JOURNEY WITH OUR COMPASSIONATE MOTHER – DAY 03 In preparation for the Feast of the Mother of Compassion on September 15

THE THIRD SORROW: THE LOSS OF JESUS IN THE TEMPLE

REFLECTION
The picture of the Holy Family had also some shadowy spots.

They were not free…
… from troubles
… from doubts
… from conflicting situations

The Holy Family was very much a human family.

But what made them Holy and a Model for families?

It was their willingness to let go of their personal mindsets and seek how God wanted them to live.

Often, we find our families or communities broken and unable to gel with each together.

The Compassionate Mother Mary, as the Mother of the Family, becomes a model for us: To adapt to God’s Will.

(Reflect for some time and personalize the above-mentioned points)

PRAYER
Compassionate Mother Mary, intercede for me, that I may learn to adapt myself to God’s Will and thus to find joy and peace always

VIRTUES TO BE PRACTISED

Adapting to the Will of God

NOVENA PRAYER
Compassionate Mother, Immaculate Virgin, look upon us with mercy. Help us in our daily trials and sorrows. For You are the comforter of those in pain and sorrow. You are the refuge of the abandoned and shelterless. You are the hope of the depressed and the despairing. Have compassion on us and come to our help.

You have known anguish and the bitterness of suffering and pain. Standing at the foot of the Cross, You witnessed the agony and death of Your Beloved Son, Jesus Christ. In deep sorrow, You held His Dead Body in Your arms. As You had compassion for the sufferings of Jesus, and suffered with Him and for Him, remember Dearest Mother, these our particular trials and sufferings (silence for a moment, placing your intentions)

Strengthen us, comfort us, intercede for us and free us from every evil.

Jesus died for us in torments and thus redeemed us through His Death. Compassionate Mother, You had a great share in the mystery of the Incarnation. By the anguish of Your heart and by suffering with Jesus for the salvation of humankind, You are the co-Redemptrix of the human race.

Intercede for us that Your Divine Son may grant us pardon, grace, purity of body and soul and all the spiritual and temporal blessings we now stand in need of.

Hail Mary, Glory Be,
Mother of Compassion, Pray for us
(7 times)

Let us pray
Grant we beseech Thee, O Lord, Jesus Christ, that the Most Blessed Virgin Mary, Your Mother, Whose most Holy Soul was transfixed with the sword of sorrows at the Hour of Your Own Passion, may intercede for us before Your Throne of Mercy, now and at the hour of our death, Amen!

God Bless! Live Jesus!

Fr Jijo Jose Manjackal MSFS
Bengaluru, India

September 11, 2020 – 23rd Week in Ordinary Time

“Seeking for the Grace of being compassionate and charitable in dealing with the faults of others!”

(Based on 1 Cor 9:16-19, 22-27 and Lk 6:39-42 – Friday of the 23rd Week in Ordinary Time)

The eye is one of the most sensitive parts of the human body.

An eye surgery, therefore, becomes one of the most vulnerable surgeries of all.

It takes a compassionate hand and a delicate touch to do surgery in the eye.

When there is an eye trouble, we need a doctor who knows what he/she is doing because even the slightest mistake can have catastrophic consequences.

The Gospel of the Day focuses our attention on the EYE…
… and the need to have a clear and fine eye!

Jesus says, “Can a blind person, guide a blind person?” (Lk 6: 39)

The Lord has blessed us with the gift of the Eye…

We are to marvel at the treasure of creation and the beauty and marvel at the wonders in nature.
We are to see the many gifts and talents that we possess in ourselves.
We are also to see the resources and assets in others and to grow in our love for our fellow beings.

This love for the others also, however, makes us…
… to encounter the weaknesses and shortcomings in others!
… to get impatient and irritated with others!

Christian love is not blind.

Christ never says to, “ignore the faults of others.”

But He surely does say, “Take care of your own faults first.”
That’s why Jesus says, “Remove the wooden beam from your eye first; then you will see clearly, to remove the splinter in your brother’s eye” (Lk 6:42b)

Look in the mirror!

Am I quick to see how arrogant people are…
… when I myself am often given into to anger and quick-temper?
Am I quick to see how lethargic are people in their spiritual life…
…when I myself fail to be active and energetic?

Am I quick to see how corrupt and dishonest people are…
… when I myself often resort to unhealthy lifestyles?

Sometimes we tend to have a microscopic view when we look at the faults of others…

A microscope magnifies an image and displays the view in a much enlarged and amplified manner.

Maybe the following check-list will help us to discern whether I am microscopic in my perception of others:

Do I blow small things out of proportion and make mountains out of molehills, without realizing its drastic consequences?

Do I maximize the sins of others – their faults, their bad habits and their shortcomings, without understanding their contexts and backgrounds and situations?

Do I come to quick, hasty or negative conclusions without seeking to garner the full truth & the complete information & details?

Do I unnecessarily get involved in situations where we should not be involved and thus bring upon unnecessary tensions and worries upon ourselves?

Do I pass along critical stories to others and fail to verify the authenticity of the rumours and even fail to stop a particular gossip from disseminating?

