Wednesday, 18 June 2025
Thursday, June 19, 2025 - 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: 2 Cor 11:1-11; Mt 6:7-15
In the text of today, we read what 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". Also the context of the prayer in Matthew and Luke is different. While in Matthew the prayer is told in the context of the Sermon of the Mount, in Luke it is told in response to the disciples’ request to Jesus to teach them how to pray (Lk 11,1). Be that as it may, in both Matthew and Luke the point is clear that the prayer is primarily a prayer of dependence on God who is Father. This dependence is for something as dramatic and magnificent as the Kingdom and also for something as routine and regular as bread. Both prayers have also the theme of forgiveness, which is received from God and given to others.
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.
Tuesday, 17 June 2025
Wednesday, June 18, 2025 - How often have you made “means” ends in themselves?
To read the texts click on the texts: 2 Cor 9:6-11; Mt 6:1-6,16-18
Immediately
after the six antitheses (5,21-48) in the Sermon on the Mount, there follows
instructions on three practices that were common among the Pharisees as a sign
of closeness to God namely almsgiving, prayer and fasting. All three though
only a means to reach God can be made ends in themselves. Almsgiving can be
ostentatious, prayer can be used to show-off and fasting can be used to point
to one’s self. Jesus cautions the listeners about these dangers and challenges
them to make them all internal activities that will lead the way to God rather
than being made ends in themselves.
For
us as Christians, Jesus has simplified matters. There is absolutely no
obligation in the Christian way of life except the obligation to love. When
there is love then all our actions come from our hearts and spontaneously
without counting the cost. Almsgiving becomes generous and spontaneous, prayer
becomes union with God and leads to action and fasting is done in order to show
our dependence on God and not on earthly things.
Monday, 16 June 2025
Tuesday, June17, 2025 - How often has the expectation of some “reward” been your motivation for “doing good”? Will you “do good” without any expectation of reward today?
To read the texts click on the texts: 2 Cor 8:1-9; Mt 5:43-48
In
the last of the six antitheses, Matthew focuses on the love command. . While
there is no command to hate the enemy in the Old Testament, yet, there are
statements that God hates all evildoers and statements that imply that others
do or should do the same. Jesus, makes explicit here the command to love
enemies. The conduct of the disciples of Jesus must reveal who they are really
are, namely “sons and daughters of God”.
The
command to “be perfect as your heavenly Father is perfect” does not mean to be
without faults, but means to be undivided in love as God is undivided in love.
The
love we have for others is more often than not a conditional love. We indulge
in barter exchange and term it love. We are willing to do something for someone
and expect that they do the same or something else in return. It is a matter of
“give”, but also a matter of “take”. When Jesus asks us to be like the heavenly
Father, he is calling us to unconditional love.
Sunday, 15 June 2025
Monday, June 16, 2025 - How often have you gone beyond the call of duty? Will you do so today?
To read the texts click on the texts: 2 Cor 6:1-10; Mt 5:38-42
The
text of today contains the fifth antithesis. In it, Jesus not only affirms the
thrust of the Law in opposing unlimited revenge, but also calls for a rejection
of the principle of retaliatory violence as well.. In the five examples that
follow (being struck in the face, being sued in court, being requisitioned into
short-term compulsory service, giving to beggars and lending to borrowers) the
one point being made is to place the needs of others before one’s own needs.
The disciple of Jesus is called to go beyond the call of the Law and do more
than it requires.
It
is so easy for us to be reactors. If someone does something to hurt us, we
think that it is “natural” for us to want to do something to hurt him or her in
return. In the text of today, Jesus is calling us to be actors and not reactors
and to do what we do because we think it is right and just and not as a
reaction to someone else’s action.
