Friday, July 18, 2014

XVI Sunday in OT:[A]:Wis 12:13,16-19;Rom8:26-27;Mt13:24-43

XVI Sunday in OT:[A]:Wis 12:13,16-19;Rom8:26-27;Mt13:24-43

Introduction: In the Gospel passage for today, the parable of the wheat and the weeds, Jesus presents a wise and patient God who allows the good and the evil to coexist in the world. "Let the seed and the darnel grow together till the harvest time.” God awaits repentant sinners, giving them the strength to acknowledge their weakness. Through the parable of the wheat and the weeds in today’s Gospel, Jesus calls us to be patient with those who fail to meet the high ethical standard expected of a Christian.

Explanation:  Most of those who heard Jesus were farmers and they could readily understand that one cannot easily distinguish weeds from wheat when the plants are very small. It is only when they have grown taller that the difference becomes apparent. By that time, however, the roots are so intertwined that one cannot pull out the weeds without severely damaging the wheat. Only at the harvest can the separation be made safely. 

The spiritual reality being illustrated is the congregation of believers. It is often impossible to know who may be for sure the true and faithful followers of Jesus since we can usually judge only by appearances. In Jesus' day, the Scribes and Pharisees seemed to be the most religious of all, yet he rejected them for lack of interior conversion. In particular, they thought they knew for sure who were the "weeds" and who were the "wheat." And they were sure that those whom they rejected were rejected by God also. The gospels tell us that Jesus thought otherwise. 

Too many Christians today are like over-zealous servants who could not tolerate the evil weeds. In their zeal to serve God they go on a crusade against those they perceive as evil with the intention of cleaning up the church, the nation, or the world. In the end they discover they have made a big mistake.

Anecdote:  A little boy not familiar with an echo thought he had heard in the woods the voice of another boy not far off. He shouted: “Hello, there!” and the voice shouted back, “Hello, there!” He cried again: “Who are you?” and the voice replied, “Who are you?” He cried once more: “You mean boy,” and the cry came back: “You mean boy.” Then this little boy went home and told his mother that there was a bad boy in the woods. His mother understood how it was and said to him, “Well, speak kindly to him and see if he does not speak kindly to you.” The boy went to the woods again and shouted, “You are a good boy.” “Of course, the echoing reply came, “You are a good boy.” “I love you,” he said loudly. “I love you,” replied the faithful echo. The story of the echo is the story of the good and bad in life.

Joke:  An elderly woman called 911 on her cell phone to report that her car had been broken in to.
She is hysterical as she explains her situation to the dispatcher: "They've stolen the stereo, the steering wheel, the brake pedal and even the accelerator!" she cried.
The dispatcher said, "Stay calm. An officer is on the way."
A few minutes later, the officer radios in. "Disregard." He says. "She got in the back-seat by mistake."

Practical Applications:1) We need to practice patience and show mercy.  Let us patiently and lovingly treat the “weeds” in our society as our brothers and sisters and do all in our power to put them back on the right road to heaven, especially by our good example and our fervent prayer for their conversion.

2) We need to grow up as healthy wheat in God’s field, leaving the weeds for Jesus to take care of.  The Good News is that growth and maturity are probably the most effective forms of weed control.  In the end, it’s enough to know that we are “seeds” who have been planted by God and that we are part of a healthy harvest that will someday be reaped by the angels of God.  Our exemplary Christian lives will be a compelling challenge and a forceful invitation to evildoers to repent of their sinful lives and turn to God.

Introduction:  Sixteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time

Message:  In his patience, the Lord allows both weeds and wheat to grow together, both saints and sinners to respond to salvation in the Kingdom.  This Lord is good and forgiving, lenient to all, desiring repentance for our sins. May the Spirit assist us in our weaknesses!

