Friday, January 23, 2015

WORD 2day: 23rd January, 2015

The Call to be people of the New Covenant
Heb 8:6-13; Mk 3: 13-19

New covenant,  new people,  new faith,  new community,  new life: for behold I make all things new. ..this is the theme that dominated the life of the early Christians. And that was what made them so attractive. All these newness is from one fundamental experience. ..The experience of a new relationship in Christ.

If a relationship with someone is taken to some newer joyful levels,  that joy betrays oral in the test of your life's conditions. If a relationship that is on,  finds a rough patch sometime,  it is bound to affect a person's entire life,  thinking,  acting and all.

How much do I value my relationship with the Lord who calls me?

DB NOVENA - Day 2


Thursday, January 22, 2015

DB NOVENA - DAY 1


THE WORD AND THE SAINT

22nd January, 2015: Bl. Laura Vicuña

Heb 7: 25 - 8: 6; Mk 3: 7-12


The letter to the Hebrews gives a distinguished importance to the quality of obedience of Jesus! In fact it speaks of obedience as special ministry of the Son of God. St. Paul's letters too have the same dimension (eg: Phil 2). At times holiness does not consist in doing great things to a great effect, but in simple and humble submission to the Lord. 

Bl. Laura Vicuña whom the Salesian family remembers today, is an exemplification of this submission. She gave herself up to the Lord, to do the Lord's will and attained an extraordinary level in sanctity already at that tender age!  In Don Bosco's spirituality,  this kind of sanctity is an ordinary sight. 

And today,  we begin the Novena to Don Bosco's  feast!

Wednesday, January 21, 2015

THE WORD AND THE SAINT

21st January, 2015: St. Agnes, Virgin and Martyr

Heb 7: 1-3,15-17; Mk 3: 1-6

The readings today speak of two religious disciplines that mattered much to the Old Testament people of God: the practice of tithing and the observance of the Sabbath. Both of them taken in their legalistic sense, would be practices very simple but of less significance. A tenth of your possession given grudgingly, or as in the example of Ananias and Saphira (Acts 5) trying to make it as affecting as possible, will bear no spiritual fruit. Keeping Sabbath as a day of dead and insensitive inactivity instead of holy and active worship to God, will be of no spiritual value. They key to right understanding here is, not giving of what we have, but giving of what we are: a true self giving.

St. Agnes the saint of the day, gave herself up - gave herself totally- to God and to her faith! This total self giving, her body, her soul and her heart, is what is presented to us as a challenge today. In a world that is torn between compromises and mixed allegiances, Agnes' example shines forth as a splendid beacon, beckoning us towards concrete and daily sanctity.

Tuesday, January 20, 2015

WORD 2day: 20th January, 2015

Faithfulness versus faithfulness
Heb 6: 10-20; Mk 2: 23-28

The crux of the the first reading today,  or for that matter even of the whole Gospels,  is the fact that God is faithful forever. God's faithfulness never ceases and the question is,  how do we find our faithfulness vis-a-vis that of God!

In demonstration of God's faithfulness,  God gives! God gives without count,  without any limit,  without restraint, without conditions,  without anything expected in return. What do we do to demonstrate our faithfulness to God?  A weekly appointment and a few fragmented moments every day and some special day's activities? All of them so legalistically followed sometimes with such insensitivity towards expressing our true love and gratitude...today let's give this dimension a serious thought: God's Faithfulness versus our faithfulness!

Monday, January 19, 2015

WORD 2day : 19th January, 2015

The New People
Heb 5:1-10; Mk 2: 18-22

When the Lord announces in the book of revelation,  'Behold I make all things new'...its not merely about some things to be made again or re-created;  it's primarily about a new mentality,  a new perspective that God wants to instil and inspire in us. The source and the spring of this new perspective is Christ himself. He is at the same time the priest and the sacrifice; the prophet and the Lord of the prophets!

Infact with a new way of relating with us,  with the unique way of sharing our very nature with us,  Christ makes us a new people! And that is what the Lord wants to see in us:our new selves -free from the shackles of the past and the prejudices of the ages-to relate with each other anew and to live each other without any conditions or preconceived notions.

Sunday, January 18, 2015

Come, See and Be!

2nd Sunday in Ordinary Time: 18th January, 2015

1 Sam 3: 3b-10,19 ; 1 Cor 6: 13c-15a, 17-20 ; Jn 1: 35-42

The readings today remind us of our calling in our day to day living as disciples of Christ. 

The first reading  from the life of Samuel highlights the inspiration we have received. Inspiration is from within. It requires that we are attentive in order that we do not miss it. A friend of mine recently resigned his job and opted another underpaid job. I asked him why. And he said that he felt that the former job was keeping him away from the Church, eating away his Sundays and a great portion of even the other days. I asked him how  he did come to decide on such a thing. And he said, 'I just felt it'. It is significant to note that he very recently became a Catholic, inspite of a strong resistance from the rest of his family.

The Gospel extends the invitation to come and see. The fact that we are inspired is undeniable, for every one of us is guided and led by the Spirit who resides within us (as the Second reading reminds us). But the crucial element is for us to 'see'... to take note of... to understand what we are inspired about. The invitation is to behold the message from the Lord, to make our contact with the Lord an experience and not just an appointment. 

The call to be a Christian is not a call of an individual, it is a call to be a communion of persons, to be an institution. It is a call to form One Body with the Lord - united with the brothers and sisters in love, instituted into a sign of hope to every one around who is looking out for something to hold on to in life. The world today may appear so critical about Christians, but it is only an expression of the expectations they have of us: that as one family of hope filled people, one institution of Christ filled persons, we radiate the joy that the humanity stands in need of.

Saturday, January 17, 2015

WORD 2day: 17th January, 2015

Bounteous and Merciful God
Heb 4: 12-16; Mk 2: 13-17

God's love is bountiful and God's mercies never cease! God loves us not because we deserve that love but because we need that love. God's mercy is given us not because we are worthy of it but because it is God's nature to be merciful. Be merciful as your heavenly father is merciful.

The Word is the epitome of God's merciful love,  a love without conditions, a love beyond criteria,  a love that fills a person and challenges him or her to total conversion! With absolutely no demands this love leads  one to a transformation that is unbelievable. All that we need to do is dispose  ourselves favorably towards this love and surrender ourselves to it.

Friday, January 16, 2015

THE WORD AND THE SAINT

St. Joseph Vaz: First Saint of Srilanka and Yet another for India!

16th January, 2015

Just two days ago we celebrated the feast of a Blessed of Indian Origin, Bl. Martyr Devasagayam. That very day, the Lord deigned to raise to the altars another saint of Indian origin, but an apostle to Srilanka - St. Joseph Vaz,fondly known also as: Juze Vaz. Born in Benaolim, Goa, the Oratorian Priest decided to go as a missionary to a Dutch-Calvinists-controlled Srilanka,in 1687 and he stayed on there, until he succumbed to sickness and breathed his last on 16th January, 1711. He was canonised 2 days ago (14th January, 2015) in Srilanka by the Holy Father Pope Francis.

Joseph Vaz teaches us the following three qualities: unity within the Church, ardent sense of evangelisation and a great commitment to social justice. All these three have a great significance, especially today!