Weekday Homilies
Sunday, July 6, 2025
14th Week, Ordinary Time, Monday, 07-07-2025
13th Week, Ordinary Time, Friday, 04-07-2025
Saturday, July 5, 2025
14th Ordinary Sunday, Year C, 06.07.2025
Isaiah 66:10-14 / Galatians 6:14-18 / Luke 10:1-12, 17-20
We have heard of the Seven Wonders of the world, or to be exact, the Seven Wonders of the ancient world.
Of these seven wonders of the ancient world, only one remained, and that is the Great Pyramids in Egypt.
The other six wonders exist only as drawings of artists’ imagination.
Following after the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World, now there are more wonders.
So, there are wonders of the modern world, wonders of the technological world, the wonders of the scientific world, the wonders of the industrial world.
While each may be a wonder of its own, the common factor about all of them is that they are man-made.
Mankind, as well as individuals of the human race, have this tendency to make a name for themselves, as well as to leave a legacy behind.
Even though they came into this world with nothing, and will leave this world with nothing, yet somehow, they want to leave something behind.
Some want to conquer and build empires so that their names will be remembered.
Some want to be ultra rich and have buildings and businesses named after them.
Some want to be popular and famous, so that their names will be echoed into the future.
In the end, it is about wanting to make a name for themselves, so as to be remembered.
But like the wonders of the ancient world, or even like the wonders of this present world, it will be a name without a memory, and a name without a legacy.
In the gospel, Jesus sent 72 disciples out for mission as labourers in the Lord's harvest.
The 72 disciples were not named, but we know what they were told to do.
They were to bring peace to whatever house they go into.
They were to cure the sick and to proclaim the Good News of the Kingdom of God.
The disciples came back rejoicing and reported to Jesus that even the devils submit to them when they call upon His name.
Jesus affirmed them, and then He said: Do not rejoice that the spirits submit to you. Rejoice rather than your names are written in heaven.
The disciples did wonderful work, but they could also be tempted to be a wonder in themselves, and make a name for themselves.
What is important is not to make a name for ourselves on earth.
Jesus will write our names in heaven when we do what He tells us.
Like the 72 disciples, we are to bring the peace of Jesus to wherever we go.
For those in pain and suffering, we bring comfort and healing with the power of the Good News of God's Kingdom.
And we have to believe that this peace and power are already given to us by Jesus.
We just have to be what He wants us to be, and we don't have to try too hard to be wonderful.
There is a story of the wind having a discussion with the sun about who is stronger.
The wind saw a man with a coat, and the wind said to the sun: I will blow the coat off the man.
So, the wind blew with all its might, but the more it blew, the tighter the man clung on to his coat.
So, the wind gave up and said to the sun: Now you try to take off his coat.
Without a word, the sun just shined brightly, and the man felt warm, and so he naturally took off his coat.
Very often, we just have to believe who we are because of Jesus who is with us, and we will naturally bring peace to others.
We are like a lighted candle. We don't have to tell others we are shining.
It is enough to be the light of Christ shining in the darkness, and bringing peace and hope for others.
A priest asked a parishioner, what does she expect of the Church.
Her reply is this: I want a simple and a quiet Church, a Church where I can pray and be at peace, a Church where I am strengthened by the gentle power of Jesus Christ.
Let us be that Church, a Church of peace and prayer, a Church that is like a lighted candle shining quietly in the darkness.
A Church that is wonderful because we proclaim the name of Jesus.
Sunday, June 29, 2025
Annual Priests Retreat 2025
My Dear Brothers and Sisters,
The priests of the Archdiocese of Singapore will be having their annual retreat from 30th June, Monday to 4th July, Friday.
I will also be at this retreat and I am really looking forward to it for a time of silence and prayer.
As such, the next homily post will be for 14th Ordinary Sunday, 6th July 2025.
Requesting prayers for myself and my brother priests that we will be renewed and re-focused so that we will continue to faithfully serve the Lord and His holy people.
Thank you. May God bless you!
Msgr. Stephen Yim
Sts. Peter and Paul, Year C, 29-06-25
Acts 12:1-11 / 2 Timothy 4:6-8, 17-18 / Matthew 16:13-19
The following are some of the famous people in history: Thomas Edison, Ludwig van Beethoven, Albert Einstein, Mark Twain, and Archbishop Fulton Sheen.
