Saturday, 28 February 2026
Sunday, March 1, 2026- If you were on the mountain with Jesus how would you respond?
To read the texts click on the texts: Gen 12:1-4; 2 Tim 1:8-10; Mt 17:1-9
There
is a common thread which runs through all three readings of today. All of them
speak of grace given freely and without reserve.
This
gift of grace is promised to Abram in the promise of a new land, descendants
sufficient to people a great nation and participation in God’s life. Abram
becomes the means through which God’s saving grace will bless all the families
of the earth. God takes the initiative and his gratuitousness alone is
responsible for this. Abram has done nothing to achieve this blessing. What
Abram (noble father) will become – Abraham (father of a multitude) is the
result of God’s grace and not Abram’s effort.
This
point is reiterated by Paul in the second reading of today in which he states
that the grace in Christ was given freely before the beginning of time, and
further, it has been revealed in its fullness in the coming of Jesus. In
Christ, this grace takes the form not merely of new land and progeny, but of
new life in his victory over death itself and the proclamation of immortality.
It is revealed to the three disciples Peter. James and John and to all others
who dare to go up to the mountain, in the transfigured body of Jesus.
Thus,
in Jesus, we are promised even more than was promised to Abram. We are offered
the gift of life and victory over death as the early disciples, and we are
being invited into the presence of the same glory as that seen by Peter, James
and John.
Three
enormous offers of grace are given freely and in abundance … and we hear them
as we have heard them so many times before and hardly pay heed. Grace? Free?
What is it that keeps us from grabbing this offer wholeheartedly? Do we not
trust it? Do we think it is too simple or too naive? Is it that we don’t know
what’s good for us? One would think that if we were given a choice between
something good and something bad we would choose the good. But there is a
mysterious streak in our nature so that given the choice between life and death
we often settle for the easy familiarity of death rather than the risky joys of
really living.
We
find ourselves always in a mixture of life and death. Some things in us are
thriving, are growing, and are bearing fruit. Some things in us are drooping,
are fading, and are shriveling up. And for some reason we get mesmerized by
death and let life pass us by. We seem to think that death is more real than
life, more to be trusted, more fitting for us. But the words of Paul do not
allow us to do that: “He (Christ Jesus) abolished death, and he has proclaimed
life and immortality through the Good News”. It is thus a matter of life and
death.
It
is Abram, seventy-five years old and childless, who sets out on what seems at
first glance as a ridiculous journey to a new land, new family, and new life.
Timothy knows only too well that the promise of life is made in the middle of
hardships that the gospel entails. And Jesus stands on a mountain top, glowing
with glory, alive as no one had ever been before, precisely between prophesies
of his death. The same Jesus who will, at the end of his life, go to his death
and in it and through it finds life for us all. On the mountain of
Transfiguration, Jesus trusted life and trusted what God was doing for him.
Peter,
James and John realized on the mountain that they were dealing with a reality
that reached beyond human experience. They were dealing not merely with a
social reformer or a political visionary; they were dealing with a man who had
a unique relationship with God. The intensity of that relation was obvious to
all on the mountain.
The
people of Israel were permitted to experience a new through the faith of Abram.
“The challenge of Christian faith is to accept and live a sustaining
relationship with God in the most trying circumstances of Jesus, but they also
heard a voice from heaven that applies that dimension to them: “This is my
chosen Son; listen to Him.” The implication is that anyone who forms a
relationship with God’s Son will one day share in the transfiguration of God’s
Son. The good news is good news for the whole human race, not reserved for the
elite few. So the apostles had to come down from the mountain with Jesus. As
much as they may have wanted, they could not stay there.
If
we are to be transfigured by his message we must do strange and sometimes
painful things indeed: like forgiving our enemies and praying for those who we
think have hurt us, maintaining hope in a world that sometimes seems hopeless,
turning the other cheek not as an act of cowardice but courage, giving
generously to those in need even from the little we have, and so on. This is
where the shadow of the cross intrudes in a practical way. The message learned
on the mountain must be lived in the valleys. Through living his message, we
are being gradually transfigured. But we must leave the choosing of that day to
him. Our challenge is to remain with Christ on whatever mountain, or in
whatever valley, we find ourselves. Because we are assured that he will be
there waiting for us.
Friday, 27 February 2026
Saturday, February 28, 2026 - 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: Deut 26:16-19; 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. This is the behaviour expected of a true disciple of Jesus. They
cannot merely love those who love them, since one does not require to be a
disciple to do this. Everyone, even the vilest of people can do this. 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.
Thursday, 26 February 2026
Friday, February 27, 2026 - How many times did you get angry yesterday? Will you attempt to make it one less time today?
To read the texts click on the texts: Ezek 18:21-28; Mt 5:20-26
The
righteousness of the disciples of Jesus must exceed that of the Scribes and
Pharisees whose standard of religious piety and practice was high. These of
course did what they did only to be seen by people and to show off their piety.
The disciples are called not merely to avoid being hypocritical.
In
the six antitheses (5:21-48) that follow, Matthew shows what it means in
practice for the righteousness of the disciples to exceed that of the Scribes
and Pharisees. Each of the six begins with what was said of old and what Jesus
is now saying. In these verses (5:21-26) Matthew narrates first of the six,
which is about the Torah’s prohibition of murder (Exodus 20:13; Deut 5:18). The
supplementary “whoever murders shall be liable to judgement” is not found
verbatim anywhere in the Old Testament, and seems to have been added by Matthew
to introduce the word “judgement” which he uses in the next verse. After
stating the law and adding a supplementary, the Matthean Jesus then radicalises
the law and calls for an interiorization of it (5:22). The call seems to be to
submit one’s thoughts about other people, as well as the words they give rise
to, to God’s penetrating judgement. It is a call to realize that God wills not
only that human beings not kill each other but also that there be no hostility
between human beings. The next verses (5:23-26) are an application of what
Jesus says. Reconciliation is even more important than offering worship and
sacrifice. The disciples are called to work for reconciliation in the light of
the eschatological judgement toward which they are journeying.
If
we come to worship God and there are feelings of anger, revenge or hatred in
our hearts, then our worship remains incomplete. It is only an external worship
and not true worship. God does not need our adoration, but if want to adore him
it must also come from within.
Wednesday, 25 February 2026
Thursday, February 26, 2026 - How will you live out the Golden Rule today?
To read the texts click on the texts: Est. 4:1, 3-5, 12-14; Mt 7:7-12
The
text of today consists of three imperatives: Ask, Seek and Knock. These
imperatives are based on three unconditional promises: you will receive, you
will find and it will be opened. While the point made here is of perseverance
in prayer and not giving up it is not the focal point. The reason for this
perseverance is God’s goodness and gratuitousness. Thus, it is not human
asking, seeking and knocking that is the focal point, but God, who remains the
actor. The reason why humans must ask, seek and knock is in order to
acknowledge their dependence on God. Ultimately it is always God who is in
control. That this is the point that Matthew makes is clear in the explanation
that follows. If human fathers who are weak, frail and selfish themselves would
never give their children anything that would be to their detriment, how much
more will God give what is good to those who acknowledge their dependence on
him by asking?