Do I have a strong bias to find others guilty and often look at the other with eyes of suspicion and doubt and scepticism?

Do I behave too harsh even when speaking the truth and fail to realize the emotions and the feelings that could cripple the person under guilt?

Do I add aggravating remarks and sprinkle home-made masalas when re-telling a story about the life or event of another person and thus twist things in the way I want?

Do I taking delight in condemning others and harping upon the misdeeds of others and thus enjoy a certain amount of pleasure and gratification through this process of character assassination?

Christian charity demands that we seek to correct others and help others in their growth and progress of spiritual health!

But in dealing with the fault of others, what is most needed is: A clear vision!

Psalm 139:23-24 says:
“Search me, O God, and know my heart! Try me and know my thoughts!
And see if there be any grievous way in me, and lead me in the way everlasting!”

The order or the sequence in which we go about this process is highly crucial and vital:

First, we judge ourselves.
First, we be hard on ourselves.
First, we ask the Lord to show us our sins.

Until we do that, the “speck” in our brother’s eye will look like a log to us…
… while the log in us will be invisible!

Only then are we ready to find the fault in others and help them to overcome the “spot” in their lives!

This stage of our life will be characterized by the virtues of:

Humility
Gentleness
Patience
Discretion

When we sincerely follow these virtues…
… our sins will bother us more than the sins of others!
… our failures will disturb us more than the failures of others!
… our weaknesses will unsettle us more than the weaknesses of others!

St Paul gives a beautiful adage:
“To the weak I became weak, that I might win the weak.

I have become all things to all men that I might by all means save some.
I do it all for the sake of the gospel, that I may share in its blessings!” (1 Cor 9:22-23)

The line is fine and thin: between correcting others and being charitable to others
The line is slender and slim: between helping others and being judgemental on others

Yes, the eye is highly sensitive and an eye surgery, is one of the most vulnerable surgeries of all.

It takes a compassionate hand and a delicate touch to do surgery in the eye!

Let us seek for this grace of being compassionate and charitable in dealing with the faults of others!

God Bless! Live Jesus!


Quotable-quote-a-day-with-St Francis de Sales (SFS) – “”Those who look well after their own consciences…

… rarely fall into the sin of judging others!”

JOURNEY WITH OUR COMPASSIONATE MOTHER – DAY 02 In preparation for the Feast of the Mother of Compassion on September

THE SECOND SORROW: THE FLIGHT INTO EGYPT

REFLECTION
Mother Mary and Joseph took up the great duty in the safeguarding of their Little One, Jesus!

They listened to God’s voice…
… to come together as the parents of God’s Child
… to share the difficulties during the Birth of the Child.

And now, they listen to God’s voice to flee to Egypt and save the Saviour of the World!

To listen to the voice of the Lord, was a remarkable aspect of the success of their life as a couple!

To listen to God’s voice through the Bible, through our authorities or through our life situations sometimes becomes difficult for us.

The Compassionate Mother Mary becomes a model for us: To be attentive and Obedient to God’s voice.

(Reflect for some time and personalise the above-mentioned points)

PRAYER
Compassionate Mother Mary, intercede for me, that I may always be attentive and obedient to the Voice of the Lord

VIRTUES TO BE PRACTISED

Being attentive to the Voice of the Lord
Being obedient to His Voice

NOVENA PRAYER
Compassionate Mother, Immaculate Virgin, look upon us with mercy. Help us in our daily trials and sorrows. For You are the comforter of those in pain and sorrow. You are the refuge of the abandoned and shelterless. You are the hope of the depressed and the despairing. Have compassion on us and come to our help.

You have known anguish and the bitterness of suffering and pain. Standing at the foot of the Cross, You witnessed the agony and death of Your Beloved Son, Jesus Christ. In deep sorrow, You held His Dead Body in Your arms. As You had compassion for the sufferings of Jesus, and suffered with Him and for Him, remember Dearest Mother, these our particular trials and sufferings (silence for a moment, placing your intentions)

Strengthen us, comfort us, intercede for us and free us from every evil.

Jesus died for us in torments and thus redeemed us through His Death. Compassionate Mother, You had a great share in the mystery of the Incarnation. By the anguish of Your heart and by suffering with Jesus for the salvation of humankind, You are the co-Redemptrix of the human race.

Intercede for us that Your Divine Son may grant us pardon, grace, purity of body and soul and all the spiritual and temporal blessings we now stand in need of.

Hail Mary, Glory Be,
Mother of Compassion, Pray for us
(7 times)

Let us pray
Grant we beseech Thee, O Lord, Jesus Christ, that the Most Blessed Virgin Mary, Your Mother, Whose most Holy Soul was transfixed with the sword of sorrows at the Hour of Your Own Passion, may intercede for us before Your Throne of Mercy, now and at the hour of our death, Amen!

God Bless! Live Jesus!

Fr Jijo Jose Manjackal MSFS
Bengaluru, India

September 10, 2020 – 23rd Week in Ordinary Time

“Allowing the Crucified Lord to be our model, our inspiration and our strength in our desire to live the ‘Gospel of the Tough!’”

