Tuesday, June 30, 2026

The Power of the demons in Two men and in the Pigs

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Ordinary Season : Thirteenth Week:  Wednesday*

*Gospel :  Mt 8:28-34*

*First Reading : Amos 5:14-15; 21-24*

*Responsorial Psalm : 50: 7-17*

*The Power of the demons in Two men and in the Pigs*

*1) What is the power of these demons?*

The passage shows several aspects of their power:

*Power to control and torment human lives*. The two men were possessed, living among tombs, isolated from society, and so violent that no one could safely pass that way (Matthew 8:28).
*Power to destroy relationships*. They were cut off from family, community, and normal human life.
*Power to inspire fear*. Travelers avoided that road because of the men.
*Limited power*. Although the demons were destructive, they could do nothing without Jesus' permission. They begged Jesus, "If you cast us out, send us into the herd of pigs" (Matthew 8:31). This shows that even evil spirits are subject to Christ's authority.

The demons possess destructive power, but never unlimited power.

*2) How destructive were they in the lives of the two men?*

The destruction was complete in several dimensions.

*A) Spiritually* : The men were under demonic bondage. Their lives were dominated by evil rather than by God.

*B) Emotionally and mentally* : They lost peace and self-control. Their identity was overshadowed by the demons.

*C) Socially* : They lived among the tombs instead of in society. They were excluded from normal community life. People feared them rather than loved them.

*D) Physically* : They became extraordinarily violent. Their condition endangered both themselves and others.

The demons robbed these men of dignity, freedom, and purpose.

*3) How destructive were the demons to the pigs?*

Once Jesus allowed the demons to enter the pigs, the entire herd rushed down the steep bank, plunged into the sea,
and drowned (Matthew 8:32).

This demonstrates the true nature of demonic influence: destruction, chaos, death, waste.

The pigs themselves were innocent. Their destruction reveals that the demons' intent was never to preserve life but to ruin it.

This agrees with Jesus' later teaching in Gospel of John 10:10: "The thief comes only to steal and kill and destroy."

*4) What is the connection between the two men and the pigs?* 

*A) The pigs visibly reveal what the demons intended for the men* 

The demons used the men as their dwelling place, so they did not destroy them immediately. When they entered the pigs, their destructive purpose became instantly visible. The pigs rushed to death. This suggests that the demons desired the destruction of the men all along.

*B) The pigs demonstrate the value of a human life*

A whole herd was lost. Yet Jesus considered the restoration of two human beings more valuable than the economic loss. This teaches that people are worth more than possessions.

*C) The drowning exposed the nature of evil*

Had the pigs simply wandered away, people might not have understood. Instead, their sudden destruction revealed exactly what evil seeks to accomplish.

*C) People's reaction*

Instead of rejoicing over the healing of the two men, the townspeople focused on the economic loss and asked Jesus to leave (Matthew 8:34). This warns believers not to value material possessions above transformed human lives.

*5) Why did Jesus allow the demons to enter the pigs?*

The text does not explicitly explain Jesus' reason, but many interpreters suggest that it served several purposes:

To demonstrate visibly that the demons had truly left the men;
To reveal the destructive nature of evil;
To display Jesus' absolute authority over demons;
To show the incomparable value of restoring human lives.

Overall, the passage is not primarily about the power of demons but about the greater power of Jesus. The demons could enslave, terrify, and destroy, but with a single command Jesus set the two men free, revealing that His authority over evil is complete and that His mission is to bring life, freedom, and restoration.

*Think about it*

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

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

The Sleeping Jesus in the Boat

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Ordinary Season : Thirteenth Week:  Tuesday*

*Gospel :  Mt 8:23-27*

*First Reading : Amos 3:1-8; 4:11-12*

*Responsorial Psalm : 5:5-8*

*The Sleeping Jesus in the Boat*

*1) Jesus sleeps because He is at peace*

The storm is violent. The disciples are terrified. Yet Jesus sleeps. His sleep is not carelessness. It is the peace of someone who knows the Father's will. He is completely secure in God's providence.

There is a contrast: The disciples measure reality by the size of the storm. Jesus measures reality by the certainty of the Father.

Our lives often resemble the disciples. We lose peace because we believe the storm has the final word. Jesus shows that inner peace does not depend on outward calm.

Peace is not the absence of storms. Peace is the presence of Christ.