Saints and Events in this Week:  22-Twenty Second-Tuesday-Saint Mary Magdalene; 23-Wednesday-Saint Bridget of Sweden, religious; 24-Twenty Forth-Thursday-Saint Sharbel Makhluf, priest; 25-Twenty Fifth-Saint James, Apostle; 26-Twenty Sixth-Saturday-Saints Joachim and Anne, parents of the Blessed Virgin Mary.

Friday, July 11, 2014

XV Sunday in OT:[A]: Is 55:10-11; Rom 8:18-23; Mt 13:1-23

XV Sunday in OT:[A]: Is 55:10-11; Rom 8:18-23; Mt  13:1-23

Introduction: Today is the 15th Sunday in Ordinary Time and the Scripture Readings of today emphasize the constant and powerful action of the 'Word of God' to enlighten and to move our minds and hearts to believe in Him and to act accordingly. In the First Reading from the Book of the Prophet Isaiah, Isaiah compares the power of the word of God with rain and thereby its effect on us. Just as rain falls and makes the earth fertile and fruitful, so the word of God comes down to us and enriches our lives. If our lives are not enriched then we frustrate God. In the Second Reading from his Letter to the Romans, St. Paul refers to the fact that all humans and all creation suffer because of sin and he assures us that the present sufferings are nothing compared to future glory that awaits at the end of the process. In the Gospel Reading from St. Matthew, Jesus tells us 'The Parable of the Sower.' He emphasizes the variety of responses to the word of God. It is not due to God’s seed (word) that the harvest fails in some people’s lives, but the manner in which it is received. “The seed that falls on good ground will yield a fruitful harvest.”

Exegesis:  The parable of the Sower speaks to all of us. If we examine and tell ourselves the truth, each one of us will convincingly find our position within it, the type of soil we are and how far we have handled the seed sown in us. What do we do with the Word of God we hear proclaimed to us every day is one important question. This is because, for many, we have become used to it that it no longer makes meaning to us, and we have developed a very hard and tough skin towards it that it can no longer penetrate the walls of our heart. Do we still heed the call and instruction of the Word of God, and has it brought any ontological or functional change in our lives? If after hearing this Word preached to us every day and we still did not make heaven, who is to blame? Our pastors, priests, parents, brothers and sisters, who else? Of course, the obvious answer is, “I”, because to whom much is given much is expected. The Word of God is meant to transform us and help us live a better and healthier life.

Joke: A young man was walking through a supermarket to pick up a few things when he noticed an old lady following him around. Thinking nothing of it, he ignored her and continued on. Finally he went to the checkout line, but she got in front of him. "Pardon me," she said, "I'm sorry if my staring at you has made you feel uncomfortable. It's just that you look just like my son, who just died recently." "I'm very sorry," replied the young man, "is there anything I can do for you?" "Yes," she said, "As I'm leaving, can you say 'Good bye, Mother'? It would make me feel so much better." "Sure," answered the young man.
As the old woman was leaving, he called out, "Goodbye, Mother!" As he stepped up to the checkout counter, he saw that his total was $127.50. "How can that be?" He asked, "I only purchased a few things!" "Your mother said that you would pay for her," said the clerk.

Reflection: Finger pointing isn't much of a solution. God spoke to Adam. Adam was in charge. Adam was God's right-hand man, the one to whom He had given dominion, power and authority. Adam was responsible. Adam could have confessed his sin right then and there. The outcome may have likely been the same, but it would have been the mature thing to do. But notice how fear and self-condemnation so quickly twists one's way of thinking. “Then the man said, 'The woman whom You gave to be with me, she gave me of the tree, and I ate.'”(3:12) Adam blamed the woman and blamed God for giving him the woman. “It wasn't me! She made me do it!” Sounds like present-day children blaming a sibling after being caught with their hand in the cookie jar. If we want to be word and light in a culture of blame shifting, then the Christian response is clear: We need to take ownership for our own wrong-doings. We need to accept the blame when we make a mistake, and we need to teach our children to do the same.


