Thursday 13 October

Thursday 13 October

Thursday of week 28 in Ordinary Time
Gospel – Luke 11:47-54
Jesus is referring to all the prophets who were silenced in the history of Israel. That reference also touches each of us who read the Word of God and not act accordingly. The inspirations and the call for conversion which the Word of God puts before us are to be taken seriously. Our indifference to the Word of God is our way of silencing the Word of God. We appreciate the message of Gospel, we love to read it, we love to listen to it, but we are not ready to act accordingly. This is where the prophetic voice is silenced. This is when we are not using the key of knowledge to enter the Kingdom of God and even we prevent others from entering it by our life. Let’s think, am I acting accordingly to the Word of God or am I indifferent to the Word of God?

Wednesday 12 October

Wednesday 12 October

Wednesday of week 28 in Ordinary Time
Gospel – Luke 11:42-46
Jesus is rewriting the rules of the society, recreating the hierarchy of values. It is not any more your external observation of the norms that makes you part of the Kingdom of God which Jesus brought. It’s the justice which the love of God dictates. The justice which the love of God prompts is the justice of love. It is not about paying the tax of the small things, but it is about loving the poor and the marginalized. It is not occupying the seats of honor and being greeted with reverence. It is about taking care of each person without distinctions or discriminations. It is about being love inspired by the love of God. It is not about making the life of people hard by our structures and system but it’s about making the life of people simple and easy with our love. The question which the Gospel puts before us: am I being a love in whatever situation I find myself?

Tuesday 11 October

Tuesday 11 October

Saint John XXIII, Pope
Tuesday of week 28 in Ordinary Time
Gospel – Luke 11:37-41
“Instead, give alms from what you have and then indeed everything will be clean for you.” How is giving alms cleanse us? It cleanses us because giving alms is sharing with freedom of heart against the selfish desire to hold everything for us alone. It’s not compelling and it’s from your free will. And most important, we don’t get anything in return from the poor person to whom we give. It’s sharing of what you have inside you. It’s sharing without desiring anything in return. It is sharing for making the poor person closer to me. When we give from our heart, our inside becomes clean because of the goodness we are spreading inside ourselves with the decision to share. Every time we decide to share with someone poor what we have, we are generating a good will inside our heart which will clean our heart from our selfishness and from our ego. The more you can share, the more you can clean your inside. Am I sharing enough to clean my heart?

Monday 10 October

Monday 10 October

Monday of week 28 in Ordinary Time
Gospel – Luke 11:29-32
The crowd is getting bigger because they want to see something amazing. Something that satisfies their curiosity. And they are not seeing anything except a man who is one among them. A man from Nazareth. Our faith is not about anything spectacular but about a person. Our faith is not about anything miraculous but about a person, the son of God who incarnated and became one among us in everything except sin. Our faith is not about anything extraordinary, but about the person of Jesus Christ who is above everyone. But often our faith is so shallow that we search something spectacular, something miraculous and something extraordinary. In this search for this, we forget the most important thing, our relationship with Jesus Christ. The Queen of the South searched for Solomon. Jonah preached and the people of Nineveh changed their lives. Their relationships changed and they changed. Their relationship with God changed. In our search for the extraordinary, let’s not forget our relationship with Jesus Christ.

Sunday 9 October

Sunday 9 October

28th Sunday in Ordinary Time
Gospel – Luke 17:11-19
“…threw himself at the feet of Jesus and thanked him…. Stand up and go on your way. Your faith has saved you”. Gratitude is an expression of your faith. The way the Samaritan leper expresses his gratitude is very touching. “Finding himself cured, one of them turned back praising God at the top of his voice and threw himself at the feet of Jesus and thanked him”. Turning back, praising God at the top of his voice, and throwing himself at the feet of Jesus. Three actions: turning back, with gratitude you turn back to Jesus, you change, you convert; praising God at the top of his voice, with gratitude you give your best, all what you can, all what you have; throwing himself at the feet, with gratitude you surrender your complete self at His feet. Then, it’s important to notice what Jesus rewards him. “Stand up and go on your way”. Jesus is giving him back his freedom as son of God. Stand up like a son and go on your way with your freedom. Gratitude gives you back your dignity as sons and daughter of God. Meanwhile, the other cured lepers are going on their way to show to the priests, the Samaritan leper goes on his way with his freedom as a son of God. The former tied around the law and the later freed by grace. So, the question here is: Are you grateful enough to be gain your freedom as son or daughter of God?