(Based on 1 Cor 8:1-7, 11-13 and Lk 6:27-38 – Thursday of the 23rd Week in Ordinary Time)

There is a joke among listeners of sermons and talks:

There are two Gospels:
(a) The “Gospel of the Easy” – Gospel passages which are uncomplicated to comprehend and unproblematic to carry out.

(b) The “Gospel of the Tough” – Gospel passages which are very difficult to understand, highly demanding in practicing and too taxing to be even considered realistic and feasible!

The Gospel Reading of the Day would undoubtedly fall in the second category: A Gospel of the Tough!

And this Gospel of the Tough, has probably one of the most toughest sentence of the Gospels enshrined in it: “Love your enemies…” (Lk 6:27)

Many of us may feel that this statement is just way too ideal to be feasible and doable.

But well…
… Facts remain facts… we like it or not… we accept it or not!

And this fact that Jesus really meant to “Love your enemies…” is proved by what follows after this statement:

He gives some explanations for the same: (Lk 6:27-28)

Do good to those who hate you.
Bless those who curse you.
Pray for those who abuse you.

He gives some practical tips for the same: (Lk 6: 29-30)

If someone hits you, turn the other cheek.
If someone takes your shirt, give your jacket too.
If someone asks you, give him something.
If someone steals your money, do not demand it back.

This is followed by the splendid Golden Rule: Do to others what you want others to do to you! (Lk 6:31)

Indeed, the teaching to “Love your enemies” is a reality and a fact and is a call to which we are invited to give heed.

That leads to a very practical question: Who are my enemies?

In general, an enemy is anyone who feels hatred toward, intends injury to, or opposes the interests of another.

The moment we hear the word “enemy”, our minds usually transports to some famous “enemies” of the world like some notorious terrorists or some dictators or rulers or gangs etc…

But the Lord is very particular in pointing out who are these “enemies”.

Jesus doesn’t restrict “enemies” to people who are against the state or the nation, but he specially means our personal enemies.

Who are these our personal enemies?

One clue we get from the words of Jesus, in Mt 10:36, “A man’s enemies will be the members of his own household”.

Oops! That’s pretty close, right?

Our personal enemies are not most often spread in Iraq or North Korea or Afghanistan or China etc…

We may perhaps never even visit these countries or encounter the people of these nations..

But our personal enemies are those in our homes…those in our close circles.. whom we meet everyday…

People whom we meet regularly and whom we come in contact often are the ones whom most likely we can hurt or who hurt us….and over time…they become our personal enemies…

So, well… it’s time to identify a few enemies….a few personal enemies…

Do I own a grudge against the members of my family – spouses, parents, children?

Do I possess hatred against the members of my community – superiors, companions, juniors, mates?

Do I kindle anger against my extended family members – siblings, in-laws, relatives?

Do I harbour ill-feelings against those with whom I work – bosses, colleagues, junior workers?

Do I maintain bad thoughts against the members of my church – priests, persons with duties, various associations?

Do I keep resentment against some other known people in life – friends, acquaintances, neighbours?

Do I entertain bitterness against many strangers – storekeepers, some walkers on the street, bus/auto/train people?

We have to admit it…
The ones who are close to us and who are more familiar are the ones who are hurt or who abuse us
… and they turn out to be our “personal enemies”!

Yet, the statement of the Lord remains firm as a rock – “Love your enemies…”

So how do we love our “enemies”?

Here are some practical tips and suggestions:

Greeting them: Wishing them constantly at least ensures we do not avoid them or dodge away from them.

Spread goodness: Answer constant avoidance with positive strokes of good deeds. Make the first move to heal.

Avoid evil-talk: Stop any bad utterances and expressions to flow from the mouth. Every time we talk: either life comes or death. The tongue has power! Allow it to forgive and bring forth life.

Thank God for them: God seeks the good of ALL persons…including the one who is not liked by us. Offer the person to this goodness and benevolence of God and be grateful

Pray for them: We may become helpless in our situation. But through prayer, God has the great ability to gift pardon and mercy. An honest heart will surely allow God’s love to flow through the relationship.

Ask God to Bless them: It’s hard to accept, but the enemy can be a gift from God. Like Joseph who said, “You meant evil against me, but God meant it for good” (Gen 50:20), the enemies become an cause for us to be humble, to keep us on our knees, to reveal our weakness & to expose our total need for God!

The teaching to – “Love your enemies…” is unmistakably a “Gospel of the Tough”!

St Paul exhorts and tells us: “Knowledge puffs up, but love builds up” (1 Cor 8:1)

Let the Crucified Lord be our model, our inspiration and our strength in our desire to live this “Gospel of the Tough”!

God Bless! Live Jesus!


Quotable-quote-a-day-with-St Francis de Sales (SFS) – “Love is at its highest when we accept afflictions, not only with gentleness…
… but when we cherish them, love them and embrace them.

It is because they come to us through God’s Permissive Will!”

September 9, 2020 – 23rd Week in Ordinary Time

“Following the instructions of Jesus, the Dietician and the Nutritionist of our Lives, Who wants to make us fit and fine and agile in our spiritual life!”

