Skip to main content

Posts

SOLEMNITY OF THE MOST HOLY TRINITY

1st Reading          Deut. 4:32-34, 39-40 Psalm                    33:4-6, 9, 18-20, 22 2nd Reading        Romans 8:14-17 Gospel                  Matthew 28: 16-20           DIFFERENCES ARE NEVER THREATS Dear friends, we ended the season of Easter with Pentecost Sunday. We continue with the second part of Ordinary Time. Interestingly, the first Sunday in this second part is the Solemnity of the Holy Trinity. This Solemnity stands at the core of Christianity as it tells us the nature of God and what we can learn from the Trinity to aid us to flourish in living our call to holiness in Ordinary Time, having been redeemed from sin and death at Easter. As well, today is also the last Sunday of May, and we thank God for his providence, and we entrust ourselves to the maternal embrace and patronage of Mary, whose intercession ...

6TH SUNDAY OF EASTER (YEAR B)

1st Reading            Acts 10: 25-26. 34-35. 44-48 Psalm                       98: 1 .2 -3ab. 3cd-4 (R. cf. 2) 2nd Reading         1 John 4: 7-10 Gospel                    John 15: 9-17 LOVE MUST PROMOTE LIFE. Brothers and Sisters, we launch into the 6th Week of Easter, with its Sunday being the first Sunday of May. Familiar to many Catholics and non-Catholics alike, May is a month dedicated to the praying of the Holy Rosary. The first thing we have to start thinking about is how to make the best out of the month with the praying of the Rosary so that we grow in our spiritual life. In May, let us strive to seek Mary's maternal aid as we so desire to become more and more conformed to Christ's image. In talking about growing in the spiritual life, which also affects every aspect of our lives, the Gospel passage for this Sunday (Jn. 15:...

5TH SUNDAY OF EASTER (YEAR B)

  1st Reading           Acts 9: 26-31 Psalm                      22. 26b-27. 28 and 30. 31-32 (R. 26a) 2nd Reading        1 John 3: 18-24 Gospel                    John 15: 1-8 GROWTH MUST BE GUIDED Dear friends, today is the 5th Sunday of Easter (Year B). Today is also the last Sunday of April, and we should give thanks to God for his providence. The Gospel passage for this Sunday is replete with images that draw our attention to growth in the spiritual life, a kind of growth that affects other aspects of life, recognizing that we have been redeemed from sin and death. We should not forget that we are still in the season of Easter.  Let us zoom in on the Gospel and say a few words about it. The Gospel is from John 15: 1-8. Reading this passage, we come across words like vine, vine master (or vine dresser), fruit, branch, prune, ...

4TH SUNDAY OF EASTER (YEAR B) — GOOD SHEPHERD SUNDAY

1st Reading     Acts 4: 8-12 Psalm               118: 1 & 8 -9. 21 -23. 26 & 28-29 (R. 22) 2nd Reading    1 John 3: 1-2 Gospel              John 10: 11-18 BEYOND HIRED LABOUR, BEING PROTECTIVE SHEPHERDS Dear friends, today, the 4th Sunday of Easter, has been designed to be called Good Shepherd Sunday or Vocations Sunday . The Gospel passage for this Sunday, from which we shall look at a few details, throws more light on the theme of the Good Shepherd.  Before that, let us look at how Good Shepherd Sunday relates to Vocations Sunday. We have to recall that in Israel, there are three groups of shepherds (in terms of leadership); Priests, Prophets, and Kings . What is clear is that for these three groups, it is God who appoints. If God is appointing, then he is the one calling people to work. Technically and in reality, it is God who is the priest, the king, and the prophet. Ho...

3RD SUNDAY OF EASTER (YEAR B)

1st Reading           Acts 3: 13-15, 17-19 Psalm                     5: 2, 4, 7, 9 2nd Reading         1 John 2:1-5 Gospel                    Luke 24: 35-48 LET DOUBT BE PURPOSEFUL AND BE OPENED TO CLARIFICATION AND FAITH  Dear friends, we welcome ourselves to the 3rd Sunday of Easter. We are still in the Easter season, and we continue to reflect on the events revolving around Christ's resurrection. The Word of God for this Sunday brings this to our focus. The first reading narrates Peter's declarations and affirmations about the Resurrection, and the Gospel brings one of Jesus' post-resurrection appearances to the fore.  Let us look briefly at the Gospel passage. The Gospel is taken from Luke 24: 35-48. Let us put this Gospel within a larger context. The whole of Luke 24 talks about Jesus' Resurrection. From vv. 1-12, we hear that so...

EASTER SUNDAY OF THE RESURRECTION OF THE LORD

  1st Reading      Acts 10: 34a. 37-43 Psalm               118:1-2. 15c-17. 22-23 (R. 24) 2nd Reading   Colossians. 3: 1-4/ 1 Corinthians. 5:6b-8 Gospel             John 20:1-9 THE DAY THE LORD HAS MADE Dear friends, we have finally arrived at Easter. Lent prepared us, Holy Week brought us closer, and the Triduum led us into Easter.  We celebrate our redemption from sin and death. In this way, hope and everlasting joy have been restored. Our sins affected God, and one who is equal to God or above God could plead on our behalf. Because no one is equal to or above Him, God himself took human flesh to effect that redemption. He took human nature so that he might be one of us to plead and redeem us. Therefore, we have every cause to be happy and grateful for such a great and unfathomable love. Easter is the Sunday of all Sundays. It is the mother of all Sundays because, without the ...

PALM SUNDAY OF THE PASSION OF THE LORD (YEAR B)

A. Gospel before Procession     Mark 11: 1-10 B. Readings after Procession  1st Reading         Isaiah 50:4-7 Psalm                    22. 8-9. 17-18a. 19-20. 23-24 (R. 2a) 2nd Reading       Philippians 2: 6-11 Gospel                  Mark 14: 1-15:47 FROM BETHPHAGE, BETHANY, MOUNT OF OLIVES TO DISCIPLESHIP Dear friends, today is Palm Sunday of the Passion of the Lord. With this celebration, we launch into the crucial moments of the Holy Week. Many activities pertaining to Jesus in the Scriptural passages are going to have Jerusalem in view. In fact, the Word of God for this Sunday (Gospel before procession) tells us this when it starts by saying,  "when they drew near to Jerusalem" (Mk. 11: 1-10).  I would like us to focus on a few details from Mark 11: 1-10. Of course, this passage is Mark's account of Jesus' triumphal ent...