Saturday, February 22, 2014

dear WORD2day Readers...
we shall not be meeting through the sharing of the Word till 3rd of March...
However, we shall be united in prayers!

in Christ...
antony christy sdb

HOLINESS - the identity of the people of God

23rd February, 2014: 7th Sunday in Ordinary Time


What makes one a Christian? Take a pause and answer this question within your hearts!

Is it Baptism? Yes, ofcourse, but only if it were received with a personal choice and every promise given at the proper moment is lived to the full everyday of one's life. 

Is it being enrolled in a parish? Yes, but only if the belonging to the parish makes one feel one with the Universal Body of Christ, the Church. 

That which makes of Baptism efficacious, our belonging to a parish meaningful, and makes us truly Christians is our realisation of our identity as people of God - a realisation that has to be manifested in our personal holiness and in our holiness as a community of believers.

Holiness is not a super-human quality. It is definitely not alien to being human. Because it can be seen at our very origin. God made us in God's own image and likeness says Genesis (1:27). So, holiness is our original nature, not sinfulness; Holiness is the core of our being, not sinfulness. Sin and Sinfulness have come to mar and obstruct our original nature. This is why to the chosen people, God says through Moses, "Be holy, because I the Lord your God am Holy." Because I am holy you can be holy too. Yes, dear brothers and sisters, we ought to be holy because we are FROM GOD.

Holiness is our choice, a choice made not once for all, but at every moment, at every circumstance, at every crisis. It is a choice made for God, because we realise and gratefully acknowlege choice that God has made for us. You did not choose me, I chose you, says the Lord (Jn 15:16). It is the Lord who had chosen us. It is not that we loved God but it is God who loved us first, reminds us St. John (1 Jn 4:9,19). God has chosen us and God has loved us abundantly! And our response is Holiness, because we belong to God, we are OF GOD.

Holiness is not an act, it is an attitude; it is not a set of actions but a habit; it is not merely an appearance but an internal becoming! holiness is a daily effort to become more and more like God. it is returning to the image and likeness of with which we were formed in the love of God. In our words, thoughts, acts and choices of daily life we are called to become LIKE GOD.

Our Blessed Mother and the Saints are our models and Jesus is our Way. St. John traces that course for us when he says, 'we will be like him because we will see him as he is" (1Jn 3:2). We are called not to be merely good people but God's people. Every word and act of our's has to reflect God's presence to those around us. 

We are People of God and our very identity is Holiness. If we miss out on holiness we lose everything. We are from God, We are of God and We are called to become like God because we are the people of God. Because we are the temple where God chooses to dwell, we are the presence of God that the world so badly needs today! 


WORD 2day: 22nd February, 2014

Celebrating the Chair of St.Peter


Today is the day when we celebrate the pastoral responsibility that the Lord places on the successors of St. Peter. The First reading has a few remarkable elements that seem to explain perfectly the role of Papacy: 'presbyter among presbyters', 'not lording over the people', 'being example to the flock'! This is exactly what Pope Francis is trying to do: stressing the Collegiality of the Bishops as Bishop of Rome, not lording over but challenging everyone with his very life. Restraining from making a hero-idol of him, it is important as a Church that we begin to hearken to his passionate call to live as light of the world and salt of the earth, spreading love and hope to those around us. We have a duty to pray for the Holy Father, as there are so many forces today in the World that wants by all means to destroy the Church and its moral authority on the planet today! The Lord promised that the gates of hell will never prevail over the Church, but we need to remain worthy of the promise, by being communities of genuine faith and integral living.

Thursday, February 20, 2014

WORD 2day: 21st February, 2014

Live what you believe!

"There are some standing here who will not taste death until they see the Reign of God come in power!" The Reign of God coming in power...when does this happen? It happens when faith and works unite in one single act of living. As long as that "faith-works" divide, translated as 'religiosity-social concern' conflict or 'contemplation-action' controversy or 'personal salvation-social commitment' confusion, still exists the Reign of God will be a mere talk. When Pope Francis appealed to the world on the 47th World Peace Day this year, not to be satisfied with policies and principles but to get down to daily living and build a world of fraternity, it was the same claim as James: faith without works is dead! What we believe has to be lived. To take up the Cross and follow in Christ's steps, is not an easy decision. But there is nothing less than that expected of us. Jesus is categorical - If anyone wants to follow me, let him or her do this. When the gap between what we believe and live, the distance between what I preach and practice, the space between the private life and the public manifestation, become lesser and lesser, the Reign of God grows stronger and stronger. There can be no threat more powerful than this to the corrupt world order!