(Based on 1 Cor 7:25-31 and Lk 6:20-26 – Wednesday of the 23rd Week in Ordinary Time)

Dieticians and Nutritionists offer various advices and tips on how to have a healthy lifestyle

For eg…they point out diverse foods that can be either beneficial or be harmful for good health
• Too much of caffeine affects the body.
• Certain foods leads to cholesterol and may cause heart diseases.
• Fruits and vegetables with vitamins and other nutrients, anti-oxidants etc supply greater energy and vitality.

Many follow this routine and practice in their lifestyle…

Some to reduce; some to maintain!
Some to stay fit; some forced due to their ill-health!

Whatever be the motive…
… there seems to be a principle behind this: “Your health is what you eat”

A similar principle can also be perhaps applied to the spiritual realm:
“Your spiritual health is what you seek and feed your soul”

The Gospel of the Day says in Luke 6:21, “Blessed are you who are hungry now, for you will be filled”

We are given a challenge to inspect and examine: How is my Spiritual Appetite?

What is the craving that I have for God and His Kingdom?

Am I really hungering for what matters most in my life?

Do I give the highest precedence to the Lord and His Will in my life?

Perhaps, some of us have not known real hunger…
… or we have kinda got used to getting our food…

Hunger to us may mean…
… waiting for an extra ten-fifteen minutes for food to be served
… not getting the food that I like or not being served the taste that I wish
… missing the food-time and then gulping down a meal from a roadside hotel etc..
And because we don’t realize much the importance of the word HUNGER, we perhaps fail to grasp the urgency and the importance when Jesus says, “Blessed are you who are hungry now, for you will be filled”!

We tend to satisfy our hunger…
… through the food of amassing enormous wealth and money
… through the food of acquiring many titles and positions and power
… through the food of many unhealthy practices and habits and addictions

But the Lord says, “Blessed are you who are hungry now, for you will be filled”

Filled with what?

Food? Money? Long life? Promotions? A perfect family? A trouble-free life?
….No, no…no…!

Mt 11:28 says, “Come to me…”!

It’s in Jesus alone – GOD ALONE – that all our hunger can be satisfied and all our cravings be fulfilled!

If we are hungry, let us go and eat of the Bread of Life!
If we are thirsty, let us go and drink of the Water of Life!
If we are weary or heavy laden, let us go to His Heart and find rest!
If we are guilty, let us go to Him, the Saviour and be forgiven!
If we are far from God, let us go to Him and be reconciled in His arms!

Yes… in the Kingdom of God, everything begins with a hunger… a craving… a search… a seeking…!

This is what St Augustine said, “O God, you have made us for yourself, and our hearts are restless until they find rest in you!”

St Paul reminds of the passing nature of the world, “For the form of this world is passing away.” (1 Cor 7:31)

Perhaps we need to reverse and turn upside the way we have been thinking and perceiving…

a. Maybe we have been thinking that riches and material prosperity is that which really matters in life…

But Jesus says, “Blessed are the poor…the Kingdom of God is yours”

Have we discovered and experienced Him as the only One who is the True Richness and the Authentic Treasure of our lives?

b. Maybe we have been thinking that we are totally satisfied with great food and our every taste is fulfilled..

But Jesus says, “Blessed are you who are hungry… you will be filled”

Have we discovered and experienced Him as the only One who can truly satisfy the hunger and thirst of our lives?

c. Maybe we have been thinking that we are quite happy in life and all our leisure and entertainments give us so much joy

But Jesus says, “Blessed are you who weep…you will laugh”

Have we discovered and experienced Him as the only One who can bless us with true joy and genuine happiness in our lives?

d. Maybe we have been thinking that we are quite safe when all people praise and flatter us in life, especially when we gain popularity at the cost of some Gospel values or virtues of life

But Jesus says,” Blessed are you when people hate you because of Me…a great reward is kept for you”

Have we discovered and experienced Him as the only One who is worth facing all difficulties and problems in order to be standing up for our Christian values and principles?

Our spiritual health depends very much on what we really seek for and what we feed our souls.

Jesus, the Dietician and the Nutritionist of our Lives, today, wants to make us fit and fine and agile in our spiritual life.

Come, let us make the necessary changes in our life so that we may enjoy better health and life…
… in the Lord!

God Bless! Live Jesus!


Quotable-quote-a-day-with-St Francis de Sales (SFS) – “Perfection does not lie in avoiding
the world…

… but in not clinging to it!”

JOURNEY WITH OUR COMPASSIONATE MOTHER – DAY 01


In preparation for the Feast of the Mother of Compassion on September 15

The First Sorrow: The Prophecy of Simeon

REFLECTION
The time was festive and the mood was joyous when Jesus was being presented in the Temple.

It’s in this special time that Simeon comes forward to bless the Child Jesus.

But it comes with a catch: Mother Mary was to be pierced by a sword – a sword of sorrow!

The celebratory atmosphere suddenly turns a bit gloomy and overcast!

Many are the times when we enjoy joyful moments, when a sudden crisis hits our life.

The Compassionate Mother Mary becomes the Model for us: To be Patient and Trustful!