Fifteenth Sunday in OT: Introduction
   
Message: “The seed that falls on good ground will yield a fruitful harvest”. May the soil of our hearts be receptive to the Word and carry it out through the presence of the Spirit.

Saints and Events in this Week: 14-Forteenth-Monday-Saint Kateri Tekakwitha, virgin; 15-Fifteenth-Tuesday-Saint Bonaventure, bishop, doctor of the Church; 16-Sixteenth-Wednesday-Our Lady of Mount Carmel; 18-Eighteenth-Friday-Saint Camillus de Lellis, priest


Monday, June 30, 2014

XIV Sunday in OT:[A]: Zec 9: 9-10; Rom 8: 9, 11-13; Mt 11: 25-30

XIV Sunday in OT:[A]: Zec 9: 9-10; Rom 8: 9, 11-13; Mt 11: 25-30

Introduction: Today’s Gospel tells us about the Heart of Jesus. It gives us these words of comfort: “Come to me all you who labor and are burdened and I will give you rest.  Take my yoke upon you and learn from me for I am meek and humble of heart and you will find rest for yourselves. For my yoke is easy and my burden light.” 

Explanation: What do they mean for us?    They tell us something about God that is very different than the images of God we might have.  Many of our images are of the Almighty Awesome Creator of the Universe.  We think of the great frescos on the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel as Michelangelo portrayed God creating the universe with a dazzling display of power.  We think of the image of creation of Adam, and God’s powerful hand touching the limp finger of the first man giving him life.  Or we think of some of the wonders of nature and we remember that God is the Awesome Creator.
We often have images of God as the Judge of the living and dead. Judgment comes accordingly the things we have done. There is reward or punishment waiting, there is mercy and compassion, but there is also justice.  Again, going back to the Sistine Chapel, Michelangelo depicts the scene of the Last Judgment showing the joy of the saved and the grief of the condemned.  Jesus is the Just and Merciful Judge.
To be meek is to be patient and gentle.  It is not the surrender of rights or some form of cowardice, but the opposite of sudden anger, of malice and of long harbored vengeance.  Jesus is meek.  He is not waiting for the right time to strike us down for what we have done to Him, how we have attacked His Holiness with our sins, how we have attacked those whom He loves, or how we have put him out of our lives.  He is gentle.  He is patient with us.

In the Gospel, Jesus offers rest to those “who labor and are burdened” if they will accept his “easy yoke and light burden.” By declaring that his “yoke is light,” Jesus means that whatever God sends us is made to fit our needs and our abilities exactly. The second part of Jesus’ claim is: "My burden is light." Jesus does not mean that the burden is easy to carry, but that it is laid on us in love and is meant to be carried in love, and that love makes even the heaviest burden light.

Joke: A woman was walking along the beach when she stumbled upon a Genie's lamp. She picked it up and rubbed it, and lo-and-behold a Genie appeared. The amazed woman asked if she was going to receive the usual three wishes.
The Genie said, "Nope ... due to inflation, constant downsizing, low wages in third-world countries, and fierce global competition, I can only grant you one wish. So ... what'll it be?"
The woman didn't hesitate. She said, "I want peace in the Middle East. See this map? I want these countries to stop fighting with each other."
The Genie looked at the map and exclaimed, "Gadzooks, lady! These countries have been at war for thousands of years. I'm good, but not THAT good! I don't think it can be done. Make another wish."
The woman thought for a minute and said, "Well, I've never been able to find the right man. You know, one that's considerate and fun, likes to cook and helps with the housecleaning, is good with me and gets along with my family, doesn't watch sports all the time, and is faithful. That's what I wish for ... a good mate."
The Genie let out a long sigh and said, "Oh… Let me see that map! And think what I can do with those countries! "

