✝️💫 REFLECTION CAPSULES – May 20, 2025: Tuesday

“Inviting Christ to calm the storm within and to experience His Divine Peace!”

(Based on Acts 14:19-28 and Jn 14:27-31a – Tuesday of the Fifth Week of Easter)

It was a cloudy afternoon, and the flight had just begun to descend.

But suddenly there were a few bumps and a strong turbulence.

People started glancing nervously out the windows. The usual cabin chatter faded, replaced by disturbed tension.

One lady clutched her rosary.
Another gripped the armrest.
A man muttered, “I don’t like this.”

But in the middle of it all, a little girl sat peacefully in her seat, colouring her book.

She was calm. Focused.
Not the slightest trace of worry on her face.

A woman sitting beside her leaned over and said gently, “Sweetheart, are you okay? Aren’t you scared?”

The child looked up, smiled, and said simply:
“No. My daddy’s the pilot…
… and he told me before we took off that he’d get me home safely.”

Boom!

That’s trust.
That’s peace.
Not because the skies were smooth…
… but because the heart knew Who’s in control.

That’s the peace the Lord – the Pilot of our life – offers!

Not necessarily a change in the weather, but a change in the heart.

The Gospel of the Day presents Jesus warning us of the dangers of increased anxiety levels and troubled moments…
… and instead invites to lead a life of peace.

Jesus says in Jn 14: 27, “Do not let your hearts be troubled or afraid”

The context of this statement of Jesus is the discourse at the Last Supper.

Jesus informs of his imminent going away from the disciples, which made them sad and anxious.

They had placed their hopes in Him.
They had offered their lives to Him.

But His announcement of departure caused worry and anxiety to the disciples.

But Jesus, who knows their hearts and gauges their emotions assures them, “Peace I leave with you; My peace I give to you. Not as the world gives, do I give it to you” (Jn 14:27)

The disciples entered into an anxiety-mode as their hearts got wearied with what was to come immediately.

But Jesus invites them to go beyond such peripheral worries, and be assured of a peace that comes as a result of trusting in Him, the Lord of all future!

When one is imprisoned in the immediate worries of life, one fails to enjoy the true freedom of peace and joy
When one is landlocked amidst the borders of impending fears and troubles of life, one is unable to move out to experience real inner tranquillity and serenity

Are we finding ourselves often in situations, when our “hearts are troubled?”

Then Jesus, the Master Doctor of hearts, needs to be immediately consulted…

He gives us the tablet of His peace which would subside our fears
He gives us the tonic of His soothing Word which would calm our troubles

Troubles will, without any doubt, always haunt us…
… but we need to grow in our understanding that in all this, Jesus, is in perfect control of our lives.

Indeed, we can’t stop the storm from raging around us…
… but we can invite Christ to calm the storm within!

Let Jesus, the Doctor of hearts and the Pilot of our lives, take complete charge of our lives

In Him, we shall experience fervent joy.

In Him, we shall live with true peace.

God Bless! Live Jesus!

— Fr Jijo Jose Manjackal MSFS
Rome, Italy
Email: reflectioncapsules@gmail.com


📖 Discovering the beauty of the Catholic Church through the Catechism
MAN’S VOCATION LIFE IN THE SPIRIT – GOD’S SALVATION: LAW AND GRACE – The Fourth Commandment – The Family and the society

Filial respect promotes harmony in all of family life

… it also concerns relationships between brothers and sisters. (CCC # 2219)

✝️💫 REFLECTION CAPSULES – May 19, 2025: Monday

“Living in a way that will make the Lord ‘feel at home!'”

(Based on Acts 14:5-18 and Jn 14:21-26 – Monday of the Fifth Week of Easter)

One evening, a little boy was helping his mother prepare the guest room.

They were expecting a relative to visit, and the boy was full of excitement.

As they fluffed the pillows and folded the blankets, he paused, then looked up and asked innocently:
“Mamma… if Jesus came to our house, where would He sleep?”

The mother smiled warmly and said, “Well, my dear boy, we’d give Him the best room, of course!”

But the boy wasn’t done. With eyes wide and voice soft, he asked: “But what if He didn’t want to leave?”

