Friday, April 3, 2026
The Strength of Loving Silence
Thursday, April 2, 2026
Love dies for you and me!
Holy Week 2026: GOOD FRIDAY
April 3: Isaiah 52:13 - 53:12; Hebrews
4:14-16, 5:7-9; John 18:1-19:42
We are at the peak, the peak of our
Christian faith, the peak of the eternal salvation plan of God, the peak of Calvary
which has transformed human history forever and from eternity. From this peak
today speaks to us the love of God - telling each of us: I died for you! I
emptied myself for you! I gave totally of myself for you!
The liturgy today invites us to dwell on
three C's...
The first is the Cross - the
centre not merely of the liturgy of today, but of our entire Christian life,
theology and spirituality. The Cross is the true symbol of love, not the heart
with a piercing arrow! The cross is the symbol of that total self-giving, total
to the extent of the last drop of blood and water. Suffering accepted for the
other, suffering taken up as a mode of self-giving, suffering endured as an act
of love, is salvific! This is both an inspiration and an invitation that we need
to hear every time we look at the Cross. Father forgive them, for they know not
what they do!
The second is the Crown - When
sufferings come our way, when trials visit us in our days, when burdens weigh
down our shoulders, when disease and death threaten us from the dark corners,
we need to remember the crown promised by the Lord! Just imagine an athlete
running a race, if right at the beginning he is given a crown and said, all
that you need to do is reach the finish line... the crown is certainly yours,
it is guaranteed! That is actually a real Christian vision of life... yes, we
have to run, yes, we have to toil, yes, we have to strive... but the crown is
ours, already! Any crisis, any suffering, any temptation, any trial, is there
just to be endured and traversed; let us remember, we are all running with the
crown already on our head...if only we are ready to live through them all in
faith! Nothing can overtake us, nothing can overcome us, for there is someone
who has overcome everything - sins, world, even death and his crown we have on
our heads, the crown of salvation. Into your hands Lord, I commend my
Spirit.
The third is Calvary - the hill
of grace, the mountain of salvation! The first time I visited Calvary, I was
disappointed. When the programme of the visit said, Calvary, my mind had
imagined an impressive hilltop up there - but all I beheld was a dozen steps to
climb with the place of crucifixion marked. We had already made the climb
walking the gradually rising slope leading to the Church of Crucifixion. But
that is precisely the message: Calvary is not that one hill perched high right
in the middle of our life - it is one whole life, it is a lifelong experience,
something that we gradually climb and come to grips with every day. Amidst the
daily chores, amidst the experiences of failures and faults, amidst the trying
relationships and discouraging life situations, we behold our Calvary - the
hill of grace, the mountain of salvation. All that we need to do is, be ready
is go through these mindful of the fact that there is God's Holy Will which is
guiding us and be ready to surrender ourselves totally. Thus, we can finally
say, 'it is accomplished!'
Wednesday, April 1, 2026
Love serves in every way!
Holy Week 2026: MAUNDY THURSDAY
April 2: Exodus 12:1-8,11-14; 1 Corinthians 11:23-26; John 13:1-15
Love is basically a willingness to submit oneself to a way of life that wishes the good of the other. Knowing the needs of the other, without having heard from him or her is a sign of love. Committing myself for the good of the other, without ever thinking of what I would gain, is an attitude of love. Being ready to lay down one's life for the good of the other is the ultimate act of love. There can be no love better that one being ready to lay down one's life for the other and it all begins in being at the service of, the other and the good of the other. The world has grown so callous to 'the other', all that matters to one is oneself and one's own - where is love here? and where would service be here at all!
Maundy Thursday is the day on which the
Lord gave us the famous mandate, the mandate of love: love one another as I
have loved you; love in action - wash each other's feet; love to be identified
as belonging to Christ. The day is filled with so many things to thank the Lord
for.
First of all, the Eucharist instituted
today is a loving service in action, by the Son of God who gives himself up for
our good. Love serves by making itself the food for the other, by destroying
oneself that the other may live!
Priesthood that is initiated today is a
service, a ministry of bringing the Lord to the people. It is an offering of
love that persons chosen and called make for the Lord, to the Lord's people,
for the Lord's mission towards the Reign of God.
Then comes the commandment of love - the spoken words of Jesus, that would be lived out in his action of serving the disciples, washing their feet and waiting on them at the table! A love in concrete action.