Practical Applications:  1) Unload our burdens on the Lord through prayers. During the Holy Mass, we have to place our stress-filled lives on the altar and allow Jesus to cool down our overheated hectic lives.  We also unload the burdens of our sins and worries on the altar and offer them and ourselves to God with Jesus’ life during the Holy Mass.  During our personal and family prayers in the evening we ask God’s forgiveness for the sins and failures of day and receive the consoling assurance that we are reconciled with God and our fellow human beings. 
2) We take up too many unnecessary burdens or worries in our life: Jesus lays the light burden of his commandment of love on us and yokes us with himself, giving us his strength through the Holy Spirit. Our life is full of love and based on the love of Jesus, then there is no room for worries. 
3) The peace we share during holy mass should be real peace to everyone. We are called, not only to find peace, refreshment and rest for ourselves, but also to live the kind of life through which others, too, may find God's peace, God's refreshing grace, and the joy of placing their lives in God's hands. 

Fourteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time : Introduction
Message:  Jesus gentle and humble of heart, came to bring peace to all people.  We are called to live in his Spirit, to be gracious, merciful, and compassionate to all.

Saints and Events in this Week:  9-Nineth- Wednesday-Saint Augustine Zhao Rong, priest, martyr and his Companions, martyrs; 11-Eleventh-Friday-Saint Benedict, abbot; 

Friday, June 27, 2014

Peter & Paul:[A]:Acts 12:1-11; II Tim 4:6-8, 17-18 Mt 16:13-19

Peter & Paul:[A]:Acts 12:1-11; II Tim 4:6-8, 17-18 Mt 16:13-19

Introduction: Today we observe the feast of martyrdom of Saints Peter and Paul. The Depositio Martyrum, in the year 258, places the Solemnity of these Apostles on June 29th.  Eventhough they suffered on different days, they were as one. Peter went first, and Paul followed. Both are the principal patrons of Rome and are mentioned in the Roman Canon.

Peter was son of Jonah and brother of Andrew. He was a professional fisherman from Bethsaida, a fishing town on the Lake of Galilee.  He might have been a follower of John the Baptist. It was his brother Andrew who introduced him to Jesus, and Jesus who changed his name from Simon to Cephas or Peter. Jesus made him the leader of his apostles and the rock on which he would build his Church. Peter was the first to preach the risen Lord on the day of Pentecost. He also convened the first Church Council in Jerusalem and wrote two epistles to the whole Church. He was crucified by the Emperor Nero in A. D. 64, and over his grave was built St. Peter’s Cathedral in Rome. Patron of those in the fishing industry.

Paul, the fanatical Pharisee and scholar of Judaism was miraculously converted and chosen by the Holy Spirit to be the “apostle to the Gentiles.” He wrote 14 epistles, made several missionary journeys and spent his final days in prison in Caesarea and Rome.  He was beheaded at Tre Fontane. Over his grave was built St. Paul’s Cathedral in Rome. After Jesus, Paul is the most prominent person in the New Testament. 14 of the 27 books of the New Testament are letters attributed to Paul and more than half of the Acts of the Apostles is devoted to Paul’s conversion and to his apostolic activities in spreading the Good News. Patron of the lay apostolate, the Cursillo Movement, and Catholic Action; also of Malta and Greece.

Mission: Our Lord called Peter and gave him a charge, a charge that we Catholics consider a real blessing. Immediately after St. Peter acknowledged that Jesus was the Christ, the Son of the Living God, Jesus declared to him: “Blessed are you, Simon son of Jonah. For flesh and blood has not revealed this to you, but my heavenly Father. And so I say to you, you are Peter, and upon this rock I will build my church, and the gates of the netherworld shall not prevail against it.  I will give you the keys to the kingdom of heaven. Whatever you bind on earth shall be bound in heaven; and whatever you loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven.” (Matthew 16: 17-20)  St. Peter’s job was that of giving us unity and the rock-like strength that is found in unity. This job is likewise the job of St. Peter’s successors… the popes, the successor Bishops of Rome. so that they may all be one, as you, Father, are in me and I in you, that they also may be in us, that the world may believe that you sent me”. (John 17:21)

St. Paul was tasked by Jesus to bring the diversity of the gentiles into what had begun as an essentially Jewish community of believers. The first believers were, of course, Jews. He became known as the Apostle to the Gentiles, he himself having been a Jewish Pharisee. But Paul was careful to carry out his mission not on his own but as a member of the College of Apostles. Paul’s message and teachings were not his own; they were the message and teachings of the Apostles led by St. Peter.