The mother was surprised at the question.

His doubt echoed in the stillness.

She sat beside him, pulled him close, and whispered: “Then, my child…
We’d change everything.

We will keep the room always ready…
We will clean the house every day…
And most of all, we’d live in a way that will make Him feel at home!”
And she added, “Because if Jesus wants to stay, then this house must become a home for God.”

The little boy smiled.

And that night, they left the guest room light on…
… just in case He came.

That child asked the question that every soul must ask: “If Jesus came, would He find a home – or just a room?”

Too often we welcome Him as a guest for Sunday…
… but forget Him by Monday.

The Gospel of the Day presents Jesus throwing light on this beautiful theme of God wishing to make a home in our hearts:
“Those who love me, will keep my word, and My Father will love them and we will come and make our home with them” (Jn 14:23)

The story of the Bible is of God who longs to dwell with His people.

In the Old Testament, we see the Garden of Eden was a beautiful communion of the first parents with God.

The atmosphere was so much homely…
… so much loving.

Sin caused a rupture in this homely bonding between God and human beings.

But the Lord, still longed to dwell with His people…

He accompanied the Israelites in their journey through the desert…
… being with them as a pillar of cloud by day and a pillar of fire by night.
He also established His glory among the people of Israel by dwelling in the ark of the covenant.

Every now and then, the people sinned and lost this presence of the Lord

Through the prophets, the Lord would invite the people to come back to His homely presence.

Finally, in the fullness of time, God decided to dwell with humans, when the Eternal Word became flesh…

Jn 1: 14, “And the word became flesh and dwelt among us”

To perpetuate His continual presence, Jesus also gave us His Body and Blood, in Real Presence…
… when He instituted the Holy Eucharist at the Last Supper with the culmination of His Sacrifice on the Cross, and His rising from the dead.

This then, is the story of the longing of a God who yearns to dwell with His people.

Jesus re-iterates this constant longing of the Lord, by promising:
“Those who love me, will keep my word, and My Father will love them and we will come and make our home with them” (Jn 14: 23)

The Lord wishes to dwell more close to us..
He longs to have a home in our hearts…

Do we make the space for Him?

The Lord promises to come and make His home in our hearts, if we love Him and keep His Word.

Loving Him requires giving Him the highest priority and precedence in our lives

Keeping His Word requires following His teachings and commandments at all times.

Loving Him means to constantly long for Him and to have our thoughts centered on Him

Keeping His Word means to make decisions and choices based on His Gospel virtues

Loving Him means to free our hearts from undue and inordinate attachments

Keeping His Word means to go against our personal choices to preserve His Will and plans

The Acts of the Apostles gives us the account of Paul and Barnabas giving a powerful witness in Lystra…
… and demonstrating the Power of the Lord, Who was given the highest priority in their life! (Acts 14:5-18)

The Lord wants a space in our hearts, to dwell in us…

Maybe, some rooms of our heart has been rented to many unwanted habits…
Maybe, some areas of our lives are occupied by unfit tenants of sin and evil…
Maybe, some quarters of our mind are accommodated with unholy and bad thoughts…

God is knocking at our doors, seeking a home for His Son…

Let’s realise: “Holiness begins when hospitality is extended to the Holy One.”

Let us live in a way that will make the Lord ‘feel at home!’

God Bless! Live Jesus!


📖 Discovering the beauty of the Catholic Church through the Catechism
MAN’S VOCATION LIFE IN THE SPIRIT – GOD’S SALVATION: LAW AND GRACE – The Fourth Commandment – The Family and the society

O son, help your father in his old age, and do not grieve him as long as he lives
… even if he is lacking in understanding, show forbearance
… in all your strength do not despise him.

Whoever forsakes his father is like a blasphemer, and whoever angers his mother is cursed by the Lord. (CCC # 2218)

✝️💫 REFLECTION CAPSULES – May 18, 2025: Sunday

“Loving like Christ – in obedience, with sacrifice and in fruitfulness – and helping ‘to resurrect lives!'”

