Wednesday, February 25, 2026

Bread vs Stone; Fish vs Serpent

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Lenten Season : Lenten Season :  First Week :  Thursday*

*Gospel :  Mt 7:7-12*

*First Reading : Esther 4:17m -17z*

*Responsorial Psalm : 138:1-8*

*Bread vs Stone; Fish vs Serpent*

*1) The Specialty of the Images*

Jesus asks: If your child asks for bread, will you give him a stone? If he asks for a fish, will you give him a serpent?

The expected answer: Of course not.

Why These Images?

In Galilee, small round loaves looked like stones.
Some serpents resembled eels or fish.

The contrast is between: Life-giving vs lifeless, Nourishment vs harm, Good gift vs deceptive substitute

*2) The Core Message of the Contrast*

*A) God Is Not Deceptive*

God does not trick His children. If imperfect human parents give good gifts, how much more will God give what is good?

God does not Replace nourishment with emptiness.
God does not Replace life with danger.
God does not Replace blessing with harm.

*B) The Fatherhood of God*

The deepest point is relational: God is not distant power — He is Father.

This is revolutionary in Jesus’ teaching. The contrast teaches trust in prayer.

When you ask: You are not bargaining.
When you ask:  You are not manipulating.
When you ask: You are not risking punishment.
When you ask:  You are asking a Father.

*C) Spiritual Application*

Sometimes we think: 
“May be God will give me something harmful.”
“May be what I receive is a stone.”
“May be I asked for bread but got suffering.”

But Jesus reframes this: 
What appears to be a stone may actually be: Protection, Redirection, Growth

God gives what is truly good, not merely what is immediately desired.

*D) Connection to Luke 7*
 
Now connect this to Luke 7: The centurion trusted Jesus’ word. The widow received life instead of permanent loss.

These are examples of: Bread, not stone., Life, not serpent., Mercy, not abandonment.

The miracles demonstrate what the teaching promises: God gives life.

*3) The Spiritual Significance*

The contrast reveals three deep truths:

*A) God’s goodness exceeds human goodness* : If flawed humans give good gifts, God’s goodness is infinitely greater.

*B) Faith is trusting the Giver*: The centurion didn’t need Jesus physically present — he trusted His word.

*C) Divine gifts are life-giving* : Everything Jesus does restores: Dignity, Health, Relationship, Hope

*4) Points to Ponder*

Do I secretly fear God may give me a “stone”?

Do I trust His timing when I don’t immediately see “bread”?

Can I ask boldly in prayer, believing He gives what truly nourishes?

The heart of this teaching is: God is good. God is Father. God gives life, not harm.

*Think about it*

*God bless you and your family. Praying for you and your dear ones*

*Fr Maxim DSouza*
*Jeppu Seminary*
*Mangalore*

Tuesday, February 24, 2026

Evil Generation and the People of Nineveh

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Lenten Season : Lenten Season :  First Week : Wednesday*

*Gospel :  Luke 11:29-32*

*First Reading : Jonah 3:1-10*

*Responsorial Psalm : 51:3-19*

*Evil Generation and the People of Nineveh*

*1) Clarification of the the Concepts* 

“This evil generation” (His contemporaries who rejected Him), and
The people of Nineveh who repented at Jonah’s preaching.

*2) The People of Nineveh*

Nineveh was the capital of the Assyrian Empire (modern-day Iraq). It was known for violence and wickedness.

When the prophet Jonah preached that judgment was coming, something surprising happened:

The king humbled himself. The people fasted. They repented sincerely. God spared them.

Even though they were pagans and morally corrupt, they responded to God’s warning.

*3) “This Evil Generation”*

In contrast, Jesus spoke about His own generation — especially religious leaders — who: Asked for signs repeatedly. Witnessed miracles. Heard divine teaching directly: Yet refused to believe.

Jesus said the Ninevites would “rise in judgment” against them because: Nineveh repented at Jonah’s preaching — and “something greater than Jonah is here.” That “greater” one is Jesus Himself.

*4) Who Is Better?*

From the biblical perspective: The Ninevites are presented as morally bad but spiritually responsive.

The evil generation is presented as religiously informed but spiritually resistant.

So, the Ninevites are “better” not because they were initially righteous — but because they repented when confronted with truth.

The issue is not who sinned more. The issue is who responded better to God’s call.

*5) Why This Comparison?*

Jesus uses this comparison to expose: Spiritual complacency – Having religious knowledge does not guarantee humility.