The
last verse of today is what is known as “The Golden Rule’ and serves as the
conclusion not just to this section but to the whole Sermon. The addition here
of the clause “for this is the law and prophets” results in this verse forming
an inclusion with the similar clause in 5:17 which began the theme of the
Sermon. Also by adding the words “In everything” before the rule, Matthew makes
it all inclusive. There are numerous parallels to the Golden rule but most of
them are stated in the negative form. Here it is positive; “do to others as you
have them do to you”. This is initiatory and not retaliatory or reciprocal. It
means in other words that the disciple is the one who takes the initiative in
doing always the most loving thing to others.
Tuesday, 24 February 2026
Wednesday, February 25, 2026 - What sign are you seeking from the Lord? Will you believe in His love even without this sign?
To read the texts click on the texts: Jon 3:1-10; Lk11:29-32
Jesus’
debate with the crowd following the exorcism of the demon that made a man mute
(11:14-16) continues. One of the challenges posed by some in the crowd was to
demand from Jesus a sign from heaven. The response of Jesus is not to give in
to their demand for a sign. A similar saying is also found in Matthew
(12:38-42) which indicates that both Matthew and Luke have taken it from the
“Q” source {Mark also has the episode of the demand for a sign and Jesus’
response (Mk 8:11-12), but it is much shorter and does not have the details
found in both Matthew and Luke}. However, Luke has so formulated the response
of Jesus, that it forms an inclusion. It begins and ends with Jonah. Through
this, Luke has associated Jonah’s preaching with Solomon’s wisdom. Since Luke
makes this association, for him the sign of Jonah was not Jonah’s being in the
belly of the whale for three days and three nights (Mt 12:40), but the call to
repentance that Jonah preached. As the people of Nineveh repented after the
call by Jonah, so Jesus calls the crowd to repentance after his proclamation.
The Queen of Sheba, or the Queen of the South, journeyed from her kingdom in
southwest Arabia to test the reports she had heard of Solomon’s wisdom (1 Kgs
10:1-13; 2 Chr 9:1-12). When she had tested Solomon with “hard questions” (1
Kgs 10:1), she was convinced of the wisdom God had given to him and blessed the
Lord who had set Solomon on the throne of Israel (1 Kgs 10:9). At the judgment,
therefore, she also would rise to condemn that wicked generation because they
had one who was greater than Solomon, and they did not hear him.
Jesus
thus refuses to give the crowds any other sign, because any demand for a sign
meant that they have not understood what Jesus was about, and what his mission
was. Jesus also knew that for those who believe, no sign is necessary, whereas
for those who do not, no sign is sufficient.
The
call to repentance is a call to look at everything in a new light. The old is
past, the new has come with the coming of Jesus. If one persists in the old way
of looking which is a way of finding God only in miraculous and spectacular
events, one will miss him. Now he can be found in all things and all things can
be found in him.
Monday, 23 February 2026
Tuesday, February 24, 2026 - How will you acknowledge your dependence on God today? Is there someone who you think has hurt you whom you have not yet forgiven? Will you forgive that person today?
To read the texts click on the texts: Isa 55:10-11; Mt 6:7-15
The
three chapters beginning from 5:1 and ending at 7:29 contain one of the most
famous discourses of Matthew known as “The Sermon on the Mount”.
It
is important to have a brief background of the Sermon in order to appreciate
fully each separate text within it. The first point that we note about the
Sermon on the Mount is that it is the first of the five great discourses in the
Gospel of Matthew. Each of these five ends with the phrase, “and when Jesus had
finished…” (7:28; 11:1; 13:53; 19:1; 26:1). It begins by showing Jesus as a
Rabbi teaching ex-cathedra (5:1) and ends by showing Jesus as the Messianic
prophet addressing the crowds (7:28).
The
second point that must be kept in mind is that the Sermon is a composition of
Matthew. An analysis of similar texts in the Gospels of Mark and Luke indicate
that many verses found here in Matthew are found in Mark and Luke in different
contexts. This does not mean that Jesus did not say these words. It means that
Matthew has put them together in this manner.
The
third point is the theme, which will determine how one will interpret the
Sermon as a whole. Most are agreed that the theme of the Sermon is found in
5:17-20, in which Jesus speaks about having come not to abolish but to fulfill
the Law and Prophets, and issues a challenge to those listening to let their
“righteousness” be greater than that of the scribes and Pharisees in order to
enter the kingdom.
The
mountain is a “theological topos” in the Gospel of Matthew (Luke’s Sermon is
from “a level place” see Lk 6:17) and therefore means much more than simply a
geographical location. Matthew does not name the mountain, but by choosing it
as the place from where Jesus delivers the Sermon, he probably wants to portray
Jesus as the New Moses delivering the New Law from a New Mountain. While Jesus
in the Gospel of Luke “stands” and delivers the Sermon (Lk 6:17), in Matthew,
Jesus sits down. This is the posture that the Jewish Rabbis adopted when
communicating a teaching of importance or connected with the Law. In Luke the
crowd is addressed from the beginning of the Sermon and addressed directly,
“Blessed are you poor…” (Lk 6:20), but in Matthew, it is the “disciples” who
come to Jesus and whom he begins to teach.
The
section on Prayer begins in 6:5 and Jesus contrasts the prayer of his disciples
with the prayer of hypocrites who like to be seen by all and also Gentile
prayer which heaps words upon words and may also mean a prayer made to many
“gods” to placate them. This kind of prayer is only for self gratification or
to receive favours. The prayer of the disciple is to God who is Father and who
knows what they need even before they can ask. Thus, prayer is not simply to
place the petition before God who is all knowing but primarily to acknowledge
dependence on God for everything.
What
follows this contrast is the prayer that Jesus teaches his disciples and which
is commonly known as the "Our Father". However, a better term for
this would be "The Lord's Prayer". The reason for this is because
there are two versions of the same prayer. The other is found in Lk. 11:2-4.
There, the pronoun "Our" is missing and the prayer begins simply with
"Father". In Matthew this prayer is at the very centre of the Sermon
and must be read with that fact in mind. It begins with an address and then
goes on to make two sets of three petitions. The address of God as “Father”
brings out the intimacy of the relationship that disciples and God share. The
pronoun “Our” here indicates that God is not merely the father of individual
believers but of the community as a whole and therefore all in the believing
community are brothers and sisters.