(Based on Acts 14:21-27, Rev 21:1-5a and Jn 13:31-33a, 34-35- Fifth Sunday of Easter)

An incident is told of a 7 year old boy.

He was just a quiet boy…
… slightly built, often overlooked
… and painfully shy.

But what made him suffer most was his stutter.

Every time he tried to read aloud in class, the snickering began.

Mockery… whispers… even eye-rolls from some of the teachers.

And over time, his silence became louder than his words.

He began to dread mornings, hoping to blend into the corners of the classroom,
… wishing he could disappear from every roll call.

One day, after he stumbled badly while reading, someone shouted, “Just stop trying!”
The class laughed.

But one classmate didn’t.

Later that day, the boy returned to his locker – head down, spirit crushed.

He opened the door, and something fluttered to the floor.

A small folded piece of paper.
He unfolded it slowly, hands shaking.

It read: “I think your voice is strong and kind. Don’t be afraid to speak.

That was it.
No signature. No clue.

But in that one sentence… something broke.

A wound began to heal.

What no lecture could do… what no sympathy could fix…
… that one, small, obedient act of love –
done quietly, without recognition, sacrificing comfort, risking ridicule,
… bore fruit that no one could have imagined.

Years later, in a hall filled with hundreds, that ‘quiet, shy’ boy stood with confidence…
… his voice echoing with passion and strength
… now a renowned speaker, helping others find their voice.

When asked what turned it all around, he said: “It was a note. Just one line. It didn’t just encourage me…
… it resurrected me!”

That’s what love does!

Love listens when others ignore.
Love gives when others retreat.
Love resurrects when others ridicule.

Love, indeed, is the best medicine for any sickness which cripples human life!

And the reason for this amazing power of love is simple:

True Love flows from the heart of the One who is Love… God!
Genuine Love gushes forth from the fount of the One who is Love Incarnate… Jesus!

The Gospel of the Day is the wonderful exhortation of Jesus to His followers with the “Great Commandment of Love”

Jesus says in today’s Gospel:
“A new commandment I give you, that You love one another, even as I have loved you” (Jn 13:34)

It is interesting to note that what Jesus gives is a COMMANDMENT…
… it was not a suggestion
… it was not a piece of advice
… it was not an ordinary recommendation

It was a Commandment!

TO LOVE, is a COMMAND!

Every follower of Christ…
… is expected
… is bound
… and is under obligation
… TO LOVE… as JESUS LOVED!

Indeed, “Love isn’t proven in emotion…
… it’s proven in obedience!”

There are three important dimensions of the Love of Jesus that we can outline and highlight:

  1. A Love that is obedient
    Jesus says, “If you keep my commandments, you will abide in my love” (Jn 15: 10)

Jesus remained in the love of the Father, by doing His commandments.

And he enjoins the same principle of Obedient Love to His disciples too.

The one who loves, also obeys and follows the commands…

Do I have a love that is obedient…?
… happy to undertake the various duties and responsibilities entrusted to me and fulfilling them to the best of my capabilities.

  1. A Love that is sacrificial
    Jesus says, “No one has greater love than this, to lay down one’s life for one’s friends” (Jn 15: 13)

Jesus showed the depth of His love by undertaking the highest sacrifice of His own life.

And he enjoins the same principle of Sacrificial Love to His disciples too.

The one who loves, also offers and foregoes some luxuries and securities…

Do I have a love that is sacrificial?
… willing to lay down one’s bias and prejudices, dying to one’s evil inclinations, putting to sword one’s bad habits that takes away from God and making adjustments of one’s self-desires to make way for God’s plans in life.

  1. A Love that is fruitful
    Jesus says, “… I chose and appointed you to go and bear fruit that will remain… ” (Jn 15: 16)

Jesus showed the quality of His love by displaying the fruits of compassion, tender mercy, an accommodating heart, gentleness and generosity.

And he enjoins the same principle of fruitful love to His disciples too.

The one who loves, also bears fruits of patience, kindness, self-control and faithfulness…
… and radiates the fruits of joy, generosity and peace…

Do I have a love that is fruitful?
… bearing fruits that witness God’s love by promoting unity and harmony and attracting many to the tender mercy of the Lord by a live of passion and zeal.

