Thursday, December 26, 2024

Christmas of Hope 2024

Lesson 2: Hope is experience, share it! 

27 December, 2024 – St. John, the Apostle 

1 John 1:1-4; John 20: 2-8

The feast of St. John the Apostle comes today to assure us that the faithfulness to the Lord is to be manifested not necessarily in death, but more so in life, in daily life! While St. Stephen yesterday bore witness through death, John today teaches us how to bear witness in life. The lesson of Hope that the Word gives us today is this: Hope is experience, share it!  

The Word today abounds with terminologies of empirical nature – speaks about what has been heard, seen, watched, touched and to be shared. Hope is not imaginary, it cannot be a theory or a concept. It is empirical; it is experiential. It is all about concrete experiences of hearing, seeing, watching, touched and being touched. That is the reason Paul writes – hope does not disappoint us, it does not delude us! It does not take too much to have hope – it is enough to see, hear, perceive and hold on to what is happening around us. Even amidst the worst of experiences, there is a string of hope or a ray of hope that comes through and we would do well to single that out and hold on to it. That is a product of faith-seeing, faith-hearing and faith-perceiving. 

John today teaches us additionally that as apostles we are called not merely to have that hope, but share it, in order to complete the joy that we can experience! We are called to evince hope in our lives, as persons of God – it is in fact writing a Gospel for the world to hear, see and read! Not from the pigment of our imaginations or the skill of our creativity, but from the concrete reality of our daily experiences, we are called to manifest and share hope that comes from the unceasing presence of the Lord. As we learn to see hope presented to us, we perceive them in concrete experiences of daily life and share it with everyone around – that is being apostles of the Reign.


Wednesday, December 25, 2024

Christmas of Hope 2024

Lesson 1: Hope comes from above, learn to see it!

26 December, 2024: St. Stephen the proto-martyr

Acts 6: 8-10, 7: 54-59; Matthew 10: 17-22

They speak of White Christmas in quite a few countries, referring mostly to a Christmas marked by snowfall. Christmas this year I feel should be called, the Green Christmas, understanding green as the colour of hope! Yes, it is a Christmas of hope, not only for the reason that there is so much of hopelessness experienced and expressed, world around – that has been the case for a few years now. But for another important reason, because it has marked the beginning of the Jubilee Year of Hope!

Beginning today, I wish to involve you in reflecting together on this Christmas of Hope, for this entire week of Christmas. Some lessons for today, that the Christmas of Hope gives us, invites us to offer to the rest of the world around us, beginning today.

The very first lesson is this: Hope comes from above, learn to see it. Today we have Stephen, who is killed! To our eyes, to the eyes of those who did that to him, he was killed. But for him, he was not killed – he was taken to paradise, he graduated, he rose from this world to the next! That was because, as we see in the Acts of the Apostles today: he saw the heaven thrown open, he saw the Son of Man standing at the right hand of God… and he said to the Son of Man: Lord Jesus, receive my Spirit.

Those standing around him could not understand what he was doing, they could not believe the way he was behaving, because they did not see what he saw! People may not understand you, people may not accept you, people may wish to destroy you – but fix your eyes on the One above, on the heaven open, and learn to see what can give you hope… the Lord says, you who stand firm to the end, will be saved

THE FEET, THE LIGHT AND THE WORD

Hope that Shines for Us - Christmas 2024



A Happy and a Holy Christmas! This day naturally fills us with immense joy, for it is a birth that we celebrate, and not just any birth of any person, it is the birth of the Saviour who is born to give new meaning to every one of our birth, and our life. Yesterday, in that moving ceremony, the Holy Father opened for us the Holy Year, the Jubilee Year, the Year of Hope – and what a beautiful moment to initiate a pilgrimage of hope, on the day when the hope of the universe was born in the form of a human being! Hope is without any mediation translated here into life, with the Divine incarnating into human person, amidst us and alike us! It is indeed a moment of thanksgiving and a moment of reembarking on our journey, the journey of finding meaning and experiencing salvation, the journey of hope.

The Liturgy of the Word on the day of Christmas presents us with three images to contemplate – the feet, the light and the Word!