Wednesday, February 19, 2014

WORD 2day: 19th February, 2014

To see like a disciple! 

We are reflecting on the letter of St. James these days, starting from this Monday, till the end of next week. James has written a letter that is incredibly practical and down to earth. Today he explains to us who is worthy of being referred to as a 'religious' person, or a faithful, or in familiar words - a disciple of Christ. We have various indications like, slow to anger, slow to speak, quick to hear, attentive to the Word and particular about its practice, and so on. But the crucial characteristic that he points out is, care for the orphans and widows, empathy with the weak and the suffering. These come naturally when we learn to look at persons as persons; not as things to be used or cases to be dealt with or problems to be solved or burdens to be borne! That is the education that Jesus wants to give us - that we graduate from looking at persons as trees moving, things existing or means to our own end; to looking at persons and observing their needs and aspirations, joys and sorrows, longings and yearnings, problems and prospects - as persons in their entire sense, with respect for their uniqueness and love for what they are.  James would insist much on this, as we would see in the coming days, because for the Master, the persons who bear the image of God were the sure source through which God shares. Let our eyes be open that we see in every person around and recognise our brother and sister...making ourselves worthy disciples of Christ, worthy to live on the Lord's holy mountain.

Tuesday, February 18, 2014

WORD 2day: 18th February, 2014

Do you still not understand?

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! Ofcourse, 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 received 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?

Monday, February 17, 2014

WORD 2day: 17th February, 2014

The Lord, our Rock!

During his life and ministry, Jesus was convinced that he had nothing to prove! 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 times 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. These are like the drooping flowers and the fading beauty, reminds St.James. Our identity rests in 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 in 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!

Sunday, February 16, 2014

La Scelta, la Legge e la Perfezione Cristiana

6˚ domenica del tempo ordinario: 16 febbraio, 2014
La scelta è il tema centrale che attraversa le letture di oggi! E c'è un altro tema dominante che qualifica questa scelta - che è la legge o i commandamenti. Legge per il popolo di Israele era il modo di vivere ordinato dal Signore. La legge era per loro la garanzia di rimanere il popolo di Dio, era la loro parte di eseguire l'alleanza che il Signore fece con loro: io sarò il vostro Dio e voi sarete il mio popolo! Parlare o agire contro la legge era per loro una cosa grave e punibile. C'è una discussione su altri due temi - "perfezione" e "sapienza" nella seconda lettura. Intrecciando tutti questi, Gesù nel Vangelo ci presenta un atteggiamento perfetto e saggio verso la legge. Egli ci invita a una scelta personale, convincente ed impegnative.
La fede è una scelta ...
La fede non è un salto nel buio, si tratta di una scelta consapevole! Come afferma Lumen Fidei n.3, la fede non può essere associato con l'oscurità, invece la fede è una luce che illumina uno a scegliere, di scegliere di credere in Dio, di scegliere di vedere Dio vivo nella propria vita. La prima lettura d’oggi ci presenta la stessa prospettiva, abbiamo la scelta tra l’acqua e il fuoco, tra il bene e il male , tra la vera gioia ed i piaceri fugaci, tra il giusto e il conveniente, tra la convinzione ed il compromesso, tra la vita e la morte! La scelta è nostra! Non possiamo cavalcare sulle spalle di tradizione e costume, e giustificare le nostre azioni e le abitudini. Dobbiamo crescerci! La nostra maturità deve essere vista nella sapienza che possediamo . È Dio che ci dà questa saggezza, ci ricorda San Paolo. Gesù s’incarna la saggezza e presenta la stessa a noi nelle sue parole: non sono venuto ad abolire la legge, ma a portarla al suo compimento.

