THE WORD AND THE FEAST
February 22, 2025: The Chair of St.Peter1 Peter 5: 1-4; Matthew 16: 13-19
February 21, 2025 - Genesis 11:1-9; Mark 8:34 - 9:1
Christian definition of Love is 'wishing the good of the other' and if this is what love means, its opposite is not just hate, but Ego! When I begin to look at me, mine and myself, when I begin to do anything to achieve my end, when everything around me is only an object for me to use, for my good and even persons are means to my ends... that is Ego.
The Word enumerates what one loses when the ego in the person grows... the person loses God, the person loses peace, the person loses the other! Godlessness, Division and Hatred - these are the three dominant viles that the humanity faces today.
Godlessness, that has made the human person arrogant, thinking of oneself as the master of everything and claiming rights over everything, even life - one's own and other's too... leading to inhumanities and killings of varied types.
Division that makes humanity broken, leaving us so despicable among the creatures on the face of the earth - not living our life and not letting others live their life, creating a hell out of the earth that is entrusted to our care - killing each other, destroying everything.
Hatred that keeps tearing apart humanity on a daily basis; making us inhuman and cruel, wishing the death of the other and in the mean time promoting and perpetrating a culture of death and decline!
The Spirit of the Lord is upon us... for the Lord has created us in God's own image. We bear the name of God. The first reading today reiterates the fact in many ways - saying that God created everything for the human beings, that God gave human beings an ascendancy over the rest of the creatures and explicitly stating once again that God created human beings in God's image, the Spirit of God!
Peter is seen to be filled with that Spirit of God when he rightly points out who Jesus was - the Son of God. Yes, we possess the Spirit of the Lord within us, and that is what defines us, not all other forces that try to take us away, or tempt us towards ruin.
I am reminded, reflecting on today's first reading, of an expression a good friend of mine is fond of repeating. He would call some people, 'the Noah's ravens' - when they take up a task and set about it but never return to report the progress or the lack of it. It is indeed an interesting perspective to think from, isn't it?
Anything good or healthy we take up to, has a gradual progress and we need to follow it through. And to do that, there are three requirements...
Firstly, we should not be impatient as to expecting everything to happen in a jiffy. Noah was patiently waiting to get the right sign and the right time. In our personal lives and in our families, when we live through some trying times, how many impatient moments lead us to choices that are not truly divine?
Secondly, when we set off on the task we should be resolute enough to follow it through till its very end. Quitting and giving up are signs of lack of faith and trust and we are called to surrender into the hands of the Lord.
February 18, 2025: Genesis 6: 5-8, 7: 1-5, 10; Mark 8: 14-21
Today, the Lord warns us of a danger that we become a leaven of insincerity, compromises, mediocrity and hypocrisy. Even though we may not outwardly choose to be blatantly evil, we may live a life of double or multiple standards, a life of total discrepancy; that life would not only be unfit for Reign, it would be dangerously against the Reign.
Getting into the ark of the Lord, that is the Reign of God, is not a simple matter that happens automatically. It is a series of deliberate choices to be made, on a daily basis. It does not happen by decisions others have made on our behalf (something like the parents deciding to baptise the kids), nor does it happen by mere enrollment on a list of members in a society or a community! It is a personal choice and an absolute way of life.
February 17, 2025: Genesis 4: 1-15, 25; Mark 8: 11-13
What have we heard from our childhood memories about the story we hear today: as Cain brought some rotten fruits and leftovers, while Abel brought the best of the firstlings from his flock? But let us take a good look at the story as we read today in the first reading: there is nothing in there that says in the Word that Cain's offering was rotten. Yes, it was not acceptable, but not because it was not of international standards or of the best known quality.
It is the question from the Lord that gives us the reason why Cain's offering was abominable: because of the heart with which it was offered. His heart was probably filled with envy, pride and malice and that renders even the best of gifts worthless. It is not what we give that matters, but with what kind of a spirit we make the offering we make.
The Gospel presents to us another scene where Jesus is upset with the Pharisees and the Scribes. So many had asked him for healing and miracles... he had no issues with them, that is about healing or doing miracles. But today when they ask for a sign he is worked up. The reason was simple: what lay in their heart as they asked for it! Feelings of animosity, pride, envy and hypocrisy. It was not what they asked that irritated him, but what was there behind what they asked, what was there in their hearts even as they made that demand from him!
Trust, in God, do we?
February 16, 2025: 6th Sunday in Ordinary time
Jeremiah 17: 5-8; 1 Corinthians 15: 12, 16-20; Luke 6: 17, 20-26
One of the first questions to be answered here is, what does 'trusting' mean? Trust is the
firm belief in the reliability, truth, or ability of someone or something! When
I say I trust, I know that the person or the thing, is capable of something
that is in reference. To trust, therefore is to know. To trust is to use that
knowledge to rely on that someone or something. To trust is however not totally
foolproof. Because trusting is a leap that one takes from what one knows about
someone, to a judgement about what that someone is. The knowledge one has can
be deceptive, or purposely created and shared to deceive. Remember the episode
of Adam and Eve with the serpent... they trusted the serpent! That is why the
whole idea of who is trust-worthy and who is not, arises.