How beautiful on the mountains are the feet of the one who brings good news, who heralds peace, brings happiness, proclaims salvation, promises hope and calls us to eternal joy! The feet here are certainly referring to those tender feet jetting out of that manger, those tender feet that would soon traverse the streets and gullies of Galilee, symbolically thus traversing the length and the breadth of the globe, taking God to humanity and bringing humanity to God. They are referring also to those feet that are today challenged to cover the distance that could divide persons some from the others, the distance that could divide the Divine and the human, the distance that could keep joy and peace away from our daily experiences. It is about reducing the distances that create discord, promote dissonance, preserve animosity, increase misunderstanding, and celebrate unforgiveness. The Christ, who comes today, comes to join the heaven and the earth, just to put us to shame for thinking that the distances we find here amidst us are insuperable. May the world today witness more and more pairs of feet that go all the distance, to bridge gaps, demolish walls and unite hearts. That is the ministry of hope that we are called to offer the world today, as people of God and as people of the Reign.

The second imagery is that of Light, the radiant light of God’s glory, that enables the world to see the salvation of our God. The world seems to prefer darkness sometimes, because it is cozy and convenient. It shirks responsibility of having to change and renew, finding comfort in repeating over and over again the same meaningless exercises in the name of customs, traditions and conventions, without really understanding the call to come into light, and look for the true meaning that can come only from the ultimate source of all wisdom. The Saviour today comes as a light, a light that shines in the dark, a light that darkness could not overpower. The Lord is that ultimate light, that we have with us. How senseless it would be for us to choose darkness over light, ignorance over wisdom, slavery over true freedom and death over eternal life! The Lord has chosen us, that we could be enabled to chose the Lord. The Light has chosen us that we have the light to see the right things at the right time, to make the right decisions in the right direction. I am the Light, the Lord declared, and has invited us to be lights, after His Light!

The third imagery, the overarching image and theme for the rest of this season is, the Word. We come across at least three typologies of this word – the spoken Word, announced and heard; the transformed Word that is seen and beheld; the Living Word that comes to stay with us. The spoken word announced for centuries and heard by us in varied ways even today signifies the religious experience that we are called to take to heart and follow in our ways. But that would not be sufficient, and hence the transformed Word that outlines a new way of life that we are taught by our faith journey, our baptismal promises and the vocation that we have received from the Lord for our daily living. The third is the Living Word who has come down to make His home amidst us, who continuously keeps speaking to us in events and persons, experiences and life-events, calling us to fidelity and prophecy on a daily basis. We are called and challenged to live in the presence of this Word, encounter this Word and live in communion with this Word, so that we can become the children of God, announcers of this Word, persons transformed by this Word and persons who make this Word come alive in many others in turn… that is the ongoing incarnation, the progressive revelation, the coming of the Lord into this world, the establishment of the Reign, the reconciliation of the entire creation in Christ, the living Word.

Celebrating Incarnation today, we celebrate the feet that take this goodnews to the world, the light that challenges that world to see the Lord who is present amidst us and the Word that is the Lord who takes our form and comes to live within us. Our pilgrimage of hope is summarized in this – that we get in touch with this Word and take this Word to the entire world. May our celebration of Christmas enable us to become the signs, witnesses and representations of the Word made flesh.



Monday, December 23, 2024

Christmas Novena 2024 - Day 9

24th December: O Morning Star...

The 7 O-Antiphons are over with yesterday...
but the Novena ends today...with the rising of the Morning Star!

O Morning Star, Radiance of eternal light
Sun of Justice, come and enlighten those who live in darkness
and in the Shadow of death.

Morning Star, actually is the star that is seen in the east shining bright just before the dawn! It is considered the imminent sign of the morning that is already rising.

The Lord is not just near... but the Lord is here!!!
We celebrate the Rising Star, the Morning Star that announces the break of day!
The Lord comes to rule in our hearts, not just in the world...
Let us prepare ourselves... for the Lord is here. 



Living in Faith - See the Lord at work and Sing of God's love!

Advent 2024: A Pilgrimage of Hope towards Peace with Joy, in Faith – the Fulfillment of the Journey!

Fourth Tuesday in Advent - December 24, 2024

2 Samuel 7: 1-5, 8-12, 14, 16; Luke 1: 67-79

Living in Faith – is certainly acting on behalf of the Lord, but before all that, it is acknowledging the work of the Lord. The essential difference today among the two kinds of homo faber in the world is precisely this – the one which think he or she is the sole cause all that one makes, and the other kind which knows well that all that one is able to do, comes from the Ultimate Doer, the cause of everything – the Almighty Creator. The sad fact is that the former kind keeps outnumbering the latter.

David, in spite of all the weaknesses and shortfalls and the eventual mercies received from the Lord, still forgets this fact and thinks he has to do something for God! How erroneous of us too – many a time, we think we have to defend God, protect God, debate for God, win arguments for God and prove God to the world! Who are we? The Lord’s glories speak for themselves. The mighty works of God sing out the glories of the Lord.