In every one of these, that which stands out is love. Love is our identity, love is our mission and love is our meaning. Love is seen in service, true and selfless service
Let us learn to love until it hurts
Holy Week 2026: THE SPY WEDNESDAY
April 1: Isaiah 50: 4-9a; Matthew 26:
14-25
Starting Monday, we have been hearing the
three songs of the suffering servant from the book of Isaiah... a set of songs
that expresses the sufferings that a servant of God or the prophet of God
undergoes. It becomes a prefigurement of Christ's suffering. A servant of God,
even the Son of God, finds all around him, those who plot his downfall, those
who want him to fail, to be destroyed: how prepared are we to face such people
and still go about with dedication and commitment to the Will of God.
Do you think it will be possible to go on
loving even at these moments? It is simple to remain with the Lord and say 'I
love', when things go on well; but when things do not go the way we want them?
That is what led to the fall of Judas! But look at Jesus... it hurt him to have
loved these people - the one who betrayed, the one who denied and those who
abandoned him... but he never ceased loving them, much less react. Yes, true
love hurts! But it goes on and on.
"From that time on, he looked for an
opportunity to hand him over" ...says the Gospel today. The plot thickens
and the tempo builds towards the climax. There are eyes that keep watching out
for the right moment to lay hands on Jesus...and the most unfortunate fact is
that it is led by one from the innermost circle of Jesus' collaborators! Yes,
love hurts, but the one who truly loves, never retorts!
Monday, March 30, 2026
Let us learn never to give up on God!
Holy Week 2026: THE PREACHING TUESDAY
March 31: Isaiah 49:1-6; John
13:21-33, 36-38
"Though I thought I toiled in vain... yet my reward is with the Lord", this feeling expressed by Isaiah in the first reading fits perfectly the state of Jesus' mind, as he bids a bitter farewell to his disciples today. Arriving at the fag end of his ministry, Jesus knows what is in store and prepares himself for it. Judas' betrayal, Peter's denial... he foresees everything and forewarns them too, but everything in vain. However, he knows that in everything God works for the good of those who love God (cf. Rom 8:28).
Just after the cleansing of the Temple and
the controversy created by it, Jesus is found preaching at the Temple, for the
last time. The Jews, the high priests and the scribes, have always challenged
Jesus regarding the authority with which he is doing all that he does! Jesus
does not care to prove his authority, not because he could not but because it
was so obvious. His words were accompanied with signs, his teachings were
authenticated with his living and no one needed any proof for Jesus' authority.
The problem was that they were not ready see the obvious truth. But Jesus' love
does not let him lose heart...he goes on. That is true love - it never gives
up.
These days, experiencing a totally strange
holy week, a holy week in quarantine, there could be anxieties, helplessness,
doubts and fears in the minds of all...but let us remember, Love never gives
up. God has never given up on us and we shall never give up on God, if we truly
love God. Let us learn to see and believe the presence of God amidst whatever
the situation be.
Believing involves repentance! Believing comes from a conviction, from an experience. Repent and believe - that was the invitation with which the Lent began!
How far have we progressed in it?
Sunday, March 29, 2026
Let us cleanse our love for each other...
Holy Week 2026: THE CLEANSING MONDAY
March 30: Isaiah 42:1-7; John 12:1-11Saturday, March 28, 2026
FIND YOURSELF IN THE CROWD
Beginning a journey with the Lord
March 29, 2026 - Palm Sunday
Life-giving death: new life, life to the full, eternal life!
Conversion – from death to life
THE WORD IN LENT 2026 – SATURDAY FIFTH WEEK
March 28 – Ezekiel 37:21-28; John 11: 45-56Our Lenten journey of Listening and Fasting, as a time of
Conversion, has practically reached its end… because from tomorrow we begin the
Holy Week with the Passion Sunday. In fact, it is towards this week we have
been preparing ourselves these past five weeks… the immediate objective of
which is to contemplate the passion and death of the Lord. We would begin that
with the solemn celebration of tomorrow…the palm Sunday, which is rightly also
called the Passion Sunday.
What was the purpose of the passion…what did it achieve? Let us
begin with that question: the first reading today answers that without hesitation
– to bring everyone home and make them One People, the people of God. The
discourse of the Shepherd returns, with Christ who offers himself to be that Good
Shepherd who lays down his life for the sheep, that no one of them shall be
lost.
God never forgets the covenant made – I shall be your God and you
shall be my people! And hence, even when we the people distanced ourselves from
God and turned our backs, God’s response was to send God’s only Son, who comes
as the Shepherd who gathers the flock into one. How does he do it – through his
death. That is why that was a life-giving death.