Saturday, 14 June 2025
Sunday, June 15, 2025 - Oneness in Difference and Difference in Oneness
To read the texts click on the texts: Prov 8:22-31; Rom 5:1-5; Jn 16:12-15
Trinity
Sunday might also be termed Mystery Sunday. This is because the focus on this
Sunday is solely on God, and God is a mystery. He meaning of a mystery is that
there is something about it that we can know, but there is also a great deal
about if that we do not and can never know. We can also know who God is through
the revelation that Jesus Christ has made as Paul points out in the second
reading of today. However, even as we do know something about God it is always
important to realize that God will continue to remain a mystery and that there
is a great deal that we do not and can never know about God because our minds
are too finite to know the Infinite God. Much as we try to understand and
define who God is, we keep in mind that we will always fall short. As a matter
of fact, the more we try to understand the more we realize that we simply do
not know. This does not deter us. Rather it makes us keep wondering about the
mystery of God. We as Christians are fortunate that God has been revealed to us
in a unique manner in the person, mission, death and resurrection of Jesus and
that much of what we know of God, is through the revelation that Jesus has
made.
The
first reading from the Book of Proverbs includes part of this revelation when
it introduces Wisdom as both part of the ordering of the created universe and
its delight. Just as creation is both intrinsic to God and an expression,
delight is intrinsic to the relationship within the Trinity as well as its
effect. The reason for the choice of this reading is to show that Jesus as
Wisdom is both the love and delight of God. Toward the end of her life, Julian
of Norwich penned this short but profound exchange which can be regarded as a
summary of the first reading: “Would you know your Lord’s meaning?” she asks.
“Know it well, love was God’s meaning. Who showed it to you? Love. What did
Love show you? Love. Why did Love show it? For love.” God is love and only
love.
This
is also the love that Paul speaks of in the second reading of today when he
tells the Romans and us that God’s love has been poured into our hearts because
of Jesus Christ and the Spirit that Jesus gives. This love made manifest on the
Cross by Jesus Christ is a love through which a new relationship is established
between God and the whole of creation. It is a love that is unconditional and
given freely and a love which helps us to endure all and any kind of trial and
tribulation.
The
ability to undergo trials is because the Spirit that Jesus promised his
disciple and gave is a life giving Spirit. It is not something given at a
moment in time but continuously and constantly. The gift of the Spirit ensures
that those who believe in Jesus will not be left alone but will always have
help and assistance. It is an indication that God’s presence in Jesus will be
with the community of disciples always. This constant presence of the Spirit of
God made manifest in Jesus is an indication that God is not for the Christian
one who is merely Creator, but also Redeemer and Sustainer. God is Father, Son
and Spirit and Almighty God, Word made flesh and Comforter. God is past,
present and future. God was, is and will be. God is all and in all.
Even
as this eternal presence of God with us and for us is true, it is also true
that three persons in one God indicates community, unity and inclusiveness. God
does not exist in isolated individualism but in a community of relationships.
In other words, God is not a loner or a recluse. This means that a Christian in
search of Godliness must shun every tendency to isolationism and individualism.
God is found in one’s heart but also in community and in relationships. Since
God is present in the now and in the world, it is right and fitting to find God
in all things and all things in him. Thus, the ideal Christian spirituality is
not that of flight from the world away from contact with other people and
society but an immersion into the world with a view to transforming sorrow to
joy, injustice to justice, negatives to positives, darkness to light and death
to life. It is a spirituality which seeks to transform fear into love.
Since
love is Universal, there is no one who is outside the kingdom of God.
We
are all connected and interconnected. Yet, though the Trinity is united it also
embraces diversity. We are not required to be the same. We can be different and
yet united, we can be different and yet one, we can be different and yet
integrated. We are asked each of us to offer our unique gifts for the good of
the community. There is unity even in diversity. There is oneness even in
difference. There are three persons yet one God.
Friday, 13 June 2025
Saturday, June 14, 2025 - When you say, “YES” do you mean YES?
To read the texts click on the texts: 2 Cor 5:14-21; Mt 5:33-37
The
fourth of the six antitheses is completely a Matthean composition. There is no
precedence for the absolute prohibition of oaths in Judaism. Rather, an oath
invoked God to guarantee the truth of what was being sworn or promised, or to
punish the one taking the oath if he was not faithful to his word.
The
Matthean Jesus here rules out oaths completely. He rejects not only false and
unnecessary oaths, but also any attempt to bolster one’s statement claim to
truth beyond the bare statement of it. It is a demand for truthfulness in
everything that one says.
If
we are convinced that we are telling the truth as we see it, there may not be
any need for us to either raise our voices when making our point or to swear or
even to call others to witness what we have said.
