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*

What then will this child be

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Ordinary Season : Eleventh Week:  Wednesday*

*Solemnity : The Nativity of Saint John the Baptist*

*Gospel :  Luke 1:57-66,80*

*First Reading : Is 49: 1-6*

*Responsorial Psalm : 139: 1-3, 13-14, 15*

*Second Reading : Acts 13: 22-26*

*“What then will this child be?”*

*1) Every life carries a possibility greater than what we can immediately see*

The neighbors looked at a newborn child and asked, "What then will this child be?" They were not merely asking about a career or social status. They sensed that this child had a special purpose.

In our daily lives, this invites us to look at people differently. Every child, every young person, and even every adult is still becoming something. Rather than limiting people with labels, we can ask:

What gifts are hidden in this person?
What good can God bring through this life?
How can I help this person become who they are meant to be?

When we see others with hope rather than judgment, we help create an environment where growth becomes possible.

*2) Good words can awaken hope and identity*

The birth of John was surrounded by words of blessing, prophecy, and thanksgiving. The conversations of the people were not filled with gossip or criticism; they were filled with wonder about God's work.

Words shape how people see themselves.

A teacher who says, "You have great potential," may influence a student for years. A parent who consistently encourages a child can build confidence that lasts a lifetime. A friend who reminds someone of their strengths can help them persevere through difficulties.

Many people remember a single encouraging sentence spoken at the right time. Good words often become seeds that grow long after they are spoken.

*3) What we talk about influences the atmosphere around us*

Notice that the community was discussing something noble and meaningful. Their conversations centered on gratitude, faith, and possibility.

In daily life, conversations can move in two directions:

Toward negativity, complaints, and discouragement.
Toward hope, gratitude, and encouragement.

This does not mean ignoring problems. Rather, it means choosing to speak in ways that build rather than destroy.

When families regularly speak about blessings, growth, and possibilities, the atmosphere changes. When workplaces celebrate good work and encourage one another, people become more motivated. Positive and truthful speech creates space for people to flourish.

*4) Speaking good about others can help them become better*

People often grow toward the expectations placed upon them.

When we recognize and affirm goodness in others:

They become more aware of their gifts.
They gain courage to develop them.
They are inspired to live up to what is best within them.

This is not empty flattery. It is seeing genuine goodness and calling it forth.

Just as the people wondered about John's future with hope, we can look at others and encourage the best possibilities in them.

*5) Application to our Life*

The passage is not only about John. It invites each of us to ask: "What am I becoming?"

Every day, through our choices, habits, relationships, and prayer, we are being shaped.

Some useful reflections are:

What gifts has God given me?
How can I use them to serve others?
What kind of person am I becoming through my daily actions?
What words am I speaking into the lives of others?

Life is not merely about success; it is about becoming the person we are called to be.

At the end of each day, reflect on three questions:

Whom did I encourage today?
What life-giving words did I speak?
Did my conversations create more hope or more discouragement?

Even one sincere word of encouragement each day can gradually transform relationships and communities.

*Think about it*

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

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

Pearls before the Pigs

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Ordinary Season : Twelfth Week:  Tuesday*

*Gospel :  Mt :7:6;12-14*

*First Reading : 2 Kings 19: 9-11; 14-21; 31-16*

*Responsorial Psalm : 48: 2-11*

*Pearls before the Pigs*

*1) Why does Jesus use this imagery?*

In the Jewish culture of Jesus' time:

*Pearls* were among the most precious valuables people possessed.
*Pigs* (swine) were considered unclean animals and had no appreciation for pearls. If pearls were thrown to them, they would not recognize their value. They might trample them and then become angry when they realized they were not food.

Jesus often taught through striking images drawn from everyday life. Here, the contrast is deliberate:

*Pearls* = something precious, holy, sacred, or deeply valuable.
*Pigs* = those who are unable or unwilling to recognize its value.

The point is not that certain people are inherently worthless. Rather, Jesus is speaking about receptivity. A gift can be precious, but if someone is determined not to receive it, forcing it upon them can lead to contempt, conflict, or even harm.

*2) hat are the "pearls"?*

Different Christian traditions have reflected on this in various ways. The pearls can represent:

The message of the Kingdom of God.
Sacred truths of faith.
Wisdom gained through prayer and experience.
Personal spiritual experiences.
Good advice offered to someone who does not want it.
Anything holy that requires a receptive heart.

Jesus Himself compared the Kingdom of Heaven to a pearl of great price in Gospel of Matthew 13:45–46.