A death that gives new life, new life as people of God, the redeemed
of God, the flock gathered unto God; a death that brings life to the full, a
life in abundance, in spite of the shortcomings and fragilities that we face; a
death that takes us to eternal life, a life in communion with the Lord of life who
is eternal, thus making us eternal too!
We see this prophesied today in the Word – not by Ezekiel whom we listen
to in the first reading, but the high priest who despised Jesus. It is he who
declares that Jesus would be the “one man to die for the people”; that Jesus
was to die to gather together in unity the scattered children of God. It is
this death that has given us life – new life, fullness of life and eternal life…
life-giving death.
Thursday, March 26, 2026
Life... the Word, Spirit and Truth
Conversion – from death to life
THE WORD IN LENT 2026 – FRIDAY FIFTH WEEK
March 27 – Jeremiah 20:10-13; John 10: 31-42
“Terror from every side!” – that is how Jeremiah explains his
situation… just as it was for Jesus too, as the elders and the scribes were out
to catch him for a word or a gesture that they can accuse him of. It would be
so for anyone who belongs to God – the generations that we spoke of yesterday,
the sons and daughters of Abraham, that is persons of faith. The reason is, the
persons of faith, persons with God, are persons who stand by truth!
Be it Jeremiah or any other prophet, or be it Jesus, the problem
was that they were speaking the truth, they were saying what God wanted them
too. Yesterday we came across in the Gospel the controversy that they accused
Jesus of speaking about himself as someone equal to Abraham – and the
discussion continues today. Jesus does not evade the question, he deepens the
controversy – the Father is in me and I am in the Father. For those who were
scandalised that Jesus was equating himself to Abraham, to hear him speak in
these terms about the Father and himself, was indeed a breaking point! But Jesus does not mind – because he was
speaking the truth.
In Jesus’ vision, this truth is the light – it makes one understand oneself and see oneself in the right light; this truth is liberty – it makes one fearlessly genuine and authentic; this truth is life – life in the Father, life in the Spirit, life eternal. It does not matter that there is terror all around, there are persons plotting against me, there are those who consider me a threat and look forward to my death – because the Spirit, the truth makes me shift my gaze from that death that surrounds to the life that is promised me!
This has to be seen in our concrete choices, in our works, as Jesus teaches us today in the Gospel. Our works need to testify to the fact that we are from the Father, that we are daughters and sons of that merciful Father, that loving generation of God’s own. Our Life, the Word today wishes to point to us, as a watershed has to orient our entire existence, and not just ours but of every single person who encounters Christ – taking us towards life, towards Spirit and truth
Wednesday, March 25, 2026
Life... living to be a generation!
Conversion – from death to life
THE WORD IN LENT 2026 – THURSDAY FIFTH WEEK
March 26 – Genesis 17: 3-9; John 8: 21-30
Our reflection on Listening and Fasting… as a way to Conversion
had lead us to this consideration of our journey from death to life, and we are
nearing the close of this reflection! The Word today takes us back to the origins
posing a fundamental question: why should we undertake this journey? Because we
are called to, by the very identity that we are given with, as people of God,
as people of life!
Abraham is presented to us as a reminder of our origins, when we
were made the people of God, the multitude of nations who were promised to
Abraham – his generations! Generations... that is indeed the crux of the
message that the Word has for us. And it is nothing new to us, as an argument.
We are all much attuned to this discussion of the generations… be it the custom
of the surnames that we hold close to our hearts (as if it is something benign,
vis-Ã -vis), or the idea of the clan and tribe that we identify ourselves with
(which of course appears to be a bit pejorative at times with its variations
like caste and other considerations!)
What is the Christ-ian sense of Generation – the roots or the identity
that we would like to refer ourselves to? Jesus today speaks of this when he
refers to Abraham, to a people who pride in being sons and daughters of Abraham.
But in his discourse Jesus deconstructs this concept of “generation” in terms
of both time and space, with his statement: your father Abraham rejoiced to
think that he would see my Day; he saw it and was glad. Isn’t that drastically
deconstructive?
Jesus is establishing a paradigm where time or space does not
define generations – neither the chronological link in the chain of birth and
ancestors, not the spatio-geographical link of socio-genetics. Jesus seems to
say that the real sense of “generation” comes in those who know the Father and
listen to the Word (Jesus himself) of the Father and live their lives in accordance.
That is generation and that is true “life” that Jesus gives- that life which
will never end, the eternal life.