Here comes the second question, what
does it mean, when I say, I trust in God. It means that I know
God, I have gotten to know God, I have my convictions about God, I have a
relationship with God as a result of knowing God. Can I say, 'O God, in you I
trust', without really knowing God? Can I claim to trust in God, without really
developing a true relationship in God? Do I really trust in God or do I trust
in what I have created for myself as trust-worthy gods? May be riches, may be
power or position or dominion over the other, may be the pleasures of life, may
be my ego, may be the opinions of the world, may be the false image that I wish
to give the world about myself... anyone of these I could create for myself as
my trust-worthy deity.
The question that remains to be answered is, do I really trust in God? Or am I using
God for my own purposes - pacifying myself, justifying myself, satisfying
myself, fending for myself and reaching my own ends! The world today teaches
this generation to look at the what is here and now, to consider the facts and
concrete reality as seen, to value statistics and believe in calculated
precisions. In the name of science, certain knowledge is created and spread and
everyone is directly or indirectly obliged to accept it, submit to it and act
on it. What is 'spiritual' is considered unreal, what is 'theological' is
considered unscientific, and what is 'transcendental' is considered a waste of
time. To add to the predicament, there are those who misinterpret the
'spiritual', manipulate the 'theological' and manoeuvre the 'transcendental' to
suit their own ends. As St. Paul says to the Corinthians in the second reading
today, these are the 'most unfortunate of all people' and not only that - the
most dangerous of all, misleading everyone.
The contrast that repeats itself in the first reading and the Gospel - the
blessed and the cursed - consists in trusting truly in God or trusting in the
gods that we create for ourselves!
The worst of the possibilities is that we intentionally create deities for
ourselves and for others around and make people trust in them. As the society
today creates success, popularity and comfort as deities and propose to people
to chase after, for the sake of happiness and meaning in life! It is enough a
person is successful and moneyed, whatever he or she says becomes trust-worthy,
today. Look at some bigwigs who control the entire governments and their policies,
just because they have the money and might! In the past we have seen too, the
moneyed controlling the world… and where it led to! Where is the trust of the
world placed?
Another possibility is that we are mistaken in our understanding, and
conceive God in a manner much limited and wrong. Some so-called preachers who
delight in making fancy predictions and frightening propositions, make people
fall for this and there are persons who trust in some rites, rituals and rules
as those which can really save them from all pain and suffering in life. What a
deception it can cause when they really get to know the Truth!
The only possibility that can do us eternal good is to earnestly pray with the psalmist today: happy is the one who trusts in the Lord. In God should we trust... in God alone, in God who is Love, Truth and Goodness. Only in love, should we trust, not in hatred and vengeance, not in proving one's point and winning over all others. Only in Truth should we trust, not in half-truths and fancy ideas, not in the deceptions of the evil one. Only in Goodness should we trust, not in craftiness and deceit, not in manipulations and exploitation.
Only in God should we trust, for in God lies our eternal salvation. We are called to resurrection, to eternal life, to that salvation... which cannot be made sense of, except in relation to God. May our everyday life choices and priorities show to ourselves, that only IN GOD WE TRUST.
The Word in its entirety today, brings to us the deep connection that exists among the three key terms of our Christian faith: the promise, the bread and the Word.
The multiplication of the bread in the Gospel, is but a symbolic episode of the continuity that exists between the God of Old Testament and the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. We witness the God who provided, in a deserted place, to a multitude of people and from almost nowhere - and we see Jesus who provides food, gives them bread to eat, just as the Father gave them food, manna from heaven to eat.
The bread is not merely a bread to eat, but a sign of God'promise. You shall be my people and I shall be your God, was God's promise and God has remained faithful to it, all the time. God promised that we would be redeemed by an offspring from a woman... and we have been! The promise lies open to us and we stand firm on it, not because we deserve it but because the Lord our God is faithful to it.
The Word is the incarnation of the promise, and the Word comes to us every day in varied forms, including the form of the bread, the bread of the Covenant, the mystery of our redemption: the Eucharist. The Eucharist embodies all the three elements of the promise, the bread and the Word... it is a daily reminder of the goodness and the faithfulness of God.
February 14, 2025: Genesis 3:1-8; Mark 7: 31-37
We see a striking similarity in the claims of both the Satan and the Lord, in the Word today.
- Do what I say and your eyes will be opened, says the serpent.
- Ephatha, Be opened, says the Lord to the deaf ears of the man.
Both take place... but the latter opens to fullness of life, while the former to destruction of life.
Today in our situations of daily life we don't deliberately choose the evil, the lie, the destruction of life... we are deceived by the look-alikes. The evil one taunts us with lies which look like truth, while they are really half truths. The insistence on autonomy of individuals, need for self actualisation, the attraction of successful living - these are presented as ideals to be pursued! They look so good and we may tend to believe this is what the Lord made us for! But unfortunately a major part of humanity is today deceived by these half truths.
Yes, they are half truths, unless they are conceived, interpreted and presented in relation to the other half - love for the other, common good, human solidarity and universal harmony! These are the complements that make the reality of creation, truly what it was conceived to be by the Creator! We would understand that, if only we open our ears to the cries of the poor and the marginalised, the wailing of the crumbling creation, the mourning of the suffering part of the humanity - ephatha...be opened, says the Word to our deafened spiritual ears.
At times people are apprehensive about interreligious dialogue or multi religious initiatives of unity and harmony. They prefer to look at the other as different, separate or even contrary. If we truly mean what we say and what we pray: I believe in One God - then I need to become more and more proactive and look at the reality as One Humanity!