Una scelta al di là della legge ...
Gesù dichiara che i suoi discepoli dovrebbero fare una scelta non contro la legge, ma al di là della legge! Egli dà un nuovo significato alla legge, e presenta il modo di andare oltre, modo di trascendere un mero legalismo servile e raggiungere alla perfezione di santità, attraverso l'amore e la compassione. Le parole di Gesù: "Avete inteso che fu detto ... ma io vi dico", sentito più volte nel Vangelo di oggi ci presenta Gesù come il nuovo Mosè, e descrive la comunità dei discepoli come il nuovo popolo di Dio! «Ecco io faccio nuove tutte le cose», rivela Gesù ( Att. 21,5). La nuova legge... oggi come ci facciamo a capire la nuova legge, la legge oltre la legge. La nostra vita non comprende soltanto di evitare il male, ma è molto di più profondo e significativo. È di vivere, di amare, di relazionarsi, di fare il bene, di maturare, di essere felici, di rendere felici gli altri e cosi insieme come comunità di figli di Dio, di rinnovare il mondo e riempirlo di gioia.

Rispettare la legge ...
Gesù insegna le persone oggi non di andare contro la legge ma di capire che cosa significa veramente, rispettare la legge. Per Lui, di obbedire alla legge non era quello di obbedire alle parole della legge, ma di obbedire al Signore della legge! È stato così anche per il popolo di Israele, avessero obbedito alla legge come un atto di obbedienza a YHWH. Ma al questo punto quando il Signore della legge era con loro, loro non se ne rendono conto. La Parola ha vissuto e si è venuto in mezzo di loro, ma loro non l'hanno accolta. Il pericolo per noi è lo stesso: che possiamo essere per definizione il migliore dei cristiani - manca nessun giorno la Messa, regolare con la lettura della Bibbia e la recita delle preghiere, rigoroso con il nostro digiuni e l'astinenza, visitando molti santuari di pellegrinaggio possibile – ma dobbiamo stare attenti... ci può essere che perdiamo il punto centrale. Questi sono buoni ma non abbastanza non sufficienti- la Parola ci istruisce : Amare Dio e obbedirlo consiste... nel amare la Parola, e nel vivere secondo essa, non essendo soltanto ascoltatori della Parola, ma quelli che la mettono in pratica(Gia 1.22), per dire SI alla Parola significa essere pronti per affrontare tutte le conseguenze che c’è e vivere con entusiasmo nonostante di esse. Il nostro SI alla Parola deve essere la nostra scelta, la nostra scelta di andare oltre la legge e obbedire al Signore della legge , per vivere e riempire la terra con amore e compassione, per sfidare gli attuali standard del mondo verso creare un mondo nuovo, un cielo nuovo e una terra nuova! 

Saturday, February 15, 2014

OUR CHOICE: to Love and Abide by the Word

16th February,2014: 6th Sunday in Ordinary Time

Choice is the central theme running through the readings today! And there is another dominant theme that qualifies this choice - that is LAW. Law for the people of Israel was the way ordained by the Lord. Law was for them the guarantee of remaining  people of God; it was their part of executing the covenant that the Lord made with them: I shall be your God and you shall be my people! To speak or act against the law was for them a serious and punishable offence. There is a discussion on two other themes- "maturity" and "wisdom" in the second reading from St.Paul. Combining all these, Jesus in the Gospel presents to us a mature and wise attitude towards LAW. He invites us to Choose LAW... that is to choose to Live and Abide by the Word. 

Faith is a Choice...
Faith is not a blind leap, it is a conscious Choice! As Lumen Fidei n.3 affirms, faith cannot be associated with darkness, instead faith is a light that enlightens one to choose, to choose believe in God, to choose to see God alive in one's life. The first reading presents to us the same perspective today, we have the choice between water and fire, between good and evil, between true joy and fleeting pleasures, between the right and the convenient, between conviction and compromise, between life and death! The choice is ours! We cannot ride on the shoulders of tradition and custom, and justify our acts and habits. We have to grow up! Our maturity has to be seen in the wisdom we possess. It is God who gives us this wisdom, as St.Paul reminds us. Jesus embodies that wisdom and presents the same to us in his words: I have come not to abolish the law, but bring it to its fulfillment. 