Thursday, 12 June 2025
Friday, June 13, 2025 - Will you bother less about your “doing” and focus more on your “being”? How?
To read the texts click on the texts: 2 Cor 4:7-15; Mt 5:27-32
The
text of today contains the second (5:27-30) and third (5:31-32) of the six
antitheses (5:21-48), which appear in the Sermon on the Mount immediately after
the theme. All six while addressing various aspects of the law move the focus
away from the letter to the spirit. Each of the six begins similarly i.e. with
a juxtaposition of what was said (by God through Moses) and what is now being
said (by Jesus to his disciples).
In
this pericope, Jesus reaffirms the prohibition against adultery (Ex 20:14), but
goes beyond i.e. to the intention of the heart.
The
third antithesis about divorce is related to the earlier one about adultery in
subject matter. Deut 24:1-4 assumes the legitimacy of divorce, and in Jewish
tradition divorce was relatively easy to obtain. Jesus, however, prohibits
divorce. Matthew alone adds the exception clause, not found in Mark 10:2-9
which here is more original and reflects the position of the historical Jesus.
There
is sometimes in our understanding of Christianity too much emphasis on what
constitutes and does not constitute sin, and on how far we can go before we
commit sin. The real question we must ask is how far we must go in love.
Wednesday, 11 June 2025
Thursday, June 12, 2025 - 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 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, 10 June 2025
Wednesday, June 11, 2025 - St. Barnabas - Is there a person, thing or event which controls you and does not allow you to be free? Try to give it up through the intercession of St. Barnabas.
To read the texts click on then texts: Acts 10:21-26;13:1-3; Mt 10:7-13
Barnabas
was originally Joseph and was named Barnabas by the Apostles probably because
of his success as a Preacher. The name was interpreted to mean “son of
exhortation or consolation”, though this interpretation is disputed by some.
According
to Acts 4:36-37, it seems that he was a convert to Christianity shortly after
Pentecost in around 29 or 30 C.E. and immediately sold his property and donated
the proceeds of the sale to the Church
Though
nothing is recorded of Barnabas for some years, he evidently acquired during
this period a high position in the Church.
The
Gospel text for the feast is from the Mission Discourse of Matthew which
contains the instructions for Mission.
Three
points may be noticed. The first is that mission is not only words but also
action. Jesus sends the disciples not only to preach but also to heal. The
second is that Jesus provides a strategy for mission which may be summarised in
one word namely, DETACHMENT. The call is to detachment from anything, which
will hold a person up or prevent him or her from engaging in mission. The third
is that Jesus calls the disciples from a detachment even from the outcome of
mission. They must not be concerned about the results or the fruits, but simply
do what needs to be done.
Often,
too much of focus on the results of our actions do not allow us to focus on the
action itself. Consequently, our action is neither effective nor efficacious.
If we continue to keep in mind that the Kingdom is not ours but His and we are
only called to do our best in striving to make this kingdom a reality in the
lives of others, then our action will be both effective and efficacious.
Detachment even from the results of our action is an indication that we are
aware that God is always in control.
Monday, 9 June 2025
Tuesday, June 10, 2025 - How will you as a disciple of Jesus be salt and light today?
To read the texts click on the texts:1 Kings17:7-18; Mt 5:13-16
The
text of today is somewhat of a link text, which joins the beatitudes (5:3-12)
to the theme of the Sermon (5,17-20). These verses point out the effect that
living the Sermon will have on the liberation of the world. The text makes two
assertions about the followers of Jesus. The first is that they are the salt of
the earth and the second is that they are the light of the world. Both these
symbols seem to point to the indispensable role that the disciples of Jesus are
to play in the liberation of the world. It is through the lives of the
disciples of Jesus that the world will be moved to glorify God. This is indeed
a great privilege, but also a great responsibility.
Salt
is an ingredient that adds flavour or taste to that to which it is added. It
makes the insipid tasty, edible and enjoyable. Disciples of Jesus are called to
add taste and flavour to the lives of others. Light enables one to see
correctly and results in removing darkness. This is what the disciples of Jesus
must do if they are to be true disciples: remove the darkness from the lives of
others.