The
opening petitions indicate that prayer does not begin with one’s needs, but
with the glory and honour due to God. God’s name is and will be honoured by all
men and women, since God as revealed by Jesus is primarily a God of mercy,
forgiveness and unconditional love. The kingdom of God has come in Jesus and is
also in the future when God will be all and in all. This is a situation in
which God will show himself to be king as he has done in the life, ministry,
death and resurrection of Jesus. As Jesus constantly did God’s will, so it will
continue to be done both in heaven and on earth. It is only when God’s will is
done rather than one’s own that there can be true and lasting peace and
harmony.
Despite
petitioning God for something as stupendous as the kingdom, the disciple also
acknowledges dependence on God for something as regular and ordinary as bread.
God’s forgiveness is unconditional and without any merit on the part of the
disciples. However, in order to receive this forgiveness which God gives
graciously and gratuitously, the disciple will have to remove from his/her
heart any unforgiveness, resentment, bitterness or anger that might be present
there. The prayer ends with a final petition that God, who always leads the
people, will not bring them into a time of testing, when the pressure might be
so great as to overcome faith itself, but that he will save them from the
ultimate power of evil.
The
Lord’s Prayer is not just a prayer; it is also a way of life. The words of the
prayer communicate the attitude that one must have toward God and others. While
we must acknowledge our dependence on God for everything that we need and
regard him always as the primary cause, our attitude to others must be one of
acceptance and forgiveness.
Sunday, 22 February 2026
Monday, February 23, 2026 - Will the life of one person be better today because of you?
To read the texts click on the texts: Lev 19:1-2,11-18; Mt 25:31-46
The
Gospel text of today is a passage about the "kingdom" of God, about
all those who are kin to God, and, therefore, who are kin to each other. We are
each of us kin to one another. We are all indeed one. The deepest expression of
this truth, on this side of life, is a spirituality in which there is no split
between our devotion and our deed; no split between mystery and commandment; no
split between piety and ethics and no split between being and doing. Like
mystery and commandment, interwoven as they are, Jesus is one with the hungry
and the thirsty, is one with the stranger and the prisoner, and is one with the
naked and the sick. To care for these, is to care for Jesus. To care for them
is to reach back into the very essence of life and to touch the God who takes
shape in the hungry, in the thirsty, in the naked, in the sick, in the
stranger, in the prisoner. "And then the king will answer them, 'Truly I
tell you, just as you did it to one of the least of these, who are members of
my family, you did it to me.'" The text, thus, is not so much about the condemnation
of God, as it is really about the universal vision of the love of God, about
the very scope of God's love in Jesus for the whole world. Jesus remains the
model of unconditional and eternal love. This was shown in the most powerful of
ways by Jesus himself, when in total obedience to the Father, he dared to
spread his arms on the Cross in total surrender of self. Therefore, God raised
him.
This
understanding is important to avoid any kind of misinterpretation that might
arise due to a person thinking that it is his/her deeds that earn merit and
reward. The righteous who reached out to the least of their brothers and
sisters, did so because of the necessity to help, love, serve, visit and feed.
They dared to listen to the promptings of the Spirit and responded to these
promptings. They did not do what they did for reward. It was not the condition
of their good deeds, but its consequences. They did not earn the kingdom but
inherited it. Inheritance is determined by the giver not the receiver. The
kingdom remains a free gift of God.
Though
the unrighteousness also address Jesus as Lord – a title used in Matthew’s
Gospel only by those who at least have some faith - it is not enough. Their
address remains at the theoretical level and is not translated into action.
They did not act because they did not believe that God could hide himself in
the poorest of the poor. They did not believe that God could be present in the
scum of society and in those who live on the margins. They believed that God
could be present only in a beautiful sunset or in the stimulating fragrance of
a rose or in the silence of one’s heart. They did not realize that our God had
been made visible in Jesus, who taught all who were willing to listen, that God
was primarily a God of the poor, and that though he was king, he came only to
serve.
The
sufferings borne by the least of our brothers and sisters continue to summon
and challenge us as Church today. They continue to ask us to dare to be
credible and authentic witnesses of the Gospel. They invite us not merely to
preach acts of loving kindness but to do them. However, what we need is not
merely more action, more doing for the sake of doing. No! What we need is a
universal unity of love and togetherness. It is a togetherness that transcends
all of our frontiers, the frontiers of our mind and of our heart, the frontiers
of our creeds and doctrines, the frontiers of our ideas and concepts. This is a
radical call to transcend all of those externals that keep us apart, that keep
us separated and split.
The
challenge for us today is to forget our own needs for love and happiness and to
reach out in love to make someone else happy who may be in greater need. For
whatever we do to the least of these needy children of God, these brothers and
sisters of Jesus, we do to Jesus Himself.
Saturday, 21 February 2026
Sunday, February 22, 2026 – First Sunday in Lent – Do you usually take the easy way out or the right way out?
To read the texts click on the texts: Gen 2:7-9;3:1-7; Rom 5:12-19; Mt 4:1-11
Lent
is a forty-day period of fast and abstinence before Easter. It begins on Ash
Wednesday and ends on Holy Saturday when we go into Easter. Sundays are not
counted as part of these forty days, since Sundays commemorate the Resurrection
of the Lord.
While
Lent means the spring season, it translates the Latin term “quadragesima” which
means “forty days” or literally the “fortieth day”. The forty day period is
symbolic of the forty days that Jesus spent in the desert, a detail mentioned
by all the synoptic gospels. “By the solemn forty days of Lent the Church
unites herself each year to the mystery of Jesus in the desert." (CCC
540).
In
all three of the synoptic gospels the scene of the temptation of Jesus in the
desert, follows immediately after the baptism and thus must be seen in
connection with it. In Matthew, at the baptism of Jesus, the voice from heaven
speaks in the third person and so reveals Jesus as Servant King to the people.
The temptation scene which follows is therefore about whether Jesus will be
faithful to this mission entrusted to him or whether he will cave in and give
up. It is a lesson on how this revealed Messiah conquers every kind of temptation
that comes in the way of being who he is, and so conquers Satan as well. The
disobedience of the first human beings is set right through the obedience of
Jesus. The temptation of Jesus is fundamentally the same as the temptation of
Adam and Eve: to become one’s own god. By overcoming the same temptation that
the first human beings had, Jesus brought to the fore both the field and the
focus of his mission: liberation from sin and its destructive and enslaving
effects.
Of
the three Synoptic gospels, Mark does not narrate the “three temptations”, only
Matthew and Luke do. However, the order of the second and third temptations is
different in these Gospels. It seems that Luke has changed the order to have as
the third temptation the challenge to Jesus to jump down from the pinnacle of
the Temple. This allows Luke to have the climactic scene to occur at the Temple
where his Gospel begins and ends.
The
temptations in Matthew begin after the forty day period of fasting, and while
the presence of the Spirit with him during these days will have strengthened
him, the physical fast will have made Jesus hungry.