Living our faith, on our part, would only mean that we acknowledge these works of the Lord, in our daily life, and sing of the love of God, forever. The Lord has made us His promises and those promises would always stand! And in fact, we stand on those promises. We would do good, not to pretend that we are accomplishing great things for God, but indeed the Lord is accomplishing mighty things for us and through us. That is what Zechariah sings of today – the Lord remembers his holy covenant and shows mercy through the ages!

The Morning Star, the Rising Sun of justice, makes us see this fact! Let us resolve to see the Lord at work and sing of God’s love forever! For his is the power, the glory and honour forever! Amen.

Christmas Novena 2024 - Day 8

23rd December: O Emmanuel

O Emmanuel, our king and our lawgiver,
the hope of the nations and their Saviour:
Come and save us, O Lord our God.

Based on the famous prophecy of Isaiah 7:14, the title Emmanuel is the key to the mystery of incarnation. The presence of God with the people was the greatest of the promises that they could experience. Be it with Abraham or with Moses or with Joshua or with the people who were walking in the desert, one of the prominent promises that God gave was to be with them! Christ comes as the fulfilment and the most complete expression as that promise: as God among us.

The symbol is the virgin with the child in the manger. It is not just any child, but the promised salvation of the God of the universe, the king who has come to meet his subjects to make them co-heirs to his throne. The manger is a lovely symbol that unites the heaven and the earth, the Divine and the human!

The presence of the Lord is salvific; one who has experienced it cannot remain silent - he or she has to go out and share it, make every one else experience that presence! This is the crux of evangelisation: it is not proselytisation, not sheep stealing and increasing the numbers within a fold. It is sharing that salvific presence that one has experienced, from the Lord. The first call is to experience the God-with-us, the presence of the Lord with us, and the call that follows is to share that presence with those around - that is salvation.

The prayer is to the Lord our God to save us by God's saving PRESENCE... in simple words it is a beseeching to stay with us, to live with us, to sanctify us, to make us worthy of God and of God's great big family.



Living in Faith – Looking ahead with heads held high!

Advent 2024: A Pilgrimage of Hope towards Peace with Joy, in Faith – the Fulfillment of the Journey!

Fourth Monday in Advent - December 23, 2024

Malachi 3: 1-4, 23-24; Luke 1: 57-66

Living in Faith – amidst all the cry for war and bloodshed, amid all the threat of the post human world on the horizon, amid the hue and cry of the so-called progressivists to relativise everything in the name of personal rights and human autonomy, living in faith would mean living a life that is frightening. That is what is presented in the Word today.

The theme of the end of days, or the Lord’s day, sometimes can be a fiction-friendly leitmotif with all its elements of suspense and secrets. But it cannot be so for a person of faith. That is what St. Paul advised his people when he wrote, “but you, brothers and sisters, you are not in darkness so that this day should surprise you like a thief.” (1 Thess  5:4) This is so because the Lord has sent us enough messengers and messages, to understand, analyse and come to make our informed choices about everything. We cannot blame anyone for our choices, nor can we feign ignorance about the purpose of our beings, if we are truly persons, children, or people of faith.

When the people saw what was happening with regard to John, the new child born in the neighbourhood, they experienced fear… for us, that should not be, because we are girded with faith. Where there is faith, there is not place for fear, for fear is a by-product of darkness. We are people of the Light, and darkness cannot overcome us, because Emmanuel, God with us, is here, very close to us. And that shall enable us, empower us to walk with our heads held high! Looking up to the Lord with faith, we can face any situation with courage and confidence, with hope, peace and joy – that is what it means to live in faith.  


Sunday, December 22, 2024

Christmas Novena 2024 - Day 7

22nd December: O King of Nations

O King of the nations, and their desire,
the cornerstone making both one:
Come and save the human race,
which you fashioned from clay.

Based on Isaiah 9:6, 2:4 and 28:16, the King of the nations is a yearning of the people of Israel. They wanted Yahweh to be their king always, even when they had a human king ruling them. That is why they did not give in to the Emperor worship that was so widespread in the dominant cultures of their times. God is the king, forever and over all!

The Symbol is the crown, and some times even the sceptre, that signifies the central place that God has in our personal and universal history; and the authority that rests solely with God. Remember the feast we celebrate just before beginning the advent, that is on the last Sunday of the Ordinary time - that is the adaptation of the same theology of Israel, into the Christian way of life.

