THE WORD AND THE FEAST
September 15, 2021: Remembering the Sorrowful Mother of God
We know it is important for the cocoon to break itself open and the creature inside to squeeze itself out - only then will there be a creature so beautiful, colourful and subtle to fly around. We know it is important for the seed to bury itself in the ground, get suffocated under mud and force itself out of the ground to yield its multifold fruit.
At times in spite of all the love that we have for God and despite all the goodness we possess, we find it so difficult to accept pain - pains of different kinds - psychological, physical, spiritual, relational or social. The moment we are able to subject ourselves to pain with serenity, the moment we are ready to go through a bit of the darkness of the unknown, the moment we are prepared to grope a bit in the shady regions of our life... and do all these with complete trust that the Lord is certainly around, I begin to rise!
When I rise, people will certainly begin to look at me, giving glory to the Lord, the Lord of the Cross! This is after all the exaltation of the Cross we are called to celebrate today and not merely some cult towards the crucifix! Let our daily lives become a perennial exaltation of the Holy Cross, from where comes our salvation.
September 13, 2021: 1 Timothy 2: 1-8; Luke 7: 1-10
The Word today touches upon a crucial point for today - who is a true leader and what we need to do towards having true leaders.
Look at the sort of leaders we have today - those who threaten all those around inviting them to prove their might, those who are busy proving themselves the most powerful, those who are busy promoting their own hidden agenda come what may, those who are more worried about their purses and positions than about those whom they intend to lead, the ones who are busy making noise without really substantialising their inner potency, those who have no stand on their own but try to capitalise on others' weaknesses and necessities - are these the kind of leaders we need? Are we the kind of leader that the centurion proved to be?
If we need to have good leaders, we should first, pray for our leaders - that those who are with the responsibility entrusted to them, be guided by the Spirit of truth and not swayed by falsity and popular craze for selfish goals.
Secondly, we need to promote such leaders, instead of losing them in time and space. What a sad fact it is that whenever we need to speak of good leaders, we go to the pages of histroy and quote a few from there. We need to identify good persons, persons with capacity and compassion and promote them to be leaders, and not go by the crowd and later lament!
And finally, we need to become, ourselves the type of leaders that we wish to see. We expect certain qualities in our leaders, for instance, honesty and integrity, morality and humanity. Do we possess them and grow in them? Do we ensure our own children and youngsters in the family grow with these?
Our faith requires from us this commitment that we organise our life, personal, familial and social, worthy of the God who we serve! It is good to take stock of our daily life and practice, isn't it?
ACTIONS: Faith has to be manifested through Actions of love
A Christian cannot be so for namesake. A believer cannot be merely someone who understands and accepts some sets of truth. A godly person cannot be someone who lives in an otherworldly atmosphere and refuses to get down to real life and its responsibilities. True faith has to be shown in concrete action. James today brings out this truth in such a candid manner.
Faith that is devoid of love is not Christian and that love when not shown in action is not real. Love is not treating people according your whims and fancies, it is approaching every person with a respect and reverence that he or she is an image of the living God. True love translates itself into commitment, a commitment for the wellbeing of the other.
CHOICES: Faith has to be witnessed to, through an absolute Choice for life
With the pandemic and its related troubles continuing to surround us, with the forces of violence all around the world making their ugly presence felt every now and then, with the dominant and hegemonic economic demons of the globalised world threatening to suffocate the entire humanity, we have determinant and definitive choices to make, as disciples of Christ. Isaiah prefigures in his own life and self, what it means to be a true disciple of the Son of God. Cross is not all about death, instead it is about glory: this is the difference between the perspective of life and that of death.
The world and its culture today is prone to death - Pope Benedict XVI called it the 'culture of death' and the present Holy Father, Pope Francis continues to reflect on that phrase. Difficulties are highlighted, despair is amplified, destruction is perpetrated and death is felt in the air. It is nauseating for a true believer, because we are persons who have chosen life, life in all its abundance. We can never choose to be gloomy and sad, pessimistic and given up! We choose God, we choose life!
THOUGHTS: Faith should be based on the Thoughts of God
Who do you THINK I am, asks Jesus. It matters a lot - what we think, how we think and why think what we think! Thinking is an expression of our innermost dispositions. How we think about others will define what we really are. That is precisely why Jesus asks us today, that all important question. But when it comes to the realm of faith, human thinking and worldly calculations will never make us persons of faith. It is only in adapting a God-perspective, that is looking at and thinking of all that is and all that happens, from the perspective of God, that we can be filled with faith.
Jesus had this God-perspective very clear. He taught the same perspective to his disciples too. That is the reason we see that he rebukes Peter for being contrary to God's thinking. Sufferings, crosses, and sacrifices are nothing strange, if and when we put on the mind of God and develop the God-perspective from within us. Within the perspective of God everything has its place and meaning.