PRAYER
Compassionate Mother Mary, intercede for me, that I may grow in my patience and learn to be trusting in God, even when situations in my life are hard and difficult.

VIRTUES TO BE PRACTISED

Patience in trials
Trusting God in difficult moments

NOVENA PRAYER
Compassionate Mother, Immaculate Virgin, look upon us with mercy. Help us in our daily trials and sorrows. For You are the comforter of those in pain and sorrow. You are the refuge of the abandoned and shelterless. You are the hope of the depressed and the despairing. Have compassion on us and come to our help.

You have known anguish and the bitterness of suffering and pain. Standing at the foot of the Cross, You witnessed the agony and death of Your Beloved Son, Jesus Christ. In deep sorrow, You held His Dead Body in Your arms. As You had compassion for the sufferings of Jesus, and suffered with Him and for Him, remember Dearest Mother, these our particular trials and sufferings (silence for a moment, placing your intentions)

Strengthen us, comfort us, intercede for us and free us from every evil.

Jesus died for us in torments and thus redeemed us through His Death. Compassionate Mother, You had a great share in the mystery of the Incarnation. By the anguish of Your heart and by suffering with Jesus for the salvation of humankind, You are the co-Redemptrix of the human race.

Intercede for us that Your Divine Son may grant us pardon, grace, purity of body and soul and all the spiritual and temporal blessings we now stand in need of.

Hail Mary, Glory Be,
Mother of Compassion, Pray for us
(7 times)

Let us pray
Grant we beseech Thee, O Lord, Jesus Christ, that the Most Blessed Virgin Mary, Your Mother, Whose most Holy Soul was transfixed with the sword of sorrows at the Hour of Your Own Passion, may intercede for us before Your Throne of Mercy, now and at the hour of our death, Amen!

God Bless! Live Jesus!

JOURNEY WITH OUR COMPASSIONATE MOTHER – INTRODUCTION


In preparation for the Feast of the Mother of Compassion on September 15

The Church abounds in celebration of many feasts.

Today – September 08 – we have been celebrating the Birth of our Blessed Mother!

This is a day which we cherish much and rejoice much

Most of these Feasts focus our attention on the joyful and happy aspects of life.

But we also know, that…
… Life is not always a superhighway

Life is more a kuccha (temporary) road with many pits and rough areas!

Moments of joy are beautiful…
… but we also ought to have courage and strength to face the “not so easy” moments of life!

7 days from today – on September 15 – the Church celebrates a feast of our Blessed Mother, which is a celebration for sure…
… but focuses our attention more, on the rougher realities of life – pain, suffering, tears and struggles: The Feast of the Mother of Compassion.

This feast is characterized by the commemoration of the Seven Sorrows of our Blessed Mother…
… seven major events, evoking compassion, in the life of “Mater Dolorosa” (Mother of Sorrows)

We begin today a journey with our Blessed Mamma through the Seven Mysteries of the Sorrows

Each day, we will have…
… a short reflection
… a prayer
… and a virtue to be practised.
This will be followed by a Novena Prayer to the Mother of Compassion.

I invite all of you to this Precious Journey with our Mother of Compassion, as She teaches us to become a better disciple of the Lord…
… and thus find greater joy and peace in our journey of life!

St Francis de Sales beautifully writes about the Mother of Compassion, as She beheld Her Beloved Child on Mount Calvary:
“It is not joy I seek, it is Himself… and My Heart, full of love, makes Me seek always to be united to that Amiable Child, My Tenderly Beloved One.

In a word, the intention of the soul in this union is nothing, save to be with Her Lover!”

May this JOURNEY WITH OUR COMPASSIONATE MOTHER help us to face the rougher realities of life with greater courage…
… and thus enjoy joy and peace, to make our life a true feast!

God Bless! Live Jesus!

September 8, 2020 – Feast of the Nativity of our Blessed Mother

“May the celebration of the Nativity of our Blessed Mother, help us to deepen our love towards Her, and may we, holding Her Hands, walk in the path of God, more faithfully and strongly committed!

(Based on the Feast of the Nativity of our Blessed Mother)

A teacher in her classroom of Second Standard students, once explained and gave a lesson on the ‘magnet’ and its functions and uses.

The next day, the teacher conducted a written test.

One of the questions in this test was:

“My full name has six letters.
My name begins with ‘M’

One of my functions is to pick up things.
Another function is to attract things towards me.

Who am I?”

When the test papers were turned in, the teacher was astonished to see the answer that was given to this question by over half the class.

Any guesses as to what answer did the children write?

Hmmm….

They wrote the word – “Mother!”

The little children, with their own personal experience had seen and witnessed a Mother being the person..
… who would pick up things ( and especially the children!)
… who would attract to herself (especially the children themselves!)

The name “mother” evokes a lot of feelings and emotions…
Love, affection, tenderness, self-giving, warmth, kind-heartedness etc…

The name “mother” also evokes a lot of characters and functions…
A life-giver, a care-giver, a consoler, a strength, a forgiver, a refuge…

The name “mother” also evokes a long list of works and tasks that she undertakes… (from a modern perspective!)
(Hold your breath as we go through this lo…ong list!)