*3)  What is Jesus teaching?*

*A) Practice discernment* 

Jesus is not telling us to stop sharing truth. Elsewhere He commands His followers to preach and teach.

Rather, He teaches discernment:

There is a difference between: sharing truth with openness, and forcing truth on someone who is determined to reject it.

Sometimes wisdom means knowing when to speak and when to remain silent.

*B) Not every heart is ready at every moment*

A seed grows only in prepared soil. Jesus uses that image elsewhere in the Gospel of Matthew.

People move through different stages: curiosity, resistance, indifference, openness.

Trying to force spiritual insight before a person is ready often produces the opposite effect.

*C) Respect the sacred* 

Some experiences are so holy that they should not be exposed carelessly.

For example: A profound experience of prayer. A deeply personal testimony. A vulnerable confession of faith.

Sharing these in a hostile environment can invite ridicule rather than understanding.

*4) How is it applicable to our lives?*

*In conversations* : Suppose you have discovered something that transformed your life—a spiritual insight, a life lesson, or wisdom from suffering.

You naturally want to share it. But if the other person is only interested in mocking, arguing, or attacking, repeatedly pushing the conversation may not help either of you.

The pearl is still valuable. The issue is not the pearl; it is the lack of readiness to receive it.

*B) In relationships* : Many people spend years trying to change someone who has no desire to change.

Jesus' saying reminds us: Love people. Pray for people. Serve people. But recognize that transformation cannot be forced.

*C) In ministry and service* : Those who teach, counsel, or evangelize often encounter situations where their efforts are rejected.

This verse can be a reminder not to become bitter. Sometimes the most fruitful response is to step back respectfully and invest energy where there is openness and willingness.

*5) Deeper spiritual reflection*

There is another way to read the verse:

Before asking, “Who are the pigs?” we might ask:

“When am I the pig?”

There are times when God offers us pearls: a wise correction, an opportunity to grow, a call to forgiveness, a deeper understanding of truth.

Yet we may ignore, reject, or trample those gifts because they do not fit our desires.

The verse can therefore become an examination of conscience:
Am I receptive to truth?
Do I recognize the pearls God places before me?
Am I open to wisdom even when it challenges me?

*Think about it*

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

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

The Log in ones own eye

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Ordinary Season : Twelfth Week:  Monday*

*Gospel :  Mt 7:1-5*

*First Reading : 2 Kings 17: 5-8; 13-15; 18*

*Responsorial Psalm : 60:3-14*

*The Log in ones own eye*

*1) Why does Jesus use this imagery?*

Jesus often taught through striking images that people could never forget.

Imagine someone with a huge wooden beam sticking out of his eye trying to perform delicate eye surgery on another person who has a tiny speck of dust in theirs. The picture is almost humorous.

The exaggeration serves several purposes:

*A) To expose hypocrisy*

The "speck" represents a small fault in another person.

The "log" represents a greater fault in ourselves that we ignore.

Human beings often notice the sins of others more easily than their own. Jesus reveals this tendency dramatically.

*B) To show how sin blinds us* 

A person with a log in his eye cannot see clearly. Likewise, pride, anger, jealousy, self-righteousness, and prejudice distort our judgment. When our vision is distorted, we misjudge others.

*C) To teach humility* 

Before correcting another person, we must recognize our own need for God's mercy. The saint is not someone who sees everyone else's sins; the saint is someone who sees his own sins clearly.

*2) What is the "log" in our lives?*

The log can take many forms:

Pride while criticizing another's mistakes.
Lack of forgiveness while demanding forgiveness from others.
Dishonesty while condemning someone else's dishonesty.
Harsh judgment while ignoring our own weaknesses.
Self-righteousness that assumes "I am better."

For example:

A parent may become angry at a child's impatience while constantly showing impatience themselves.

A Christian may condemn another person's moral failures while neglecting prayer, charity, or humility.

The log is often not simply a sin but blindness to our own sin.

*3) Is Jesus forbidding all judgment?*

No. Notice that Jesus says: "First take the log out of your own eye, and then you will see clearly..."

The goal is not to stop helping others.
The goal is to help them with clear vision and love.

There is a difference between:

*Condemning judgment* : Looking down on others. Assuming we know their hearts. Feeling superior.
and
*Loving discernment* : Recognizing right and wrong. Helping someone grow. Correcting with compassion and humility.

Jesus condemns the first and encourages the second.

*4) Spiritual reflections*

*A) The faults that irritate us most may reveal something in ourselves* 

Often the behaviors that provoke us in others are weaknesses we secretly struggle with.
The person who constantly complains about pride may be proud.
The person obsessed with judging others may be struggling with judgmentalism.
When someone annoys us, it can be an invitation to ask:
"Why does this bother me so much?"