*2) God sometimes appears silent*

Perhaps the hardest part of the story is not the wind. It is that Jesus seems to be doing nothing.

The disciples ask: "Teacher, do you not care that we are perishing?" (Mark 4:38)

This question echoes throughout human history.

Why does God seem silent?
Why does He delay?
Why doesn't He intervene immediately?

The Gospel suggests something important: 
Jesus was asleep—but He was still in the boat. 
His silence was not His absence.
Often we mistake silence for abandonment.
Many saints describe periods when God seems hidden. Yet those times can become occasions for deeper trust.

*3) The boat represents our life*

From the earliest centuries, Christians have seen the boat as a symbol.

It represents: our personal life, our family, the Church, humanity itself, 

Storms symbolize: suffering, illness, failure, grief, uncertainty, temptation

No one escapes storms. The question is not whether storms come.

The question is: Who is in the boat with you?

*4) Fear makes us forget what we already know*

The disciples had already witnessed miracles. They had seen Jesus heal the sick. Yet one storm erased their memory. Fear narrows vision.

It makes us believe: God has forgotten us. We are alone. Hope is gone.

Faith remembers what fear forgets. 

One spiritual practice is recalling how God has been faithful in the past, especially when present circumstances tempt us to despair.

*5) Jesus calms the storm after calming the disciples*

Notice the order.

First He speaks to the disciples: "Why are you afraid?" Only then does He speak to the wind.

Sometimes the greater storm is not outside. It is inside.

Two people can experience the same situation. One lives in panic. The other remains peaceful.

The external circumstances are identical. The inner world is different.

Jesus desires to quiet the heart before He changes the circumstances.

*6) The storm reveals what is hidden*

Calm seas reveal little about us.

Storms reveal: what we trust, what we fear, where our hope rests, what controls our hearts

Trials are often revealing more than punishing. The storm becomes a teacher.

*7) Faith is trusting before the miracle*

If Jesus had calmed the storm immediately, faith would have been easy. Instead, He waits. Faith is believing while the waves are still crashing.

Many people believe after seeing. Biblical faith often means trusting before seeing. That is why waiting can deepen faith.

*8) Sometimes Jesus allows storms to deepen our faith*

Jesus Himself led the disciples into the boat. He did not promise an easy crossing. He promised His presence.

Sometimes God does not remove difficulties because He intends to form us through them. A comfortable life may produce shallow faith. A tested faith often becomes mature.

What storms am I facing today?
Where do I feel that God is silent?
Do I believe silence means absence?
What fears dominate my heart?
Have I allowed anxiety to become louder than God's promises?
Am I trying to control the storm instead of trusting the One who is with me?
Can I rest, even when everything around me feels uncertain?

*Think about it*

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

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

The Identity of Jesus in Caesarea Philippi

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Solemnity of Peter & Paul, Apostles*

*Ordinary Season : Thirteenth Week:  Monday*

*Gospel :  Mt 16:13-19*

*First Reading : Acts 12: 1-11*

*Responsorial Psalm : 34: 2-9*

*Second Reading 2 Tim 4: 6-8, 17-18*

*The Identity of Jesus in Caesarea Philippi*

*1) Why did Jesus choose Caesarea Philippi?*

The location itself is deeply symbolic. Caesarea Philippi was unlike the villages around the Sea of Galilee. It was:

A center of pagan worship, especially dedicated to the Greek god Pan.
A place where the Roman emperor was honored as divine.
Filled with temples, idols, and political power.
Near a cave that people called the "Gate of Hades" (the entrance to the underworld).

Against this backdrop of competing gods and earthly powers, Jesus asked:

"Who do people say that the Son of Man is?"

Then He made it personal: "But who do you say that I am?" The setting is not accidental.

It is as if Jesus is saying: "In a world full of false gods, competing loyalties, and human power, who am I to you?"

The confession of faith is made where many voices claim authority.

*2) Why did Jesus ask if He already knew?*

Jesus was not seeking information. He was forming His disciples.

There is a difference between: knowing about Jesus, and knowing Jesus.

The first question concerns public opinion. The second concerns personal faith.

Many answered: John the Baptist, Elijah, Jeremiah, one of the prophets.

These are respectable opinions. But Jesus does not build His Church on opinions. He asks for conviction.

