Tuesday, June 16, 2026

To stay clear of trivialities

WORD 2day: Wednesday, 11th week in Ordinary time

June 17, 2026: 2 Kings 2:1, 6-14; Matthew 6: 1-6, 16-18



The only condition placed before Elisha, that he may receive a double share of the Spirit possessed by Elijah, was that Elisha should see Elijah being taken away by God. The challenge here is not to miss what is central to whatever we are involved in, being distracted with the trivialities.

The Gospel places the same condition before us. The actions that we do will have their true value depending on the fact whether the centrality of the right element was ensured. Praying, fasting and almsgiving are the three actions mentioned in the Gospel today and they together epitomise the entire religious practice of a Jew. The point is: not to miss what is central to it in getting distracted with the trivialities of human recognition and immediate rewards.

In our relationship with ourselves, with others and with God, we are invited to pay attention to the most central of all concerns: to do what is most pleasing to God at a given instant. Any other concern is only a triviality, however good and practical it could be. The spiritual prudence that Jesus teaches us today is to stay clear of the trivialities and place God at the centre and at the core.

Note: Just a word about the picture chosen for this... is it not true that our life too has so many shades interplaying themselves... all that we need to do is keep that path clearly in our focus, be aware of the various things and happenings around us, understand truly which of those matter and which do not, in short, identify the trivialities and stay clear of them!

Love - the Father's Perfection

WORD 2day: Tuesday, 11th week in Ordinary Time

June 16, 2026 - 1 Kings 21: 17-29; Matthew 5: 43-48


Coming to the end of the Beatitudes, Jesus today summarises the beatitudes into just one evocation: be perfect as your heavenly father is perfect. And what does that perfection consist of? The essence of it is Love, an unconditional love, a limitless love, a non-judgmental love that respects the inner self of a person and the person's true intentions!

The first reading is an extreme type of an example for God's love and mercy. As the psalms and other books in the Old Testament describe, God always manifested Godself to be slow to anger, abounding in love, ready to forgive and longing to remain in relationship with humanity. Though Ahab's acts were so gruesome, the mere fact that he repented for those and felt sorry for his foolishness, turned the entire issue upside down. Ahab finds favour in the eyes of God, Ahab becomes lovable all over again.

The message is pretty clear. For us too, the merciful Lord awaits and awaits with an ever burning love, to get us all back into Lord's own embrace for eternity. But this getting back will not happen automatically. It needs more attention to basics through developing traits such as personal integrity, spiritual identity and sense of belonging to the Reign. 

Above all these we are challenged today to possess the epitome of Christian living: Love, the Father's Perfection!

Sunday, June 14, 2026

The Extra Mile...

WORD 2day: Monday, 11th week in Ordinary time

June 15, 2026 - 1 Kings 21: 1-16, Matthew 5: 38-42


Jesus presents us today the most impractical of all his teachings... showing the other cheek, giving more of what you are deprived of, and walking that extra mile with the one who tries to take advantage of me. This was in fact the teaching, they say, that inspired the "satyagraha" movement of Mahatma Gandhi.

The first reading presents us with the exploitative element that is always present giving us the opportunity to practice our virtues and attain our salvation. At times the evil around us threatens to take the better of us, but the Word today reminds us of a fundamental attitude we are called to: "do not be overcome by evil, but overcome evil with good" (Rom 12:21).

Jesus did not only say this, he lived it to show by example. When God decided to show the world how much God loved God's children. God decided to send God's only Son...and the Son went an extra mile and not just put up with the atrocities of human kind but went on to give his life for the same humanity that rejected him and brought salvation!

That we can identify ourselves as disciples of Christ, we are expected to be spiritually prepared to allow ourselves be taken for granted without letting the goodness within us go down the drain; we are called to be who we are regardless of what others are! It is of course difficult and demanding...but that alone can make a difference in the world - that extra mile.

Chosen...

Chosen: Recognizance? Gratitude? Reminder?

11th Sunday in Ordinary time - June 14, 2026

Exodus 19: 2-6; Romans 5: 6-11; Matthew 9:36 -  10:8


The Readings today, taken together remind us of the call that we have received from the Lord, as we get back to the Ordinary Sundays after a long time... with the lent, pasch and then the following solemnities of the Lord that had occupied our minds all this while. 

