priest will be an occasion to come together as one
family of humans and be united even in our diversity.
Tuesday, 26 May 2026
Wednesday, May 27, 2026 - How would you define honour? What does your definition say about you?
To read the texts click on the texts: 1 Peter 1:18-25; Mk 10:32-45
In this pericope Jesus
predicts for the third and final time that he is to suffer and die and be
raised (10,32-34). It is the most detailed of all the three. Here too, like in
the case of the two previous Passion and resurrection predictions there is a
misunderstanding. This time it is on the part of James and John who want places
of honour in the kingdom. In response to Jesus’ question of whether they are
able to drink the cup that he must drink and be baptised in the baptism with
which he must be baptised, they say that they are able. Jesus promises that
they will indeed drink the cup and undergo the baptism, but cannot he cannot
determine the position of places in the kingdom. That role is left only to the
Father.
The other disciples who
become agitated with the request of the brothers are in the same boat as they
are, and once again Jesus has to teach them the way of the kingdom. Only those
willing to serve others can hope to have a place of honour in the kingdom. The
last verse of this section points to the Son of man who has come to show the
way to the kingdom through his service.
The attitude of the ten
towards James and John may be termed as confrontation. This often happens when
one desires what the other person is striving for and so feels jealous and
envious of the other. It also leads to backbiting and thinking ill of the other
like the ten did in the case of James and John. An alternative to confrontation
is the attitude of “care-frontation” which would involve challenging the other
person to rise above trifles and that, which is not necessary. It arises out of
a genuine concern for the good of the person.
Monday, 25 May 2026
Tuesday, May 26, 2026 - What is the thing, which is the person, what is that event which is preventing you from working for the kingdom? Will you give it up today?
In response to the statement of Jesus that it is impossible for the rich to enter the kingdom of God, Peter states that they as disciples have left everything to follow Jesus. The response of Jesus is a reassurance that what they have given up will be replaced by the new bond that they will share with each other both in this life and in the life to come. It must also be noted that the Marcan Jesus also mentions persecutions as being part of the lot of the disciples. These are to be expected by anyone who is a true witness of the Gospel. The last verse of this pericope speaks about the reversal of status that will be part of the kingdom indicating that that the values of the world do not apply in the kingdom.
When we sacrifice something for a cause we
must realise that our reward must be the sacrifice itself. The reason why we
sacrifice is because we believe in the cause, whether it is helping the poor,
reaching out to the needy or any other and we must gain our satisfaction from
the understanding that someone has lived more fully because of the sacrifice
that we have made.
Sunday, 24 May 2026
Monday, May 25, 2026 - Blessed Virgin Mary, Mother of the Church - How will you show that you are part of the Church of God founded by Jesus?
To read the texts click on the texts: Acts1:12-14; Jn 19:25-27
Pope,
St. Paul VI declared Mary as Mother of the Church on November 21, 1964. In
2018, Pope Francis reinvigorated the title by proclaiming the Monday after
Pentecost as the Memorial of the Blessed Virgin Mary, the Mother of the Church.
Through Scripture and tradition, we clearly see how Mary has been “Mother of
the Church.”
The
Synoptic Gospels provide an account in the ministry of Jesus, when the mother
of Jesus and his brothers and sisters approach the house where Jesus was
teaching (Mt 12:46–50, Mk 3:31–35, Lk 8:19–21). When word reaches Jesus that
his mother is outside, he says, “My mother and my brothers are those who hear
the word of God and act on it” (Lk 8:21). In Luke more clearly than in the
others Synoptic Gospels, Jesus is pointing to Mary no merely as his physical
mother or the one who gave birth to him and brought him into the world, but
also as one who is mother to him because like him she too does the will of God.
In
the first reading chosen for the memorial, we read how Mary is with the eleven
before the choice of Matthias and also before Pentecost. The presence of Mary
with the disciples whom Jesus left behind is an indication that she was an
integral part of the ministry of Jesus and also one of those on whom the Spirit
was poured at Pentecost. As mother of Jesus, she is also the mother also of the
disciples and all others who believe in Jesus. In the Gospel text from John, it
is from the cross that Jesus hands his mother over to the beloved disciple.