A Choice beyond the Law...
Jesus declares that his disciples should make a choice not against the law but beyond the law! He gives a new meaning to law, and presents the way to go beyond, to transcend a mere slavish legalism and reach the heights of saintly perfection, through love and compassion. The words of Jesus, "You have heard that it was said,...but I say to you", heard repeatedly in the Gospel today presents Jesus as the New Moses, and describes the community of disciples as the New People of God! "See I am making all things new," declares Jesus by this (Rev. 21:5). The new law...today how do we understand that new law, the law beyond the law... L - to Love, A - to Abide, and W - the Word. To love the Word and Abide by it...is the new law that Jesus gives. The Word presents to us a guarantee to sanctity. To know the Word, to reflect on it and understand it, to love it and strive to abide by it, is the sure way to be real children of God, worthy people of God. Our life does not comprise merely of avoiding evil, it is much more profound and meaningful. It is to live, to love, to relate, to do good, to mature, to be happy, to make others happy and thus together as a community of God's children, to renew the world and fill it with joy.

To Obey the Law...
Jesus teaches the people today not to go against the law but to understand what it really means to obey the law. For Him, to obey the law was not to obey the word of the law but to obey the Lord of the law! It was so for the people of Israel; they obeyed the law as an act of obedience to YHWH. But when the Lord of the law was with them, and they did not realise it. The Word lived and moved among them, but they did not comprehend it. The danger for us too is the same: that we may be by definition the best of Christians - missing no Sunday Mass, regular with reading the Bible and reciting the prayers, strict with our fasting and abstinence, visiting as many pilgrim shrines as possible - but let us beware, we may be missing the point. These are good but not good enough - the Word instructs us: Love and Abide by the Word... to love the Word, and to live by it; not being merely hearers of the Word  but doers(Jam 1:22); to say YES to the Word and mean it, to face all the consequences of that Yes and live through it. Our YES to the Word has to be our choice, our choice to go beyond the Law and obey the Lord of the law, to live and fill the earth with love and compassion; to challenge the present standards of the world towards a new world, new heaven and new earth!



WORD 2day: 15th February, 2014

Can we live divided lives?

For the people of Israel there was no difference between their political life and their religious life. For them everything was just one; an integral mode of living as people of God; forever the people of the Covenant: 'I shall be your God and you shall be my people'. But at a certain point, as we read in the first reading today, the misery befalls them - Politics and Religion part their ways. Further, something that happens makes things worse: using religion for political ends or politics for religious reasons. It becomes almost an unjust alliance and remains so even to this day! That is history, but can happen in our personal life too: the division between our religious life and our civil life, and worse still if we use one for the manipulation of the other. Jesus is totally against this division and considers it always an hypocrisy. One cannot call oneself a shepherd and still remain untouched by the miseries of the people. One cannot call oneself a 'Christ-ian' and live a life that is totally insensitive towards others. One cannot call oneself a child of God and look down on his brother or sister, or much worse ill-treat, exploit or oppress them. If one does that, he or she is giving into idolatry, claiming to belong to Christ but divided within oneself, externally professing Christ but totally against Christ at the level of the inner self. 

Friday, February 14, 2014

WORD 2day: 14th February, 2014

Pride, Rebellion and Hearing God's Voice

The readings today speak of two kingdoms...one that was ending and the other which was rising. Prophet Ahijah instructs Jeroboam about the role that he has to play in the fall of David's kingdom. And in the Gospel we see the people who rejoice at the coming of the Kingdom (Reign) of God: "the deaf hear and the mute speak" they exclaim - that phrase was symbolic and indicative of the Reign of God to the people of Israel. The message is obvious - it is an invitation to turn away from a tendency of human pride and rebellion and place the absolute dominion always in the hands of God. Right from the beginning (explained by the stories of Adam and Eve, the tower of Babel and so on), the ruin of humankind has been due to human pride; the entry point of sin into humanity has been rebellion. It is in that rebellion and pride that we make gods for ourselves - making gods of our own ego, of our successes, of our plans and projects, of our prospects and the social ladders, of our attachments and cravings. At times, only when drastic things happen we realise our folly! The Lord says to us today: I am the Lord you God, hear my voice...let us make it our habit to hear the Lord's voice and live by it everyday.

Thursday, February 13, 2014

WORD 2day: 13th February, 2014

Saints who surprise God!