Hardness of heart – People can demand more proof while ignoring what is already given.

Accountability increases with privilege – The more light you receive, the more responsible you are.

Nineveh had: One reluctant prophet. A short warning. No miracles recorded.

Jesus’ generation had: The Son of God in person. Miracles. Fulfilled prophecies. Deep religious heritage. Yet many still refused.

*6) Connection to Present-Day Life*

This comparison is deeply relevant today.

*A) Information vs Transformation* 

We live in an age of: Unlimited sermons, Online theology, Spiritual podcasts, Religious debates. Yet knowledge does not equal repentance.

Like Jesus’ generation, we can: Study endlessly, Analyze endlessly, Debate endlessly, But avoid personal change

*B) Sign-Seeking Culture* 

Today many people say: “If God would just show me a sign…”. But often the deeper issue is not lack of evidence — it is resistance to surrender.

*C) Moral Humility vs Religious Pride* 

Nineveh shows: Even very broken people can turn around. 
Jesus’ generation shows: Even very religious people can resist truth.

The warning is not for “bad people out there.” It is for people who think they are already fine.

*Think about it*

*God bless you and your family. Praying for you and your dear ones*

*Fr Maxim DSouza*
*Jeppu Seminary*
*Mangalore*

Monday, February 23, 2026

The Logic of Forgiveness in Lord's Prayer

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Lenten Season : Lenten Season :  First Week :  Tuesday*

*Gospel :  Mt 6:7-15*

*First Reading : Is 55:10-11*

*Responsorial Psalm : 34: 4-19*

*The Logic of Forgiveness in Lord's Prayer*

*1) The “Logic” of Forgiveness*

The key line is: “Forgive us… as we forgive…”

This is not merely a comparison (“forgive us in the same way”), but a spiritual relationship between receiving and giving mercy.

The logic works in three connected ways:

*A) Forgiveness reflects the heart* : Forgiving others reveals that a person has truly understood God’s mercy. If I have deeply experienced God’s forgiveness, I become capable of forgiving.

*B) Forgiveness shows openness to grace* : Refusing to forgive hardens the heart. A hardened heart cannot receive mercy freely. It’s not that God is unwilling — it’s that the person has closed themselves to mercy.

*C) Forgiveness belongs to the Kingdom life* : In the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus describes the inner life of the Kingdom. Forgiveness is not optional; it is part of living as a child of the Father.

*2) How Does God the Father Forgive Us?*

In Matthew’s Gospel, God forgives: Freely, Compassionately, Out of Fatherly love, Before we deserve it

This is seen even more clearly in: The parable of the unforgiving servant (Mt 18:21–35). The mercy-centered teaching of Jesus throughout the Gospel

God’s forgiveness is: Initiated by grace, Received through repentance, Connected to transformation of heart

God forgives as a Father — but Fatherhood implies relationship, not mechanical transaction.

*3) Is God’s Forgiveness Conditioned on Our Forgiving Others?*

This is the hardest part : At first glance, it sounds strictly conditional: “If you do not forgive… neither will your Father forgive.”

But we must understand this carefully.

It is not A legal contract, 
It is not A system of earning forgiveness,
It is not a A transaction: “I forgive → God pays me back”

It is: A spiritual law of the heart

Think of it this way: Forgiveness received → softens the heart, Softened heart → forgives others

Refusal to forgive → reveals a heart not yet transformed

In this sense, our forgiveness of others is not the cause of God forgiving us — it is the evidence that we have received His mercy.

*4)  Mercy Cannot Be Divided*

You cannot divide mercy into two directions: Upward (toward God) and Outward (toward others)

If I ask God for mercy but deny it to others, I contradict myself.

Jesus is exposing hypocrisy: “Lord, forgive me” while saying “But I will not forgive him.” This is spiritually incoherent.

*5) A Deeper Spiritual Insight*

Forgiveness is participation in God’s own life.

God’s mercy flows like this: God → Me → Others

If I block the flow toward others, I block it within myself.

It is similar to a closed fist: A closed fist cannot give. A closed fist also cannot receive.

*6) Practical Reflection Questions*

When I pray “forgive us,” do I mean it?

Is there someone I am refusing to release?

Have I truly experienced God’s mercy personally?

Is my heart soft or guarded?

*7) Points to Ponder*

The Lord’s Prayer teaches this paradox: We do not forgive in order to earn forgiveness. We forgive because we are forgiven.

