Saturday, February 21, 2026

LISTENING... TO THE RIGHT VOICE!

The voice of the serpent? the voice of death? or the Voice of God?

THE WORD IN LENT 2026 – FIRST SUNDAY IN LENT

February 22 – Genesis 2:7-9, 3:1-7; Romans 5: 12-19; Matthew 4: 1-11


We have begun this Lent with the two-word orientation of our Holy Father – Listening and Fasting. The Word this Sunday and that of the next, invite us to ponder on the first term – listening! Listening, we know, is the most fundamental disposition for our Spiritual life and our growth in it.

Let us begin with a metaphor, from our daily life experience… listening to a radio, a FM: nowadays it is has gone to advanced levels of spotifies and podcasts… although analogously even they can be considered, the classical functioning of a radio is an ideal metaphor to understand. When we switch on a radio, it is not automatic that it plays. It has to be tuned to a particular frequency, in order to hear or listen to a particular content. And as we tune, we keep passing by so many other frequencies that play too…probably what we have chosen not to hear. This one of the primitive experiences of channel surfing, which later applied to satellite TVs and then to the internet and so on. One experience while radio surfing could be that we stumble upon a frequency where something interesting, attractive or capturing draws our attention. Either we get stuck to that stumble and forget the original destination, or we are two minds whether to follow on to where we were originally destined or to continue listening to this new voice stumbled upon!

That metaphor can help us understand many a phenomenon we experience in the world today – there are myriad voices that clamorously claim our attention every day. So much so, on our project to Listen, the crucial question that emerges would be: listen, yes, but to which voice? This is the first plane of reflection that Lent this year invites us to: are we listening to the right voice?

The voice of the serpent: One of the many voices that we have to beware of is that of the evil one; the enemy who constantly speaks to us, shouts into our ears, nags our hearts, fills our minds with information – most of the times false, fake and foul. Just as we see in the first reading of this Sunday, where the first parents are deceived by the voice of the serpent, so do we run the risk of being hijacked by the enemy, who is “prowling round like a roaring lion” as would explain St. Peter in his letter.

The danger that subsists in the of the voice of enemy is its overlay; it is so superimposed that it looks good, sweet, acceptable, real, caring, practical and functional. But it takes the Holy Spirit to understand that it only looks so… and it is truly not so! The first parents were deceived… they thought it was care, it was concern, it was an intention to help that the serpent expressed. They failed to notice that the evil one was merely attempting to pit them against their loving Creator, making them suspect the “Will of God” for them.

In our personal and social experience too, we hear a lot of voices – such that whisper: ‘after all you can do this’, ‘who is really going to know about it’, ‘who said this is not good’, ‘what if you can do it and still get away with it’… and so on. How late is it going to be, before we realise that those are the voices of the evil one, voices of the enemy, voices of the serpent who wants us to remain as far away from our Creator as possible, hidden from the absolute Truth and Goodness.

The voice of death: Another set of voices to be careful about is that which comes from the principle of death, death which is the most powerful instrument within the domain of the evil one! Death in itself is not evil… of course it is not. But when it is handled by the evil one, it becomes a treacherous instrument of fear, of meaninglessness, and above all of negativity.

There is so much negativity spread all over in today’s world. If we are not careful we would listen to those voices that speak from the negative corners of darkness and succumb to death. St. Paul warns us of it in the second reading today, speaking to the Romans. He speaks of the death that reigns over people, instead of allowing our Saviour to reign over us. When fear rules over us, when ego determines everything that we do, when insensitivity blinds our perspectives… we are in the reign of death. This is what Pope Benedict XIV often warned us of – the culture of death that prevails in the world of today.

The culture of death makes us look at every one else as an object to be used, competition to be won over, a disturbance to be avoided, a foe to be curbed, a danger to be terminated… that is negativity. At all levels we see this at work in the society: persons who look at their own siblings and family members that way, sections of people looking at “other” sections of persons that way, nations looking at other nations, and the whole world looking at “some” in that manner… if we are not careful we will fall for these voices, saying they are after all true and factual.

The Voice of God: We have to really train ourselves to single out the Voice of God from the cacophonic noises that the world is house to. That is a Lenten task – because it is an exercise of spiritual discipline, a an of surrender to the Spirit, who alone can help us do that. Jesus in the desert, does exactly that – surrenders himself to the Spirit of the Lord and arms himself with the Word of God, in order to win over the misleading voices that tempted him and listen to that One Voice of God: this is my beloved Son!