*3) Peter's confession*

Simon Peter answered: "You are the Christ, the Son of the living God." This confession contains three profound truths.

*A) "You are the Christ"* : Jesus is the promised Messiah. He is God's anointed King.

*B) "The Son of the living God"* : Not merely another prophet. Not simply a teacher. Not one god among many. He is uniquely God's Son. Notice the contrast. Surrounded by lifeless idols, Peter proclaims the living God.

*C) Faith is God's gift* : Jesus replies: "Flesh and blood has not revealed this to you, but my Father in heaven." Faith is not merely intellectual agreement. It is revelation. One may study theology for years and still miss Christ. Another may simply open the heart and recognize Him.

*4) Why is this incident so important?*

This passage is a turning point in Matthew's Gospel.

Before this event: Jesus reveals Himself through miracles. The disciples are learning.

After this event: Jesus begins teaching about His suffering, death, and resurrection. He prepares the disciples for the Cross.

The confession comes before the Cross because discipleship begins with recognizing who Jesus is.

*5) What is the Caesarea Philippi of our lives today?*

Spiritually speaking, everyone has a Caesarea Philippi.

It is the place where many voices compete for our loyalty.

Today's Caesarea Philippi may be:

materialism telling us that money is ultimate;
success becoming our identity;
social media shaping our worth through likes and approval;
consumerism promising happiness through possessions;
political ideologies demanding absolute allegiance;
technology becoming something we trust more than God;
career ambitions replacing our vocation;
personal comfort taking precedence over faithfulness.

In each of these settings, Jesus still asks: "Who do you say that I am?"

*6) Points to Ponder*

*A) From hearsay to personal faith* : Many people know what others say about Jesus. Few have answered Him personally. Christian faith begins when Christ becomes my Lord, not merely a historical figure.

*B) Faith is tested where other gods compete* : Jesus did not ask this question in the Temple. He asked it where idols surrounded His disciples. Likewise, faith matures not in isolation but in the midst of competing values and pressures.

*C) Every disciple must answer personally* : Parents cannot answer. Friends cannot answer. Pastors cannot answer. The Church cannot answer for us. One day each believer must respond to Christ's question.

*D) Our confession must become our life* : Peter confessed Jesus boldly. Later he denied Him. Then he was restored. This reminds us that discipleship involves both confession and ongoing conversion. Faith is not measured only by what we say, but by allowing Christ to reshape our lives.

*E) Christ asks the question before giving the mission* : Only after Peter's confession does Jesus entrust him with greater responsibility. Identity comes before mission. We cannot effectively serve Christ until we first know who He is.

Who is Jesus to me today—not ten years ago, but now?
What "idols" compete for first place in my heart?
What is the "Caesarea Philippi" where my faith is being tested?
Is my knowledge of Jesus based mainly on what others say, or on a living relationship with Him?
If Jesus asked me today, "Who do you say that I am?" how would my life—not just my words—answer?

*Think about it*

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

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

The Power of the One cup of Cold Water

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Ordinary Season : Thirteenth Week:  Sunday*

*Gospel :  Mt 10:37-42*

*First Reading : 2 Kings 4:8-11, 14-16*

*Responsorial Psalm : 89: 2-19*

*Second Reading : Romans 6:3-4, 8-11*

*The Power of the One cup of Cold Water*

*1) Why "a cup of cold water"?*

In the hot climate of Palestine, cold water was precious and refreshing. Offering someone a drink was a simple act of hospitality, kindness, and compassion.

Jesus deliberately chooses something: very ordinary, inexpensive, available to almost everyone.

The point is not the monetary value of the gift but the love with which it is given. God measures the heart, not the size of the action.

*2) The Power of One Cup of Cold Water*

*A) Small acts become sacred*

The Kingdom of God grows through seemingly insignificant acts.

A smile. A listening ear. A word of encouragement. A visit to the sick. Sharing food. Helping someone carry a burden. These are today's "cups of cold water."

Jesus says that nothing done in love is ever wasted. There are no "small" acts when they are done for Christ.

*B) It recognizes Christ in others*

Earlier Jesus says: "Whoever welcomes you welcomes me." (Mt 10:40). Therefore, offering water to a disciple is actually offering it to Christ Himself.

This echoes the teaching in Gospel of Matthew: "I was thirsty and you gave me drink." Every person becomes a meeting place with Christ.