Joke:  A priest settled into a chair in an office. “Is it true,” said the priest, “that your firm does not charge the members of the clergy?” “I am afraid you are misinformed,” stated the officer. “People in your profession can look forward to a reward in the next world, but we people have to take ours in this one.”

Practical Applications: 1) Accept Jesus as Son of the living God. As Jesus is son of the living God, let us be brothers and sisters for the living. This can be achieved only through accepting Jesus as Messiah, the Savior. 
2) It is not the power of being pope in Authority that leads peter to die for Jesus, but having a feeling of unworthiness of death on the cross like Jesus.  And so Peter asked the executioners to crucify him upside down on the cross. Positions are for servicing Jesus and it is not authority.
3) Let us be dutiful as St. Paul was in commissioning Good News to the Gentiles instead of his own. Taking difficult task for Jesus as a mission is the real mission work. Christian duty is to spend life for Jesus among others who are needy.

Feast of Saints Peter and Paul – Introduction

Message: Peter, rescued from the power of Herod, and Paul, protected from his enemies, proclaim with their lives that Jesus is the Messiah, the Son of the living God.

Saints and Events in this Week: 13-Thirteenth Week in Ordinary Time; 30-Thirtieth-Monday- The First Martyrs of the Holy Roman Church; 1-First – July –Tuesday-Blessed Junipero Serra, priest; 3-Third-Thursday-Saint Thomas, Apostle; 5-Fifth-Saturday-Saint Anthony Mary Zaccaria, priest; Saint Elizabeth of Portugal; 

Friday, June 20, 2014

Corpus Christi:[A]: Deut 8: 2-4,14b-16a; I Cor 10: 16-17 Jn 6: 51-58

Corpus Christi:[A]: Deut 8: 2-4,14b-16a; I Cor 10: 16-17 Jn 6: 51-58
Introduction: During the liturgical year there are at least two feasts that invite us to meditate on the mystery of the Eucharist: the Maundy Thursday and the Feast of the Precious Body and Blood of our Lord (Corpus Christi - that is today!).  On the Maundy Thursday, the reflection on the Eucharist is centered on the memorial of the Passover meal and the institution of the priesthood.  The feast of today gives us yet another opportunity to contemplate the mystery of the Eucharist. 

Origin: Today is the Solemnity of “The Most Holy Body and Blood of Christ.”, the Feast of Corpus Christi, owes its existence to Blessed Juliana, an Augustinian Nun, in Liege, France, who had a great veneration for the Blessed Sacrament around 1230 and longed for a special feast in its honor. Largely through her insistence, in 1264 Pope Urban IV commanded its observance by the Universal Church, on Thursday after Trinity Sunday; however, where it is not a day of obligation it is usually celebrated on the Sunday following Trinity Sunday.