CEO of the Household, Chef, Cheerleader of a family, Housekeeper, Hair Stylist, Bed-wetting Patrol Squad, Keeper of Secrets, Food Tester, Family Therapist, Toddler Wrestling Coach, Laundry Machine, Teacher, Toy Repair Expert, Finance Manager, Art Director, Potty Trainer, Search and Rescue Manager, Champion Tickler, Day-care Provider, Personal Assistant for the entire family, Wardrobe Stylist, Toothbrush Inspector, Birthday Events Director, Sleep Scientist, Dramatic Story Teller, Professional Singer, Kiss and Hugs Expert, Speech Specialist, Vacation Coordinator & Tour Guide, Mrs. Fix-It, Stain Removal Expert, Bodyguard, Pet Caretaker, Marketing Director….etc etc…..

Yes, the list is indeed long…
… very very long…and we can certainly think of many more perhaps!

A simple word – Mother – yet evokes so many powerful functions and feelings.

Today we celebrate the Birthday of the Most Beloved, the Most Loving and the Most Lovable Mother of all – Blessed Mother Mary!

Our world, in the modern trend, fluctuates between two contrasting approaches towards our Blessed Mother.

  1. Minimal devotion to Mother Mary

On one side, there is a highly sad and deplorable ignoring of the honour and the status that is due to our Blessed Mother.

Many consider Her only as an “egg-shell”, whose role and relevance completely ceased, after having given birth to Jesus

Many consider Her as just any ordinary woman, who “happened” to be picked by God, so that He could “use” Her to fulfil His plan.
Many consider Her to be worthy of absolutely no extra honour and mock at Her only as causing a distraction, away from God

  1. Exaggerated devotion to Mother Mary

On the other side, there is a “comfortable” and dangerous trend towards exalting Mother Mary to such an extent that She is sometimes accorded the worship of a goddess or a deity!

Many consider devotion to Her being much more important, much more satisfying and much more easier than to God Himself!
Many consider expressing their actions of piety and affection to such an extent that even God is sometimes neglected (especially God in the Blessed Sacrament or in the Holy Word)!

But both these extreme understandings and approaches towards Blessed Mother Mary need to have a refinement, a filtering and a restoration towards the right perspectives!

Towards this end, the name “Mary” could be expanded, in the following manner, to help in having a truer appreciation, a genuine devotion and a deeper love for Her: MARY – a Model, an Apostle, a Revolutionary, a Yeast

  1. Mary – is the Model for every Christian

Her life becomes a wonderful example to every person who wishes to follow our Blessed Lord.

She remains the perfect Model of being attentive to the voice of God, being actively response to His call and being faithfully committed to every task entrusted to Her

  1. Mary is the Apostle-par-excellance
    As an Apostle of Her Son and Saviour, She always remained in His presence – either physically or in Her thoughts or through Her constant longing for Him

She is the Beloved Apostle who had offered Her whole body, mind and soul to the glory of God and fulfilling His every plan

  1. Mary is the Revolutionary who dared to do God’s Will
    Her Yes to the Plan of God, at the Annunciation and Her continual Yes to His Will, even in the moments of the most extreme suffering had the tenacity and the passion of a True Revolutionary.

It is hard to follow God’s Will, especially in some moments of crisis;
It requires extreme courage and unfailing commitment to be always walking in the path of God

She is the wonderful Revolutionary who dared to always seek and do God’s Will in Her life!

  1. Mary is the Yeast who silently fulfilled Her role in the plan of salvation
    In the Bible, the words of Mother Mary are fairly minimal; yet Her few words and above all, Her dedicated life speaks volumes of Her role in the Salvific Plan!

She is the unseen Yeast through whom the mighty Grace of God wonderfully worked to raise up the Author of Salvation!

Blessed Mother Mary is our wonderful and beautiful mother, who deserves our greatest affection and love, in a way that draws us more and more towards Her Son, Jesus.

May we be encouraged by the words of St Maximilian Kolbe:
“Never be afraid of loving the Blessed Virgin too much. You can never love her more than Jesus did.”

May the celebration of the Nativity of our Blessed Mother, help us to deepen our love towards Her, and may we, holding Her Hands, walk in the path of God, more faithfully and strongly committed!

As Fulton J Sheen says:
“The less we think of Him, the less we think of Her.

The more we adore His divinity, the more we venerate Her motherhood.
The less we acknowledge His divinity, the less we have respect for Her!”

A wonderful Birthday to our Blessed Mother!

We Love you, Dearest Mamma!

Happy Feast day to all Her children!

May we deepen our love for Her Beloved Son and our Saviour, Jesus!

God Bless! Live Jesus!

Fr Jijo
Bengaluru, India


Quotable-quote-a-day-with-St Francis de Sales (SFS) – ” Honour, revere and respect the Blessed Virgin Mary with a very special love; she is the Mother of our Sovereign Lord…
… and so we are Her children.

Let us think of Her with all the love and confidence of affectionate children; let us desire Her love…

… and strive with true filial hearts to imitate Her graces.

September 7, 2020 – 23rd Week in Ordinary Time

“Allowing the Lord to work a revival in us, by “encircling” ourselves in prayer and self-discipline, and being willing to get out of our “comfortable zones” of worldliness and hard-heartedness!

