Monday, February 2, 2026

Woman Who suffered from a chronic hemorrhage for twelve years

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Ordinary Season:  Fourth Week :  Tuesday*

*Gospel :  Mark 5:21-43*

*First Reading : 2 Sam 18:9-10, 14, 24-30; 19:3*

*Responsorial Psalm : 86:1-6*

*Woman Who suffered from a chronic hemorrhage for twelve years*

*1) Jewish Law & the Sickness*

According to Jewish law (Leviticus 15), her condition made her ritually unclean:
She was socially isolated
Excluded from worship
Unable to touch others without making them unclean

She had tried every available medical option, but nothing helped.
In desperation mixed with faith, she believed: “If I just touch his garment, I will be healed.”
She touches Jesus secretly, is instantly healed, and Jesus publicly affirms her faith.
This is not just a healing story—it is a story of restoration: physical, social, emotional, and spiritual.

*2) Spiritual Significance*

*A) Faith beyond Visibility*
Her faith was quiet, hidden, and risky.
She did not speak aloud, yet Jesus recognized her faith.
True faith does not need attention; it needs trust.

*B) From Ritual Impurity to Personal Dignity*
Instead of Jesus becoming “unclean” by her touch, holiness flows outward from Him and heals her.
This shows that grace is stronger than shame, and mercy overcomes exclusion.

*C) Jesus Seeks Relationship, Not Just Healing*
Jesus stops and asks, “Who touched me?”
Not to shame her—but to restore her publicly.
Healing is not complete until the wounded person is seen, named, and affirmed.

*D) “Daughter” – A Word of Belonging*
Jesus calls her “Daughter”—the only time He uses this title in the Gospels.
Her identity is restored: Not “unclean woman,” not “sick person,” but family.

*3) Why Twelve Years Matters*

Twelve symbolizes completeness (12 tribes, 12 apostles)
Her long suffering reflects waiting without answers
It reminds us that delay is not denial
God may allow long seasons of pain, but they are not meaningless.

*4) Relevance in the Present-Day Context*

*A) People Still Suffer Silently*

Today, many suffer for years with: Chronic illness, Mental health struggles, Trauma, Misdiagnosis or ineffective treatment
This story speaks directly to those who feel forgotten, exhausted, and unheard.

*B) Limits of Human Systems*

The physicians tried, but failed—not because medicine is wrong, but because human solutions have limits.
Faith does not reject science—but reminds us not to replace hope with systems alone.

*C) Faith in a Distracted World*

The woman had to reach Jesus in a crowd.
Even today, faith often requires intentional effort amid noise, skepticism, and distractions.

*D) Restoring the Marginalized*

The woman represents: The voiceless, The excluded, The “invisible” in society
Jesus still stops for those others overlook.

*5) Points to Ponder*

What long struggle have I accepted as “normal”?
Do I believe God notices silent faith?
Am I reaching out in hope—or withdrawing in shame?
Do I stop, like Jesus, to truly see wounded people?
Am I open to being healed in ways that restore identity, not just comfort?

*Think about it*

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

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

Sunday, February 1, 2026

The Paradox of Jesus' Presentation and Purification of Mary

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Ordinary Season:  Fourth Week :  Tuesday*

*Gospel :  Luke 2:22-40*

*First Reading : Malachi 3:1-4*

*Responsorial Psalm : 24:7-10*

*The Paradox of Jesus' Presentation and Purification of Mary*

*1) The Apparent Paradox*

According to Jewish Law (Lev 12; Exod 13):
*The Presentation*: Every firstborn male was to be presented to the Lord and “redeemed.”
*The Purification*: A mother underwent ritual purification after childbirth.

Yet:
*Jesus is God*, not someone who needs to be “offered back” or redeemed.
*Mary is Immaculate*, untouched by sin or ritual impurity.
So the question is very sharp: Why submit to laws that do not apply to them?

*2) Not Necessity, but Freedom*

Neither action was morally necessary for Jesus or Mary.
They act not from obligation, but from loving freedom.

This is crucial: They are not under the Law in the usual sense; they enter into it voluntarily.
St. Paul gives us the key: “Though he was rich, yet for your sake he became poor” (2 Cor 8:9).
Their obedience is not about cleansing or redemption—it is about solidarity.

*3) Jesus: Redeemer Who Accepts Redemption*

*The deepest irony is this*: The One who redeems the world is himself “redeemed.”

Jesus allows himself to be treated as:
one among many
a child needing ransom
subject to the Law

Why?
Because salvation works from inside the human condition, not from above it.
He does not save us by exemption, but by entering fully into our situation.

*4) Mary: Purity That Chooses Humility*

Mary’s purification is not about sin, but about humility and communion.
She does not separate herself from other mothers, even though she is unique.
She chooses to walk the path of ordinary obedience, quietly and invisibly.

*This teaches something profound*:
Holiness does not insist on its privileges.
True purity does not announce itself.
It hides, serves, and waits.

*5) Fulfillment, Not Rejection, of the Law*

Jesus later says: “I have not come to abolish the Law, but to fulfill it” (Mt 5:17).
This moment in the Temple is already a sign of that fulfillment:
The Law is honored, But its limits are revealed
The Law points forward to Christ—but Christ enters the Law first, as a child in his mother’s arms.

*6) A Silent Teaching on Scandal and Love*

There is also a lesson in not causing scandal.

Had Mary refused purification, or Jesus refused presentation, it would have:
drawn attention to themselves
disrupted the community
elevated private privilege over communal faithfulness
Love sometimes chooses to submit rather than explain.

*7) Simeon and Anna: Heaven Recognizes What the Law Cannot*

Interestingly, the Law sees nothing special.
But Simeon and Anna see everything.

