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1st Reading 1 Corinthians 2:10-16
R. Psalm Psa. 145,8-9.10-11.12-13.13-14
Gospel Luke 4:31-37
Dear friends, today we are presented with one of Jesus' liberation acts presented as a healing. As outlined in his programmatic discourse which he expounded in a synagogue in Nazareth (yesterday's Gospel) to be on a mission of bringing good news to the poor, liberty to the captives, we see Jesus liberating a possessed man.
This kind of story relayed by Luke already should stress the fact that Luke concerns himself more with works of a physician since he himself is a physician. We speak best in our fields.
Today's Gospel, I believe, engulfs our various situations in life, situations wherein we are chained by forces seeming to be beyond us. An encounter with Jesus sets the pace for a liberation from such challenging situations. With Christ, powerlessness, a sort of poverty, responds to silence.
Silence becomes God's first language, even for us, when we are ready to meet him in silence. It is an arena wherein we learn to decipher God's voice. May Christ help us out of every situation, that particular one by which seem to be chained, locked in.
Well, silence should be a perfect area for such an encounter. May the help us.
Amen
Pax et Bonum

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