Let us pledge ourselves to an ACT of faith this day and in the coming week: to act in love, to choose life and to think like God - only then can we be truly disciples, apostles, and brothers and sisters of Christ.
At times persons ask questions like: why is it that people are so bad and they don't allow me to be as good as I wish to be! May be the Word today could answer that question... I am responsible for the fruits that are expected of me... there will surely be scores of others who will disturb, distract, discourage and disorient me but I cannot lose the direction that I am given with. I cannot blame it on others or the situation when I fail to bear the fruits that I should.
However, we have a God who is inexhaustible in patience. It is beautiful to remember here those wise words of the saint of the gutters, whom we celebrated last Sunday. She was convinced and repeated often, God expects from us not success but faithfulness. But it is hard to be faithful, faithful amidst all the difficulties around.
This day cannot be forgotten from recent pages of history, a day that changed the entire world mentality 20 years ago. The twin tower blasts which implanted fear, suspicion, hatred, vengeance and universal mistrust, still affects the way persons and societies look at the other and others! But can we just give into the influence of evil and hatred, in spite of all the hardships we face! Here is where our call to bear fruit amidst odds, stands out.
Let us resolve to be good, to bear only good fruits, to never give up on the call we have received. May the inexhaustible patience of God fill us with necessary endurance to make this journey possible.
Septermber 10, 2021: 1 Timothy 1: 1-2, 12-14; Luke 6: 39-42
September 8, 2021: Celebrating the Birthday of Our Mother
Micah 5: 1-4; Matthew 1: 1-16, 18-23
The Birthday of our Blessed Mother brings home to us a typically Christ-ian message: the message of being chosen from all eternity, as St. Paul affirms in his letter to the Ephesians (1:4). "God has chosen you before the foundation of the world." God chose Mary from eternity and prepared her to be the worthy dwelling place for God's Son. That is why the Angel greeted her with those significant words: 'Hail! Full of Grace!' She, who was so full of Grace and who bore the fullness of Grace within her, becomes for us the bearer of grace. She was destined and chosen and God deigned to share with her God's glory.
Mary's role as the destined and chosen one, reminds each of us of our status as chosen children destined to share in the glory of the Lord. When Mary was born, the climax of God's salvation plan was born.. of course, it was yet to reach its climax. Her greatness lies in the fact that she cooperated with God and it was that trait which led her to the glory that she enjoys today - lifted up by the Lord himself. Everyone of us is called to that same glory and we are faced with the same demand: that we cooperate with the Lord in the eternal plan, where we have a specific and irreplaceable role to play.
The scourge of the world today consists in the fact that it has lost the sense of the eternal. All that matters is the here and the now, the immediate and the instant differences that people look for. This is the tendency that leads to evaluating a person in terms of usefulness, looking at everything from the point of view of gain or loss and judging everything with the criterion of utility. Reading through the genealogy presented to us, we may think it just followed one after the other -but how long a wait it was for humanity, and that is the preparationg towards eternity! In God's plan everything has its place, everyone has one's proper place and role!
Let this feast of our Blessed Mother bring health to our mind and body! It is so much needed today: with the pandemic and the post pandemic effects affecting not merely our physical health but also our mental and spiritual wellbeing, may our blessed mother, celebrated as the Mother of Good Health in India, bring sanity and sanctity to our spirit and soul, that we may be fully alive, sharing and spreading the glory of God - that is what we are chosen for and that is what we are destined for! MAy God be praised in God's angels and saints! Ave Maria!
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You must be rooted, built on him, held firm by faith and be filled with thanksgiving - what powerful words that Paul uses to explain what is it that we are called to, especially in this epoch where everything Godly is being despised, hated and frowned upon! Yes, we are called. Just as Jesus called those 12, he has called each one of us, by name, from a crowd of people, singling us out and setting us apart.
But, what are we called to?
To be rooted in Christ, that we be nourished and kept alive, by no one knows what, the very source of life and meaning - the Divine Word, become flesh.
To be built into Christ, that every thing that we say, do or even think, may make present that almighty transforming power of God, the Spirit that rested on Christ and which has been passed on to us.
To be held firm in Christ, against all concussions that may happen due to the wiles of the world - that is why Paul warns us: make sure that no one traps you, with the empty, rational principles of this world.
To be filled with thanks to Christ, for having won us over for God! In spite of the daily troubles and unending cares of the day, we are called to look at the blessings God has willed for us and the treasures God has stored for us.
We are called... to be rooted and built on Christ, held firm and filled with Christ, that we can make sense of our own lives, make meaning for others and find that ultimate meaning - Christ himself!
September 6, 2021: Colossians 1:24 - 2:3; Luke 6: 6-11