The
first temptation is addressed directly to this aspect, but has deeper
overtones. It is about the means that Jesus will use to fulfill his mission. By
asking Jesus to turn “stones” (not “this stone” as in Luke) into bread, the
temptation is not merely about alleviating Jesus’ hunger, but also about
conforming to the popular expectations of the Messiah as one who would provide
for the material needs of the people. While Matthew does narrate two feeding
miracles (14:15-21; 15:32-38), the response of Jesus here is that true
nourishment comes not merely from physical bread that is eaten but from
obedience to God’s word.
The
second temptation seems to concern sensationalism and probably even a desire to
“test” God’s providence. Jesus responds by quoting Deut 6:16 that he will
refuse to test divine providence. He will trust completely and needs no proof
of God’s providence. He does not need God to give him a sign.
The
third temptation is the offer to Jesus of “all the kingdoms of the world and
the glory of them”. This is a challenge to accept the ways of the world namely:
to use domination rather than service, to accept selfishness rather than
selflessness and to be crowned with gold rather than thorns. Jesus’ response is
to reaffirm the mission he received at his baptism and to refuse to follow
anything else except the will of his father. Here, however, before Jesus can
quote the scripture to disprove Satan, he adds his own words, “Begone, Satan!”
(not in Luke) through which Matthew indicates that Satan has indeed been
defeated and though Jesus and his disciples will continue to be tempted, Satan
will not have the same power.
Someone
once said to me tongue in cheek, “The best way to overcome temptation is to
give in.” While we might smile at the humour we also realize that while this
was what our first parents did, it was not the way of Jesus. The overcoming of
the temptations by Jesus stands in stark contrast to the first human beings
capitulating to the guile's of Satan as narrated by the first reading. This is
the theme of Paul’s hymn to God’s unconditional love and grace. Through his
overcoming sin and therefore death, Jesus has attained for all humans for all time
the grace of God. He is the one who justifies us. No one will now condemn.
Unlike
the first human beings who disobeyed God and in their pride tried to define for
themselves what was good and evil, Jesus continued to remain obedient and
because he was confident of his intimate relationship with the Father did not
need any miraculous signs of that presence. Nor did Jesus have to prove his own
status by being a wonder working, spectacular and dominating King. His kingdom
will come through service, selflessness, helplessness and through the cross.
Friday, 20 February 2026
Saturday, February 21, 2026 - How will you celebrate today your call to be a disciple of Jesus?
To read the texts click on the texts: Isa 58:9-14; Lk 5:27-32
The
call of Levi the toll collector and his response to that call is the text for
today. Toll collectors like Levi was were those individuals who paid the Roman
authorities in advance for the right to collect tolls. Since they decided the
value of the goods being brought in, they could abuse the system and many did.
Due to this also because they were seen as colluding with the Romans, they were
despised by the people and made targets of scorn and ridicule. The calling of
Levi is a revolutionary act on the part of Jesus. When almost everyone else
would have seen Levi as a thief and corrupt individual, Jesus was able to see
him as a potential disciple. This is an indication not only of the deep insight
into people that Jesus had but also of God’s grace which is given without any
merit on the part of the individual. It is a gift and not earned but gifted.
Levi
on his part accepts this call. He leaves “everything” for the privilege of
following Jesus. Luke’s Gospel alone mentions the word “everything” to stress the
total sacrifice that Levi was called to and made. It is an indication that he
left his old way of life behind to take on a new kind of life that Jesus was
calling him to. He then arose and followed Jesus. The sequence of the actions
of Levi is interesting. He gets up and follows, only after giving up.
Levi
then gives a feast in his own house to celebrate his call. The scribes and
Pharisees complain about the scandal of sitting at table with tax collectors
and sinners. By doing so those who sat at table with them were making
themselves unclean, but they were also showing social acceptance of a group
that was considered as outcasts. Jesus’ response is in and through a proverb
and a statement. It is obvious that the services of a physician are required by
those who are sick not be those who are well. The mission of Jesus is very
clearly directly to those who need him: the sinners. Repentance is not the
condition for following Jesus; it is his purpose for coming into the world. He
has come in order that sinners might be transformed
The
call which Jesus made to his disciples and here to Levi is startling brief:
“Follow me”. This is because his call was a call to a personal commitment to
him. It was not a call to a set of values or principles. It was not a call to
any kind of philosophy or theology. It was not a call to a particular political
programme. It was a call that had as its base and origin Jesus himself. The
only reward that one could expect from such a following was that others would
be drawn to Jesus because of one’s own commitment and perseverance.
The
call is made here to Levi, who was considered as an outcast and one who was
beyond the bounds of God’s mercy. This indicates that no one is excluded from
the Mission of Jesus. Everyone has a place, all are called. Like Levi it is
important to give up the former way of life and then to get up and follow. This
requires God’s grace surely, but also human response.
Thursday, 19 February 2026
Friday, February 20, 2026 - Do you often do the right thing at the wrong time or the wrong thing at the right time?
To read the texts click on the texts: Isa 58:1-9; Mt 9:14-15
The question of fasting is raised by the disciples of John the Baptist. They want to know why they and the Pharisees follow the rule of fasting, but the disciples of Jesus do not. Jesus’ first response is that the guests at a wedding do not fast at the wedding. It would be absurd to do so. Since the coming of the kingdom has often been portrayed as a messianic banquet, Matthew seems to want to insist that Jesus is the messianic bridegroom and with his coming the wedding feast has begun. There will be a time when the bridegroom is taken away and that will be the time to fast. The “taking away” of the bridegroom refers to the death of Jesus.
The
book of Ecclesiastes points out wisely that “there is a time for everything”.
There is a time for feasting and a time for fasting. But here is the rub: To
know which time is for which. Even as we discern about the times for suitable
actions, we must keep in mind that rules and regulations can never be ends in
themselves. They are only means to an end. All rules are at the service of
humans no matter how good or noble they may be. If the rule becomes an end in
itself, it loses its relevance and meaning. Also, if following the rule makes
one less tolerant of others and leads to pointing out the faults of others,
then it may be better to give it up.
Wednesday, 18 February 2026
Thursday, February 19, 2026 - At the end of today will you consider your life as having been one that has been worthily lived?
To read the texts click on the texts: Deut 30:15-20; Lk 9:22-25
On
the day following Ash Wednesday, the church makes explicit through the choice
of the readings what the overarching theme of the season will be. It has to do
with suffering, the cross and death, which here, is not primarily physical
death, but death to self and the ego.
This
is seen clearly in the first passion and resurrection prediction in the Gospel
of Luke which is part of the text for today. Like in the other two synoptic
gospels, the prediction in Luke appears immediately after Peter’s confession of
Jesus as the Christ. Immediately following Peter’s confession Jesus sternly
commands the disciples not to tell anyone of this. This is because he does not
want to be misunderstood as a glorious and triumphant Messiah or as one who
will come conquering, but as a Messiah who will suffer and die. This is because
God has ordained it and Jesus will always be obedient to God’s commands.