(Based on 1 Cor 5:1-8 and Lk 6:6-11 – Monday of the 23rd Week in Ordinary Time)

A young missionary in a particular village, had heard the fame of a senior missionary and his successful ventures in reviving the faith of the people.

Wanted to know the secret of success in ministry, the younger missionary, on meeting the senior, asked him: “What is the secret of reviving the faith of the people in my village?”

The senior man, who was also aware of the worldly lifestyle of the younger missionary said:
“Go back to your home and lock yourself up in a private room.

Then, take a piece of chalk, and mark a circle on the floor.

Get down on your knees, then, inside the circle…
… and pray to God to begin a revival inside the circle!

When this prayer is heard, a revival will take place in your people as well!”

Yes… it is when one is revived with the Spirit and Enthusiasm of the Lord…
… that one can radiate the same to others!

This revival demands that we “encircle” ourselves in prayer and self-discipline…
… by being willing to get out of our “comfortable zones” of worldliness and hard-heartedness!

The Gospel of the Day is an encounter with a group of people, who got stuck in their own “comfortable zones” of interpreting and understanding the Scriptures, failing to be open to the True Author of the Scriptures and thus failing to tread the path of mercy, compassion and charity.

The Gospel passage is another Sabbath day controversy.
Jesus is in the synagogue, teaching and proclaiming God’s Word.

His words would bring strength and courage to those in despair
His teaching would fill with hope those who were stranded on the peripheries of life
His preaching would invigorate those who were sapped of energy and felt themselves rejected.

Among those who heard Him in the synagogue, was a “a man whose right hand was withered” (Lk 6: 6)

It’s not mentioned how did he began to have a withered hand…
… maybe he was born so
… maybe he met with an accident
… maybe he had a sickness which made it so

But having a withered right hand had its own implications and difficulties to pose.

Right hand in the Bible, usually refers to..
… being the hand of blessing
… being the hand of strength
… being the hand of labour

So this man with the withered right hand is portrayed as being…
… disfigured in his purpose and goals of life
… pitiable in being rendered weak and sort of helpless

But more than this man with the physical disability, there were also some others, who had a “withered mentality” – the Pharisees

They had God, the source and origin of the Law, as their “right hand”
They had the privilege of learning and knowing the Scriptures, as their “right hand”

But, unfortunately, we find them with “withered”…
… their focus on God, the purpose and goal of the Law was “withered”!
… their opportunity to interpret and understand the Scriptures properly was “withered”!

To the man who had the physically withered right hand, Jesus said, “Stretch out your hand” (Lk 6:10)

Probably these words were also directed or perhaps intended more for the Pharisees who were “withered” in their understanding and mentality regarding the Law and the Author of the Law Himself!

Jesus was asking them to “stretch out their hands” which were withered…
… because they failed to understand the basic purpose of God’s Law which was aimed at reflecting on God’s Goodness and to reflect the same in their lives
… because they were stuck to their own rigid and arrogant interpretation of God’s Word and failed to put into practise the real meaning of God’s Word which is to do good, show mercy and extend charity

Are those words, “stretch out your hand” being directed to us also?

Are we failing to centre our lives on the Precious Gift that God has blessed us with – His Holy Word in the Holy Bible – and failing to make efforts to read, learn more and understand God’s Word properly and effectively

Do we consciously cultivate practices which help us to set apart time (on a daily, regular basis) to read the Bible and reflect and shape our lives, in the light of the Holy Word of God?

Do we remain rigid, obstinate and closed to the voice of the Holy Spirit, who speaks to us, through different sermons, write-ups, talks etc. on the Word of God and allow transformations to happen in my life?

Are we zealous to learn God’s Word more deeply, to know Him more and to cultivate a personal taste to understand the Scriptures better with self-reflection?

St Paul strongly warns us to cast away anything that is unbecoming in us, in our following of Christ: “Cleanse out the old leaven that you may be a new lump, as you really are unleavened.

For Christ, our paschal lamb, has been sacrificed.
Let us, therefore, celebrate the festival, not with the old leaven, the leaven of malice and evil, but with the unleavened bread of sincerity and truth!” (1 Cor 5:7-8)

Our Blessed Lord invites and exhorts us to have a “Revival in our Christian Lives”

It is only when one is revived with the Spirit and Enthusiasm of the Lord…
… that one can radiate the same to others!

May we allow the Lord to work this revival in us, by “encircling” ourselves in prayer and self-discipline…
… and being willing to get out of our “comfortable zones” of worldliness and hard-heartedness!

God Bless! Live Jesus!


Quotable-quote-a-day-with-St Francis de Sales (SFS) – “Those who look well after their own consciences…

… rarely fall into the sin of judging others!”

September 6, 2020 – 23rd Sunday in Ordinary Time

“Breaking the chains of our ego and pride, and in humility and gentleness, reach out to the lost ones!

