Tuesday 5 March

Tuesday 5 March

Tuesday of the 3rd week of Lent
Gospel – Matthew 18:21-35
“Jesus answered, ‘Not seven, I tell you, but seventy-seven times. …And that is how my heavenly Father will deal with you unless you each forgive your brother from your heart.” This passage is very challenging because this calls for absolute trust in the Lord. This passage questions more about your relationship with God than your relationship with your brother. Because we don’t forgive someone because of the damage done or hurt imposed or even worse things. But we don’t forgive because the presence of God in your life is not stronger than what you feel against your brother. Your hatred is deeper than the presence of God in your life. That is why you cannot forgive. It’s not about forgetting. We cannot forget things, but we can forgive if we grow in the trust in the Lord. When we trust in the Lord, we can forgive from the heart and not only with lips. Whatever is lost or threatened by the behavior of the other person, is assured by the presence of the Lord. Grow in the trust in the Lord and forgive from heart. Let’s reflect: Lent is the time to forgive from heart by growing in the trust in the Lord.

Monday 4 March

Monday 4 March

Monday of the 3rd week of Lent
St Casimir
Gospel – Luke 4:24-30
“I tell you solemnly, no prophet is ever accepted in his own country”. This is a warning which Jesus gives us because of our prejudices and hasty judgement of those around us. We have lots of these in our life. Ordinary people around us, members of our family, often have no special value in our eyes. Whatever they do, we immediately judge it as useless or valueless. This attitude is against the will of God. And Jesus is saying that God has a different way of looking at persons. Those persons who do not a value before other persons, has value before God. God chooses them and they come instruments of God’s grace. Because these people are open to the action of God in their lives. Whereas we who judge others and we who carry with us prejudices are often close to the action of God in our life. Our pride closes ourselves to the grace of God and our humility opens ourselves to the grace of God. Let’s reflect: Lent is the time to reflect whether I am closing myself to the grace of God with my prejudices and hasty judgements about others.

Sunday 3 March

Sunday 3 March

3rd Sunday of Lent
Gospel – John 2:13-25
“Take all this out of here and stop turning my Father’s house into a market.” Temple signifies the presence of God. God who condescends to be with People whom He adopted as His own with all their defects and weaknesses. And His presence is gratuitous. This gratuitous presence is to create culture of reciprocal gratuitous love. Whereas it became a market where everything is calculated, and nothing is gratuitous. Everything is profit oriented. In the house of the Lord, who is gratuitously giving everything, the market culture took over. This is why Jesus was so furious about it. The culture of bazaar which is totally contrary to the presence of God which is a free manifestation of His love. God also is present in our heart. So, we also make it suitable for the presence of God. We must not make our heart a bazar with calculations and looking for profits. We must keep our heart as our Father’s house with gratuitous love towards others. If we had made our heart, a marketplace, let’s welcome Jesus to clean it up. Let’s reflect: Lent is the time to welcome Jesus to transform our heart into Fathers’ house.

Saturday 2 March

Saturday 2 March

Saturday of the 2nd week of Lent
First Saturday: Let us entrust ourselves to the Immaculate Heart of Mary
Gospel – Luke 15:1-3,11-32
“He was angry then and refused to go in, and his father came out to plead with him”. The parable of the prodigal son is the parable of the generous Father. This can be seen in his approach to the younger son but it is also very much evident in his approach to the elder son. The elder son seeing the welcome, which the younger son got, he became angry and refused to go in to join the happiness of the family. He does not understand his father. Then the father is coming out and he is pleading with him. God the Father comes in search of us who are not understanding His will. He came in search of us in the person of Jesus Christ, Second Person of the Holy Trinity. He not only comes out in search of the son, but also pleads with him. God the Father, through His Son pleads to us to enter into the joy of the Kingdom of God. And the words of the Father are so generous, “all I have is yours”. This is the love of God the Father. Let’s reflect: Lent is time to understand in depth the love of God the Father for us.

Friday 1 March

Friday 1 March

Friday of the 2nd week of Lent
First Friday: Let us entrust ourselves to the Sacred Heart of Jesus
Gospel – Matthew 21:33-43,45-46
“It was the stone rejected by the builders that became the keystone”. This is the about Jesus Christ who was abandoned and crucified. Jesus Christ became the keystone of our salvation. He became the keystone of the new world which enjoys the fruits of redemption. But this parable is also applicable to us. Because the story continues. We have given this new vineyard which is the Church. We are supposed to give fruits to the keystone. But when we make of the grace for our own selfish interests without giving the right importance to the cornerstone, we are committing the same mistake of those servants in the parable. We are supposed to produce the fruits and to be handed over to Jesus Christ. All glory and honor belong to Him. Instead, if we are gathering all the glory and honor for ourselves, it is wrong. Let’s reflect: Lent is the time to assure that all glory and honor is given to God and we don’t take it for ourselves.