Anyone
who wishes to follow Jesus must be of the same mind. The first saying on
discipleship which follows emphasizes not so much the readiness to die for
Jesus as much as the courage to persevere in following him. This is why Luke
adds the word “daily” after the call to take up the cross. It is in spending
oneself for the good of others rather than pursuing one’s own selfish ambitions
that true joy, peace and fulfillment can be found. Paradoxically, spending
one’s life for others results in gaining one’s life. The final saying of the
Gospel of today cuts the ground from under our preoccupation with material and
temporary wealth. What will we have gained, even if we acquire all the
possessions in the world, but lose ourselves in the process? This saying
reminds us that there are dimensions of life vital to fulfillment and happiness
that are not satisfied by financial security or material wealth.
The
impulse to succeed in a given profession, to acquire material possessions, and
to prosper is powerful. In a materialistic culture we are easily seduced by the
assumption that security and fulfillment are achieved by means of financial
prosperity. We strive for things that do not last and in the process of our
striving, are not able to see the beauty that life has to offer. We exist
without really having lived. The challenge is to seek for that which brings
real fulfillment and not illusory happiness.
Tuesday, 17 February 2026
Wednesday, February 18, 2026 - Ash Wednesday - How often have you made “means” ends in themselves?
To read the texts click on the texts: Jl 2:12-18; 2Cor 5:20-6:2; Mt 6:1-6,16-18
The
season of Lent begins on Ash Wednesday and is derived by counting back 40 days
{not including Sundays} from Easter day. Ash Wednesday is so called because of
the imposition of ashes on the foreheads of the faithful, which serve as a
reminder of the call to repentance and to believe in the good news. The period
of Lent is a reminder of the forty days that Jesus spent in the desert before
taking up the mission he received from his Father at his baptism.
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. The focus thus is on the motivation with
which one does what one does. If the motivation for doing good is to win the
admiration of human beings, then that action is selfish and self-motivated and
so does no good at all. If the action is done out of a sense of duty or
obligation, it cannot be called pure and is instead diluted. However if one
does the action and accepts that the reward is in the performing of the action
itself, such an action can be salvific. This is the challenge not only of Ash
Wednesday, but of the whole season of Lent, “to give and not to count the cost,
to labour and to look for no reward.”
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 February 2026
Tuesday, February 17, 2026 - What is the leaven (influence) that is affecting your vision of who Jesus really is? Will you cleanse your heart to see rightly today?
To read the texts click on the texts: Jas 1:12-18; Mk 8:14-21
The
text of today contains a dialogue between Jesus and his disciples and ends the
long sequence, which began with Jesus teaching the crowds from a boat (Mk
4:1-8). This is the third of the three incidents at sea in which the disciples
seem to be at sea in their attempt to discover who Jesus really. The first was
in Mk 4:35-41 when Jesus calms the storm so that the disciples have to ask,
“Who then is this?” the second in Mk 6:45-51 when Jesus comes walking on the
water and Mark comments that “the disciples were utterly astounded for they had
not understood about the loaves for they did not understand about the loaves
but their hearts were hardened” (Mk 6:51-52) and here in the third incident in
this section they also fail to understand. (Mk 8:21).
The
disciples think that Jesus is rebuking them because they had forgotten to carry
food, when in fact he is rebuking them for their hardness of heart. When Jesus
questions the disciples about the feeding miracles, the focus of his questions
are not on the number of people who were fed (this would be asked to indicate
the magnanimity and abundance of the miracle) neither are they on the smallness
of their resources (which would indicate the stupendous power of Jesus) but on
the breaking and gathering. The disciples know the answers, but are not able to
perceive that Jesus is able to provide anything his disciples’ need. They are
taken up with his power, but do not really understand.
Like
the disciples we tend sometimes to focus on things that are not really
necessary and so lose sight of the bigger picture. We can get caught up in
details and so not see the whole. We might have a narrow view of the world and
so lose sight of the fact that we can find God in all things and all things in
him.
Sunday, 15 February 2026
Monday, February 16, 2026 - What sign are you seeking from the Lord? Will you continue to believe even without this sign?
To read the texts click on the texts: Jas 1:1-11; Mk 8:11-13
The
text of today appears immediately after the second feeding miracle in the
Gospel of Mark, in which Jesus has fed 4000 people with seven loaves and a few
fish. The Pharisees demand a sign. The sign they demand is some form of divine
authentication. Jesus’ response is to sigh deeply in his spirit, which could be
akin to throwing one’s hands up in despair. He refuses to perform a sign. This
refusal on the part of Jesus could be interpreted as a sign of Jesus’ rejection
of “this generation”. Mark portrays Jesus here as a prophet announcing God’s
judgement against this generation.
There
are times in our lives when everything seems to go awry. Nothing seems to be
going right. At times like these we might keep asking God to give us some sign
that he is on our side and cares for us and we might not receive it. It is
possible that this might lead us to lose faith and to stop believing. We need
to have the courage to believe even without any signs. This is what true faith
means.
Saturday, 14 February 2026
Sunday, February 15, 2026 - Will you interiorise all that you do today?
To read the texts click on the texts:Sirach 15:15-20; 1 Corinthians 2:6-10; Mt5:17-37
While
the commandments in the Old Testament are ten in number, these are summarised
by Jesus into two which actually is one. This commandment is to love neighbour
and in neighbour, one loves God. When Jesus speaks in the Gospel text of today
as having come to fulfil the law, he means that he has come to take the law to
a higher level which is the level of interiorization. This is to state that one
follows the law not out of compulsion or fear, but from the heart. This means
that Jesus will go beyond a purely legal interpretation to a broader
perspective. He will remove the focus from the mere external and concentrate on
the internal. The focus will be more on the attitude than merely on the action.
The
next verses are about how the righteousness of the disciples of Jesus must
exceed that of the Scribes and Pharisees. In the six antitheses (5:21-48) that
follow.
Each
of the six begins with what was said of old and what Jesus is now saying. The
first of the six (5:21-26) is about the Law’s prohibition of murder (Exodus
20:13; Deut 5:18). After stating the law and adding a supplementary, the
Matthean Jesus then radicalises the law and calls for an interiorization of it
(5:22). The call seems to be to submit one’s thoughts about other people, as
well as the words they give rise to, to God’s penetrating judgement. It is a
call to realise that God wills not only that human beings not kill each other
but also that there be no hostility between human beings. The next verses
(5:23-26) are an application of what Jesus says. Reconciliation is even more
important than offering worship and sacrifice. The disciples are called to work
for reconciliation in the light of the eschatological judgement toward.