There is something common in all these people.
Surprisingly, it is not that they were top students or that they were outstanding when they were young.
On the contrary, they were written off and cast aside, to be thrown into the rubbish heap of life.
For example, his teacher wrote a note and told Thomas Edison to give it to his mother. The note read: Your son is too stupid to be taught.
His mother decided that she herself would be his teacher. Thomas Edison would grow up to become one of the greatest inventors, and one of his inventions was the electric bulb.
Similarly, Albert Einstein dropped out of elementary school at age 15, but he went on to become a great scientist.
Ludwig van Beethoven was told by his teacher to forget about music and that he will never be able to compose anything.
Mark Twain also dropped out of school at an early age, but he went on to become one of America's greatest writers.
Archbishop Fulton Sheen, the famous TV evangelist in the 1950s, was told by his teacher then he would never become any kind of great speaker.
These are just some of the famous people in history who don't seem to have any talents or gifts when they were young.
But later on in life, they made an impact, that the world would acknowledge their greatness.
They may be called late bloomers, but bloom they did, and they bloomed to make the world better and beautiful.
Today the Church celebrates the feast of Saints Peter and Paul, the two great pillars of the Church.
We may think that these two saints are like two peas in a pod, and if we were to give names to a pair of twin boys, the obvious choice would be to name them Peter and Paul.
Peter and Paul may seem to give us an impression of unity, but in fact, they were more of an incompatibility.
They were more like oil and water, and their differences go deeper than of oil and water.
That fact is that initially, they would have wished the other to be dead.
St. Paul, when he was Saul, was part of the mob that stoned Stephen, the first martyr, to death.
And following that, king Herod started persecuting certain members of the Church, as we heard in the 1st reading.
He beheaded James, the brother of John, and when he saw that this pleased the crowds, he targeted Peter and had him put into prison.
The Church then prayed fervently for Peter, and he was miraculously rescued from the prison by an angel.
By then Paul had become the No. 1 enemy of the Church as he relentlessly persecuted Christians and he even went as far as Damascus to capture Christians.
But it was there on that road to Damascus that something dramatic happened to him and then things changed drastically.
So initially, Paul was the hunter and Peter was the hunted; Paul was the persecutor and Peter the persecuted.
They were on opposite and opposing sides. Paul had the political force to carry out his persecution, but Peter had the spiritual power for his protection.
But even after Paul’s conversion on the road to Damascus, he and Peter did not immediately become friends, and they also did not see eye to eye on Church matters.
They were as different as oil and water and they even had their differences recorded in the Acts of the Apostles.
And in Galatians 2:11-14, Paul even called Peter a hypocrite in his dealings with the Gentiles.
It was rather strange that Jesus would choose these two men who were far from perfect or even suitable to be the two pillars of His Church.
Yet, that also showed that the Church is both divine and human – that there is a spiritual power guiding and working through her human instruments.
Although in life, St. Peter and St. Paul had their differences and shortcomings, it was in death that they were united in a common goal and mission.
Both died in Rome as martyrs. St. Peter was crucified upside down and St. Paul was beheaded, and that showed that their lives were not for their own glory but for the glory of God.
This feast of Saints Peter and Paul teaches us that despite the differences and failings of personalities and characters, the Church can still be united in a common goal and mission.
Even now in the Church, there are some who are conservatives and some who are liberals; some are traditional and some want to be modern; some want discipline and others want freedom.
Yes, the Church is like a mixture of oil and water, and yet we, like St. Peter and St. Paul, are called to rise above our differences just like oil floats above the water, and be united in a common goal and mission.
As we heard in the gospel, Jesus promised that the gates of the underworld can never hold out against the Church.
But we also must be reminded that our differences must not give the opportunity to the underworld to tear us apart from within.
Rather, like St. Peter and St. Paul, let us be united in love for Jesus and for one another.
St. Peter and St. Paul showed that in their lives they loved Jesus, and hence in love they also accepted the other, even if they did not agree totally with the other.
Just as they were united in life by the love of Jesus, so were they united in death, and now they are united in glory.
It was the love of Jesus that made Saints Peter and Paul rise from their weaknesses and bloom with love.
Likewise, let us be united in love for Jesus, so that whether in life or in death, the gates of the underworld will never tear us apart.
And may we bloom with the love of Jesus, so that the world will be better and beautiful.