Sunday, 8 June 2025
Monday, June 9, 2025 - 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, 7 June 2025
Sunday, June 8, 2025- Pentecost - Good-bye my love. No one is leaving.
To read the texts click on the texts: Acts2:1-11; 1Cor 12:3-7, 12-13; Jn 20:19-23
A
story is told of a man, who, when a very young boy, was taken to nursery school
by his mother. Attentive to his anxiety about 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 was during this time 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 on his departure to the Father: “Good bye, my love. No one is
leaving”.
The
annual celebration of the paschal mystery, which began on Ash Wednesday,
culminates at Pentecost. In a narrative evocative of major Old Testament
themes, Acts recounts the overwhelming gift of the Spirit. Such a fresh
outpouring of the Spirit was to accompany the messianic age. Also the
first-century Jewish feast of Pentecost, which occurred 50 days after Passover,
memorialized the covenant at Sinai. Having celebrated the liberating Passover
sacrifice of Jesus, the disciples are formed into a covenant community that is
to continue the work of Christ through history. As we celebrate the traditional
birthday of the church, the readings present the genetic code of the living
church.
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 says 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 on
Easter evening, 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 which is to forgive and retain
sin.” Retaining sin” has sometimes been equated with a juridical act, but two
indicators caution us that it should not be so. The first is that 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. The second is that the Greek “kratein” can also
mean “restrain or hold in check.” This thus means that through the gift of the
Spirit, who is also the Spirit of truth, the disciples are given power to take
away sin the sin of the world and unmask and control the power of evil as Jesus
himself did. They are not to act as arbiters of right and wrong, but 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 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 in the language of God.
After Pentecost the days of Babel and confusion are over. The great differences among us, in
communication and dialogue, culture and background, wealth and poverty, are
scattered in “the rush of a violent wind.” They are burned away by tongues of
fire. It does not matter now whether we
are Parthians, Medes or Elamites of old, or Indians, Chinese, Pakistanis of
today. Each one hears the same message in his/her native tongue simply because
the language of love is one. Our world, however, is still tongue-tied. What can be misunderstood will be
misunderstood. But 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 all remain stymied by our fundamental
inability to accept the differences among us in how we live and what we
believe.
But
the unity which love brings is summarized by Paul in his first letter to the Corinthians.
The Spirit, though one, is never bottled or canned. It 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. It is only to the
extent that we make an effort 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.
As
the Spirit used the discourse of the disciples on Pentecost to reshape and
redirect the lives of those who listened to their words, so the Spirit on this
Pentecost will reshape and mould us if we but listen. After all, God speaks to us in the one abiding
word that ends fear and brings lasting peace and love—the Word- Made-Flesh,
Jesus Christ our Lord.
Friday, 6 June 2025
Saturday, June 7, 2025 - Would Jesus point to you as a beloved disciple today? Why?
To read the texts click on the texts: Acts 28:1-20; 30-31; Jn 21:20-25
The
first two verses of today’s text shift the focus from Peter to the Beloved
disciple. Like he does elsewhere, with other characters in his Gospel, John
reminds the reader of when the beloved disciple first appeared in his
narrative. The question of Jesus to Peter in 21:22: “If it is my will that he
remain until I come, what is that to you?” has caused consternation. John
already provides a correction of the misunderstanding that this disciple would
not die and so, this is not what Jesus meant. By using a favorite word of his,
“remain”, John points out what he means by Jesus’ seeming enigmatic words. This
disciple will indeed remain through the words that he has written in his
Gospel. Though he will die a physical death, he will continue to live in the
witness that he has given to Jesus in his Gospel. Just as Peter will give
witness to Jesus by dying a martyr’s death, the beloved disciple will give
witness to Jesus by his Gospel.
The
Gospel ends with a hyperbolic statement which also serves as a warning of how
the Gospel and all of scripture must be interpreted. The Gospel is only a
pointer and must be seen in that light. The person of Jesus is bigger than any
writing or Gospel can ever contain and, no matter how much is said of Jesus, in
the final analysis, it will always be inadequate. This does not mean that we
must not say what we know. Rather, it means that, even as we say what we know,
we must realize that there is much more that we do not know and so cannot say.