While the beloved disciple is indeed a historical figure, he/she can also be
anyone who loves Jesus. The command of the Lord to such a disciple, who loves
him, is that he/she must also take his mother into their home because she is an
integral part of the family of Jesus. 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. We remember the words that
we recite in 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) where Jesus turned water into sparkling wine.
How
will you show that you are part of the Church of God founded by Jesus?
Saturday, 23 May 2026
Sunday, May 24, 2026 - Pentecost Sunday - Will you open your heart to the promptings of the Spirit?
To read the texts click on the texts: Acts 2:1--11; 1 Cor12:3b-7, 12-13;Jn20:19-23
The
little boy was taken to the nursery school by his mother. Aware of his anxiety
being abandoned, the boy’s mother leaned down, kissed her son, and said, “Good
bye, my love. No one is leaving.” Each day, his mother would bid him farewell
with those same words. The boy was too young to recognize the paradox, and
embraced his new existence and quickly adjusted to new and frightening
surroundings. Day after day, and week after week, his mother bid the same
farewell: “Good bye, my love. No one is leaving.”
The
boy grew into adulthood, and there came a day when he was confronted with the
reality of having to place his mother in a nursing home. She – now elderly and
frail, with advanced Alzheimer’s disease – barely recognized him, often forgot
to eat, and simply could no longer care for herself. As he departed from her,
leaving her in her new and frightening surroundings, he remembered her words.
He leaned down, kissed his mother, and said, “Good bye, my love. No one is
leaving” – words his mother recognized even though she no longer recognized
him. A tear appeared in her eye, as she clasped his hand and repeated,” Good
bye, my love. No one is leaving.”
This
is Jesus’ message to his disciples on his departure to the Father: “Good bye,
my love. No one is leaving”.
Jesus
is departing from us, out of our sight. We find ourselves in the new and
frightening surroundings of this life, in a place where we are uncomfortable
and often feel ill-equipped to carry on. And yet, Jesus continues to assure us
of his continued presence through his gift of the Holy Spirit. This is why,
though he said good bye, he is not leaving. This is shown in the Gospel text of
today when he comes to the frightened disciples after his Resurrection, with a
twofold greeting of peace. These disciples, who fled in fear at Jesus’ arrest,
are now themselves forgiven and told to continue his mission from the Father.
Though they abandoned Jesus, he will not abandon them though they failed him;
God’s love will not fail them. Then, reminiscent of God’s action at creation,
Jesus breathes on them, and gifts them the gift of the Spirit and with it the
gift of new life. They have become a new creation.
Along
with the gift of the Spirit is also a commission to forgive or retain sin.
“Retaining sin” is not a juridical act. It is not just the eleven but the
“disciples” who are gathered in the room. John uses the term ‘disciples’ for a
much larger group than the twelve or eleven. This group could also have
included women and so the commission has to do with something that is more than
juridical. So this means that through the gift of the Spirit, the disciples are
given power to take away the sin of the world and unmask and control the power
of evil as Jesus himself did. Through their just and loving actions in
imitation of the Lord, they are to communicate the unconditional love of the
Father.
At
Pentecost, as the Acts of the Apostles narrates, the Spirit of God – and
through the Spirit, God’s unconditional love – comes down upon the disciples,
resting on each of them and thereby bringing them and us together once again.
The disciples get a crash course as it were in the language of God. After
Pentecost the days of Babel and confusion are over. The great differences among
us, in culture and background, wealth and poverty, are scattered in “the rush
of a violent wind”. They are burned away by tongues of fire. Their nationality
or culture does not really matter. Each one hears the same message in his/her
native tongue simply because it is a language of forgiveness and love, and the
language of love is one.
The
unity which this love brings is summarized by Paul in his first letter to the
Corinthians. The Spirit is at work in each of us, always fresh and always new,
waiting to be translated into the language of our own lives, into the language
of love.
Our
world, however, is still tongue-tied. Babel, the parable of our first clash of
cultures and failure to communicate, is more than a mythic explanation of the
differences among nations and languages. It is an apt description of the human
condition itself. We often do not understand one another even when we speak the
same language. We remain stymied by our fundamental inability to accept the
differences among us.
It
is only to an extent that we try to accept the other, no matter how different
or foreign, that we come to understand the language of God. Only then is Babel
turned to Pentecost.