Episodes
Thursday Mar 26, 2015
April 5 - Easter Sunday : Experiencing Easter Everyday
Thursday Mar 26, 2015
Thursday Mar 26, 2015
First Reading Genesis 1:1—2:2
God creates the heavens and the earth. (shorter form, Genesis 1:1,26-31a)
Second Reading Genesis 22:1-18 (shorter form, Genesis 22:1-2,9a,10-13,15-18)
God puts Abraham to the test.
Third Reading Exodus 14:15—15:1
The Israelites pass through the Red Sea.
Fourth Reading Isaiah 54:5-14
The Lord promises to redeem Israel.
Fifth Reading Isaiah 55:1-11
A call to return to the Lord who is merciful
Sixth Reading Baruch 3:9-15,32—4:4
Israel is told to follow the way of God's commandments.
Seventh Reading Ezekiel 36:16-17a,18-28
The Lord will cleanse Israel for the sake of his holy name.
Epistle Romans 6:3-11
Those who have been baptized have died with Christ.
Responsorial Psalm Psalm 118:1-2,16-17,22-23
God's mercy endures forever.
Gospel Reading
Mark 16:1-7
The significance of Jesus' resurrection is that it offers for all believers the hope pf a new life here and now. Yes, we will all rise from the dead one day and share in eternal glory but even today, here and now we experience the power of Easter glory, the effects of Jesus' rising from the dead. we all testify to the power of the Resurrection among us when we don't let evil and death get the better of us but let the way of Jesus triumph in our lives through our faith, hope and love.
Thursday Mar 26, 2015
April 3 - Good Friday : By His Wounds We Have Healed.
Thursday Mar 26, 2015
Thursday Mar 26, 2015
First Reading Is 52:13—53:12
Responsorial Psalm Ps 31:2, 6, 12-13, 15-16, 17, 25
Second Reading Heb 4:14-16; 5:7-9
Gospel Reading Jn 18:1—19:42
Today
we venerate the wood of the Cross because it was by His Cross that Jesus
redeemed the world. No one can separate Jesus from His Cross: Where Christ is
there is the Cross and where there is the Cross there is Jesus. The world may
look at the Cross as a threat or as a curse or as a headache. But for a
Christian the Cross is the road to salvation and holiness. Pope St. John Paul
II said on the canonization of Bl. Padre Pio “difficulties and pain, is
accepted with love become a privileged path to sanctity”. Each one of us
has been given some type of a Cross. The presence of the Cross in our lives
tells us that we are in the surest road to sanctity. Therefore let us ask the
grace to embrace our little crosses with love. Because it is in the Cross that
we find forgiveness, healing and salvation
Thursday Mar 26, 2015
April 2 - Holy Thursday : The Day of Love
Thursday Mar 26, 2015
Thursday Mar 26, 2015
First Reading Ex 12:1-8, 11-14
Responsorial Psalm Ps 116:12-13,
15-16bc, 17-18
Second Reading 1 Cor 11:23-26
Gospel Reading Jn 13:1-15
The Mass of the Lord's Supper is characterized by the announcement of the commandment of love and the gesture of washing the feet.What Jesus did at the last supper when he washed the feet of his disciples, was not just an act of humility. It was an act of love revealing our God who is ‘passionately loving in his self-giving service’. In Johns Gospel, the Eucharistic meal is a celebration of the whole life of Jesus Christ. The last supper is not separated from his other meals which he took with the publicans and sinners and with Pharisees and with well to do people and above all with his own disciples. Foot washing expresses what living a life of self-emptying love looks like in imitation of the Lord who emptied Himself for us and who still does in the Most Holy Eucharist. It has been traditionally referred to as the Mandatum, the Command. It is an invitation to become a man or woman poured out for others. A Christian who lives the love of Charity (Caritas), the Love of Jesus Christ, makes Jesus Christ real. In so doing, the Incarnation continues.
Wednesday Mar 25, 2015
March 29 - Palm Sunday / Passion Sunday : Human abandonment of Jesus
Wednesday Mar 25, 2015
Wednesday Mar 25, 2015
Gospel at the Procession with Palms
Mark 11:1-10 or John 12:12-16
Jesus enters Jerusalem as the crowds shout, “Hosanna!”
First Reading
Isaiah 50:4-7
The Lord's servant will stand firm, even when persecuted.
Responsorial Psalm
Psalm 22:8-9,17-18,19-20,23-24
A cry for help to the Lord in the face of evildoers
Second Reading
Philippians 2:6-11
Christ was obedient even to death, but God has exalted him.