There
is an obsession with so many today with prolonging life. These use all kinds of
artificial means to try to look younger. They dye their hair black; get tummy
tucks, nose jobs, and even plastic surgery to remove wrinkles. They imagine
that they can cheat death and live forever. They hardly realize that what is
important is not the length of time one lives, but how one lives in the time
given to us. It is quality, not quantity that is important. Jesus’ words about
the beloved disciple are not about his living forever, or not dying, they are
about the witness that endures even after he dies. This means that each of us,
like the beloved disciple, has the ability to leave a legacy even after we are
gone from this world. It is up to us to decide what kind of legacy it is going
to be.
Thursday, 5 June 2025
Friday, June 6, 2025 - Be careful of saying you are a friend of Jesus, he will call you to live and love for him.
To read the texts click on the texts: Acts 25:13-21; Jn 21:15-19
The
first verse of today’s text links this section with the previous one (21:4-14)
through the words, “When they had finished breakfast”. It is a continuation of
the appearance of Jesus to the disciples at Lake Tiberius where, because they
obey his instructions, they are able to haul in 153 fish.
The
verses of today’s text narrate the conversation that Jesus has with Simon
Peter. Some are of the opinion that the reason why Jesus asks Peter three
questions is because Peter denied him three times. While this may be so, it is
also important to realize that the questions are all different. The first
question which Jesus asks is inclusive. It includes the other disciples, the
boat, the nets, and the fish. Jesus is asking Peter whether Peter loves him
more than he loves the other disciples and/or his livelihood. The second
question is direct and involves only Jesus and Peter. Everything else recedes
into the background. The spotlight shifts only to the two. Does Peter love
Jesus? Though the third question seems similar to the second, it is really
different because in it, Jesus asks Peter about friendship. It reads: “Simon,
son of John, are you my friend?” This is a crucial change from the earlier
question because, in 15:13, Jesus had explained the true meaning of friendship
when he said: “No one has greater love than this, to lay down one’s life for
one’s friends.” By affirming that Peter is, indeed, a friend of Jesus, he is
affirming his willingness to die for Jesus.
This
interpretation is confirmed by the fact that as soon as Peter affirms his
friendship, Jesus invites him to lay down his life. This invitation begins with
the double Amen in 21:18, and so marks the introduction of a solemn
pronouncement. The saying of Jesus that follows explains how, when Peter was
young, he fastened his own belt and went wherever he wished to go. This is an
indication of the freedom that Peter experienced earlier. However, soon he will
have to stretch out his hands and someone else will fasten his belt for him,
and take him where he does not wish to go. This is seen as a specific reference
to Peter’s death by crucifixion, and is confirmed by the explanation that John
gives in parenthesis in 21:19: “(He said this to indicate the kind of death by
which he would glorify God.)”
The
text ends with Jesus inviting Peter to follow him. Though this command of Jesus
may be seen as a general invitation to discipleship, here it means a specific
command to martyrdom and even death.
It
is significant that the call to martyrdom to Peter is given only after his
threefold confession of his love of Jesus, and he is given charge of the sheep
only after he has confessed this love. It is thus clear that there is no
coercion on the part of Jesus, but a call that Peter has accepted freely. Peter
knows, even as he answers, that trials and difficulties are part and parcel of
his commitment. He is aware that following Jesus is not going to be easy and
that he will be called to make great sacrifices. He is ready, willing, and
able.
The
call to follow Jesus today is a call that will continue to be heard as long as
there are people who dare to open their hearts to this call. While it will not
always be a call to martyrdom by death, like it was in the case of Peter, it
will always be a call to be a martyr or witness. This is because the voice of
Jesus can only be heard today in his disciples and he can be seen and
experienced only when those who profess to follow him reach out in love.
Wednesday, 4 June 2025
Thursday, June 5, 2025 - Are the troubles and difficulties of your neighbour as real to you as your own? Or do you regard their problems as of no consequence to you?