In
the second (5:27-30) Jesus reaffirms the prohibition against adultery (Exodus
20:14), but goes beyond i.e. to the intention of the heart. In the third
(5:31-32) which is related to divorce, Jesus simply prohibits it.
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.
Thus
Jesus reiterates and states even more emphatically what Ben Sirach had written
centuries before namely that one chooses to obey the commandments of God as a
matter of one’s own free choice. To choose obedience is to choose life. God
will respect the free choice of every individual.
In
order to do this we require wisdom, which is a gift from God. It is God’s
Spirit which is given freely which helps us choose always what is right and
good.
While
laws, rules and regulations are necessary and help towards order, it is also
possible that they can become ends in themselves and not as they are meant to
be, means to an end. We might follow in some cases the letter of the law, but
miss out on its spirit. We might even follow the rule or law only because we
are afraid of getting caught and punished and not because we are convinced of
it.
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.
Friday, 13 February 2026
Saturday, February 14, 2026 - Has my abundance motivated me to “give” at least a little to someone else? Or do I prefer to keep it all to myself?
To read the texts click on the texts: 1 Kgs 12:26-32,13:33-34; Mk 8:1-10
Today’s
reading contains the second of the two feeding miracles that are found in
Matthew and Mark. It has largely been regarded as a Gentile feeding as opposed
to the first feeding miracle (6:35-44), which is considered as a Jewish
feeding. One reason for this is that the setting of the previous miracle of the
healing of the deaf man with an impediment in his speech was possibly in
Gentile territory and it is presumed that the setting for this miracle too is
the same. Another reason is that this feeding is the less abundant of the two.
While in the first feeding miracle fewer loaves (5) and fish (2) are required
to feed more people (5000) and more baskets are gathered after the feeding
(12), here more loaves (7) and fish (few) are needed to feed fewer people (400)
and lesser baskets are gathered (7).
Here
too, however, like in the first feeding miracle, the crowds eat and are
satisfied. This indicates the abundance of the messianic age and what the
coming of Jesus represents.
All
that we have is given to us in trust by God and is to be used not selfishly but
for the good of others. We can decide to hoard and store for future generations
of our nuclear families, or we can decide to share at least a little of what we
have with the less fortunate.
Thursday, 12 February 2026
Friday, February 13, 2026 - How often have you used your tongue to demean people? Will you attempt to speak only words that enhance today?
To read the texts click on the texts: 1 Kgs 11:29-32; 12:19; Mk 7:31-37
The
text of today is a miracle that is found only in the Gospel of Mark. The
friends of the man who is deaf and has an impediment in his speech bring him to
Jesus.
This
is the first of two miracles in Mark in which Jesus uses external methods. The
other is in Mark 8:22-26. The healing occurs immediately and the confirmation
of the healing is shown in the man’s beginning to speak. Jesus gives the crowd
a command to silence, but it is disobeyed and his reputation keeps spreading.
The comment of the crowd indicates that they are becoming aware that with Jesus
the messianic age has dawned, since according to Isaiah 35:5-6, healings of the
blind, deaf and persons who were disabled were signs that the messianic age had
indeed dawned.
We can use our faculties of hearing and speaking to hear selectively and to speak unkind and demeaning words, or we can use them to listen attentively to the world around us and to speak words that are kind and result in building up others.
Wednesday, 11 February 2026
Thursday, February 12, 2026 - When at first you do not succeed, will you try and try again?
To read the texts click on the texts: 1Kings 11:4-13; Mk 7:24-30
At
the beginning of today’s reading we are told that Jesus has entered Gentile
territory. His reputation seems to have preceded him because though he did not
want anyone to know that he was there, his presence cannot be kept secret. When
the mother of a girl who is possessed by an evil spirit makes a request for
healing, Jesus responds that the Jews (children) must first have their fill
(Jesus’ reaching out to make whole) and only then can the dogs (Gentiles) be
fed. While in Mark the response of Jesus accepts the possibility of a Gentile
mission even if after the mission to the Jews. In the parallel text in Matthew
(15,24-26), it is clear that Jesus’ mission is exclusively for the Jews and not
Gentiles. The woman is not deterred and responds in a manner that bests Jesus’
response. In Mark, the concluding saying of Jesus makes explicit that the
daughter of the woman is healed because she has won the argument. She has
turned the metaphor to her advantage.
No
one has the power to hurt or insult you unless you decide to give the person
that power. When someone says something, I need to decide whether I will sulk
because I find it insulting or whether I will use what he or she has said to
learn something about myself and so use it to my advantage.
Tuesday, 10 February 2026
Wednesday, February 11, 2026 - Have you focussed more on your “doing” than on your “being”? Is your “being” good?
To read the texts click on the texts: 1 Kgs 10:1-10; Mk 7:14-23
The
text of today continues the discussion of the earlier text, which was read
yesterday (7:1-13). If the earlier part was a response to Jewish teachers, this
part is addressed to the crowds. Jesus asserts that nothing from outside has
the power to make one unclean. Instead of being concerned with externals, Jesus
challenges those who listen to him to focus on the internal, since uncleanness
comes from within.
Mark
presents this teaching of Jesus as a parable and so there is a need to explain
it. In his explanation to the disciples, Jesus makes clear that what goes into
a person from outside enters the stomach and not the heart and so cannot
defile. It is what comes from within, that is from the heart that defiles and
makes unclean.
Sin
comes from within. While external circumstances do have an effect on us and
influence us, we cannot put the blame for our actions on these. The actions
that we perform are ours and we must accept responsibility for them.
Monday, 9 February 2026
Tuesday, February 10, 2026 - Is your “worship” lip service or heart service?
To read the texts click on the texts: 1 Kgs 8:22-23,27-30; Mk 7:1-13
In
the text of today, the Pharisees and the Scribes see that the disciples of
Jesus eat with unwashed hands, and so ask Jesus a question concerning what they
consider as defilement. In his response to them, Jesus takes the discussion to
a higher plane, by focussing not merely on what defiles or does not defile a
person, but on true worship, which stems from the heart.
The
quotation from Isaiah 29:13 is an apt description of the sham worship offered,
when God wanted heart worship. To illustrate his point, Jesus gives the example
of Corban, in which the Pharisees’ would dedicate, something to God, and so not
allow anyone else including their parents to use it, but would use it
themselves. In case others wanted to use it, their answer would be that they
could not allow them to do so since it was “Corban” (dedicated to God) and so
belonged to God alone.
There
are times when we find way and means to get out of fulfilling our obligations
to others. We come up with flimsy excuses when we cannot keep a commitment, and
try to absolve ourselves of our responsibility. At these times we too can be
accused of lip service.
Sunday, 8 February 2026
Monday, February 9, 2026 - Will you like Jesus make at least one person whole today?
To read the texts click on the texts: 1 Kings 8:1-7,9-13; Mk 6:53-56
The text of today is a summary
statement of the activities of Jesus, but deals only with his healing activity.