*C) Love is practical*

Christianity is not only beliefs or prayers. It is expressed through concrete acts.

James writes: "Faith without works is dead." One cup of water is love made visible.

*D) No act escapes God's notice*

Jesus promises: "They will certainly not lose their reward." This is astonishing.

God notices what the world ignores. People may never remember our kindness. But God remembers. Nothing done in love disappears.

*3) Why specifically "cold" water?*

Some biblical scholars suggest several meanings.

*A) Refreshment* : Cold water revives the weary. Likewise, our kindness refreshes tired hearts. Sometimes people do not need solutions. They need refreshment. A gentle conversation can become a cup of cold water.

*B) The Best We Can Offer* : Cold water was more refreshing than warm water. It implies giving thoughtfully rather than carelessly. Love asks: "What does this person truly need?"

*C) Immediate Compassion* : Water cannot wait. When someone is thirsty, help is needed now. Likewise, Christian charity is prompt. It responds before it is too late.

*4) Spiritual Meaning*

The "cup of cold water" symbolizes:

mercy
compassion
hospitality
encouragement
generosity
presence
service
love in action

It reminds us that holiness is lived in ordinary moments. Many people look for dramatic ways to serve God. Jesus points instead to everyday kindness

*5) Deeper Reflections*

*A) Great love is hidden in little things* : We often think: "I can only do something important if I have money or influence." Jesus says: "Start with one cup." Small acts change lives.

*B) Every encounter is sacred* : Every person we meet may be carrying hidden pain. Perhaps what they need today is simply someone to notice them. One kind word can restore hope.

*C) Kindness costs little but gives much.* : A cup of water costs almost nothing. Yet it may save a traveler from exhaustion. Likewise, listening patiently, forgiving quickly, encouraging sincerely, sharing a meal, may become life-giving gifts.

*D) God sees what no one applauds* : The world celebrates extraordinary achievements. God treasures hidden faithfulness. The unnoticed caregiver, the volunteer, the quiet teacher, the person who prays for other. all offer "cups of cold water."

*E) Every disciple can participate* : Jesus does not ask everyone to perform miracles. He asks everyone to love. No one is too poor to give kindness. No one is too insignificant to serve.

The "one cup of cold water" teaches a central truth of the Gospel: God transforms ordinary acts of love into eternal gifts.

*Think about it*

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

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

Friday, June 26, 2026

The Personality of the Centurion

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Ordinary Season : Twelfth Week:  Saturday*

*Gospel :  Mt 8:5-17*

*First Reading : Lamentations 2:2, 10-14, 18-19*

*Responsorial Psalm : 74: 1-21*

*The Personality of the Centurion*

*1) The Speciality of the Centurion*

*A) Extraordinary faith* 

Jesus says: "Truly I tell you, with no one in Israel have I found such faith." (Matthew 8:10). The centurion believed that Jesus' authority was so great that He did not need to be physically present to heal.

*B) Humility* 

Although he was a Roman officer commanding about one hundred soldiers, he says: "Lord, I am not worthy that you should enter under my roof." Power often leads to pride, but this man combines authority with humility.

*C) Compassion* 

He approaches Jesus not for himself but for his servant. In the Roman world, servants were often treated as property. Yet this centurion genuinely cared for his servant's suffering.

*D) Understanding of authority* 

He explains: "I also am a man under authority, with soldiers under me." He recognizes that just as his commands are obeyed, Jesus commands sickness, nature, and even death. His military experience helped him understand Christ's divine authority.

*2) Why is he so different from others?*

Several reasons make him stand out.

*A) He is a Gentile* : He is not part of Israel, yet he recognizes Jesus before many religious people do. Faith is not determined by nationality, race, or background.

*B) He seeks Jesus with confidence* : Others demanded signs and miracles. The centurion simply trusted Jesus' word.

*C) He combines faith with humility* : Sometimes people have confidence without humility. Others have humility without confidence. The centurion possesses both.

*D) He puts love into action* : His concern is practical. He does not merely feel sorry for his servant; he seeks help.

*3) How is he an inspiration to others?*

The centurion teaches several timeless lessons.

*A) Believe in Christ's power* : Even when we cannot see immediate results, Christ is still at work. Faith trusts God's word before seeing the outcome.