To read the texts click on the texts: Acts 22:30-23:6-11; Jn 17:20-26
In
these last verses of the prayer, Jesus expands the circle of those for whom he
prays to include believers of the future. Since Jesus did not come to make a
limited revelation, but one that was meant to embrace the whole world, it is
only appropriate that he pray also for those who will believe because of the
disciples’ word and witness. The primary invocation that Jesus makes here is
the all be one. It is a petition for unity. The reason for this petition is
that Jesus wants all those who will believe in him to share in the same
relationship that he shares with his Father. Just as Jesus and the Father are
one, so, he prays, that all believers will also share in this mutual
indwelling. When this unity is seen by those who do not yet believe, they, too,
will be inspired to know and believe that Jesus was indeed sent by God. Unity
of the community, which has as its source the unity of the Son and Father, will
be the drawing force that will lead others to Jesus. By the unity that is shown
in community, those who believe in Jesus will also be able to complete God’s
work in the same way in which Jesus did.
In
the last three verses of the prayer (17:24-26), there is a greater intensity.
Petition changes to want. This is not to be interpreted as selfishness but
rather, as audacity or confidence. Jesus is confident that his Father will give
him what he wants and also, that this is his Father’s will for him and all
believers. What Jesus wants is that God, he, and the believers, share in a
mutual indwelling. What he wants is that all be one. This oneness and unity is
expressed in the tangible reality of love.
Christianity
was never meant to be, and can never be, a private religion. Everything about
Christianity is both individual and communitarian. The seven Sacraments are
beautiful examples of the communal dimension of Christianity. This is because
Jesus did not come to make a private or esoteric revelation to only a small
group of individuals but to make a revelation to the whole world. Thus, the
community of believers today is faced with this challenge of showing the
communal dimension or unity of the community and so, drawing others to believe.
It is a tremendous privilege and responsibility. It is a privilege because we
are called to continue the work of Jesus himself and so share in the mission
entrusted to him by his Father. It is a responsibility because, as believers,
we cannot be complacent and content with our private devotions or individual
faith. We must manifest it to everyone
we meet. It is a faith that is to be shown in action, a faith that is to be
shown in tangible love.
Tuesday, 3 June 2025
Wednesday, June 4, 2025 - How do I measure my own success? Is my striving to “have more” or to “be more”?
To read the texts click on the texts: Acts20:28-38; Jn 17:11-19
The
prayer of Jesus continues with a prayer for the disciples. In the first verse
today, Jesus prays for God’s protection for the disciples and the oneness that
they must share. This unity must be like the unity that the Son, Jesus, shares
with God, his Father. While Jesus was on earth, he was able to instruct his
disciples on this unity and show it in his own words and actions. Now that he is going to the Father, he
entrusts this teaching to God. The “world”, with its own set of values and way
of proceeding, will try to draw the disciples away from the teaching of Jesus,
much like it drew Judas Iscariot. Yet, he was the one who decided that he
wanted to break away from the community and align with the “world” and so, made
his choice. The disciples need to be given the same strength that Jesus had and
be sanctified in the truth
It
is so easy to be sucked in by all that the “world” has to offer. The lure of
money, riches, and the desire to have more, are tempting and inviting. Success
is often measured by how much a person has rather than by how much he/she is.
This results in a striving to possess more and more even, if at times, it is at
the cost of someone else having less than is their due. The prayer of Jesus for
his disciples must be read today in this context and we need to constantly ask
ourselves if, as his disciples, the prayer that he made is having its desired
effect on us.
Monday, 2 June 2025
Tuesday, June 3, 2025 -- Does my prayer show in action? How?
To read the texts click on the texts: Acts20:17-27; Jn 17:1-11
Chapter
17, from which we will read today, tomorrow, and the day after, is titled “The
High Priestly Prayer” of Jesus. However, this may also be seen as a farewell
hymn of praise to God. This farewell is not simply the death of Jesus, but is
the “departure” from this world, a return to the Father, after completing the
work entrusted to him. It is thus a prayer of thanksgiving and confidence.
Since is the last prayer before the Passion Narrative, which begins in Chapter
18, it must also be interpreted with this in mind. The intimacy that Jesus
shares with the Father shines through every sentence of the prayer. Jesus
speaks in this prayer directly to God.
