Apr 30, 2025 | DAILY BREAD
Saint Pius V, Pope
Wednesday of the 2nd week of Eastertide
First reading Acts 5:17-26
“We found the gaol securely locked and the warders on duty at the gates, but when we unlocked the door, we found no one inside”. The mysterious release of the apostles from the securely locked prison in Acts 5 is not merely an extraordinary event; it is a powerful symbol of the inner liberation that the Resurrection of Christ offers to every believer. Easter is not only about the stone rolled away from the tomb, but also about the chains that fall away from the heart, the fear, guilt, and despair that once confined us. The guards, doors, and walls remain, but the prisoners are gone, for the Risen Lord cannot be contained by human limits or closed systems. This is the transformative freedom that Christ bestows: not merely an escape from external oppression, but a deep, personal release into the light of truth, courage, and joyful witness. In the quiet prisons of our minds and hearts, He enters unseen and leads us out to proclaim the Gospel without fear. Let’s reflect: Easter is the liberating power of the Risen Christ who breaks through every confinement, external or internal, and sets us free to live in truth, courage, and joyful witness.
Don Giorgio
Apr 30, 2025 | NEWS
On April 16, 2025, we had the great joy of welcoming the first three young women from Indonesia into our community as postulants.
In preparation, the Superior General, who was visiting Flores at the time, held a three-day retreat for them.
During Holy Mass on the afternoon of April 16, Filomena, Ursula, and Veronika were accepted as postulants. Holy Mass was celebrated by Fr. Jan (a local Steyler missionary, SVD), who accompanies our candidates and postulants as spiritual director and confessor. Concelebrants were Fr. Tadeusz and Fr. Bosco (both SVD). After the homily, the candidates knelt before the altar and asked Our Lady, our patroness, for help, protection, and guidance to her Son, our Lord, to whom they now wish to belong completely in our congregation.
As a sign of acceptance, the Superior General presented each of them with a small Miraculous Medal.
After Holy Mass, everyone congratulated the new postulants, and the day ended with a joyful dinner together.
Let us accompany our postulants and the new beginning of our congregation in Indonesia with our prayers, so that the work of our founder may grow there and become a blessing for the people.
Apr 29, 2025 | DAILY BREAD
Saint Catherine of Siena, Virgin, Doctor
Tuesday of the 2nd week of Eastertide
First reading Acts 4:32-37
The life in the Risen Christ, as witnessed in the early Christian community described in the Acts of the Apostles, reveals a new way of being in the world — one marked by a deep unity of heart and soul, and a radical sharing of life and possessions. This unity was not enforced by external obligation but flowed naturally from the inner liberation that Christ had won for them through His Resurrection. In Christ, they were freed from the chains of selfishness, fear, and possessiveness; they no longer clung to material things as sources of security or identity. Everything they owned was held in common, not because they were compelled, but because love had transformed their understanding of what it meant to belong to one another. Easter is not merely a celebration of Christ’s triumph over death; it is an invitation to enter into a new existence where personal barriers are broken down, where generosity flows from the abundance of grace, and where the needs of the other become our own. To live the Easter life is to be liberated from the prison of self-centeredness and to be drawn into a community where Christ is truly alive, where we see Him not only in the breaking of the bread but also in the breaking open of our own hearts for the good of our brothers and sisters. In this way, Easter continues to unfold in the life of the Church and in the life of each believer who allows the Risen Lord to make all things new. Let’s reflect: Easter is the joyful entrance into a new life of freedom in the Risen Christ, where hearts are united, possessions are shared, and love overcomes all selfishness.
Don Giorgio
Apr 28, 2025 | DAILY BREAD
Monday of the 2nd week of Eastertide
First reading Acts 4:23-31
The experience of the early Church in today’s reading from Acts reminds us that the life of faith is not a flight from difficulties but a courageous engagement with them, sustained by prayer and the power of the Holy Spirit. Peter and John, after facing threats and opposition, return not with anger or discouragement, but with a heart turned toward God, bringing their wounds into the light of the community and inviting all to pray. And their prayer is not for safety or comfort, but for the grace to persevere and to proclaim the Word with greater boldness. This radical trust in the power of God over human threats reveals the true fruit of the Resurrection: the Spirit alive and active in believers, making them fearless witnesses to Christ. In our own lives, when challenges arise, whether external resistance, interior doubts, or a culture growing indifferent or hostile to the Gospel, we are called to the same response: to gather, to pray, and to ask not for the removal of hardships, but for the strength to remain faithful. The Easter season is not a time of passive joy, but of active mission, where the Spirit shakes our lives anew and fills us with divine courage. May we, like the first disciples, become places where God’s boldness is made visible. Let’s reflect: Risen Christ is proclaimed not only with words but with a life transformed by fearless love and unwavering hope.
Don Giorgio
Apr 27, 2025 | DAILY BREAD
Divine Mercy Sunday
First reading Acts 5:12-16
On Divine Mercy Sunday, the first reading from the Acts of the Apostles (5:12-16) shows us that divine mercy is not only a truth we believe in, but a dynamic reality that transforms the world. It is through divine mercy that signs and wonders were performed by the apostles, and the people, moved by hope, brought the sick and those tormented by unclean spirits, confident that even the shadow of Peter could bring healing. Mercy, therefore, is not passive; it is powerful, active, and overflowing. It reaches into human suffering and brings restoration, it meets despair with hope, it touches death with the promise of life. It is the visible sign that God has not abandoned humanity but continues to walk among us, heal us, and lift us up. On this Sunday, we are reminded that we, too, are called to be bearers of this mercy: to extend forgiveness where there is hurt, to offer compassion where there is loneliness, and to be a living sign that Christ’s mercy is inexhaustible and ever at work. Through prayer, trust, and acts of love, the Church today continues the mission of the apostles, drawing countless souls to the heart of the One who is Mercy itself. Divine mercy is the very life of the Risen Christ poured into the world through His Church.
Don Giorgio