God’s forgiveness is primary. Our forgiveness is responsive. 

*Think about it*

*God bless you and your family. Praying for you and your dear ones*

*Fr Maxim DSouza*
*Jeppu Seminary*
*Mangalore*

Sunday, February 22, 2026

The Separation of the Goats & Sheep

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Lenten Season : Lenten Season :  First Week :  Monday*

*Gospel :  Mt 25:31-46*

*First Reading : Levi 19: 1-2; 11-18*

*Responsorial Psalm : 19: 8-15*

*The Separation of the Goats & Sheep*

*1) The fact of Separation* 

*A) It is a Picture of Final Judgment*

Jesus describes Himself as the Son of Man coming in glory, seated on His throne, separating people “as a shepherd separates sheep from goats.”

Sheep (right side) → Blessed, inherit the Kingdom

Goats (left side) → Sent away into punishment

This scene is not just symbolic storytelling; it reveals: Christ as Judge, A universal gathering (“all nations”), A decisive and final separation

*B) The Criterion of Judgment: Love in Action*

The surprising focus is not religious ritual, wealth, or status — but how people treated: The hungry,  The thirsty, The stranger, The naked, The sick, The imprisoned

Jesus says: “Whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers and sisters of mine, you did for me.”

The key message: Love for Christ is shown through practical love for others.

*2) Reasons for the Separation

The separation is based on response — not merely belief, but lived faith.

*Sheep*: Responded with compassion, Acted in mercy, Served without realizing they were serving Christ

*Goats*: Failed to act, Ignored suffering, Showed indifference

Notice something important: Both groups are surprised. The issue is not conscious rejection of Christ, but neglect of love.

The deeper reason for separation: A heart transformed by love versus a heart closed in self-interest.

*3) Theological Implications* 

*A) Faith Must Be Active* : True faith produces visible fruit. Love is evidence of belonging to Christ.

*B) Every Person Bears Christ’s Presence* : Christ identifies Himself with “the least.” This elevates the dignity of the poor and marginalized.

*C) Eternal Consequences Are Real* : The passage clearly teaches accountability and eternal destiny. Choices in this life matter.

*4) Application to Our Lives* 

This passage challenges us to examine:

*A) How do I treat the vulnerable?* : Do I notice those in need? Or do I look away?

*B) Is my faith practical?* : Do I serve only when convenient? Or is compassion a way of life?

*C) Do I see Christ in others?* : Every encounter becomes sacred when we see Christ in the hungry, sick, lonely, and forgotten.

*5) Points to Ponder* 

*A) The Danger of Indifference* : The goats were not violent criminals — they were indifferent. Indifference can be spiritually deadly.

*B) Small Acts Matter* : The acts mentioned are simple: giving food, visiting, clothing. The Kingdom is built through ordinary mercy.

*C) We Meet Christ Daily* : Judgment is not only future — it begins in daily choices. Each day we stand before Christ in the face of another person.

*D) Love Is the Final Measure* : At the end of life, what remains is love.

*Think about it*

*God bless you and your family. Praying for you and your dear ones*

*Fr Maxim DSouza*
*Jeppu Seminary*
*Mangalore*

Rereading into the Temptations of Jesus in the Present day Context

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Lenten Season : Lenten Season :  First Week : Sunday*

*Gospel :  Matthew 34: 1-11*

*First Reading :  Gen 2:7-9; 3:1-7*

*Responsorial Psalm : 51: 3-17*

*Second Reading : 5:12-19*

*Rereading into the Temptations of Jesus in the Present day Context* 

*1) Three Temptations* 

*A) Turn stones into bread* – Temptation of physical need and self-satisfaction.

*B) Jump from the temple pinnacle* – Temptation of pride, fame, and testing God.

*C) Bow down and worship Satan for all kingdoms* – Temptation of power and worldly glory.

Jesus responds to each temptation with Scripture (from Deuteronomy), showing obedience and trust in God.

*2) Significance of These Temptations?*

*A) Jesus as the New Israel* : Jesus relives Israel’s 40 years in the desert during His 40 days of fasting. Where Israel failed (complaining about bread, testing God, turning to idols), Jesus remains faithful.

*B) Jesus as the New Adam* : Where Adam fell in temptation, Jesus stands firm. He reverses humanity’s disobedience through obedience.