The most dangerous character of sin is, it takes over little by little that, all too soon we find it to be too late! Solomon who was a sign of God's glory in the early days of his kingship, soon finds himself in a point of no return, because he had given away his heart little by little to ways that took him away from God! In simple words sin can be understood as a rebellion against God... a lack of surrender into God's hands. The remedy is: a childlike surrender into the hands of God; following God unreservedly as did David (1Kgs 11:6); a faith that becomes a humble surrender to God's Will, like the Syrophoenician woman that we see in the Gospel. She becomes the prototype of the saints who surprised God... who surprised God by their total surrender...like St.Paul, or the early martyrs, or the later saints like John Maria Vianney, or Maxmillian Kolbe, or great models like Bishop Oscar Romero, Sr. Rani Maria... the list goes on, and the challenge is that we add our names to that. Let our surrender to the Lord be so total, that in God's pleasant surprise miracles abound. Can we surprise God by our surrender?... that will be a wonderful sign of growing in holiness.

Wednesday, February 12, 2014

WORD 2day: 12th February, 2014

Living at the Core of our Being...

"That they may see your good deeds and glorify your heavenly Father", said Jesus to us this Sunday(Mt 5:16). Today we see Solomon exemplifying this claim to honour. We read that the Queen of Sheba, looking at the wisdom and splendour of Solomon, said "Blessed be the Lord your God!"(v.9). What actually matters is not what is seen merely on the outward appearance, for we cannot put up a show all our life. Just imagine, if we have to create an image of ourselves just for the sake of the others and live up to it all our life - how tiresome and fatiguing it can be! At some point or the other, to someone or the other, the truth will be known and that will be the ruin of everything. Instead, Jesus invites us to an authentic living that is built from within, from those which comes out from within - our thoughts, our attitudes, our priorities, the words and thoughts we entertain, the feelings and impulses we give into, the kind of persons we identify ourselves with, the sort of people for whom our hearts are moved, the readiness with which we go out of ourselves in true love and selfless compassion. Let us pay attention to our interiority. The core of our self defines who we are, and at that level of our being, we cannot deceive ourselves! Let our hearts enshrine the presence of the Lord and let that presence illumine every bit of our life. 

Tuesday, February 11, 2014

WORD 2day: 11th February, 2014

External Expressions Vs Internal Dispositions

Still keeping with the theme of yesterday, the first reading presents to us Solomon who brings to light the relationship that lies between the absolute importance of the temple and the folly of limiting God's presence to the temple. They are two elements of a devotion that is matured, worthy of being called an adult faith. Jesus too talks of the same, but from a different context. He contrasts between an External Expression and an Internal Disposition: they are not exclusive choices to be made but a mature balance to be achieved. External expressions without deep internal dispositions will turn into mere ritualism and legalism; while mere internal dispositions without right external expression will lead to a cold individualism which is totally 'unchristian'! Our Blessed Mother, did not only keep everything in her heart and ponder (Lk 2:51), but also intervened in concrete situations with relevant actions (Jn 2:3). Commemorating Our Lady of Lourdes and remembering the 22nd World day of the Sick - let us resolve to make the life of persons who suffer, who are sick and who are in need, a little better to be lived - if not, all our faith-practices will become empty expressions of ritual legalism. Let our internal disposition be challenged and transformed on a daily basis towards a continuous maturity that leads to a meaningful living of our faith.

Monday, February 10, 2014

WORD 2day: 10th February, 2014

Can God's presence be felt!

The Ark comes to the Temple and Jesus comes to the people: where does the link lie here? Obviously, it lies in the fact that the people of God are the true temples of God! Do you not know that you are God's temple and that God's Spirit dwells in you? , asks St. Paul (1 Cor 3:16). Specially the needy and the poor, the sick and the suffering, the lonely and the unloved... they are the temples where we can encounter God face to face. Jesus does not depreciate the importance of the Temple when he said: a day will come when you will worship the Lord in Spirit and in Truth (Cf. Jn 4:23,24). He invites us to look at a new perspective. Building churches are important but it is more important to build the Church, that is the people of God. Celebrating the feasts and solemnities are important, but it is more important to celebrate persons and ensure humanity, happiness and wholeness to every person. What would we have gained if we spent tons of money on a well organised festivity, if we had not touched even one needy person, or made happy one grieving heart, or given joy to one drooping spirit? Wherever Jesus went, people went and God's presence was felt; wherever the apostles went, people went and God's presence was felt (compare with Acts 5:12-15); wherever we Christ-ians go, God's presence should be felt!