The Lord has loved us tremendously… with a love that is obedient, sacrificial and fruitful.

Each of us is to possess this same treasure of love.

Love binds every brokenness…
Love joins every divorced situation…
Love unites every ruptured circumstance…

May the Lord enable us to be filled from His fountain of love and share His joy and peace to a world that is broken and seeks for consolation, comfort and calm…
… and thus help us to share in His Dwelling place “where every tear will be wiped away and there will be no more death or mourning, wailing or pain…” (Rev 21: 4)

When we love like Christ, we don’t just touch hearts…
… we help ‘to resurrect lives!’

Let’s always remember: It only takes one small seed of love, sown in obedience and sacrifice…
… to change a lifetime!

Yes…the quietest act of love is sometimes the loudest voice in someone’s life.

God Bless! Live Jesus!


📖 Discovering the beauty of the Catholic Church through the Catechism
MAN’S VOCATION LIFE IN THE SPIRIT – GOD’S SALVATION: LAW AND GRACE – The Fourth Commandment – The Family and the society

Whoever honours his father atones for sins, and whoever glorifies his mother is like one who lays up treasure.
Whoever honors his father will be gladdened by his own children, and when he prays he will be heard.

Whoever glorifies his father will have long life, and whoever obeys the Lord will refresh his mother. (CCC # 2218)

✝️💫 REFLECTION CAPSULES – May 17, 2025: Saturday

“‘Learning Jesus’ more and more, by faithfully attending His School of Love and doing away with ‘spiritual illiteracy’ in our lives!”

(Based on Acts 13:44-52 and Jn 14:7-14 – Saturday of the 4th Week of Easter)

A priest – very devout to the Word of God and a good preacher – was asked, “Father, can you tell us, what makes you to be so passionate about the Word of God?”

The priest thought for a couple of seconds and replied:
“As I began my studies of the Bible, I began to realise…
… that I used to treasure the encouraging letters that were written by my parents when I was in the seminary!
… that I would time and again take these letters – though I knew the content of it by heart – and would get a special feeling, every time I went through them!”

And he added, “I realised this great truth: When you fall in love with the sender, you fall in love also with the letter of the sender!

The same is true of God
When we fall in love with God – the sender of the Word of God – we fall in love with the Bible!”

Have we fallen in love with the Word of God?
… or are we living in “spiritual illiteracy?”

Spiritual Illiteracy could be described as…
… the inability to know or understand the promptings and inspirations of the Holy Spirit
… the lack of keenness to know about the Lord, His Teachings and His Mission
… the failure to have any interest in knowing God and His infinite love and mercy

The Gospel of the Day presents Jesus revealing the spiritual illiteracy of His Apostles, “Have I been with you so long and yet you do not know me…?” (Jn 14:9)

The context of this statement is the Last Supper Discourse that Jesus gives to His chosen disciples.

The disciples had been, probably with Jesus for nearly three years…

They had seen Him performing many miracles
They had heard Him speak of the glorious Kingdom of God.
They had experienced Him endowed with the special favour of God
They had touched Him and received powers and graces for the mission.

Yet, when Jesus speaks about the Father, the disciples express their ignorance.

Jesus, therefore, puts forward the question, “Have I been with you so long and yet you do not know me…?” (Jn 14:9)

Our lives can also resemble these disciples – in ignorance of the Lord.

We may remain “illiterate” spiritually, even though we have been admitted for a long time in the school of Jesus.

We may be “illiterate” in knowing…
… the vision of Jesus in building His Kingdom on the earth
… the feelings of the Lord in being passionately zealous to save all people
… the value of the sacrifice that Jesus has offered for us by His passion and death
… the depth of glory that is promised to us as a fruit of the Resurrection, if we follow Him

This spiritual “illiteracy” causes us…
… to remain unaware of the power and workings of the Holy Spirit in our lives
… to become lethargic and uninterested to know more about the Lord and His Word
… to be lukewarm and indifferent to explore the Lord deeper, especially in His Sacraments.

The call of the Gospel is to rekindle the fire to know the Lord more intimately and closely.