The Voice of God is liberating – it liberates me from egoism, from competitions and from pride of proving myself. The Voice of God is life-giving – it makes me look at possibilities and not problems, positivities and not pitfalls, persons and not threats! The Voice of God is lifting – it lifts my spirit and does not make me feel like I am a failure, lifts my attention from the material needs to the transcendental truths, lifts my priorities from self-centred satisfactions to a holistic and integral fulfilment.

The Voice of God is the Word of God, which is the lamp to our feet, the light on our way, the guide to our steps. It guides us through life and death, towards a life that is eternal – the Words of eternal life!

Friday, February 20, 2026

Conversion: Together renewing our lives in the Lord

Lent as a Time of Conversion

THE WORD IN LENT 2026 – SATURDAY AFTER ASH WEDNESDAY

February 21 – Isaiah 58: 9-14; Luke 5: 27-32   



Lent as a time of conversion – proposing that leitmotif for this season, the Holy Father reflects on three key movements we are called to. The first two, listening and fasting, the Word called us to reflect on, the past two days. Today the Word inspires us on the third term – together.

We see the Saviour coming in search of the sick, the sinners, the needy and the broken. Jesus declares that unequivocally – I have not come to call the virtuous, but the sinners to repentance; he presents himself as the breach-mender, the Restorer of the ruins, that Isaiah speaks of in the first reading. The season of lent is here to bring us together, to walk together, to progress together, to grow together mindful of this call that the Lord has open for us: Follow me!

If we wish to say “yes” to that call, we need to ensure these three dispositions within us – that of mending our ways, that of lending our hands, and that of tending towards the life, a life to the full.

To follow the Lord is to mend our ways – an ample period of 6 weeks is right here before us to launch ourselves on this mission. We can certainly at the end of this spiritual exercise find ourselves at least a few yards closer to being truly God’s delight.

To follow the Lord is to lend our hands – to our brothers and sisters in need; to free the yoke of those who feel trapped, to feed those who hunger for acceptance, affection and compassion, to relieve those who feel oppressed by the inhuman conditions that are justified by the cultures of today – that is the way we can become commensals in the Reign of the Lord.

To follow the Lord is to tend towards life – it is to see life, to give life, to promote life and not prejudices and condemnations. We are not called to sit on judgement of the others, as to who is going to hell and who not, instead we are called to make our way to the Lord, towards that Absolute Life, by living our lives to the full, and making of our lives a sacred offering to the Lord.

True lent is when we come to appreciate the absolute value and significance of the life that God has gifted us, and enhance and enrich it towards making it reflect the fullness of God – that is salvation, and that is the paschal mystery

Thursday, February 19, 2026

Conversion: Fasting that opens us to see God

Lent as a Time of Conversion

THE WORD IN LENT 2026 - FRIDAY AFTER ASH WEDNESDAY

February 20 – Isaiah 58: 1-9; Matthew 9: 14-15 



Lent as a time of conversion - that is our project this Lent proposed by our Holy Father. Yesterday we reflected upon this conversion in terms of listening, listening enough to know what God wants of us. Today we are called to reflect in terms of fasting… that is the second term that Pope Leo presents to us – listening and fasting.

The obvious question is, what kind of a fasting are we speaking about here? Certainly, we are not out to destroy the traditional value and spiritual merit that lies in fasting from food and beverage, or abstinence from meat and other goodies of life. What we are up to here, is what Isaiah intends to do in the first reading today, what Jesus wishes to do in the Gospel passage today – perspectivise the fasting we undertake.

Fasting is not deprivation: First and foremost, fasting should not be centred around an argument of “deprivation” – I deprive myself of something: the breakfast, meat, another meal or things of that sort. If so, at the centre of it all I find myself who is deprived of all these! That is going to blind me further to so many points of focus that Lent wishes to offer me.

Fasting is an opening to see: Fasting is not centred around me, but it opens my mind, my heart, my eyes and my life to the other – in more than one way – making me feel the pinch of not having something, making me look at the need of the other, making me aware of what I have always been blessed to have, making me look at those for whom what I leave out is not an option at all, making me sense in some way the struggles and sufferings of the other. More than being deprivation, it becomes a setting aside. Setting aside things, that I could share with others; setting aside my own feelings, that I may listen to the other; setting aside myself, so that I can make space for the other.