Corpus Christi is the celebration of the abiding presence of a loving God as Emmanuel – God with us – in order to give collective thanks to our Lord living with us in the Eucharist. The feast gives us an occasion to learn more about the importance and value of the “Real Presence” so that we may appreciate the Sacrament better and receive maximum benefit from It.  We explain the real presence of Jesus in the Holy Eucharist by the word “transubstantiation” which means that the substance of the consecrated bread and wine is changed to the substance of the risen Jesus’ glorified Body and Blood by the action of the Holy Spirit, and its accidents (like color, shape, taste etc.), remain the same.
Readings: The First Reading from the Book of Deuteronomy tells of Moses' advice and warnings to his people not to forget the deeds God had done for them when they travelled through the desert after being freed from the slavery of Egypt. He recalls the way in which God fed the people of Israel in the desert with manna, that miraculous food which Christians were later to see as a prefiguration of the Eucharist. As they relied on manna for life in the desert, so they must also continually depend on the Word of God. St Paul in the second reading says, the Eucharist builds the Church, whose head is Jesus Christ. Participation in the body and blood of Christ is the source of the life and unity of the Church as one body. From this Eucharistic fellowship with Christ follows the real union of all the faithful with one another in one body. In the Gospel passage, Jesus identifies himself as “the living bread that came down from heaven,” thus linking himself with the manna in the wilderness, while assuring his disciples that, unlike those who ate manna, “One who eats this Bread will live for ever.”    
Anecdote: Two soldier friends served together in Iraq. One was a dull fellow. The other was sharp. Yet, there was a chemistry that made them inseparable. The slow one was wounded. His friend gave his blood. When the wounded fellow learned whose blood had saved his life, he said to his companion, "I feel like a new man."

Something similar should take place each time we receive the Eucharist. We drag ourselves into the Liturgy looking for a spiritual transfusion, a pick-me-up, a refueling. We need an adrenaline rocket that will jump start us and get us through the next six days. 

Joke: Seems an elderly gentleman had serious hearing problems for a number of years.
He went to the doctor and the doctor was able to have him fitted for a set of hearing aids that allowed the gentleman to hear 100%. The elderly gentleman went back in a month to the doctor and the doctor said, "Your hearing is perfect. Your family must be really pleased you can hear again."
To which the gentleman said, "Oh, I haven't told my family yet. I just sit around and listen to the conversations. I've changed my will five times!"

Practical Applications: 1) Let us appreciate the “Real Presence” of Jesus in the Holy Eucharist, by receiving him with true repentance for our sins, due preparation and reverence.
2) Let us be Christ-bearers and conveyers: By receiving Holy Communion, we become Christ-bearers as Mary was, with the duty of conveying Christ to others at home and in the workplace, through love, mercy, forgiveness and humble and sacrificial service.
3) Let us offer our lives on the altar along with Jesus’ sacrifice, asking pardon for our sins, expressing gratitude for the blessings we have received and presenting our needs and petitions on the altar.
Introduction: Corpus Christi
Message:  The cup we share, is it not the blood of Christ?  And the bread we break, is it not his body? Just as God fed the Israelites with manna from heaven, so too do we feed on the best of wheat, the bread of angels, food for the pilgrim journey.


Saints and Events in this Week: 24-Twenty Forth-Tuesday-The Nativity of Saint John the Baptist; 27-Tweenty Seventh-Friday-The most Sacred heart of Jesus; 28-Twenty Eighth-Saturday-The Immaculate Heart of the Blessed Virgin Mary; Saint Irenaeus, bishop, martyr; 29-Twenty Nineth-Sunday-Saints Peter and Paul. Apostles; 

Friday, June 13, 2014

Holy Trinity Sunday:[A]: Ex 34: 4b-6, 8-9; II Cor 13: 11-13; Jn 3: 16-18

Holy Trinity Sunday:[A]: Ex 34: 4b-6, 8-9; II Cor 13: 11-13; Jn 3: 16-18

Introduction: Holy Mother Church’s Magisterium (the highest teaching authority) teaches on the Trinity. Definitively, she teaches that the Trinity is first a mystery and as such a Dogma which must be believed. This dogma on the Trinity could therefore be summed up as follows: “The Trinity is One. We do not confess three Gods, but one God in three persons, the “consubstantial Trinity”. The divine persons do not share the one divinity among themselves but each of them is God whole and entire…The divine persons are really distinct from one another. “God is one but not solitary.” “Father”, “Son”, “Holy Spirit” are not simply names designating modalities of the divine being, for they are really distinct from one another…The divine persons are relative to one another. Because it does not divide the divine unity, the real distinction of the persons from one another resides solely in the relationships which relate them to one another (CCC253-255, p.82-83). We believe in this Mystery of Holy Trinity because Jesus who is God taught it clearly, the Evangelists recorded it, the Fathers of the Church tried to explain it and the Councils of Nicaea and Constantinople defined it as a dogma of Christian Faith.