(Based on Ezek 33:7-9, Rom 13:8-10 and Mt 18:15-20 – 23rd Sunday in Ordinary Time)

It’s a Friday…
… the scene over a small hillock

The mid-day sun shining bright and hot but preparing itself to slowly fade into darkness and tepidity…

A sparse number of people were around…

Some indifferent ones gazing from far…
Some proud ones standing on the ground…
Some broken ones on their knees…

Three were suspended on the Cross…

One of them…
… in Excruciating Pain, yet Majestic and Glorious in His Character and Nobility…

With a disposition of Graciousness and Goodness, spelled out into a loud, yet compassionate exclamation: “Father, forgive them…they know not what they do”

This cry of the Son of God – Jesus – from the Cross to His Father, on behalf of the sinful & strayed humanity…
… was a statement that summarized His life-long mission: To forgive, to bring back the lost & to give hope to the strayed ones!

The Gospel of the Day presents this teaching of the Lord, which He lived in His life and perfectly climaxed on the Cross: To forgive, to bring back the lost and to give hope to the strayed ones!

Last Sunday, the Gospel exhorted us to “deny ourselves, take up our cross and follow Him” (Mt 16:24)

This exhortation is given a practical dimension in today’s Gospel…
… with a strong accent on the need to grow ourselves in the aspect of Active Forgiveness and to make eager and earnest efforts to bring back a lost person and to render hope and optimism to the wayward hearts.

Just a few verses before today’s passage, we have in Mt 18: 10-14, the Parable of the Lost Sheep.

The shepherd loves all his hundred sheep…
… yet, when one gets strayed, he makes “an out-of-the-way effort” to get the lost one back.

He doesn’t give up on the strayed.
He doesn’t desert the lost.
He doesn’t abandon the one gone from his circle.

This attitude of “taking an extra pain” and “dripping an extra sweat” would seem weird and strange to a calculative, pragmatic and business-minded head of ours, in this modernistic period…

Is it not a waste of time to go after the “lost sheep” – of an obsessed drug-addict or a habitual drunkard or a consistent smoker?

Is it just too futile to awaken a “lost sheep” – of a soul in slumber, where there is no focus on spiritual life, where there is slackness of prayer and sacraments and where worldliness and materialism have crept and conquered?

Is it of any use to go after the “lost sheep” – of a couple who are constantly bickering and a family which is broken up with regular fights and misunderstandings?

Is there any sense in trying to restore the “lost sheep” – of a community whose members seem disinterested, who are lethargic, who have their own personal and hidden agenda and who always back-talk and back-bite?

Is it just not meaningless to revive the “lost sheep” – of a society or a nation where corruption has taken deep-roots in hearts of people and all sincere efforts of transformation often gets dumped into the bin?

The True Shepherd however, in all such situations, of the sheep being lost, makes an extra effort in getting them back.

This same Shepherd today invites us, through the Gospel of the Day, to be partakers in restoring the lost ones.

A series of steps are enshrined to make this “seemingly not-so-pleasant” task happen!

  1. Engaging in a mutual dialogue
  2. Engaging in a small-group interchange
  3. Engaging in a communitarian initiative

Why is it a “seemingly not-so-pleasant” task?

Mt 18:15 says,” If YOUR brother sins against YOU…“

Can we read it again…
… YOUR bro sins against YOU….

Now that sounds crazy, isn’t it?

Why should I…I be doing that?

Someone hurts me…should I go?

Someone wounds me…should I restore?
Someone harms me…should I reconcile?
Someone kills me mentally…should I patch up?
Someone spoils my name…should I take the lead?

Well.. the Gospel of the Day…simply says, ” If YOUR brother sins against YOU…”
…Then….YOU TAKE THE LEAD, TO GET THINGS RIGHT!

YES… You!

But we ask WHY?

WHY ME?!

This WHY may not get answered so easily or convincingly..

But the One who gave this exhortation, makes us to focus our attention back on the small hillock, on the Friday…

With the mid-day sun slowly fading into darkness…
… with hands stretched on the Cross with deep pain, crying: “Father, forgive them…they know not what they do!”

Tough words to hear on a relaxed Sunday, right?

Christianity is wonderful…
… but Christianity is also a task!

Yes, the Obligation of Sunday duties ought to get actualized and lived in all the other weekdays of our life!

St Paul tells us: “Owe no one anything, except to love one another; for he who loves his neighbour has fulfilled the law!” (Rom 13:8)

The Lord reminds us through Prophet Ezekiel of the noble yet great responsibility entrusted to us to be accountable to one another: “O you, son of man, I have made a watchman for the house of Israel; whenever you hear a word from my mouth, you shall give them warning from me!” (Ezek 33:7)

Let’s embrace this task of the Lord…
… to forgive, to bring back the lost and to give hope to the strayed ones!

The Good Shepherd preached it…

The Good Shepherd lived it in His life…
The Good Shepherd perfected it on the Cross.
We, His little Sheep, are now exhorted the same…

Let us break the chains of our ego and pride…
… and in humility and gentleness, reach out to the lost ones!

God Bless! Live Jesus!


Quotable-quote-a-day-with-St Francis de Sales (SFS) – “Refrain from imputing imaginary faults to your neighbour…
… from revealing those which are secret

… and from exaggerating those which are obvious!”