Fasting is an opening to see God: If fasting does not lead to me see God present with me, that fasting has not spiritual meaning - it is merely dieting or disciplining! As Jesus says, when I feel the need to get in touch with the Divine, I feel the need for fasting; fasting gets me back into communion with the Lord. In getting me see the other and the need of the other, fasting makes me see God and what God wants to communicate to me.

This is the perspective that Pope Leo offers too – he calls for a fasting from harmful words. He says: this lent be kind and watch your words; disarm your language and avoid hard words and rash judgements; fast from slander and from speaking ill of others! That is indeed a fasting that opens us to see God, God who is in others, and God who is with us and within us

Wednesday, February 18, 2026

Conversion: Listening enough to Choose God

Lent as a Time of Conversion

THE WORD IN LENT 2026 - THURSDAY AFTER ASH WEDNESDAY

February 19 - Deuteronomy 30: 15-20; Luke 9: 22-25 



Lent as a time of conversion - that is a fundamental perspective that guides us on our ongoing journey of faith. It is not that this is the first time we celebrate a season of lent, not is it going to end with this season; we are familiar to this atmosphere, at times we even look forward to it. It is indeed a beautiful season, a season that lets us get in touch with our real inner selves, with humility and truth. But we have to beware of a tendency that can lead us to complacency and compromise...warns the Word today.  

How do we understand conversion - that is where the key lies. Conversion is choosing God... says Moses today in the book of Deuteronomy. We have before us the possibilities, the choices, the alternatives - some of them lucrative, successful, glittering and glimmering; others not so attractive, difficult, demanding, boring, at times even discouraging. But on what basis do we choose? What is attractive or what is right? That which is lucrative or the one which is just? The ones which are sensational and splashy or that which is sincere? Death or life? The evil or God?

How can we choose what we ought to? We need to see... the light that shines from the Lord makes us see what to choose. We need to hear... the voice that comes from the Lord helps us orient ourselves towards the right. We need to listen... listen enough to choose God, and God  alone - that is true conversion. 

At times we choose that which goes against what God wants of us - worse still, we choose so and we believe we have after all made the right choice. Other unfortunate times, we choose what we ought not to, and we do our best to justify the choice we made, in spite of knowing that we made a mistake in that choice. Here, it is not only that we do not see, we do not want to see! It is not only that we do not hear, we just do not want to listen... Listening to the Lord, leads us to conversion; in fact, conversion is listening enough to choose God above all. 

Tuesday, February 17, 2026

Listening and Fasting

Lent as a Time of Conversion 

THE WORD IN LENT 2026 - ASH WEDNESDAY

February 18 - Joel 2: 12-18; 2 Corinthians 5:20 - 6:2; Matthew 6: 1-6, 16-18



We begin the holy season of Lent for this year - a Time of Conversion, as Pope Leo describes it for us this year. In his message for this Lent Holy Father reflects on the theme, Listening and Fasting. The opening theme itself is striking... where is the connection between listening and fasting? It is a simple and clear call for us to remember that all our fasting (spiritual exercises of penance) should come from listening (experience of prayer). When these two are separated from each other, we fall into empty ritualism or meaningless legalism.

Secondly, we see that the Holy Father intends to highlight for us three inner movements of our being - the journey of our spirit: first movement indicated by the world listening, a second movement of fasting and the third movement of doing all these, together. This can be termed as interior movement, exterior movement and communal movement. We shall deepen our reflection on these terms, all through this season, with the help of the Word that would inspire us in this light. 

A third reflection proper to today, would be as the Word points out today - our lenten practices will become effectively a time of conversion, when they are Sincere, Spiritual and Secret.

Let our lenten practices be sincere, that is coming straight from our hearts - not from our calculations, scheming ways or our capacity to project an image to others. As Prophet Joel instructs us today, it has to be from the heart, breaking the heart and transforming the heart, thus making us new persons little by little during these days.

Let our lenten practices be Spiritual, that is inspired by the Spirit who brings us into communion with the Lord who bids us to celebrated this profound time of coversion. As St. Paul reminds us, the ultimate aim of all that we do, big or small, internal or external, material or spiritual, has to be greater communion with the Loving Mercy that surrounds us, the God who has called us to renewal and reformation. 

Let our lenten practices be secret, that is known only to us and to God our Father and Mother who sees everything in secret... that we may not go by merely external signs but focus on the internal meaning of those, that we may not seek the approval or appreciation of those around us but feel assured and strengthen by the Presence so intimate to us, growing every day mindful of and grateful for that accompanying Presence. 