*B) Self-examination should come before criticism*

Before speaking about another person's fault, ask:
Have I prayed about this?
Do I struggle with something similar?
Am I motivated by love or irritation?
Would I want to be corrected in the way I am about to correct them?
These questions help remove the log.

*C) We all live by mercy*

The Gospel reminds us that everyone stands before God as a sinner in need of grace.
When we remember how patient God is with us, we become more patient with others.
Mercy does not deny truth; it changes the way truth is spoken.

*D) The purpose of correction is healing*

Jesus uses the image of the eye because the eye is precious and delicate.
A loving person removes a speck from another's eye carefully, not violently.
Likewise, Christian correction should be gentle, respectful, and aimed at healing, not winning an argument.

The "log" is removed not by self-condemnation but by humility before God. Once our own eyes are healed, we can truly become instruments of healing for others.

*Think about it*

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

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

Two Sparrows sold for a penny

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Ordinary Season : Twelfth Week:  Sunday*

*Gospel :  Mt 10:26-33*

*First Reading : Jer 20:10-13*

*Responsorial Psalm : 69: 8-35*

*Second Reading : 5:12-15*

*Two Sparrows sold for a penny*

*1) Why did Jesus use sparrows?*

In first-century Palestine, sparrows were among the cheapest birds sold in the marketplace. They had very little monetary value. If even a tiny bird that people barely notice is known and cared for by God, then human beings—especially God's children—are certainly not forgotten.

Jesus argues from the lesser to the greater:

If God notices a sparrow, He notices you.
If God governs the life of a sparrow, He governs your life.
If a sparrow is not outside God's knowledge, neither are your sufferings.

The point is not that sparrows never die. Sparrows do die. The point is that their lives are never outside God's awareness and sovereign care.

*2) God's care extends to the smallest details*

Jesus says that even the hairs of your head are numbered. This means God's knowledge of us is personal, not general.

Many people imagine God as caring only about major world events. Jesus teaches that God is attentive to details: our worries, our struggles, our disappointments, our hidden tears, our daily needs. Nothing is too small for God's attention.

*3) Our value comes from God, not from the world*

A sparrow was worth almost nothing in the marketplace. Human societies often measure worth by: wealth, status, education,  success, popularity.

Jesus teaches a different standard. Your worth is rooted in being known and loved by God. This is especially comforting to those who feel unnoticed, insignificant, or forgotten.

*4) Fear should not control discipleship*

Three times in this section Jesus says, "Do not be afraid." The disciples were afraid of: rejection, criticism, persecution, suffering.

Jesus does not promise an easy life. Instead, He promises God's presence and care within difficulties.

The message is: "You may face hardship, but you are never abandoned."

*5) How is this applicable to our lives?*

*A) When we worry about the future* : Many fears arise from uncertainty: Will I have enough? What will happen to my family? Will things work out?

The sparrow reminds us that God is already aware of our circumstances. Trust does not eliminate planning and responsibility, but it removes the burden of thinking everything depends entirely on us.

*B) When we feel insignificant* : Sometimes we think: Nobody notices me. My work doesn't matter. My life seems ordinary.

Jesus points to a tiny bird and says that God notices it. Therefore no human life is insignificant before God.

*C) When we face suffering* : The passage does not deny suffering. Sparrows fall. People suffer. Yet suffering is not evidence that God has stopped caring. Jesus Himself would later suffer and die, showing that God's care and human suffering can coexist in ways we do not fully understand.

*D) When we are afraid to stand for truth* : The broader context is about confessing Christ publicly. Fear of criticism can tempt us to stay silent about our faith or convictions. Jesus encourages courage by reminding us that God's approval matters more than human opinion.

*6) Points to Ponder*

The sparrow is small, but God sees it. Often we feel like sparrows—ordinary and unnoticed. Yet God's gaze rests on us even when no one else sees.

Jesus does not say, "Nothing bad will happen." He says, "Do not be afraid." Christian hope is not based on the absence of trouble but on the presence of God.

A sparrow cannot increase its value in the marketplace, yet God values it. Likewise, God's love is not earned by our achievements.

The God who numbers the hairs of our head is concerned not only with our eternal destiny but also with our daily lives.

Fear shrinks life; trust enlarges it. The sparrow passage invites us to move from anxiety to confidence in God's fatherly care.

A simple way to summarize Jesus' message is: "You are known, you are valued, and you are under God's care. Therefore, do not live in fear."


*Think about it*

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

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

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* *Responso...