Wednesday, July 8, 2026

Love, because you are loved!

WORD 2day: Thursday, 14th week in Ordinary time

July 9, 2026: Hosea 11: 1-4,8-9; Matthew 10: 7-15



We are loved, loved by God, loved extremely and unconditionally. Like a child, without having to pay back, we are loved by God. Hosea who has been speaking to us for the past few days, brings out the compassion and love of God towards God's children in various terms, always contrasting it with our own infidelity and fickle mindedness. Today he brings out the love that God has for us in terms of a love that a father or a mother has towards a little, helpless child.

In the Gospel Jesus gives a practical demonstration of what happens when we really understand and experience this love of God, so free, so unlimited and incredibly unconditional. When we receive the love from the Lord, we cannot hold it within us - because of two reasons: we receive it undeservedly and we receive it in such immense measures! That is why he sends his disciples far and wide, and asks us today, to go and to take the loving message of God to every nook and corner of the earth.

Experiencing God's love makes me by nature, loving. The more I experience God's love truly, the more loving I become. The corollary is revealing: the less loving I am, the less have I really experienced the love of God. Hence all those hypocrites who spread hatred in the name of God, are despicable beings that have really not experienced the true love of God. Isn't that a challenging perspective to think about?

If we really experience the love of God, drink deep from it, we cannot but give it because our cup overflows! We give because we are filed with it. We give because we are given. We love because we are loved!

Tuesday, July 7, 2026

The Lost children of God...

WORD 2day: Wednesday, 14th week in Ordinary time

July 8, 2026 - Hosea 10:1-3,7-8,12; Matthew 10:1-7

We see the Lord calling his apostles today and sending them to the lost house of Israel...go to the lost sheep of the house of Israel. It is not about some historically lost group of people that the Word is speaking to us - the reference is to the present situation, the present day when people are more and more drifting away from God, when the very children created by God are losing God, getting lost from God, getting themselves away from God. 

In the first reading today, Hosea gives us at least three ways in which persons today get themselves lost from God.

The first is the image of the "divided heart"...persons divided between the good and the evil, divided between the truth and the fake, divided between love and animosity, divided between giving and avarice.

The second is the image of the "straw drifting on the water" ...the aimless ways of life, the confusing value systems, increasing promiscuity and self-centred justification of everything that leads to relativism.

The third is the image of the "thorns and thistles on the altar"...the sacred of our life encroached by the tendencies of materialism, consumerism, objectification of persons, possessive sense of sentimentalism and many other thinking and practice which cloud the true spiritual sense of human call. 

Every person is a child of God... that is our true identity and fundamental calling, but often times today marred by the conflicting ideas and luring attractions. How are we going to remain children of God in our daily lives? How are we going to reach out to the "lost children of God"? 

Monday, July 6, 2026

The passion to be compassionate

WORD 2day: Tuesday, 14th week in Ordinary time

July 7, 2026: Hosea 8: 4-7, 11-13; Matthew 9: 32-38


The Word today presents to us two contrasting realities: the obstinate sinfulness of the people and the absolute compassion of the Lord. A contrast that fills the pages of the Salvation history, right from its beginning up until now, until our own days and our own lives!

In the first reading, Hosea points out how despicable the people were getting. The dwindling faith, the blatant compromises, deliberate choices for what is ungodly, absolutisation of human autonomy, justification of a lawless economy... wait! are these not the experiences that the society is grappling with even today?

Is there a way out of these? Surely no, as long as the idolising tendency of the human person does not disappear. Today we make idols out of money, possessions, our own ego, power and position, status and social image, sometimes so ironically, even of our own religiosity, forgetting the actual epicentre of true meaning of our existence! How many values, persons and principles we sacrifice in the bargain! As if that is not enough, the society is ever ready to demonise those who stand for justice and truth, those who speak up for God, those who stand for God's people. The so-called mainstream society ostracises those persons as anti-socials, conservatives and anti-progress individuals.

Jesus presents himself to us as a motivating role model, inspiring us to stand for God and for the values of the Reign, inspite of the world that threatens us. Jesus is absolutely compassionate even when he finds that the people were not ready to understand him totally, some of them in fact were calumniating against him. Nothing would perturb Jesus... and it was so because, it was his passion to make people feel the compassion of God. Yes, the theme we reflected on yesterday... being the compassion of God and being compassionate with suffering children of God. 

The challenge today is, whether we can be still compassionate, even though we find those around, not really worthy of it!

To be the compassion of God

WORD 2day: Monday, 14th week in Ordinary time

July 6, 2026: Hosea 2:16, 17c-18, 21-22; Matthew 9: 18-26



We begin to listen to prophet Hosea from today... and Hosea brings out an intense dimension of God's love towards us. He offers the analogy of a spousal love to the relationship between God and God's people. A reminder to us, of the how compassionate God is towards us God's people. The central call is that we realise the Comapassion that God is.

Jesus brings out the same compassion in his own way, his heart goes out to the woman with the suffering and his tender love reaches out to the girl on the death bed. The readings present to us Jesus, as the compassion of God and in doing so has an underlying commission to us. As we are given to understand and acknowledge Jesus as the Compassion of God, we are called and challenged to be the compassion of God in our own way, wherever we are and in whatever we do.

