THE WORD AND THE SAINT
Ephesians 4: 1-7,11-13; Matthew 9: 9-13

September 20, 2024 - 1 Corinthians 15: 12-20; Luke 8:1-3
First and foremost of all the effects that Christ has on his followers is the Resurrection effect: that is a life filled with hope! The year of jubilee that we are preparing ourselves towards, gives us an opportunity too to realise the importance of this element of hope. If Christ were not raised from the dead, our faith would be in vain - declares St. Paul today. We are filled with a hope so great that nothing, not even death, can take away the meaning of our life.
Secondly, we find today Jesus amidst the first community that he himself had initiated - the Twelve, and some women! That is another Resurrection effect - the fruit of rising above all the pettiness of the world, discarding the divisions, despising the differences of gender or geography, and becoming one community, one people! 'We are all baptised into the one Spirit - Jews or Greeks, free or slaves, we are all filled with the same Spirit', St. Paul would instruct ( cf. 1 Cor 12:13).
As we know, humility is a sign that one knows oneself, understands oneself, places oneself in the right perspective and accepts what the Lord has called one towards. It is not abasing or belittling oneself; that would be a misunderstanding and a belittlement of the Creator. Therefore, humility is simple, looking at oneself from the perspective of God!
Flowing directly from humility, is gratitude! The more one is forgiven, the more one loves; because love flows from the goodness that God makes us feel welling up from within us. That is the source of gratitude, feeling the goodness flow from within, well up within, and flowing out of oneself.
Humility and Gratitude are qualities that are indispensable markers, for a life that wants to define itself with the adjective, "spiritual". A humble person is a grateful person; and a grateful heart is a holy heart. The woman who was forgiven, was offered a totally new life and that made her so exuberantly grateful that she did not hesitate to expess it through all means she thought best.
A spiritual person is humble and grateful; and a grateful and humble person is definitely a holy person.
September 18, 2024 - 1 Corinthians 12:31 - 13:13; Luke 7: 31-35
These days the Word has been speaking to us about living our faith in action, beginning with the Sunday that has just gone by. And today, we have the discourse about the most concrete and fundamental expression of faith - an essential and exclusive element - Charity. It is essential because without it we cannot make sense of faith; it is exclusive because where there is no charity, there is in fact no faith, what we find is at the most, a fake faith or a misunderstood faith.
At times Charity could be miunderstood and misinterpreted as approving of everything that the other does, invariable of what it is or what is the value at stake, merely because I have to prove that I love that person. The understanding of the world today is this... while Jesus reminds us, it is childish; it is infantile; Charity would hurt at times, it would cause mutual suffering at times... but always towards the good of the other!
"Good of the other" - that is the key to understand the right sense of love or Charity! That does away with selfishness, pride and jealousy. That is the key that places the other at the centre and that is the key that can make our regard for God, as the ultimate Other, true and sincere. That is why, it is love that makes our faith authentic and valid. These three, faith, hope and love abide; the greatest of these is love!
September 17, 2024 - 1 Corinthians 12: 12-14, 27-31a; Luke 7: 7-11
The first reading speaks to us of One body that we need to make up, one body with many parts, each part bringing its significance to the whole. The Gospel speaks to us of the life giving Lord, who is ready to give life to the one body, if only we live up to our call of building up that one body! The Lord has the ultimate power, the only One who can give life! If only we live together in union of heart and mind, as one body of Christ, the Lord will give us life and we shall spread life allover the world. That is an inspiration from the Word today.
Each of us is given special gifts from the Holy Spirit, special gifts according to the specific calling that we have received. If we become aware of the call that we have received, we would also become aware of the gift that is given to us, to live up to that calling. To be prophets, or to be apostles, or to be teachers, or to be leaders, or to be interpreters... these are all different calls which are lived out by means of various tasks that we are called to carry out. But the fundamental purpose of all these, the call underlying all these calls is just one: to be holy and blameless, before God in love (Eph 1:4).
The Word presents to us today, two inseparable and consequential dimensions of the Eucharistic celebration: Encounter and Communion. These two dimensions are inseparable, complementary, consequential and dependent on one another; and that, at two levels! One at the immediate level, and the other at transcendental level!
The Body of Christ is the key to understand these levels and and these dimensions. Christ comes alive and encounters us at the immediate level during the celebration and we are called to grow in that communion at the tranformational or transcendental level, that is in continuity of our daily life. The second is the Body of Christ which is he people of God - who encounter each other at the immediate level within the eucharistic celebration and are challenged to grow and transform themselves into that communion at the transcendental, or transformational level of their faith life.
When these two dimensions are not experienced in and through a Eucharist, that celebration remains merely a ritual and the Lord shall certainly not approve of it. We do ourselves more harm through it, warns St. Paul. While these two dimensions blend in and bear fruit at the immediate and the transcendental levels, creating a community of love and peace, the Lord shall expressedly congratulate us, as he does to the centurion!
The saintly martyrs we celebrate today, one a Pope and the other a Bishop, were great models in this teaching and practice. They recognised the real challenge of making the Eucharistic gathering truly a moment of communion of hearts rather than merely a ritual of ceremonies. For us today, that needs a bit of homework prior to the celebration itself: communion has to be built on a daily basis and celebrated at the Eucharist. If it has not been built already, what do we celebrate at all?
Monica, this saintly Mother has always been a point of great admiration in Christian hagiography. What a great example we have in her, as a mother and as a child of God!
There are three lessons that this saintly mother can teach us:
Pope Francis encourages people to pray for the 'grace of tears' when pleading to God to help others, when recognising their own sinfulness, when contemplating the greatness of Christ's love and when experiencing God's mercy. Monica had the grace of tears and she prayed with tears every time she prayed for her husband and her son.
3. The witness of tears:
Tears become a witness, witness to the love of God. The genuine tears of a loved one speaks volumes about the immeasurable love that God has for a person. Tears are not signs of weakness, they are signs of inner strength to remain with a person who is suffering or struggling!
Let us pray for the gift of tears, as Pope Francis recommends!We are called to be disciples of Christ too... can we merit such an appreciation from Jesus as he had for his apostles?
The colour red that we use to indicate the specific role the apostles play within our faith, is also a reminder to die with Christ so that we may rise with Him. This reminder of death, is in fact reminder of a life, a lifestyle that does not count anything - neither struggles and persecutions, neither death nor defeat - when it comes to our fidelity to God.
Fidelity to God is a matter of integrity and authenticity; it cannot be a mere appearance! That is precisely why "not being capable of deceit" is an essential trait of an authentic apostle. If we have to grow to be true apostles, we have to be incapable of deceit. Let Bartholomew inspire us to live a life that makes us worthy be called persons without guile, people incapable of deceit
August 23, 2024 - Ezekiel 37: 1-14; Matthew 22: 34-40
Bones strewn all around but having nothing to do with each other. Bones so dry and lifeless that they lack any sign of hope. Persons everywhere bumping into each other and crisscrossing without limits, but no one wishing to enter meaningfully into the life of the other. Isn't it right to call this a dry bone syndrome?