Now my question while reflecting on these readings was this: where do we begin? 

If we begin from the second reading, the message is one of Recognizance! We are weak and feeble, the Lord has chosen us to be God's own people and has called us and set us apart for the sake of his people. We are recognizant of the gratuitousness of our call and election. 

If we begin from the first reading, the message would be one of Thanksgiving! We are called to be God's people and God has made this choice right from time immemorial. We have been weak and feeble and have failed Him in this call. But the Lord continues to call us and accompanies us with his powerful presence. It is a thanksgiving that emanates from our hearts and we wish to walk with the Lord more faithful and committed.

If we begin with the Gospel, it would be a powerful Reminder! We are called to be God's people and some of us are set apart to serve the people in the name of the Lord. This call comes from the very beginning and it is part of our very essence. Therefore, our weaknesses and our frailties cannot become an excuse, because the Lord called us well aware that we are weak... hence the responsibility that we have to rise up and measure up to the call and grow, deepening our commitment and our promise to remain faithful to the Lord, who has called us. 

Whether, Recognizance, or Thanksgiving or the Reminder of our Responsibility... we are called today to become aware of who are are and what we are called to and keep forging ahead. May God be our help and our sustenance. 

Friday, May 22, 2026

Peter and Paul... You and Me!!!

WORD 2day: Saturday before Pentecost

May 23, 2026: Acts 28: 16-20, 30-31; John 21: 10-25




These days we have been continuously hearing of Paul and Peter, the two great leaders who led the band of apostles in their proclamation of the Gospel and the initial formation of the Church. They announced the Gospel in season and out of season, in the prison or out of it, in political custody or in the public squares, in health and in sickness, among the faithful or among skeptics, among simple peasants or to learned philosophers. Nothing held them back from preaching the Word.

Looking for ideal situations to evangelise, bemoaning the political atmosphere or the social apprehensions, finding excuses for remaining unnoticed Christians and justifying our lack of initiatives towards evangelisation: these are very common these days. Tomorrow we will be celebrating the feast of the descent of the Holy Spirit causing giving birth to the new form of the People of God - the Church.

Imagine if the Church would have really been born, if the Christians of those times were as calculative as some of us are these days. An experience that I had just yesterday, provoked me a bit. A person from South America was enquiring me, how many percentage of Indians are Christians. I said, official statistics says, we are 2.7 percent. And immediately he remarked, ofcourse with a smile and for a joke, (but it provoked me to think): "you guys have to work more"! Apart from the fact of needing to work on the front of proclamation, it reflects the state also of our witnessing life, the daily testimony that is the first proclamation that we have to make to our context!

Let us pray for the Spirit, the Spirit of power, love and self-discipline, the Spirit of courage and wisdom, the Spirit who strengthens apostles and empowers martyrs, that we may be persons filled with the Spirit and become powerful witnesses of the Gospel, in our daily life, wherever we are!

Thursday, May 21, 2026

Following the Lord

WORD 2day: Friday after Ascension

May 22, 2026: Acts 25: 13b-21; John 21: 15-19

The total import of following the Lord may not be known to us right at the beginning when we intend to. But the Lord does not spare the moment. He instructs right from the beginning what can, or what is sure to, befall someone who intends to follow Him. Whoever is not ready to take up his daily cross and follow me is not worthy of me, said Jesus categorically (cf. Mt 10:38).

St. Paul was more than certain of everything that awaited him, the sufferings and even death for the sake of the Lord. "I kept back nothing," he could declare because that was the fact - he did not deem anything worth keeping back from God and from God's purposes; he did not find anything more important that doing what the Lord commanded him to do: go and proclaim.

Jesus himself prepares Peter in his post-resurrection encounter. Invariably all Jesus's apostles, except John it is said, died the death of martyrs. They were prepared for it and they even considered it their privilege. It was in fact the finest way of expressing their love for their Master and Lord. Paul was not exception on this count as well.

Today, with the increasing number of anti-Christian skeptics in the world and anti-Reign elements even within our faith, our challenge to be disciples becomes is more and more demanding. However, it remains categorical as ever. There can be no other choice or no compromise absolutely. Following the Lord means following Him in everything, right till the end.