In a culture that is widespread today where the very meaning and implication of love is misunderstood or insensitively neglected, when faithfulness and mutual commitment in family living is more and more under crisis, when possessions and positions mean much more than persons... the message is truly challenging. Today, let us be conscious of every moment when the Lord gives us an opportunity to be God's compassion to others in our own way, beginning from within our families. 

Though little, our compassionate deeds might go a long way in making the day blessed for us and for the others.

Friday, July 3, 2026

The Reign Perspective

WORD 2day: Saturday, 13th week in Ordinary time

July 4, 2026: Amos 9: 11-15; Matthew 9: 14-17


The times are dull and dreary, the situation is grim and gloomy, the future seems uncertain and bleak, people beginning to lose any hope about a more just and peaceful world... there are theories and conspiracies, all of them disturbing... these are the kind of feelings that fill our days today... these same are presented in the readings too! But a truly Christian hope is that, there is always a light at the end of the tunnel. The last word is always the Lord's.

Amos, who has been pronouncing such vehement warnings all this while, at a point comes out with a hopeful projection of the future. In fact, some scholars say, that this part of the text could be actually an interpellation into Amos' text. However, the readings today point to the fact that things can and will change for the better. There will be plenty, there will be justice flowing like river and righteousness like an overflowing stream, in short, there will be the Reign of God established for sure!

The call on our part is that, we should be prepared for it. We should be prepared to have a new mindset, a totally new perspective, an absolutely different value system! Cosmetic changes will not work...patchworks will not be sufficient...little additions here and there, simple deletions at places will not suffice... these adjustments will only make the situation worse, more confused and totally disoriented. What will help is only a radical transformation in Christ. It is what St. Paul would say, 'do not be conformed to this world, instead be transformed in Christ Jesus' (cf.;Rom 12:2); 'those who are in Christ are a new creation' (2 Cor 5:17). And for this we have put on the mind of the Christ (cf. Phil 2:5) and that is a radically new mindset, a totally new perspective, new thinking for the new times, new wine in new wine skins, an absolutely different value system: namely, the Reign perspective!

Communion - the core of being Church

An unfortunate development despite warning



Certainly we are aware of what is happening in the Universal Church these days with the Excommunication of 2 Ordaining bishops and 4 candidates involved in the attempted episcopal consecration of the society of St. Pius X (SSPX) 

See Vatican News

Reacting to this news, I read a comment which remarked - "another Reformation is needed in the Church." Unfortunately, the connotation of the term used "Reformation" sounds exact as the efforts understaken by the group involved amounts more to a "schism" than to an enhancement of the faith community. 

When the Faith community, with all the struggles and strifes, tries to make itself as close as possible to the "joys and the hopes, the griefs and the anxieties of the persons of this age," some forces deny all these inspiration and signs of the times, for what they call "orthodoxy" which infact is more rigidity and fixation. It is the Holy Spirit alone that can help us discern the right sense of bringing the Good News to the world of today!


Thursday, July 2, 2026

Doubts or difficulties... till death, with the Lord!

THE WORD AND THE SAINT

July 3, 2026: Celebrating St. Thomas the Apostle to India
Ephesians 2: 19-22; John 20: 24-29



The Feast of St. Thomas could leave us with three lessons to ponder...

1. We are One Church built on the Apostles.
The feasts of every apostle is a reminder of the essential unity that has to exist within the Church. As Paul so vehemently opposes (cf. I Cor 1:10-13), right from the earliest times division has always been a dreaded scandal within the Church. This reality notwithstanding, the divided body of Christ today drains the Church of its witnessing power and evangelical authority. A divided Church is the worst scandal that we can give the world, the Magisterium has repeatedly declared. Instead, a Church with persons of single heart and mind, brothers and sisters who live in harmony, is the highest form of testimony we can offer for the Reign of God.

2. The Church in India has a special responsibility.
The Church in India, boasting a direct handing over of faith by an apostle, has a special responsibility towards establishing the Reign of God on earth. It is unfair to claim privileges but refrain from the duties that come with it. Every person who has received the gift of faith in this country of ancient heritage and culture, has to stand firm in witness to the Gospel thus received challenging the society towards a holistic transformation, ushering in the Reign of God here and now - through justice, peace, equality and sincere compassion for every other.

3. Doubts don't matter as long as the Lord remains close to us.
Thomas is easily identified with the doubt that he raised about the Risen Lord. He was not only the one who wanted to touch the wounds that nails made and put his hand into the hole on Jesus' side, but he was also the one who said, "let us also go, that we may die with him" (Read Jn 11:16). His personal attachment to Jesus covered up for his obstinacy in not believing readily when the rest of the apostles reported Jesus' resurrection. In our lives too, when doubts assail, when clouds gather over our heads and we tend to be overwhelmed by them, the only thing that can sustain us is our personal relationship with Jesus! Doubts or difficulties, we decide to stay all our life, right till our death, with the Lord.

May St. Thomas show us, and especially the Christians in India, the most fitting way of living out the Gospel in the given context, so that we may be authentic ambassadors of the Reign of God, here and now.