Sunday, February 9, 2014

THE LIGHT OF FAITH

Be illumined! Illumine!

9th February, 2014: 5th Sunday in Ordinary Time

"The Light of Faith: this is how the Church's tradition speaks of the great gift brought by Jesus": so begins the encyclical Lumen Fidei. Light is an image very often presented in relation to faith, the faithful and the life of a faithful. It is an explicit call by the Lord right from the Old Testament times that the people of God have to be light to the nations (Is 42:6). With Christ's call today to be light of the world, it becomes an inevitable criterion to be identified as Christ's disciple or not!

Faith as Light: The first reading reminds me of a Zen story that I have heard of the Master who asked his disciples: When do you think it is dawn? The disciples attempted various responses, like - when we see the difference between a tree and a pillar; when we can identify a black thread from a white, and so on. The Master, discontent with everything, finally said: it is dawn, when you look into the eyes of the one next to you and see your brother or your sister! The first reading  tells us exactly that... when you accept the gift of faith from the Lord, your eyes are opened that you can see into the eyes of those around you and see your brothers and sisters; in their suffering and in their pains, you can feel your heart weeping and your eyes welling. We are reflecting today on the theme of LIGHT... the light that illumines us, the light that makes us see the real meaning of life and the true sense of being human. Which can do that task better than our faith - Faith is the Light we are offered by the Lord, as a gift! 

The Faithful as Light: Once we accept that gift, the gift of faith from the Lord, we as faithful, we become the Light! Receiving the light, we become the Light. The Lord sets us as the light to the nations, the light to the world, the light on the lampstand, the city on the hilltop! Our faith does not rest on human wisdom, or logical reason, or scientific thinking, or systematic and mind blowing theologies! Our faith is primarily founded on the power of God, reminds St. Paul in the second reading today. Illumined by the Light, we become the light! Jesus declared, "I am the light of the World" (Jn 8:12); but did not stop with that. He challenges us today, "You are the light of the World." Every person of faith is called to be a light that is set on the lampstand, to spread the light to the entire house, to illumine those around him or her. But it is important that we remember always that the source of our light, is the Light which illumines us all, the Light eternal of which we are rays, the eternal fire of which we are sparks.

The life of the faithful as Light: Being the light...what does that mean? It involves two important elements: One, everyone sees you; and two, one is able to see because of you! Just two days have passed after an exam that I gave, where the examiner asked me, what would be the apt mode of proclaiming the Good News to those who have not heard it. I said, "by living my everyday life!" One may ask, but where is the proclamation - I believe it is in the very living! Our life cannot have two shades - personal and public, sacred and profane, spiritual and secular... If I am a Christian - I should be seen! That is the first dimension of being light - my life has to be lived in its integrity. When the light can be seen, then one can see, because of the light. When my life can be seen by the other as a open book, the other can draw an inspiration to live by, and that is proclamation; that is evangelisation; that is illumining! It is through my life, my words, my actions and everyday choices that I become a light to the other; "if you bestow your bread on the hungry and satisfy the afflicted; then light shall rise for you in the darkness!" and thus one will become the light in darkness to the upright.

Let us keep this light burning in our hearts whole day today, to evaluate our daily life and see, if we really possess the Light of Faith, if we really live our life in a manner as to become light to those around me! Let the Eternal Light of Lord fill our hearts to be illumined and to illumine!

Saturday, February 8, 2014

WORD 2day: 8th February, 2014

Compassion - the quality closest to sanctity!