Numerous people sensing that Jesus was able to make them whole came to him from
every part of village, city or country. All of them were healed. Through this
Mark brings out both the need of the people for healing and the willingness and
ability of Jesus to make people whole.
A kind word or an enhancing
action on our part is enough to boost the spirit of people. Sometimes a short
visit to someone who is sick or in pain, a positive word of encouragement to
someone who has experienced failure or a word of praise to someone who has done
well and succeeded will do wonders in helping these to become whole and glory
in their selfhood.
Saturday, 7 February 2026
Sunday, February 8, 2026 - How will you as a disciple of Jesus be SALT and LIGHT to those around you?
To read the texts click on the texts: Isa 58:7-10; 1 Cor 2:1-5; Mt 5:13-16
Besides making foods
delicious, it is believed that there are more than 14,000 uses of salt. Many of
these uses were for simple things around the home before the advent of modern chemicals
and cleaners. However, many uses are still valid today and a lot cheaper than
using more sophisticated products.
What could Jesus have meant
when he used the metaphor of salt and invited his disciples to be the salt of
the earth? It must first be noted that this identification is unparalleled in
contemporary literature and that salt is never identified with people anywhere
in the Old Testament. At the time of Jesus, salt was used as a preservative, in
sacrifices, in food to add taste and to purify. Jesus does not refer to any
specific function of salt and so some have interpreted this metaphor as a call
to the disciples to be preservatives of all that is good and not allow it to
decay, to be an example of purity since offerings were offered with salt and
also to add flavour or taste to the world and make it palatable for others or
in other words to give meaning to life.
This last use is brought out
well in a story that is told of a merchant who had several daughters. One day
he asked them: “How much do you love me?” They all said various poetic and
abstract things, but the youngest replied: “I love you like salt loves food.”
This seemingly silly and disrespectful answer angered the merchant who expelled
her from the house to wander as a beggar. In time the young woman became
married to a very wealthy and influential man. When many years had passed it
happened that her father was invited to her house. She directed the cook to
prepare all the food without salt. As they were eating the merchant began to
weep violently. “I had a daughter who told me she loved me as salt loves food.
Now I realize that she loved me most of all!” Those who suffer from high blood
pressure and are advised by doctors to avoid salt in their food will know how
the merchant will have felt.
However, from the context and
the following sayings about salt losing its saltiness, it seems that Jesus is
saying something more fundamental than that. Jesus, in using the salt-metaphor
to describe his followers, is suggesting that just as salt has a certain
intrinsic property--its saltiness--without which it would be of no value,
Christians also have certain intrinsic characteristics that are definitive, and
without which they would cease to be “Christian.”
Anyone who is asked what salt
tastes like will almost certainly say, “Salty.” There seems to be no other way
to describe it. The saltiness of salt is its definitive property. Although it
has other properties--white, granular--these are not definitive. Saltiness, on
the other hand, is so very definitive of salt that we would have trouble even
imagining “unsalty salt”. Salt without its definitive property would be of no
value. Salt is defined by, and valued for, its saltiness. Christians, as salt
must be salty or Christians as Christians must be Christian and the only
example that we need to explain what this means is the person of Jesus Christ.
There must be something about us as Christians, something shared by all
believers and followers of Jesus, which is definitive. There must be something
that marks us, sets us apart not in the sense of being parochial or exclusive,
but in the sense of being an example to others so that others will want to know
what makes us tick. A Christian without these special characteristics would
simply not be “Christian.” The challenge is not to become what we are not
already, but to show forth what we are, what God has already made us. This is
not something that we can muster up, not something that comes with training,
with effort, with learning, with erudition (though these are all helpful), but
something that is a natural concomitant of what we have received: our new being
in Christ. We will not need to proclaim in words our saltiness but it will have
to be experienced by others, just as no one tells the chef after a good meal
that there was great salt used in the meal. Salt brings out the flavour and the
food gets noticed.
Jesus also challenges his
disciples to be “the light of the world”. This metaphor seems to be used here
as an expression of the saving presence of God. Disciples of Jesus must radiate
through their loving and healing actions this saving presence. This is further
explained by the two sayings on the city on the hill top which is visible to
all and the lamp on the lamp stand. Just
as these cannot be hidden from view, so also the disciples must be visible.
They must not try to hide the light which God has lit in their lives. The
martyred German theologian, Dietrich Bonhoeffer, criticizing the Church for
cowering under Nazism, once wrote, “Flight into the invisible is a denial of
the call. A community of Jesus which
seeks to hide itself has ceased to follow him.” This visibility according to
Isaiah is not shown in private acts of devotion like fasting, but through an
integration of personal devotion and social action. His action is expressed in
the tangible manner of sharing bread with the hungry; sheltering the homeless
poor and clothing the naked. This kind of a “doer” of good deeds is according
to the psalmist the one who is a light in the darkness.
The crucified Christ is
according to Paul, the best example of this light. To be a light is to follow
this God, struggling to bring about social justice in our society, to safeguard
human rights and to work for peace and reconciliation. Our witness must consist
of both deeds and words that point to God the Father and bring glory to him.
What a privilege we have to be the agents of evoking praise to our Father in
heaven!
Friday, 6 February 2026
Saturday, February 7, 2026 - How would YOU define “mission”? Are you engaging in mission now?
To read the texts click on the texts:1 Kgs 3:4-13; Mk 6:30-34
The
text of today is about the successful return of the disciples from the mission
to which they were sent by Jesus, and forms a sandwich construction with their
sending (6:7-13). The verses that come in between are about the death of John
the Baptist. Through this structure, Mark wants to indicate that the fate of
John the Baptist will also be the fate of Jesus and of his disciples.
Nevertheless, the disciples are to continue to engage in mission, confident in
the knowledge that their Lord and Master will see them through.
Success
and failure is often measured in terms of results. However, what is even more
important is the amount of effort that each one of us puts into what we do. If
at any given moment we can say that we have done our best and all that is
required of us, then we do not need to be too bothered about the outcome.
Thursday, 5 February 2026
Friday, February 6, 2026 - Do you often make promises that you cannot fulfil? Will you do what you promise today?
To read the texts click on the texts: Sir 47:2-11; Mk 6:14-29
While
Mark has mentioned Herodians before (3:6), this is the first time in his Gospel
that he mentions Herod. Herod, here is Herod Antipas who was the son of Herod
the Great who is the one referred to in the narrative of the birth of Jesus in
the Gospel of Matthew (Mt 2:1-23), and had been appointed by the Roman as the
ruler of Galilee and Perea (Lk 3:1). He was never “king” as Mark mentions in
his story, and Matthew corrects this by referring to Herod as tetrarch (Mt
14:1). The story of the death of John the Baptist in Mark is sandwiched between
the sending of the Twelve on Mission (6:7-13) and their return from Mission
(6:30-34).