*C) Revelation of True Messiahship* : 

*Satan tempts Jesus to*: Use power for Himself, Seek spectacular recognition, Gain authority without the Cross

*But Jesus chooses* : Dependence on God, Humility, The way of suffering and obedience

This shows that God’s kingdom is not built on spectacle, comfort, or domination.

*3) Understanding the Temptations in the Present-Day Context* 

These temptations are not just historical—they describe the ongoing human struggle.

*A) First Temptation: Stones into Bread* 

*Modern form*: Materialism and consumerism
“My life is about earning, possessing, enjoying.”
Identity based on salary, property, comfort.

Jesus says: “Man shall not live by bread alone.”
Meaning: We are more than economic beings. Spiritual hunger is deeper than physical hunger.

Today this temptation appears as: Workaholism, Constant desire for more, Measuring success only in money

*B) Second Temptation: Jump from the Temple* 

*Modern form*: Ego, image, and social validation
Desire to be admired
Social media validation culture
“If God loves me, He must prove it.”

*Testing God today looks like*: 
Demanding miracles on our terms
Treating faith as a performance
Using religion for prestige

Jesus teaches: Do not manipulate God for attention.

*C) Third Temptation: Worship for Power* 

*Modern form*: Power, influence, control

Political ambition without morality, Corruption, Sacrificing values for success

*Satan offers shortcuts*: Success without sacrifice, Authority without integrity, Glory without the Cross

Jesus rejects this: Worship God alone.

*4) How Does “Satan” Appear in Present-Day Life?*

Satan may not appear visibly—but temptation works through:

*A) Ideologies* : Extreme materialism, Secularism that denies spiritual dimension, “You are what you own.”

*B) Systems* : Corrupt economic systems, Exploitation in business, Power politics without conscience

*C) Inner Voice* : Temptation often sounds reasonable: “Everyone does it.” “You deserve this.” “No one will know.” “This is practical.” 

Satan in Scripture is the “tempter” and “accuser.” In modern life, this appears as: Subtle compromise, Moral relativism, Gradual dulling of conscience

*5) Materialistic Outlook and the Temptation Today*

*Materialism says*: Happiness = Possessions, Security = Wealth, Identity = Status, 

*But this leads to*: Anxiety, Comparison, Emptiness, Loss of spiritual depth

*Jesus’ response teaches*: Dependence on God, Simplicity, Integrity, Worship directed only to God

Materialism is not just about having things — it is about making things ultimate.

*6) Points to Ponder*

What Is My “Bread”? : What do I think I cannot live without? Money? Recognition? Control?

Do I Test God? : Do I pray only when I need something dramatic?

What Am I Willing to Bow To? : Career? Popularity? Political identity? Comfort?

Am I Choosing the Cross or the Shortcut? : The Christian path is not immediate glory but faithful obedience.

*Think about it*

*God bless you and your family. Praying for you and your dear ones*

*Fr Maxim DSouza*
*Jeppu Seminary*
*Mangalore*

The Beauty of THREE TABLES

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Lenten Season :  Saturday after Ash Wednesday*

*Gospel :  Mt 5:27-32*

*First Reading : Is 58: 9-14*

*Responsorial Psalm : 86: 1-6*

*The Beauty of THREE TABLES 

*1) The Table at the Tax Office*

This is the Table where Levi was first found
This is the table of work, compromise, and routine life.

Levi (Matthew) was sitting at a tax booth — a place associated with: Money, Power, Corruption, Social rejection

It was not a holy place. It was not a synagogue. It was not a temple.

Yet that is exactly where Jesus called him.

*Reflection:* Jesus meets us at the table where we actually live — even if it is messy.

Our workplace, our office desk, our daily responsibilities can become the place of calling.

No table is too secular for grace.

The tax office table reminds us: God’s call begins in ordinary life.

*2) The Dining Table at Matthew’s House*

This is the table where sinners sat with Jesus in Mathews House 
After being called, Levi did something extraordinary — he hosted a banquet.

The dining table becomes: A place of celebration, A place of friendship, A place of inclusion,  A place where the “unworthy” are welcomed

The Pharisees complained: “Why do you eat and drink with tax collectors and sinners?”

Jesus answered: “I have not come to call the righteous but sinners to repentance.”

*Reflection* : The dining table becomes a place of mission. Evangelization happens around meals. Hospitality becomes a form of theology.
 
This table shows: Grace is not private — it invites others.

The table in Matthew’s house is where sinners become guests, and guests become disciples.

*3) The Eucharistic Table : The table of communion*

The Eucharistic table connects deeply with the banquet at Matthew’s house.

