Saturday, October 31, 2020

Feast of All Saints, 01.11.2020

Apocalypse 7:2-4, 9-14 / 1 John 3:1-3 / 1 Thess 1:5-10 / Matthew 5:1-12

There are more than 10,000 saints that the Church has canonized. By that, it means that the Church has officially declared that these saints are in heaven. 

But of course, beyond that, the 1st reading tells us how many saints there are in heaven – a huge number, impossible to count, of people from every nation, race, tribe and language. 

If it is impossible to count, then it is also quite impossible to imagine how packed Heaven is with saints. 

But despite this countless number of saints, we do know some of them, or at least we must know one of them. 

There are the more well-known saints like St. Peter, St. Paul, St. Jude who is the patron saint of desperate and hopeless cases, St Francis of Assisi, St. Anthony whom we invoke for lost articles, and other saints that we may have a Devotion to. 

But at least we must know one particular saint, and that is our patron saint. 

Some of us may be thinking, “Our who?”. Yes, our patron saint, the saint we took as our patron and it is in our baptism name. 

So, from our baptism name, we would know who is our patron saint. And we can get to know our patron saint by checking out whatever information about the patron saint. 

But if for some reason our baptism name is not taken from a saint, then maybe God wants us to be a saint! 

But seriously, getting to know our patron saints is really helpful for the spiritual life. 

We can turn to our patron saints for intercession in our needs. We look to our patron saints as a model of faith and as a model for life and for inspiration. 

So, if your name is Damien, then your patron saint is Saint Damien of Molokai, or also known as St. Damien the leper. 

St. Damien offered to go to Molokai to serve the lepers there, and unfortunately, he contracted the disease and died from it. 

But from his own writings, he revealed the ordinary human struggles he had to endure in order to overcome his initial revulsion for the day-to-day life with his flock of lepers. 

He constantly thought of how Jesus reached out to the lepers and he wanted to do the same. 

Indeed, St. Damien is a model of self-sacrifice, of perseverance and of love for God and for the lepers. 

If your name is Therese, or Teresa, then your patron saint is St. Therese the Little Flower, who taught us how to do little things with great love for God. 

She inspired St. Mother Teresa who took on the motto of “doing little things with great love” in serving the poorest of the poor. 

So, the saints, especially our patron saint can be our model of faith and model of life. 

A lady by the name of Rita was asked if her husband has any faults. She replied, “Oh, as many as the stars at night.” 

When asked if her husband had any virtues, she said, “Oh, not much, maybe only one, like the sun in the sky.” 

When asked how she was able to cope with her husband’s faults, she replied, “When the sun shines, its brilliance covers all the stars.” 

But she also added that she had wondered what her name Rita meant, and she found out about St. Rita, and how she converted her wayward husband with her love, patience and forgiveness. And she wanted to do likewise. 

So, it was St. Rita who inspired her to be a more loving and understanding wife. 

So, on this Feast of All Saints, let us find out more about our patron saints.

Our patron saints want to help us in our need, but more importantly, our patron saints want to help us to journey towards heaven by living a life of love and gentleness, mercy and forgiveness, peace and righteousness. 

Like the saints who have gone before us, we too will face difficulties and opposition and even persecution. 

But let us persevere in faith and love. We may experience sorrow for doing what is right and loving. 

But as Jesus promised us, we will rejoice with the saints. 

That is our eternal reward in heaven. 

May the saints, and especially our patron saints pray for us.

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First Friday Devotion to the Sacred Heart of Jesus
with Exposition of the Blessed Sacrament
6 Nov Friday 8.30pm Singapore time (GMT +8)
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Thursday, October 29, 2020

30th Week, Ordinary Time, Friday, 30-10-2020

Philippians 1:1-11 / Luke 14:1-6    

Prayer has two aspects - the personal dimension and the communal dimension.

When we pray, we will certainly pray for our own needs and intentions. This expresses our personal relationship with God and our dependence on Him in our lives.

But when we pray, we are also in union with the Body of Christ, the Church, as we pray for the needs of the Church and also for the world.

In prayer, we not only look on our own needs but we look outwards to others who are in need.

In the 1st reading, St. Paul tells the Philippians that he thanks God whenever he thinks of them, and every time he prays for them,  he prays with joy, remembering how they have helped to spread the Good News.

And he tells them that his prayer for them is that their love for each other may increase more and more and never stop improving their knowledge and deepening their perception so that they can always recognise what is best.

That is what we should also be praying for, not only for ourselves but for others as well.

We, as individuals and as members of the Body of Christ, need to improve our knowledge and deepen our perception so that we can always recognise what is best.

It is through our union with God that we will be able to do what is good and loving and be messengers of the Good News of salvation.


30th Week, Ordinary Time, Saturday, 31-10-2020

Philippians 1:18-26 / Luke 14:1, 7-11

By and large, we have the etiquette and the decorum to be shown our seats in a function or at a dinner reception.

We certainly don't want to be embarrassed to take a seat we assumed to be ours only to be told otherwise.

Nonetheless the parable of Jesus tells us that we have this innate desire to be honoured and maybe even exalted.