*B) Use authority to serve* : Leadership is not domination. Whether we are parents, teachers, employers, priests, or public servants, authority should protect and uplift others.

*C) Care for those under our responsibility* : The centurion reminds us that true greatness is shown by caring for the weakest.

*D) Practice humility*  : The words, "Lord, I am not worthy..." have become part of the Eucharistic liturgy in many Christian traditions. They remind believers to approach God with reverence and gratitude.

*4) Relevance to our life today*

*A) Faith beyond visible evidence* : Many people struggle because they want proof before believing. The centurion teaches us to trust God's promises even when we cannot see immediate answers.

*B) Humility in success* : Education, wealth, position, and influence should not make us proud. Real greatness bows before God.

*C) Compassion in everyday life* : Like the centurion, we should notice the suffering of family members, coworkers, neighbors, and those who serve us. Faith expresses itself through love.

*D) Respect for God's authority* : Instead of trying to control everything, we learn to surrender our lives to Christ. His authority brings healing, peace, and hope.

*5) Points to Ponder* 

Faith sees what the eyes cannot.
Humility opens the door to grace.
Love notices another's pain.
Jesus responds to sincere faith wherever it is found.
Authority is meant for service.

The centurion stands as a model of faith, humility, compassion, and trust. Though he was an outsider, his heart was open to Christ. Though he held authority, he remained humble. Though he had power, he used it with compassion.

*Think about it*

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

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

Lepers Kneeling before Jesus

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Ordinary Season : Twelfth Week:  Friday*

*Gospel :  Mt 8:1-4*

*First Reading : 2 Kings 25: 1-12*

*Responsorial Psalm : 137: 1-6*

*Lepers Kneeling before Jesus*

*1) The Actual Meaning of Kneeling*

In the ancient world, kneeling was a sign of:

Respect before someone of higher authority.
Humility and acknowledgment of one's need.
Submission to a king, master, or divine figure.
Earnest petition or prayer.

The leper was a social outcast. According to Jewish law, lepers were often separated from society. Yet he approaches Jesus and kneels. He is not demanding healing; he is placing himself completely before Christ.

*2) The Spiritual Meaning*

*A) Humility Before God* 

 The leper recognizes his helplessness. He does not say, "I deserve healing." He says, "If you are willing."

This is the attitude of true prayer: recognizing God's power, trusting God's goodness, surrendering to God's will. Kneeling expresses inward humility. The body becomes a visible expression of the soul.

*B) Faith* 

Kneeling is also an act of faith. The leper already believes Jesus can heal him. His question is not about Jesus' power but about His willingness. Many people doubt God's power. The leper does not.

His kneeling says: "I know You can. I entrust myself to You."

*C) Worship* 

The Greek word used in many passages for kneeling or bowing before Jesus can also carry the sense of reverence or worship.

The leper sees more than a miracle-worker. He addresses Jesus as "Lord." Thus kneeling becomes an acknowledgment of Christ's divine authority.

*3) The Symbolic Meaning*

*A) Empty Hands Before God* 

A kneeling person cannot boast.

Kneeling symbolizes: surrender of pride, dependence on grace, openness to receive.

The leper comes with nothing except his need. This reflects the spiritual condition of every believer. 

*B) Acknowledging Spiritual Poverty* 

Leprosy in Scripture often symbolizes the deeper reality of sin—not because every leper was sinful, but because leprosy visibly separated people from the community much as sin separates humanity from God.

The kneeling leper symbolizes humanity coming before God saying: "Lord, I cannot heal myself. I need Your mercy."

*C) From Isolation to Communion* 

The leper is excluded, but kneeling before Jesus becomes the beginning of restoration.

Symbolically: distance becomes closeness, exclusion becomes acceptance, impurity becomes cleansing.

*4) How Important Is Kneeling?*

Kneeling itself does not magically create holiness. Scripture teaches that God looks at the heart. Yet bodily actions matter because human beings are both body and soul.

Kneeling: helps cultivate humility, reminds us that God is God and we are not, trains the heart through the body, expresses reverence when words are insufficient.

Throughout the Bible many people kneel in prayer:

Solomon dedicating the Temple,
Daniel praying faithfully,
Stephen before his death,
Paul in prayer,
even Jesus Himself in the agony of prayer.

Thus kneeling is a deeply biblical posture of prayer and surrender.