The book of Hosea (Hos 4:6) places a warning if we are to continue in this “illiteracy”:
“My people perish for want of knowledge!

Since you have rejected knowledge, I will reject you from my priesthood!
Since you have ignored the law of your God, I will also ignore your sons”

A revolution is to be triggered so that “spiritual illiteracy” can be wiped away!

This is also a wonderful opportunity for us to examine the possible means of “knowing” the Lord and the many opportunities that we squander away in “knowing” Him deeper…
… Do I set apart, some time at least, daily, reading the Bible – His Holy Word?
… Do I spend time, without any fail, in quiet prayerful moments with the Lord?
… Do I maximize my possibilities of meeting the Lord in the Blessed Sacrament?
… Do I pick up opportunities to listen to His Spirit in the various situations of my life?
… Do I ignite the sparks of desire to participate in the Sacraments, especially the Holy Eucharist and Confession?

St Paul points to the fact of how many Jews failed to recognize Jesus as the Messiah…
… and thus missed out on “living a life in Him”
… and how the Gentiles would “learn the path to eternal life!”

“And Paul and Barnabas spoke out boldly, saying, “It was necessary that the word of God should be spoken first to you. Since you thrust it from you, and judge yourselves unworthy of eternal life, behold, we turn to the Gentiles.

For so the Lord has commanded us, saying, ‘I have set you to be a light for the Gentiles, that you may bring salvation to the uttermost parts of the earth.’” (Acts 13:46-47)

Jesus desires that we know Him more…
… not just ‘about’ Him
… not just intellectual knowledge
… not just His teachings or wisdom
… But Him!
He wants all to have an “experiential” and a “living” experience of Him!

Let us realise that, “when you fall in love with the sender, you fall in love also with the letter of the sender!”

“When we fall in love with God – the sender of all the Word of God – we fall in love with the Bible!”

Let us “learn Jesus” more and more, faithfully attending His School of Love and doing away with “spiritual illiteracy” in our lives!

LEARN JESUS to LIVE JESUS to GIVE JESUS!

God Bless! Live Jesus!


📖 Discovering the beauty of the Catholic Church through the Catechism
MAN’S VOCATION LIFE IN THE SPIRIT – GOD’S SALVATION: LAW AND GRACE –
The Fourth Commandment – The Family and the society

Jesus recalls this duty of gratitude.

For the Lord honored the father above the children, and he confirmed the right of the mother over her sons. (CCC # 2218)

✝️💫 REFLECTION CAPSULES – May 16, 2025: Friday


“Overcoming our ‘spiritual paresthesia’ and fully cooperating with the Grace of the Lord!”

(Based on Acts 13:26-33 and Jn 14:1-6 – Friday of the 4th Week of Easter)

In the late 1970s, a young man named Ian Waterman, just 19 years old and full of life…
… was suddenly struck by a rare neurological condition.
>> Overnight, he lost his entire sense of touch, balance, and bodily awareness…
… though not a single muscle was paralyzed.

He could move, technically…
… but he no longer knew how.
>> Without his sense of body position, he was trapped inside himself.
>> Doctors told him he would likely never walk again.

But Ian was determined.
>> Through slow, painstaking effort and immense mental focus, he retrained his brain to walk again…
… by watching every movement visually.
>> He had to constantly think about every step, every motion…
… because the natural, effortless connection with his body was gone.
(Later he would be referred to as the “man who lost the body!”)


Ian’s story is striking…
… not just medically, but spiritually.
>> Because what he experienced physically, is what many of us go through spiritually.


We often lose our awareness of God!
>> We go through the motions – Mass, prayer, acts of charity…
… but the connection with the Lord feels dry, distant, numb.

We become spiritually numb.
Detached. Disconnected. Distant.

We are walking.
>> But not with Him.

We are alive.
>> But not aware.

We are moving.
>> But without meaning.

This is what we could call “spiritual paresthesia” – a loss of sensation to grace, to the presence of the Lord, and even to sin.