Because it cannot be denied that we liked to be looked up too. For some, it may even be an obsession.

But for all the adulation and limelight that we might get, what and how will it matter in eternity?

In the 1st reading, we hear of St. Paul's dilemma.

He wants to be with Christ but yet he know he had to stay on for a while in order to help the early Christians progress in their faith.

Yet St. Paul also knew that all praise and honour is to be given to God alone.

So let us be aware of our tendency to be in the limelight and receive the applause.

Yet all this does not matter in eternity. What matters then is that we continue to praise and glorify the Lord.
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First Friday Devotion to the Sacred Heart of Jesus
with Exposition of the Blessed Sacrament
6 Nov Friday 8.30pm Singapore time (GMT +8)
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Wednesday, October 28, 2020

30th Week, Ordinary Time, Thursday, 29-10-2020

Ephesians 6:10-20 / Luke 13:31-35

Human strength can be quite impressive and even admirable.

But no matter how strong a person is, whether physically or mentally, human strength is limited and human beings are not invincible.

More so when human strength is pitched against a spiritual force, then human strength is certainly no match at all because the spiritual force is higher and greater.

In the 1st reading, St. Paul urged the Ephesians and urges us to grow strong in the Lord, with the strength of His power.

St. Paul tells us to put on God's armour so as to be able to resist the devil's tactics.

St. Paul also highlights this: For it is not against human enemies that we have to struggle with, but against the Sovereignties and the Powers who originate the darkness of this world, the spiritual army of evil .

Jesus had to face these forces of darkness when Herod, being used by these dark forces, tried to find ways to kill Jesus.

But Jesus came to destroy the powers of darkness and to bring light and salvation and to give us strength to fight against evil. 

St. Paul urges us to pray all the time, asking for what we need, praying in the Spirit on every possible occasion. 

Prayer is our armour and our strength from God. With prayer we will be able to do what God wants of us and also we will overcome the forces of darkness and evil.

Tuesday, October 27, 2020

Sts. Simon and Jude, Apostles, Wednesday, 28-10-2020

Ephesians 2:19-22 / Luke 6:12-19   

The feast of St. Simon the Zealot and St. Jude (Thaddeus) are linked together probably because both of them preached the Good News in Persia and were martyred there.

And their remains were both in Saint Peter’s Basilica under the main altar of Saint Joseph.

Even their names are next to each other in the list of the apostles in the gospel passage.

They may not have known it then, that they would eventually be going to far-away lands to preach the Good News and to lay down their lives in witnessing to Jesus their Lord.

For whatever reason that St. Simon was called the Zealot, it can be presumed that he was zealous enough for the mission to be given that name.

But for St. Jude, his original was Judas son of James, and he was often mistaken for Judas Iscariot the traitor.

But St. Jude has his place in the devotional life of the church as he is the patron of desperate and even "hopeless" cases.

As we join the Church to honour these two saints, let us also ask for their intercession that in our difficulties and desperation, we will receive help from on high through their prayers.

God is love, and God loves us and wants to save us.

This is the Good News that St. Simon the Zealot and St. Jude Thaddeus preached and laid down their lives for.

May we experience God's saving love for us in our despair and distress through their prayers.

Monday, October 26, 2020

30th Week, Ordinary Time, Tuesday, 27-10-2020

Ephesians 5:21-33 / Luke 13:18-21   

We would certainly like to have it our way in life.

And we would be proud to say "I did it my way".

Giving way to others is considered as a sign of weakness and when we give way it is quite likely that we would also be taken advantage of.

But the 1st reading urges us to give way to one another, but it is for a higher purpose.

We give way to one another in obedience to Christ.

So whether it is in marriage, in the family, at the workplace or in relationships, we give way to others out of love for Christ, and also out of love for them.

That seed of love that is planted in our hearts can only germinate and grow when we give way to others in obedience to Christ.

Then we will bear the fruits of the kingdom of God, fruits of peace, joy and love for God and for others.


Sunday, October 25, 2020

30th Week, Ordinary Time, Monday, 26-10-2020

Ephesians 4:32 - 5:8 / Luke 13:10-17      

Physical pain, sickness and illness are part and parcel of life.

Still they are not to be taken lightly as they wear us down and we don't have that quality of life that we desire.

Hence, good health is what we pray for so that we can live life fully and happily.

In the gospel, we heard of a woman who for eighteen years had been possessed by a spirit that left her enfeebled, and she was bent double and quite unable to stand upright.

She was in the synagogue, and obviously her foremost prayer would be one for relief of her affliction.

When Jesus cured her of her infirmity, she immediately straightened up and with great rejoicing, she glorified God.

If such is the joy of a physical healing, then there is an even greater joy in spiritual healing.

Sin in any form is a spiritual affliction that makes us impure and erodes the peace and joy in our hearts.

In the 1st reading, St. Paul gives some examples of the sins that destroys us within.

Sin darkens our hearts, but God's forgiveness shines the light and cleanses us and brings us peace and joy.

Let us always stay united with God and be children of the light.