Anecdote: The shamrock, a kind of clover, is a leguminous herb that grows in marshy places. St.  Patrick, the missionary patron saint of Ireland, used the shamrock to explain the Holy Trinity.  The story goes that one day his friends asked Patrick to explain the Mystery of the Trinity.  He looked at the ground and saw shamrocks growing amid the grass at his feet.  He picked one up one of its trifoliate leaves and asked if it were one leaf or three.    Patrick's friends couldn't answer – the shamrock leaf looked like one but it clearly had three parts.  Patrick explained to them: "The mystery of the Holy Trinity – one God in Three Persons: the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit - is like this, but more complex and unintelligible.”     St. Cyril, the teacher of the Slavs, tried to explain the Mystery of the Most Holy Trinity using sun as an example.    He said, "God the Father is that blazing sun. God the Son is its light and God the Holy Spirit is its heat — but there is only one sun. So there are three Persons in the Holy Trinity but God is One and indivisible." St. John Maria Vianney used to explain Holy Trinity using lighted candles and roses on the altar and water in the cruets. “The flame has color, warmth and shape. But these are expressions of one flame. Similarly the rose has color, fragrance and shape. But these are expressions of one reality, namely, rose. Water, steam and ice are three distinct expressions of one reality. In the same way one God revealed Himself to us as Father, Son and the Holy Spirit.”

Exegesis:  On this Most Holy Trinity Sunday, our celebration is a song of praise to the Almighty God who has taken us up to share in the very life of the Trinity. Two of the most complete, heavily loaded, and yet very concise prayers and blessings are this: “May the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, the love of God and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit be with you!” and “May the Almighty God bless you the Father, the son and the Holy Spirit. I call these Trinitarian formulas and fellowship. In these prayers, and blessings, the Trinitarian God unite to perform this function for which they are being consulted. Paul knew this and so, constantly employed this Trinitarian formula in concluding of most of his letters to the churches he wrote to (1 Cor, 16, 23; 2Cor 13, 14; Gal 6, 18; Phil 4, 2).

Joke: At Sunday school they were learning how God created everything, including human beings. Johnny was especially intent when the teacher told him how Eve was created out of one of Adam's ribs.
Later in the week his mother noticed him lying down as though he were ill, and said, “Johnny, what is the matter?”
Johnny responded, “I have pain in my side. I think I’m going to have a wife.”

Practical Applications: 1) Let us respect ourselves and others because everyone is the temple of the Holy Spirit where all the Three Persons of the Holy Trinity abide. 
2) Let us practice the Trinitarian relationship of love and unity in the family relationships of father, mother and children because by Baptism we become children of God and members of God’s Trinitarian family.

Introduction: Holy Trinity Sunday
Message: God sent his son to save us and to forgive us, making us his adopted children.  Like the Trinity, may we be united in peace and love through the Spirit, through whom we offer God praise and glory.