Today power is misused for manipulation and arriving at hidden agenda; power which is given to certain persons for the sake of furthering the care of humanity is used to destroy the very humanity. Who is to be blamed? Those who manipulate it? Yes, of course. But what about those who let them do it? those who keep silent when it is done? If it is true that we have accepted God as our King, Christ as our King, it means we have accepted Truth, Justice, Love and Peace. Anything that, or anyone who goes against these, just cannot be sided with - it would be a wrong allegiance, a slavery!

The prayer is to SAVE the human kind, from slaveries of sin and death to the freedom of the children of God, for that is what we are, children created in the image and likeness of God. It is to grow in this identity and dignity that the coming of the Lord invites us.


A PILGRIMAGE OF HOPE TOWARDS PEACE, WITH JOY, IN FAITH

The Fulfilment of the Journey 

Fourth Sunday in Advent: December 22, 2024

Micah 5: 1-4; Hebrew 10:5-10; Luke 1:39-44


We began a journey three weeks ago, a journey preparing ourselves towards that Pilgrimage of Hope we wish to make in the coming Jubilee Year! And here we are at the close of the journey, reflecting on the fulfilment of this life journey, the journey of hope, towards peace, with joy, in faith! This Sunday, the Sunday of faith, speaks to us of faith as that experience of fulfilment that we are called to, as people of God. Apart from the theme of faith that is proposed for our reflection, there is the figure of Mary presented to us as the icon to be contemplated upon this Sunday, so close to the celebration of the profound mystery of Incarnation. We see this reflection shared in three modes, answering three pertinent queries regarding faith.

The first of the points of clarity we have: what is the meaning of Faith – it is the confidence we have in the Lord, arising out of the fulfilment of the promises that the Lord has given us. Mary is presented as the model of that person of faith, as we see Elisabeth declaring, “blessed is she who believed that the promise made her by the Lord would be fulfilled. Yes, the model presented to us by Mary in this regard is a reminder of hope, that we always remain disposed to behold the fulfilment of the promises of the Lord, despite the darkness or the confusion that may surround at a given moment. Just as Mary trusted in the Lord, in spite of her inability to grasp entirety of the plan of God that was unfolding around her, we are challenged to grow in confidence of hope that the promise of the Reign will certainly be fulfilled in God’s own time.

That is the meaning of faith, that this Sunday teaches us, as it prepares our minds to look forward to the imminence of the great mystery of salvation that we are about to celebrate in a couple of days. Our lives are an unfolding of these fulfilments, if only we are attentive to many an experience that our lives consist of. It is a special quality to recognize that and proclaim – the Mighty one has done great things for me.

The second point of reflection is the obedience of faith – the source of our peace, the true, internal peace that the Lord alone can give. Here I come to do your will – that phrase that we hear today is so explicative of Christ as that Son of God who submitted himself in obedience of faith, as St. Paul would explain to us (Rom 1:5 & 16:26). Mary is presented as one who manifested the same obedience to the Will of God – thus becoming the eminent of the first fruits of Christ’s salvation to human kind. Apart from salvation that sounds so transcendent, we could understand the obedience of faith as the source of peace even in our days.

If only each of us and all of creation vows this obedience of faith to the eternal will of the Creator, everything would be in peace! It applies to our individual hearts too – when we submit ourselves in this obedience of Faith to the One who calls us, we shall experience a peace that shall fill our lives and that no one can take away from us.

A third challenge that is posed to us is a commitment of faith – faith that requires us to become bearers of joy to the world, to others, to everyone whom we meet. Why should I be honoured with a visit from the mother of my Lord, exclaims Elisabeth in the Gospel, for the moment your greeting reached my ears, the child in my womb leapt for joy. Some Gospel exegetes want us to note here the resemblance to an Old Testament incident – when King David leapt and danced for joy (2 Sam 6) – because he saw the Ark of the Covenant enter Jerusalem. John the Baptist in the womb of his mother leaps for joy, just as Elisabeth herself, when Mary entered the house! Mary is paralleled here to the Ark of the covenant, that is the bearer of the presence of God. That is the commitment of faith that we are given with today: to become the bearers of this joy of the presence of the Lord to whomever we encounter. That is evangelization today, to be bearers of the joy of the presence of the Lord to the world.

The feast of the incarnation is at hand! The journey of advent we began is fast ending… and we are called today to gear up, to hold our heads high and receive the call of the Lord to be persons of faith, beholding the fulfilment of the promises of the Lord in hope, to find the source of peace in our obedience of faith and commit ourselves in faith to be bearers of the joy of the presences of the Lord to the world. May the forthcoming feast strengthen our dedication and enable us to grow in our vocation to be pilgrims of hope

Friday, December 20, 2024

The Joy of Obedience: the Lifestyle of the Reign

December 20, 2024 - Third Friday in Advent