Let us begin this time of conversion... a time not just an event, and that of conversion and not merely a commemoration. The call is clear - we begin a journey today, gradually and constantly striving to get closer and closer to God, to be transformed by Love. Happy Lent. 



Monday, February 16, 2026

Do you still not understand?!

WORD 2day: Tuesday, 6th week in Ordinary time

February 17, 2026 - 1 James 1: 12-18; Mark 8: 14-21

How agitated Jesus gets today with his disciples! Jesus expects them to rise above the ordinary or the normal. As Jesus warned us this Sunday: if our perfection does not surpass those that of the scribes and the pharisees, that is if we do not rise above the 'usual' way the world looks at reality, we will not be considered fit for the Reign of God! 

The so-called normal attitudes of the world, the value systems propagated as "normal" by the world, the life style of the so-called successful that stands counter to what the Gospel teaches... these are the temptations that we have today! Of course, they do not come from God, reiterates St. James. 

Our desires, temptations, sin and resultant death: this is the cycle that Jesus wants us to understand, resist, surpass, and triumph over. None of us can ever say after an act of unrighteousness, that we were not at all aware of its nature! Let us not deceive ourselves! 

We know what we are surrounded by, we know what we go through on a daily basis and we know what is appreciable and what is not worthy of our call to be children of God. Inspite of all the graces that we have obtained and the gratuitous gifts that we have received from the Lord, if we still insist on giving up on our call to commitment and righteous living, we will soon hear that question addressed to us by Jesus: do you still not understand?

Sunday, February 15, 2026

The Lord our Rock

WORD 2day: Monday, 6th week in Ordinary time

February 16, 2026 - James 1: 1-11; Mark 8: 11-13


During his life and ministry, Jesus was convinced that he had nothing to prove, to no one! He was what he was - the Son of God, the Word Incarnate. He spoke what he believed and lived what he spoke. That gave him an authority that the Pharisees and the Scribes could never understand. It came from his holistic self-understanding, an understanding in terms of the ONE who had sent him: "For I and the Father are one", he declared (Jn 10:30). 

Many a time we identify ourselves with the riches we have, the social status we enjoy, the titles and the offices we hold, the adulation from others and the image that others have of us. We are concerned and fixated on achievements and social images we create of ourselves. But these are like the drooping flowers and the fading beauty, reminds St. James. 

Our identity has to rest on that one thing that never changes - the truth that we are sons and daughters of the One God, that we are created in the image and the likeness of that One God who has loved us into existence. When we get this fact imprinted clearly on our hearts... no trial or doubt, no suffering or shock will ever affect our perseverance (Jas 1:4). 

Let our life be founded on that unshakable foundation, the Lord, our Rock!

Saturday, February 14, 2026

FEB 14 - A REFLECTION

Saints Cyril, Methodius and Valentine - The Call to be in Love!


The Word reaching a people is not a simple happening or a non characteristic event - it is a definitive self revelation of God being extended to that part of humanity! Those who are involved become blessed instruments in the hands of the Lord, according to the heart of the Lord. They become the most beautiful feet on earth, carrying the most life-giving of all things in the world - the Word of the Lord.  

However, there are more than a few elements that have to come together if this blessed experience has to be realised. Looking at it as a basic communication, there is the Sender who has to will it and there has to be the receiver who is prepared to receive it; there has to be a medium which will carry it, amidst all the noise that will surround to disturb it; and above all and at the heart of it all rests the message that is being communicated, which has to be conceived and represented in its utmost originality! 

It is in this context that the saints whom we celebrate today come into consideration. Be it Saints Cyril and Methodius, or any other Apostle for that matter who is called and sent, there is the medium being chosen by the Lord! The effectiveness of this medium is determined by the fact of how much the medium is taken up with the message; how much the medium knows and treasures the message; how much the medium has interiorised the message - and this is what we call - being in love, which translates as the medium becoming the message! 

Celebrating also the popular feast of the patron of those in love - St. Valentine, today the question we are inspired to ask ourselves is this: how much in love am I with the message, as a medium! The reason we need to ask this question is crucially this: because the call to be an apostle, is a call to be in love! 

ASCOLTARE E DIGIUNARE

La Quaresima - il tempo di conversione

Messaggio del Santo Padre Leone XIV per la Quaresima 2026


QUARESIMA 2026 - PAPA LEONE XIV

LISTENING & FASTING

Lent - a time of Conversion

Message of Pope Leo XIV for Lent 2026 


LENTEN MESSAGE 2026 - POPE LEO XIV