Saints and Events in this week: 15-Fifteenth - Fathers Day; Eleventh Week in Ordinary Time; 19-Nineteenth – Thursday- Saint Romuald, abbot; 21-Twenty First-Saturday, Saint Aloysius Gonzaga, religious; 

Friday, June 6, 2014

Pentecost Sunday:[A]:Acts2:1-11;ICor12:3b-7,12-13;Jn20:19-23

Pentecost Sunday:[A]:Acts2:1-11;ICor12:3b-7,12-13;Jn20:19-23
Introduction:  Today we celebrate the birthday of this Church – the universal church.  We celebrate the presence of the Spirit in this believing community today, just as it was present among the community in Jerusalem.   In some countries this day is celebrated as the feast of the laity.  It is the feast of every believer.  The liturgy of the Word on this day suggests the theme of unity of the Church.
Exegesis:  Evangelist Luke considers the event of the resurrection (Easter) and the decent of the Holy Spirit (Pentecost) as two significant events, not necessarily as separate events.  As the resurrection of the Lord is associated with the Jewish feast of the Passover, Luke considers it meaningful to situate the coming of the Holy Spirit within the Jewish feast of the Pentecost – a harvest festival that was celebrated fifty days after the Passover.  Strongly prejudiced by this Lukan tradition we tend to consider the Pentecost as a separate feast, and the descent of the Holy Spirit also as a dramatic event always and fail to see that no other Gospel has this separate narration.  On the other hand, according to the Gospel of John – as we heard it read in today’s gospel text (Jn 20:19-23), the descent of the Holy Spirit is on the day of the resurrection of the Lord.  It reads: “In the evening of that same day, the first day of the week… Jesus came and stood among them… he said to them: ‘Peace be with you…’After saying this he breathed on them and said: ‘Receive the Holy Spirit’!
Therefore, the Holy Spirit cannot be separated from the Risen Lord.  Pentecost cannot be separated from Easter!  Holy Spirit could be considered as the continued presence of the Risen Lord.  Jesus, after his resurrection is not present with us as he was present for 33 years in his incarnate form – as Jesus of Nazareth.  But He is alive, and the Spirit completes His work.

The event: On the day of Pentecost 1) The Holy Spirit descended upon the apostles and Blessed Virgin Mary as fiery tongues. 2) The frightened apostles were transformed into fiery preachers and evangelizers by a special anointing of the Holy Spirit. 3) The audience experienced a fresh anointing of the Holy Spirit with the gift of tongues, hearing Peter speaking in their languages. 4) The early Christians became powerful witnesses and brave martyrs for faith.
Joke:   Seeing her friend Sally wearing a new locket, Meg asks if there is a memento of some sort inside.
“Yes,” says Sally, “a lock of my husband’s hair.”
“But Larry’s still alive.”
“I know, but his hair is gone.”
Practical applications: The idea Paul suggests is that being a part of the body of Christ, we each have a function for the common good.  We need to find out what that function is that the Spirit has given us, develop it, trust God the Spirit to activate it, and then appreciate and not be envious of the gifts of others which work to further our own good.
I am suggesting, with Paul today, that each of you has been given a gift to advance the community here. You may not have discovered that gift yet. You may have been afraid to discover that gift. But with your confirmation, it can be discovered and activated. It may even surprise you. This week I would love for you to think about what gift or gifts you may have been graced with, and whether you are using them for the good of this community or in building Christ’s kingdom beyond us. You may want to think of it as a talent for something or just simply something you are good at, but it is important to bring it to our table, to use it, to function as part of Christ’s body.  I promise you, when you use it properly it will feel very satisfying and good and you will know you have contributed to the unity of this parish and this community through the grace of God.  This is the Good News you need to discover within yourself and use.  Happy Birthday to our Church.
Introduction: Pentecost Sunday
Message:   All of us have been baptized into one and the same Spirit.  That same Spirit, the Advocate, was given as gift to the disciples to strengthen them to go forth in the name of the Lord, “to renew the face of the earth”.

Saints and Events in this week:  Ordinary Time continues in A liturgical cycle-10th (Tenth)-week; 9-(Nineth)-Monday-Saint Ephrem, deacon, doctor of the Church; 11-(Eleventh)-Wednesday-Saint Barnabas, apostle; 13-(Thirteenth)-Friday-Saint Anthony of Padua, priest, doctor of the Church;