In the Eucharist: Christ still sits with sinners. The unworthy are invited. Mercy is served as food.

Just as Levi’s table gathered the rejected, the Eucharistic table gathers: The weak, The broken, The repentant

The Church is not a reward for the righteous — it is a hospital for sinners.

*Reflection*: At the tax office table, Levi was called.

At his dining table, he welcomed others.

At the Eucharistic table, we receive the One who called us.

This is a spiritual progression: Called → Converted → Sent → Nourished

*4) Connection between Three Tables* 

*Tax Office Table* - Where we are found - God calls us in our imperfection

*Matthew’s Dining Table* - Where we gather others - Grace overflows into hospitality

*Eucharistic Table* - Where we receive Christ - Mercy becomes communion

All three tables teach us: Jesus crosses boundaries. No life situation is beyond redemption. The table is where relationships are restored. Conversion is never meant to remain private.

*Think about it*

*God bless you and your family. Praying for you and your dear ones*

*Fr Maxim DSouza*
*Jeppu Seminary*
*Mangalore*

Thursday, February 19, 2026

The real Meaning of Fast

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Lenten Season :  Friday after Ash Wednesday*

*Gospel : Mt 9:14-15*

*First Reading : Is 58:1-9a*

*Responsorial Psalm : 51:3-19*

*The real Meaning of Fast*

*1) What Kind of Fasting Is This?*

Jesus is speaking primarily about spiritual, relational fasting — not just abstaining from food.

In Jewish tradition, fasting usually meant:

Abstaining from food (sometimes drink)

Accompanied by prayer, repentance, and mourning

Often connected to longing for God or sorrow for sin

But Jesus shifts the focus:

While He (the “bridegroom”) is present, it is a time of joy

When He is taken away (pointing toward His Passion and death), it will be a time of longing and fasting

So the fasting He speaks of is:

A fasting born from love and longing

A response to the felt absence of the Bridegroom

A preparation of the heart

It is not legalistic fasting — it is relational fasting.

*2) What Type of Fast Is Needed in Lent?*

Lent is rooted in: The 40 days Jesus fasted in the wilderness

Preparation for His Passion and Resurrection

*A) External Fast* :  

Traditionally

Abstaining from certain foods (often meat)

Reducing meals

Simplicity in lifestyle

*B) Interior Fast (More Important)*

Fasting from sin

Fasting from distractions

Fasting from ego, pride, anger

Fasting from noise to make space for God

Lent is not about punishment. It is about making room for the Bridegroom.

*3) How to Understand This Concept Spiritually*

Jesus calls Himself the Bridegroom. That imagery appears throughout Scripture:

God as Bridegroom in the prophets

Christ as Bridegroom of the Church

Fasting during Lent means:

“I miss You.”

“I desire You.”

“I want nothing to replace You.”

It becomes a language of love.

If fasting is only diet change — it is incomplete.

If fasting increases prayer, humility, and charity — it becomes transformative.

*4) Points to Ponder*

*A) Fasting Is About Relationship*

When you fast, ask:

What space am I creating for Christ?

If the hunger makes you irritated but not prayerful, adjust your intention.

*B) Joy and Sorrow Both Belong to Christian Life*

Jesus says there is:

A time of joy (His presence)

A time of longing (His apparent absence)

Lent holds both: Sorrow for sin

Hope of Resurrection

Hope of Resurrection

*C) The Real Fast Is From Self-Sufficiency*

True fasting says: “I am not sustained by bread alone.”

It reminds us of dependence on God.

*D) Fasting Without Love Is Empty*

Elsewhere in Scripture, especially in Book of Isaiah 58, God says the true fast includes:

Justice, Mercy, Care for the poor

So a powerful Lenten question is:

Am I becoming more compassionate?

*5) A Simple Way to Live This During Lent*

You might:

Fast from one meal weekly and use that time to pray

Give what you save to someone in need

Fast from negativity or complaining

Fast from screens to deepen silence

Let your fasting:

Create hunger for God

Deepen prayer

Increase love

*Think about it*

*God bless you and your family. Praying for you and your dear ones*

*Fr Maxim DSouza*
*Jeppu Seminary*
*Mangalore*

Bread vs Stone; Fish vs Serpent

GOSPEL THOUGHTS *Lenten Season : Lenten Season :  First Week :  Thursday* *Gospel :  Mt 7:7-12* *First Reading : Esther 4:17m -17z* *Respons...