But we are not doomed to stay there.
>> We are called to have intentional cooperation, spiritual discipline, and the Grace of God…
… as the Lord cries out to every soul numbed by routine, by sin, by indifference, with the proclamation:
“I am the Way, the Truth, and the Life!” (John 14:6)


This reply of the Lord came in response to the query of Thomas, the Apostle who asked Jesus, “Lord, we do not know, where you are going; how can we know the way?” (Jn 14:5)


Thomas, along with the other disciples, had by now, spent quite a lot of time with Jesus, their Master….

They had encountered Jesus as The Way….
… the Way Forward: when sicknesses and problems of life had crippled the lives of many

They had encountered Jesus as The Truth….
… the Truth Uncompromised: when lies and malicious forces sought to thwart the plans of the Kingdom of God

They had encountered Jesus as the Life….
… the Life in Abundance: when hopelessness and sin would cause people to give up any aspirations for life

Yet, the disciples failed to recognize these aspects in Jesus.


They were perhaps, in a state of “spiritual paresthesia”…
… being numb to understanding Jesus
… unable to sense the words and depths of the Words of Jesus.

And so when Thomas put forward the doubt: “Lord, we do not know, where you are going; how can we know the way?” (Jn 14:5)…
… Jesus emphatically declared, “I am THE WAY, THE TRUTH and THE LIFE!” (Jn 14: 6)


The Lord wanted the disciples to overcome their “spiritual paresthesia”…
…and come to be aware of the Reality and Greatness of His Presence in their life!


Perhaps, we too often find ourselves in a state of “spiritual paresthesia” or “spiritual numbness!”

One of the main factors, which can cause this state of “spiritual numbness”, is the reality of sin in our lives…
… which many times, we either deny or fail to acknowledge.

In the teachings of Jesus, one of the stand-out factor was His uncompromising attitude with respect to sin.

And perhaps, this is where Jesus as a Holy Person stands out incomparable with all other great spiritual or philosophical leaders of the world.


This is also where Christianity as a religion stands out unmatched with any other belief system or practice of spirituality.

For Jesus and in Christianity…
… there is an uncompromising teaching on the need to root out sin and evil offences
… there is an absolutely unparalleled insistence on removal of sin for spiritual progress
… there is an unsurpassed assertion on being holy and pure to be in communion with Him

Let’s realise: “The devil doesn’t always roar—sometimes, he just numbs.
>> Quietly. Slowly. Deadly!”


We need to make an honest examination of our conscience…

Is our life suffering from a “spiritual Paresthesia” or “numbness to what is holy” or a “lack of sensation to sin”…
… Do I continue to pursue, persevere or promote deeds of sin, even though I am aware of it, or has been brought to my notice?
… Do I fail to be sensitive to issues of immense sin and evil happening in and around me, in people and situations, and instead become indifferent and uninterested?

A persistence in this spiritual “Paresthesia” or numbness can very dangerously sever our relation with the Lord.


The Lord declares that “In My Father’s house, there are many rooms…” (Jn 14: 2)

St Paul reminds us of the wonders of the Resurrection of Jesus and the promise of blessing that is enshrined to everyone who follows Him:
“… we bring you the Good News that what God promised to the fathers; this He has fulfilled to us their children, by raising Jesus!” (Acts 13:30-33)


Yes, the Lord wishes and desires, that all of us….
… should dwell with Him!
… should enjoy eternal life in Him!
… should reach the heights of holiness!

But this also requires our genuine co-operation to the Grace of the Lord…
… by seeking to get over our spiritual Paresthesia or numbness…


This process of getting out of this spiritual “Paresthesia” will involve “disciplining” in the form of reparation, penance and atonement.

Let us be willing to…
… let go a life of sin
… embrace the words of the Lord
… and live it joyfully and fervently in our life!


God Bless! Live Jesus!


—————————–
📖 Discovering the beauty of the Catholic Church through the Catechism
MAN’S VOCATION LIFE IN THE SPIRIT – GOD’S SALVATION: LAW AND GRACE –
The Fourth Commandment – The Family and the society
>> The fourth commandment reminds grown children of their responsibilities toward their parents.
>> As much as they can, they must give them material and moral support in old age and in times of illness, loneliness, or distress. (CCC # 2218)
——————-