Mark
mentions three opinions about Jesus said to be circulating at that time. Some
believed that Jesus was John the Baptist raised from the dead; others believed
that Jesus was Elijah, while still others believed that Jesus was one of the
prophets of old. Herod, however, is quite clear in Mark that Jesus is John the
Baptist raised. This profession of Herod leads Mark to narrate the story of the
death of John the Baptist as a flashback. According to Mark, the reason why
John was put in prison was because he objected to Herod’s violation of the
purity code, which forbade marriage of close relatives and to a brother’s wife
while the brother was still alive (Lev 18:16; 20:21). Mark seems to lay the
blame for the death of John on Herodias who manipulates Herod into executing
John. The daughter of Herodias is not named here or anywhere in the Bible, nor
does the Bible give her age. According to Mark a drunken Herod is trapped into
fulfilling a rash vow and so has John beheaded.
Though
in Mark’s narrative it is Herodias who is directly responsible for the death of
John the Baptist, Herod cannot disown responsibility. He could have decided if
he had the courage not to give in, yet he made the choice to have John
beheaded. Each of us is responsible for our own actions though we may sometimes
blame others or even circumstances. The sooner we accept responsibility for who
we are and what we do, the sooner we will grow up.
Wednesday, 4 February 2026
Thursday, February 5, 2026 - How often have you given up when the results of your action were not as you expected? Will you keep on keeping on today? How would you define Mission? Will you engage wherever you are today?
To read the texts click on the texts: 1 Kgs 2:1-4; 10:1-2; Mk 6:7-13
The
text of today contains what may be termed as the “Mission Discourse” according
to Mark. Jesus sends his disciples out on mission, and instructs them about the
content of mission and provides a strategy for mission. The content combines
word and action, proclamation and deed. The Kingdom is not merely a spiritual
enterprise, but connected intimately with the whole of life. The strategy that
Jesus gives may be summarised in one word, which is “detachment”. Jesus
instructs them to be detached from material things and even from the outcome of
mission. The job of the one who is sent is to engage in mission and not bother
about the results. The results will be taken care of by God.
The
Church has two patrons of Mission St. Francis Xavier and St. Theresa of the
Child Jesus, whose lives were quite different from each other. While St.
Francis Xavier was active moving from place to place with the hope of baptising
as many as he could, St. Theresa of the Child Jesus spent her religious life as
a Cloistered Carmelite and never went from place to place but remained where
she was and still did mission. By placing these two different individuals and
lives before us, the Church is pointing out to us that Mission is one: namely
working to make the kingdom that Jesus inaugurated a reality. This may be done
through various ministries or apostolate. While one kind of ministry may be
prayer, another kind can be preaching.
Tuesday, 3 February 2026
Wednesday, February 4, 2026 - St. John de Britto SJ - Are you like John de Britto ready to face the consequences of standing up for the truth?
To read the texts click on the texts: 1 Cor 9:19-27; Jn 12:20-32
John
de Britto was a native of Lisbon, Portugal. He was born on March 1, 1647, and
was martyred in India on February 11, 1693 when he was forty-six years of age.
He
was dedicated at birth to St. Francis Xavier, and was a noble friend of King
Pedro. He entered the Society of Jesus at the age of fifteen. In his effort to
promote conversions among the native Indian people as a missionary to Goa, he
wandered through Malabar and other regions and even adopted the customs and
dress of the Brahmin caste which gave him access to the noble classes. His
dress was yellow cotton; he abstained from every kind of animal food and from
wine in an effort to be one with the people he wished to serve. In 1683, John
de Britto had to leave India but returned in 1691. He advised Teriadeven, a
Maravese to dismiss the many wives he had and keep only one. However, one of
Teriadeven’s wives was the niece of the king. Due to this, John de Britto began
to be persecuted. On February 11, 1693, he was taken to the capital Ramnad and
from there led to Oriyur a small village in Tamil Nadu, where he was tortured
and put to death by beheading.
He
had wrought many conversions during his life, established many stations, and
was famous for his miracles before and after his death. He was beatified by
Pius IX, 21, August, 1853.
Pope
Pius XII canonized him in 1947.
The
Gospel text for the feast of John de Britto is from the what may be seen as a
turning point in the Gospel of John. This is because with the coming of the
Greeks to Jesus, the Evangelist indicates that the unbelieving world is coming
to Jesus. Since Jesus has come not for a select few but for the whole world,
this indicates that now the Mission of Jesus will be completed through his
glorification on the Cross and his resurrection.
The
disciples must realize that following and obeying Jesus, as servants obey their
masters, will lead to persecution. What has happened with Jesus will be
repeated in the disciples’ lives. While the authority of the one sent is the
same as the sender, it is also true that the response to the one sent will be
the same as the response to the sender. Those who do not accept the word of
truth, spoken by God in Jesus, will indulge in persecution. Those who accept
the word will respond by living out that word in their lives. Rejection of the disciples means rejection of
Jesus because it is Jesus who sends them.
Rejection of Jesus means rejection of God who sent him.
In
a world in which the resonating message is to “have more”, it is not always
easy to speak and live Jesus’ message to “be more”. Those who do this are labelled
as crazy and out of touch with reality. John de Britto was not afraid to do
this and was ready to face the consequences. He was ready because he was part
of the vine to live and die as Jesus did. He stood up for the truth right to
the very end.
Monday, 2 February 2026
Tuesday, February 3, 2026 - How easily do you give up when this do not go your way? Will you persevere today?
To read the texts click on the texts:2 Sam 18:9-10,14,24-25,30 – 19:3; Mk 5:21-43
In
the text of today, Mark has used what is known as the sandwich construction.
This means that he has introduced the incident about Jairus’ daughter being ill
(5,21-24), interrupted it with the cure of the woman with the flow of blood
(5,25-34) and continued again and completed the incident of the curing of
Jairus’ daughter (5,35-43). The reason for this sandwich construction seems to
be to heighten the suspense. Since Jairus’ daughter is at the “point of death”,
Jesus must not tarry but hurry if she is to be saved. Yet, Jesus tarries,
confident in the knowledge that he can indeed raise even the dead.
In
these miracles, both of those who are healed are female, and the number twelve
appears in both. The woman has been ill for twelve years and the girl is twelve
years old. In both, the cure is the result of faith. These incidents indicate
that Jesus has power over both life and death. He is indeed Lord of heaven and
earth.
We
may tend to give up and lose heart especially when our prayers remain
unanswered for a period of time. We may sometimes accept defeat and stop
praying. We may lose faith. These miracles call us to continue to hope even if
there are times in our lives when our prayers do not seem to be answered. If we
persevere and have faith like the woman and Jairus, we too can obtain from the
Lord what seems impossible.