"An understanding heart to guide God's people", is what Solomon asks of the Lord... and that is what he was given! We see Jesus, who understood the tiredness of his apostles and counseled them to relax. We see Jesus looking at the people and understanding their need, their thirst, their yearning for life...he was filled with compassion! Compassion, which comes from com-pati (latin),  to have the same feeling as someone, is basically an understanding of the other! When someone next to me is undergoing a crisis, when someone in my vicinity is going through a suffering, when persons in front of my eyes are experiencing a situation that stifles their lives... can I really feel with them, can I really suffer with them? That would be compassion! That is the sensibility that Jesus exhibits, that is the sensibility that Christ requires of us, if we have to call ourselves Christians! Compassion is the quality closest to sanctity! To be Christ-ians, we cannot but be compassionate; like Solomon, let us ask the Lord, and the Lord will grant us a heart that is wise and understanding, loving and compassionate.

Friday, February 7, 2014

WORD 2day: 7th February, 2014

Making God the centre of our lives!

We are presented with two kings today in the readings - King David and King Herod! Of one the reading praises without end and the other... we surely know his end! Both kings over Israel... but two totally different sorts of kings. One, who listened to the prophets and the other who killed them! Not that one was a saint and the other was a sinner... both were sinners; but what made the difference? While one was merely curious about the things of God, the other one - the reading says, "with his whole being he loved his Maker and daily had His praises sung" (Sir 47:8,9). The place that David gave to God, in spite of all the weaknesses he had, made him the most loved of the sons of God. It does not matter what heights we reach, or what laurels we fetch, giving the Lord the first place, will set everything else right. Making God the centre of our lives, is what all the saints teach us. And that is the secret to a life, truly happy and meaningful. 

Thursday, February 6, 2014

WORD 2day: 6th February, 2014

Remembering Gonsalo Garcia (Paul Miki and Companions)

Shall we do our part towards the Reign of God!

David gives instruction  to young Solomon as he is about to take over the Kingdom. Jesus gives instruction to his apostles as they are about to set out for a mission! The common element is the instruction and there is a common thread that runs through the two sets of instructions too. For that matter the whole of the Word of God, and Jesus as the Word of God made flesh always has this ready message to give us: Seek first the Reign of God, and all other things will be given unto you (Mat 6:33). Paul Miki and his companions, the martyrs we remember today, the apostles, the first christian communities, the early missionaries... every one of them was filled with this same zeal. Health. wealth, pleasure, not even life mattered more than the Reign of God for them! Solomon would later fall from the glory of his father, precisely because he would lose sight of the Reign that God wanted to establish. Let us renew our commitment towards the Reign of God today - the Reign of justice, love, peace, brotherhood and sisterhood... in short Shalom, Wholeness, God's presence! Let us make present these in our little way today!

It is a wonderful element to celebrate today, that one of the companions of Paul Miki was of Indian Origin - Gonsalo Garcia (though his father was a Portugese), from the Vasai, region of Maharastra - first Indian to have been canonised!

Wednesday, February 5, 2014

WORD 2day: 5th February, 2014

To behold the Lord in the Ordinariness of life

Falling into sin, giving into our imperfections, are a common human experience. The most problematic experience is when we have fallen and we do not want to get out of it. David was a chosen one of God. He was blessed with experiences and graces that no one else had been blessed with... but he falls and he falls repeatedly. When things go wrong and miseries come his way he realises his folly. The Lord's grace is ever present with us - but it is possible that we do not realise it or we refuse to behold it in our obstinacy. The ordinariness of Jesus was an obstacle for the people to accept the great things that he was upto. It is important that we learn to behold the Lord's graceful presence, in the ordinariness of our lives; if not, it will be too late when we realise it, as it happens to David. Let us resolve to be ready and eager to behold the presence of the Lord in the ordinariness of our days. 

Tuesday, February 4, 2014

WORD 2day: 4th February, 2014

Does not matter if you appear strange!

Sometimes we might appear 'strange'. David does, in today's first reading! To those with David, it seemed well deserved that Absalom met with such an end for all that he had done to David; but for David, it was unbearable; he cries inconsolably. He appears strange for the people who wanted to celebrate the victory. Jesus looks strange, when he asks who is that who touched him, when there was a whole multitude that was crushing him! He appears strange when he tells those people at Jairus' house, 'the child is sleeping.' In fact, the disciple expressed their surprise and the people ridiculed him. There is an element here that they did not see, which made it natural for Jesus (and David) but, for the people it was strange. The element is, the capacity to see everything from the eyes of God and feel everything from the perspective of God! When David looked at it from the perspective of God, it was his loving child who was dead! When Jesus felt the touch from the perspective of God, it was a touch of intense prayer and when He saw the child on the death bed, it was God's glory yet to be revealed. When we look at our own successes, failures, difficulties, trials, temptations and struggles from the eyes of God - they will have completely different meanings - 'strange' for others, 'miracles' for ourselves!