Gospel Reading
Mark 14:1—15:47 (shorter form: Mark 15:1-39)
Palm Sunday is the great doorway into Holy Week, the week when the Lord Jesus makes his way towards the culmination of his earthly existence. Today’s liturgy calls us to keep in mind two points. 1) The early Church Fathers saw a symbol in the gesture of the people who followed Jesus, the gesture of spreading out their clothes/coats before the Lord. Before Christ –the Fathers said- we must spread out our lives in an attitude of gratitude and adoration. 2) The totality of the human abandonment of Jesus which is portrayed by Mark. All flee, with the last one leaving even his clothes behind in order to get away from Jesus – the opposite of leaving all things to follow him. Have you abandoned Jesus like that young man reported in the Gospel of Mark?
Wednesday Mar 18, 2015
March 22 - Fifth Sunday in Lent: Dying to oneself
Wednesday Mar 18, 2015
Wednesday Mar 18, 2015
First Reading Jeremiah 31:31-34
Jeremiah tells the people that the Lord will make a new covenant with them,
planting the law within their hearts.
Responsorial Psalm Psalm 51:3-4,12-13,14-15
A prayer for God's mercy and forgiveness
Second Reading Hebrews 5:7-9
Through his sufferings, Jesus gained salvation for all who obey him.
Gospel Reading
John 12:20-33
In today’s Gospel Jesus tells us that unless a grain of wheat dies, it cannot bear fruit. Or to put it another way, unless we die to our own will, we cannot bear fruit for God. It is a paradox and a bitter one. The paradox of life through death would not puzzle us so much if we were to look at the nature and human growth. Our highest life dos not consist in self-expression but in self-sacrifice. It is not we take up but what we give up that makes us and others rich. Dying to self would often mean, sacrificing one’s self-will, for the sake of God’s will, which is his law, “placed within us and written upon our hearts” (Jer 31:33). Dying to self often means sacrificing ourselves for the sake of others. Only by dying to our self-seeking and vain ambitions, can we bring life to others, spreading joy and inspiring hope. If one has found nothing worth dying for, then probably found nothing worth living for. Let us pray: “Lord Jesus help us imitate the wheat and the grapes and offer our lives to you for whatever use you wish to make of them”.
Wednesday Mar 11, 2015
March15 - Fourth Sunday in Lent : The measure of God’s love
Wednesday Mar 11, 2015
Wednesday Mar 11, 2015
First Reading 2 Chronicles
36:14-16,19-23
The causes for the Israelites' captivity in Babylon are described.
Responsorial Psalm Psalm
137:1-2,3,4-5,6
A lament from exile for the loss of Jerusalem
Second Reading Ephesians 2:4-10
In grace we have been saved, so that we may do the work of the Lord.
Gospel Reading
John 3:14-21
Thursday Mar 05, 2015
March 8 - Third Sunday in Lent : Reverence vs Religion
Thursday Mar 05, 2015
Thursday Mar 05, 2015
First Reading Exodus 20:1-17 (or shorter form, Exodus 20:1-3,7-8,12-17)
Moses is given the Ten Commandments.
Responsorial Psalm Psalm 19:8,9,10,11
A prayer of praise to God who gives us his commandments
Second Reading 1 Corinthians 1:22-25
Paul preaches Christ crucified to the Corinthians.
Gospel Reading
John 2:13-25
The Gospel for the third Sunday of Lent interrupts the Mark’s Gospel we have been reading to give us a little of John’s. It is here to show us the prophecy of Jesus Resurrection – the event that we are preparing for in Lent, but I would like you to also note that the one time that Jesus gets angry that we are told about happens here as well. It happens because Jesus sees the commandments of our relationship to God being damaged. The house of God, the temple where God dwelt was considered sacred. It was where worship was held, it was where God’s name was never taken in vain, but glorified. Yet the porticos of the Temple were surrounded by trade and finance, and indeed, more emphasis was being put on the buying and selling than the worship and sacrifice itself. Jesus’ anger caused the event that did more than any other to upset the priests and Pharisees and directly led to the death he was about to suffer. So it is an important event. In some sense it was foolish of Jesus and because he gave into his human violence, it may have led to his own violent death. But Paul tells us God’s foolishness is wiser than human wisdom, and God’s weakness is stronger than human strength.” God had a plan, and that plan brought about nothing less than the salvation of all people.