*5) Application to Our Lives*

*When We Feel Unworthy* : The leper teaches us that we do not need to become perfect before approaching Christ. Many people think: "I will pray when I become better." The leper came while still a leper.

*We come to Jesus as we are.* : When We Need Healing. Whether the wound is physical, emotional, relational, or spiritual, the leper's prayer can become our prayer: "Lord, if You are willing, You can make me clean."

*When Pride Grows* : Kneeling reminds us that everything is grace. It is difficult to remain arrogant while sincerely kneeling before God.

*When God's Will Is Unclear* : The leper combines confidence and surrender: "You can." "If You are willing."

This balance is essential for mature faith.

*6) Deeper Reflections*

The leper knelt before he was healed.  Can I trust God and worship Him even before my prayers are answered?

The leper's greatest strength was not his health but his humility. Do I approach God as a needy disciple or as someone trying to control outcomes?

Jesus touched the one whom everyone else avoided. What areas of my life do I keep hidden from Christ instead of bringing them before Him?

The leper surrendered to Jesus' will. Do I pray only for what I want, or do I also pray: "Your will be done"?

Kneeling places us lower physically but often raises us spiritually. What pride, fear, or self-sufficiency do I need to lay down before Christ today?

*Think about it*

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

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

Thursday, June 25, 2026

House on the Rock and House on the Sand

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Ordinary Season : Twelfth Week:  Thursday*

*Gospel :  Mt 7:21-29*

*First Reading : 2 Kings 24: 8-17*

*Responsorial Psalm : 79: 1-9*

*House on the Rock and House on the Sand*

*1) What Does the Rock Represent?*

The rock symbolizes: Truth, Wisdom, Strong values, Faith lived out in practice, Character built over time

A rock foundation is usually hidden underground. Likewise, the most important parts of a person's life are often invisible: Integrity, Honesty, Discipline, Compassion, Spiritual depth

These are not flashy, but they hold everything else up.

*2) What Does the Sand Represent?*

Sand symbolizes things that seem attractive but lack lasting strength: Popular opinion, Temporary success, Wealth alone, Status, Pleasure without responsibility, Shallow beliefs, Shortcuts

Sand can look smooth and beautiful. The problem only appears when pressure arrives.

*3) Why Do People Build on Sand Today?*

People may not literally build houses on sand, but many build their lives on unstable foundations.

Examples:

*Career* : A person may build identity entirely on a job title. As long as the career succeeds, everything seems fine. If the job is lost, the person's sense of worth collapses. The "house" was standing on the "sand" of external achievement.

*Relationships* : Someone may build a relationship only on attraction. When difficulties arise, there may be no deeper commitment or shared values to sustain it.

*Money* : Money is important, but if it becomes the sole foundation of life, financial loss can create emotional ruin.

*Reputation* : A life built entirely on others' approval is unstable because public opinion changes constantly.

*4)  The Storm Comes to Both Houses*

 One striking feature of the parable is that: The wise builder faces storms. The foolish builder faces storms.

The difference is not the absence of trouble. The difference is the foundation.

This reflects a deep truth about life: Everyone encounters disappointment. Everyone experiences illness, loss, failure, aging, and uncertainty. No foundation prevents all storms. A strong foundation helps us endure them.

*5) Application to Life*

*A) What am I relying on most?* : If everything else were removed, what would remain? Character? Faith? Family? Purpose? Service? Or only possessions and achievements?

*B) What foundations am I building today?* : Foundations are laid gradually: Keeping promises, Learning continuously, Practicing kindness, Developing self-control, Nurturing meaningful relationships. These small actions are like digging down to bedrock.

*C) Am I choosing convenience over depth?* : Building on sand is faster. Building on rock takes effort. Many worthwhile things in life—trust, wisdom, expertise, spiritual maturity—develop slowly.

*6) Points to Ponder*

A beautiful house can hide a weak foundation.

Likewise, a successful-looking life can conceal fragility, while a simple life grounded in values can prove remarkably resilient.

What sustains us in times of success is not necessarily what sustains us in times of crisis

*Think about it*

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

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

The Power of the demons in Two men and in the Pigs

GOSPEL THOUGHTS *Ordinary Season : Thirteenth Week:  Wednesday* *Gospel :  Mt 8:28-34* *First Reading : Amos 5:14-15; 21-24* *Responsorial P...