The
prayer is divided into three parts. In the first (17:1-5), though it seems that
he is praying for himself, what Jesus is really doing is giving thanks to the
Father for his graciousness and love. In the second part (17:6-19), Jesus prays
for his disciples and, in the final part of the prayer (17:20-26), Jesus prays
for those who will believe because of the disciples preaching, i.e. future
generations of disciples.
The
prayer begins with Jesus adopting a formal posture of prayer, looking up to
heaven, and addressing God as “Father”. On the one hand, this shows that Jesus
now distances himself from his disciples and, on the other, indicates the
intimate relationship that Jesus shares with God. The announcement of the
“hour” at the beginning of the prayer points to the fact that the prayer will
be directed to God, keeping this in mind. It is the “hour” of glorification
because during it, Jesus will obey God completely, and in that obedience, God
will be revealed and glorified. Jesus, as Son, has revealed God’s gift of
eternal life to all who were willing to receive it. Jesus has completed this
work on earth and now, he has to return to the Father in order to complete the
work of glorification.
The
work of glorification included making the name of God known to all. Jesus has
revealed the Father as Father and God as a God of unconditional and bountiful
love. The disciples have been able to see God revealed in Jesus and thus, have
kept God’s revealed word. Since Jesus is not going to be in the world in the
same way in which he was with the disciples, he prays for their protection.
This protection is to be manifested in the oneness that the disciples will
share to show those who do not yet believe, that Jesus has indeed come from God
and is with God.
Prayer
is not primarily words, but an attitude. This is what Jesus displays in his
prayer. The manner in which one addresses God displays the relationship that
one shares with him. “Father” was the most intimate term for Jesus to use and
it shows the oneness that he felt with God. Each of us has to find our own
intimate term with which to address God. It is important to realize that, after
Jesus, God can never be looked at with fear or trepidation, but only with
confidence, courage, and hope.
Prayer
does not begin with “me” but with God and his glorification. However, the
glorification of God is complete when love abounds, because where love is,
there God is. The effect of our prayer has to be seen in tangible love,
expressed in deeds, like it was in the life of Jesus.
Sunday, 1 June 2025
Monday, June 2, 2025 - When faced with a seemingly insurmountable problem today will you believe that you, like Jesus, will overcome?
To read the texts click on the texts: Acts 19:1-8; Jn16:29-33
Though
the disciples think that they have understood everything that Jesus has said,
and that it is plain to them, they actually misunderstand. While Jesus has used
many figures of speech to make his points, the disciples mistakenly think that
he has used only one. They also do not realize that Jesus had spoken of a
future time when he would speak plainly and when things would be clear, and
erroneously think of that time as the present. Where Jesus was appealing to the
heart, the disciples used their minds. Their knowledge is an intellectual
knowledge and thus, focuses only on the present and not on the future. They
forget that the whole story of Jesus can only be completed with the departure
to the Father. This is why Jesus has to reorient them and remind them again of
the “hour”. The “hour” here is the hour of death which will result in the
scattering of the disciples. They will all abandon him at his death. Yet, Jesus
will not be alone because he knows that the Father will be with him, even if no
one else is. Thus, even when faced with the most difficult situation, namely
death, Jesus can have peace and this is the peace that he will gift to the
disciples. This peace will enable the disciples to stand up to all the trials
and tribulations they will encounter.
The
last words of Jesus here are words of confidence and hope: “But take courage; I
have conquered the world.” Even as he goes to his death, Jesus knows that
victory will be his. He will overcome, through his cross, all the negative
powers that try to prevent his love from reaching the ends of the earth.
It
takes courage to believe when we are faced with seemingly insurmountable
obstacles and difficulties of life. It is at times like these that our faith is
tested and tried. It is at times like these when we have to ask ourselves
whether we believe that God is still working for our good. To have courage in
the face of adversity, to believe in the face of trials, and to trust and have
faith when everything seems to be going wrong, is to have the confidence in the
Father that Jesus had. This attitude can be ours if we open ourselves to God’s
abundant grace and realize the impermanence of all that assails us. It is to
know that, like Jesus, we too will overcome the “world”. The movement from
present sorrow, pain and trial, to future joy, peace and hope, is possible and
even guaranteed because Jesus has overcome.