Wednesday, July 1, 2026

Inspiring awe for God

WORD 2day: Thursday, 13th week in Ordinary time

July 2, 2026: Amos 7: 10-17; Matthew 9: 1-8



Persons of God inspire awe about God, despite the unfavourable circumstances that surround them. Look at the two personalities presented to us today: Amos and Jesus. Amos, opposed by Amaziah, the local priest and threatened by Jeroboam, the king in Israel, is warned not to prophesy! What does he do... he speaks, what the Lord wanted him to! Jesus, surrounded by the self-righteous indignant religious fanatics, is scrutinised for every word that he spoke and every move he took! What does he do... he speaks, what his Father wanted him to! And the result: the people were in awe!

First of all, they inspire awe - they leave people wondering and lost in admiration: not that the circumstances around them is all conducive for that, not merely by their competence of speech or performance of a show, but by their lives and their courage to stand for truth. That fills the people with a feeling of awe!

Secondly, the feeling of awe is not all about them! They do not claim it for themselves. Amos clarifies that he is no prophet and belongs to no prophetic band, but he is a simple shepherd and a tree-dresser, but picked up by God and sent on duty by God. Jesus clarifies too that he has the authority because he was the Son of Man, the One sent by God, that his authority came from the Father who sent him! They inspired awe, but not about themselves!

Thirdly and most importantly, they inspired awe about God! Be it Amos or any other prophet or Jesus, all that they did, inspired awe about God. It was not a self-proclamation, a self-coronation, a self-nomination as the messiah of the masses. It was all about God, the glory and mercy of God... that is why seeing their acts and listening to their words, "people praised God" for giving such power to men!

If we need to be truly sons and daughters of our Eternal Father and Mothers, brothers, sisters and disciples of Jesus our Master, men and women filled with the Spirit, in short, if we have to be truly 'persons of God', every word we speak, every move we take and every choice we make has to inspire awe in the people, about God and God's glory! Do they?

Tuesday, June 30, 2026

Choosing good and Shunning evil - Seeking God!

WORD 2day: Wednesday, 13th week in Ordinary time

July 1, 2026: Amos 5: 14-15, 21-24; Matthew 8: 28-34


Seek Good and Shun Evil... it is such a simple and straight forward directive from Amos today! It is a universal dictum, but is it as simple as it is said? Do we really and absolutely seek good and good alone; God and God above all? More importantly, do we shun evil, and shun it absolutely?

The world today holds out a culture that seems to be a subtle mixture of both... some good are seen to be 'too impractical' and we are advised not to seek them. Some evil are so subtly deemed 'acceptable' and made so hard to be shunned right away. The majority advocates evil, but in a clandestine form, in a very sweet-coated form. It is a meager and meek minority that stands for an absolute good - unfortunately they are despised and even eliminated by the rest of the world!

Sometimes it appears a better prospect to live with certain forms of evil and remain acceptable and comfortable in our living zones, than to choose good or 'the right' and be isolated. When we seek good, when we seek the Lord, we have to by all means do away with certain things in our lives. But we conveniently keep the Lord away at those points, so that our comfort zones are not affected, like the people in the Gospel today - who come to beg Jesus to leave their locality! They did not mind living with the evil spirits, but they were upset that they lost a herd of swine, maybe! They wondered how much more they will have to lose if Jesus stayed on with them!

If we really want Jesus to stay on with us, we will have to do away with a lot of things! Are we really prepared? Or would we choose to tell the Lord to leave us in peace? Choosing good and Shunning evil...is in short actually Seeking God - but is it a natural quality to me?

Monday, June 29, 2026

To be just, is living by faith!

WORD 2day: Tuesday, 13th week in Ordinary time

June 30, 2026: Amos 3: 1-8, 4: 11-12; Matthew 8: 23-27


There is a close link between justice and faith, far more closer and incredibly more intimate than the world of popular religiosity can ever imagine! In fact, a faith without justice or justice without the dimension of faith, would be equally inhuman and oppressive.

Amos points out to the people that they were living an unjust life because they do not really behold the presence of the Lord who had done so many wonders on their behalf. We become evil, unjust, selfish, blood thirsty and inhuman when we do not realise who we are, from whom we come, what our roots are, where our real treasures are and who is that who sustains us! Realising these, in short, is faith and a real one at that, will certainly challenge us to live just.

Beholding the presence of the Lord is the first sign of faith. At times of trials, when there is a suffering because of our just way of life and at times of temptations, when our mind sights short cuts and the world suggests that as the way of the smart, we need to behold the presence of the Lord beside us and stay calm! Even if we have to face an ordeal because of it, real faith would encourage and empower us to stand for justice and stand with those who are denied justice.

The wind and the storm, the demons and the diseases, they recognised the Lord and bowed down at the sight. The human will and freedom refused to do it and it still happens so, when we do not behold the mighty presence of the Lord from the depth of our hearts. A presence that makes itself felt in such a simple manner around us. When we recognise it, our life changes, our perspectives widen and we grow more and more holy and just. 

Indeed, to live by faith is to live just!