Saturday, October 5, 2024

27th Ordinary Sunday, Year B, 06.10.2024

Genesis 2:18-24 / Hebrews 2:9-11 / Mark 10:2-16

One of the basic and fundamental needs in life is the need for survival. 

From the moment we came into the world, we instinctively made it known that we want to live and survive. 

So, even though when we were helpless little babies, we would cry out for attention in our need for food. 

And as we started to crawl around, we would put into our mouths anything we can lay our hands on, and our parents would go into alarm or panic mode. 

When our need for food is met, and we have a stable supply of food, we will turn our attention to something else. 

Not being satisfied with just having food to survive, we now want to have our place in this world. 

So, we begin the quest for recognition and status, for academic qualifications, for job promotions and for material possessions. 

Instinctively, we will look for what benefits us and we will avoid what are burdens to us. 

So, it is like when we have to go out on a rainy day, we will look for an umbrella, for the benefit of keeping dry. 

But, when the rain has stopped, or when we have no more need for the umbrella, then it becomes a burden, because we have to carry it around. 

So, in life, our human survival instinct tells us to get what benefits us, and to avoid and reject what are burdens to us. 

In the gospel, Jesus gave a teaching about marriage, and He stated that from the beginning, marriage was instituted by God. 

That beginning is what we heard in the 1st reading, when God said: It is not good that the man should be alone. I will make him a helpmate. 

The Lord God made the man fall into a deep sleep, and then took to a rib from the man and created the woman. 

So, something was taken from the man and given to the woman. 

So, it can be said that a man and a woman commit themselves to marriage because they want to give themselves to the other. 

Marriage is not for self-benefit, neither is it to think of the other as a burden. 

When marriage is understood as a self-sacrifice for the other, then there will be love in the marriage. 

Needless to say, that in marriage, one spouse cannot think of the other as an umbrella for rainy days, and a burden when the rain has stopped. 

Rather, one becomes the umbrella and a shelter for the other in rainy days. 

This self-sacrifice of love is what parents will teach and show to their children. 

I once watched a movie clip about a father who went to fetch his twin children from kindergarten on a rainy day.

When the father reached the kindergarten and saw his two children happily waiting for him, he realized that he had only one umbrella, and it was not a big umbrella. 

For a moment, the father looked at his children and looked at the umbrella. 

The next scene showed him holding the umbrella over his two children, and he was wet in the rain. 

What he did for his children, he would also do for his wife, and his wife would also do likewise. 

And that is how we see the meaning of our life. 

More than just food and other things for survival, we live because of love. 

To survive is just to exist. But to live is to love. 

God created us in love, with love and for love. 

Let us go forth and share God's love with our world.

Friday, October 4, 2024

26th Week, Ordinary Time, Saturday, 06-10-2024

Job 42:1-3, 5-6, 12-17 / Luke 10:17-24  

We like things to have a happy ending. If it is a story book or a movie, a happy ending will earn our approval.

Even in life, whatever we undertake, be it projects or assignments or whatever tasks, we would like it to have a happy ending, so that we would earn the approval of others.

In the 1st reading, we have finally come to the last chapter of the book of Job. The book of Job has often been the assigned reading for those who have questions about innocent suffering.

Well, the book of Job closes with a happy ending with the fortunes of Job restored and he lived to a ripe old age and full of days.

Yet Job did not find the answers as to why he had been afflicted with sufferings and tragedies. His consolation, besides his restoration, was his realization of who God is as he says "but now I have seen You with my own eyes"

He realized that everything happens under the watchful eyes of God, and God's plan for us is always for our good and not otherwise.

In the gospel the 72 disciples came back to Jesus rejoicing that even devils submit to them when they use the authoritative name of Jesus.

But the time will come when the whole strength of the enemy will come at them, and they will be persecuted and they will even have to face death.

It may not be that kind of happy ending that people wish for, yet for whatever ending it will be, the disciples will accept it willingly.

Because the true happy ending will be that their names are written in heaven. 

May we willingly accept our difficulties and sufferings in life and realize who God is, so that our names will also be written in heaven.



Thursday, October 3, 2024

26th Week, Ordinary Time, Friday, 04-10-2024

Job 38:1, 12-21; 40:3-5 / Luke 10:13-16  

Man is the most intelligent of all creatures.

With his intelligence, he can make discoveries and use tools to make inventions.

But despite his intelligence and knowledge, there are questions that are beyond the grasp of man.

It can be as simple a question like: Which came first, the chicken or the egg?

That is a simple question, and yet we cannot be certain of which came first.

In the 1st reading, Job had earlier questioned God about the meaning of his misfortunes and sufferings.

Then God replied to Job, not with answers, but with questions.

More than just the chicken and egg question, God asked Job about the workings of nature and all that he sees around him.

To God’s questions, Job can only reply with this: My words have been frivolous; what can I reply? I had better lay my finger on my lips.

We too have our questions about life, especially when we face unfairness, misfortunes and suffering.

But like Job, let us lay our finger on our lips.

When we silence the noise of our hearts, then we will be able to listen to the voice of God and we will also be able to see what God wants to reveal to us.

Wednesday, October 2, 2024

26th Week, Ordinary Time, Thursday, 03-10-2024

Job 19:21-27 / Luke 10:1-12   

We all have friends – some are good friends, while others are either casual or social friends.

But as the saying goes: A friend in need is a friend indeed.

In a time of tribulation, there will be a revelation.

It will reveal who are really our friends, and who are the fair-weather friends.

In the 1st reading, the so-called friends of Job didn’t seem to have any sympathy or empathy for Job in his time of misfortune and suffering.

Yet, in the depths of his misery, Job still hung on to his faith that God will come to his help as he says:
“These eyes will gaze on Him and find Him not aloof”.

In the gospel, Jesus prepared His disciples for danger as He reminds them that He is sending them out like lambs among wolves.

But He also tells them that there will be those who will welcome them.

Just as a labourer deserves his wages, His disciples will also have consolation in the face of desolation.

That is also the promise of Jesus to us. 

We will know who our true friends are in our time of need.

Tuesday, October 1, 2024

The Holy Guardian Angels, Wednesday, 02-10-2024

Exodus 23:20-23 / Matthew 18:1-5, 10  

In the Creed, we profess the existence of not only the seen but also the unseen, or what we call the spiritual world.

Yet somehow, whenever we talk about the spiritual world,  what may come to mind may be ghosts and haunted places.

Today as the Church celebrates the feast of the Holy Guardian Angels, we also acknowledge the existence of the spiritual world.

But it is a spiritual world of angels whom God has sent to protect and guard and guide us.

What God has assured His people Israel in the 1st reading, i.e. the protection of an angel, He also assures the Church and each of us.

This is also what Jesus is affirming in the gospel.

So let us pray daily to our guardian angels whom God has sent from above.

This is the traditional prayer to the guardian angel:
Angel of God my guardian dear
To whom His love, commits me here,
Ever this day be at my side,
To light and guard, to rule and guide.
Amen.