Monday, February 3, 2014

WORD 2day: 3rd February, 2014

Curses or Praises - a Christian focus!

Isn't it everyone's experience that we come across some person or persons, who curse us, wish us ill and hold grudges against us? Today David demonstrates to us what should be the ideal response to such an experience. At times we get so worried, pulled down, discouraged, depressed or angered at such moments. Real faith would inspire us to do the contrary - that we remain calm, composed, clear, courageous and focused on God and God alone! Especially when we go out of our way to do something more than the ordinary, or involve in a public concern, there can be more opportunities of criticism and derision; let not our focus be lost! Let nothing move you, says St. Paul (1 Cor 15:58). It is equally true of a vain glory, or a cheap flattery! When the evil spirits start proclaiming Jesus as the Son of God, Jesus is not carried away by the adulation. He casts them away and sends them to where they belong! As that man who was possessed, returns to "his right mind", so are we called to remain ever in our senses. Only a right understanding of our faith, an uninterrupted focus on God and on doing God's will, can keep us in that right mind. When we sense a moment that tends to get the better of us, let this be our prayer: Lord, rise up and save me!

Saturday, February 1, 2014

Comes, Becomes and Challenges to Become!

2nd February, 2014: The Feast of the Presentation of the Lord

We have been prepared during the last week towards the celebration today! The reflections on David's dedication to the Lord, the fall of Saul and the eventual fall of David...all these communicated to us the nature of our vocation as human persons: that we are called to belong to the Lord. They also brought out to us the weakness with which we have to constantly struggle in order to be faithful to this call. The feast today assures that we are not alone in this struggle, the Lord lives with us all along.

THE MEMORY: The memory that we celebrate today is that of the Lord who comes, who comes into His temple! A beautiful moment so picturesquely presented by Luke. The expectations, the entry, the enchantment and the extravaganza that was witnessed in the Temple as Mary and Joseph bring the child into the temple premises. We celebrate this memory, the memory of the Lord coming to us, the Lord of the world entering our world.

THE MEANING: The memory has a specific meaning, the Lord comes to be like us! The Lord chose to share this world with us in His incarnation and became like us, like us in everything, except sin, says the letter to the Hebrews (4:15). The Lord chose to suffer, the Lord chose to be tempted, the Lord chose to undergo the same struggle as each of us do! 

THE MISSION: The meaning of this memory, leads us to a deeper understanding of the Mission of the Lord who comes. The Lord comes to be like us, that we may become like Him. When John proclaims in his Gospel, "to those who believed in him, he gave the power to become children of God" (Jn 1:12), he underlined this specific mission of the Messiah - to make us like him! 

If we have to become like him we have to first "Let Him enter" when He comes. The responsorial psalm invites us to open the portals of our heart and let the King enter. And when the Lord enters, He enters to purify us...like the fuller who washes the linen white, like the silver smith who burns the silver to purity, like the gush of water that enters to wash away all sediments of impurities, the Lord enters. At times it can be painful to be washed, to be refined, and to be flushed of our naive attachments and egoistic pleasures. But without those, there is no purification or refinement. Speaking of faith, in the Apostolic exhortation Evangelii Gaudium, Pope Francis says, "God asks everything of us,yet at the same time he offers everything to us" (n.12). The feast of Presentation reminds us of this dimension of our faith - to offer to the Lord everything of ourselves! 

The Lord becomes like us to challenge us to become like him. Jesus lived like us, but every moment of his life was a declaration to the One who sent him: "Here I come to do your will" (Heb 10:7)... that self submission to God begins in the event that we celebrate today. Let us pray for the Christian Parents that they, like the Holy Family, may offer themselves and their family into the hands of God, who has called them into loving existence. Let us pray for the Religious who have offered themselves to the Lord, that their consecration might ever be uncompromising. Let us pray for each of us, that we may welcome the Lord who comes to us, who becomes like us, that we may learn to become like Him!