Wednesday, May 20, 2026

The Mystical union with God

WORD 2day: Thursday after Ascension

May 21, 2026: Acts 22:30, 23:6-11; John 17: 20-26


Just as the Father is in the Son and the Son in the Father, we are invited to be one in the Father and the Son, through the Holy Spirit. Jesus' prayer for his disciples, that is, for us to the Father has a beautiful challenge to pose to us. The challenge does not consist in doing anything or accomplishing anything great... but it consists of being, simply being with the Lord, just being one with the Lord!

However, it is not that simple. As both the readings point to, the world at large does not "know" the Lord, nor does it identify with the Lord; in a way it stands aloof from or sometimes even against the Lord. The culture of death that prevails, the insensitive economy that rules, the inhuman politics that dominates, the treacherous power equations that manipulate... are signs of opposition to God and the Gospel. It is in this context that the Lord invites us to bear witness, 'just as in Jerusalem, also in Rome'.

From Jerusalem to Rome, from the religious circles to the political arena, from the academic domain to grass root social praxis, we are called to bear witness to the Lord and to the Lord's good news of love - the love that the Father has for the Son, which is the same love that God has for us! We are called to be One in love, we are united in the love of God. We are in the Lord and the Lord is in us, and we are made one in the Lord - let us celebrate this mystical union in God, that is the quintessence of Christian faith.

Tuesday, May 19, 2026

The preoccupation for the Flock

WORD 2day: Wednesday after Ascension

May 20, 2026: Acts 20: 28-38; John 17: 11b-19


The readings today present to us the preoccupation that Jesus and St.Paul have for the flock that they leave behind - as St. Paul sets off to Jerusalem and Jesus contemplates returning to his Father! The total dedication that each of them had towards those entrusted to them is known to us and it is best expressed in the phrase that St. Paul uses quoting his Master: it is more blessed to give than to receive.

Keeping the faith, being true to the message of the Lord, persevering in the tradition in which one is brought up, not letting oneself be swayed by newer teachings and fancier presentations, not becoming stumbling blocks to others, not looking for greener pastures, not seeking excitements of the moment or extraordinary show down... these are the preoccupations that are expressed here and proposed to us.

These concerns prompt to us two important qualities that are necessary: Spiritual Sincerity and Constant Discernment. Spiritual Sincerity that goes beyond all external shows and calculated benefits and refers to a person's innermost relationship with his or her Lord, and Discernment that refers to the openness to the Spirit of the Lord and obedience to the Will of God even amidst problems and struggles.

The times today are marked by certain fickle minded hopping from tradition to tradition, seeking consolation or so-called "search" for the truth, or reckless trial-and-error attempts, with the proliferation of innumerable sects and factions. If these movements are spiritually sincere and discerned with rigour, well and good. But if they come from an unfounded mind and a lack of persevering dedication, they are the dangers that Paul and Jesus warn us against.

Monday, May 18, 2026

The real glory of a true disciple

WORD 2day: Tuesday after Ascension

May 19, 2026: Acts 20: 17-27; John 17: 1-11a

"Father the hour has come, give glory to your Son, that your Son may glorify you!" prays Jesus. The glory that he talks of is the baptism of blood, the cup of suffering that Jesus was preparing to take up! Not just himself, but all those who believed him were destined to that cup and to that baptism, says Jesus (Mk 10:39; Mt 20:23).

St. Paul understood this perfectly. Though he knew well, instructed by the Holy Spirit, that suffering and imprisonment awaited wherever he went, he does not hesitate. He was more than prepared for the cup of suffering, for the baptism of blood! Today we hear him say that in terms so clear: I consider life of no importance to me! For him all that mattered was to carry the Good news to the farthest that he could!

For us it sounds good, means great and appears lofty, but does it really become our way of life? Every time a suffering comes my way, the first thought that crosses my mind is, why me! And as if it were alright some other time, why now? The fact is that whatever be the moment we would ask that same question. As soon as a grief or a burden befalls someone, we have to take a giant effort to justify it and negate it and decry that God would prevent, and protect, and deliver and so on and so forth! Why all these fretting? Why are we so slow to submit ourselves to the eternal design of God? Why is it so difficult to surrender to the plan of God, instead of suggesting all types of adjustments to the Lord?

How many times I would have languished that I don't get any consolation from God for belonging to God, for being on God's side and for speaking on behalf of God! Do I really understand in Jesus' terms, the real glory of a true disciple?