*This shows*:
Legal obedience prepares the way
But spiritual sight recognizes the mystery
The Law opens the door; the Spirit reveals who has entered.

*8) Various Lessons*

*A) Obedience Can Be an Act of Love, Not Fear* : We obey not always because we must—but because we love God and others.

*B) Holiness Often Looks Ordinary* : God’s greatest mysteries pass through the Temple like any other family.

*C) Humility Is the Shape of Redemption* :Salvation begins not with miracles, but with submission.

*D) God Meets Us in Our Institutions* : Even limited human structures can become places of divine encounter.

*Think about it*

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

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

Peace Makers are the Sons of God

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Ordinary Season:  Fourth Week :  Sunday*

*Gospel :  Mt 5:1-12*

*First Reading : Zepha 2:3; 3:12-13*

*Responsorial Psalm : 146:6-10*

*1 Cor 1:26-31*

*Peace Makers are the Sons of God*

*1) Why are peacemakers called “sons of God”?*

In the Bible, a “son” is one who shares the character and mission of the father.
God is revealed throughout Scripture as a God of peace (cf. Rom 15:33).
God actively creates, restores, and reconciles—between himself and humanity, and among human beings.
Therefore, those who make peace are acting as God acts.

To be called “sons of God” means:
They resemble God in their actions.
They participate in God’s work of reconciliation.
They are publicly recognized as belonging to God’s family.
This is not about biological sonship, but moral and spiritual likeness.

*2) What kind of “peace” is meant in Matthew’s Gospel?*

The peace Jesus speaks of is not merely the absence of war or conflict.

*A) Biblical concept of peace: Shalom*

The Jewish background of Jesus points to shalom, which means: Wholeness, Harmony, Right relationships, Well-being of persons and communities

So peace includes: Peace with God, Peace within oneself, Peace with others, Peace within society

*B) Peace through justice and reconciliation*

In Matthew’s Gospel: Peace is closely linked with righteousness (Mt 5:6, 5:10).

Jesus rejects superficial peace that ignores injustice (cf. Mt 10:34—not a denial of peace, but a warning that true peace may bring conflict).
True peace often requires truth, forgiveness, repentance, and courage.
Thus, peacemaking is active, not passive.

*3) What is the need for peace in the world today?*

The Beatitude is extremely relevant today.

*A) A world marked by division*

Today’s world is shaped by: Wars and political conflicts, Religious and ethnic violence, Social injustice and economic inequality, Polarization in families, communities, and even churches

Peace is needed not only at global levels but also: In homes, In workplaces, In digital spaces, In human hearts

*B) Inner peace crisis*

Modern life also creates: Anxiety, Fear, Loneliness, Anger and resentment
Without inner peace, outer peace is fragile.

*4) Significance of this Beatitude today*

This Beatitude: Calls Christians not just to love peace, but to make it
Shifts responsibility from governments alone to every believer
Challenges indifference, neutrality, and silence in the face of injustice

A peacemaker is not: 
Someone who avoids conflict at all costs
Someone who compromises truth

Rather, a peacemaker:
Faces conflict with love
Seeks reconciliation without denying justice
Builds bridges where others build walls

*5) Reflections on “Blessed are the peacemakers”*

*Peacemaking begins in the heart* : One cannot give peace without first receiving it from God. Prayer, humility, and self-examination are essential.

*Peacemaking is costly* : Jesus himself made peace through the cross. True peacemakers may be misunderstood, rejected, or hurt.

*Peacemaking is a Christian vocation* : Every baptized person is called to be an agent of reconciliation—in words, actions, and attitudes.

*Peacemakers reflect Christ* : Jesus is the ultimate Peacemaker (cf. Eph 2:14). When we forgive, reconcile, and heal divisions, we mirror Christ to the world.

*The promise is recognition by God* : The world may not always honor peacemakers, but God does: “they shall be called sons of God.”

*In a world loud with conflict and fear, peacemakers quietly reveal who God is. This Beatitude reminds us that peace is not weakness—it is divine strength in action.*


*Think about it*

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

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

Friday, January 30, 2026

Let us go across to the Other Side

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Ordinary Season:  Third Week :  Saturday*

*Gospel :  Mark 4:35-41*

*First Reading : 2 Sam 12:1-17*

*Responsorial Psalm : 51:12-17*

*Let us go across to the Other Side*

*1) The Immediate, Physical Meaning*

Jesus is speaking by the Sea of Galilee. The “other side” refers to the eastern shore, a region largely Gentile, culturally and religiously different from Jewish Galilee.

So yes, it is a real boat, a real lake, a real journey. But the physical act sets the stage for something much deeper.

*2) The gesture of Water Crossing*

In Scripture, water crossings are never neutral:
*The Red Sea* → slavery to freedom
*The Jordan* → wilderness to promise
*Jonah’s sea journey* → flight, death, repentance, mission

Here, the Sea of Galilee becomes a threshold space—a place of transition.

Jesus is saying, in effect: We are leaving what is familiar. Something will be confronted. Something will change.

*3) The Storm: Why It Happens During Obedience*

Need to pay attention to the timing when Storm happened 

Jesus commands the crossing. The disciples obey. Then the storm arises

*This matters spiritually* : The storm is not punishment. It is not disobedience. It happens because they are going where Jesus sent them.

*Spiritually, this teaches* : 
Obedience does not eliminate storms
Following Jesus often reveals what is already chaotic within and around us
Faith is tested not in still water, but in commanded crossings

Jesus sleeping in the boat is especially striking:
He is not absent
He is not anxious
He is present in a peace the disciples have not yet learned

*4) “The Other Side” as Mission Territory*

When they arrive, Jesus immediately encounters:
A demoniac (Mk 5), Chaos, exile, uncleanness. A man living among tombs—a picture of spiritual death

*This reveals something profound* : 
The crossing was not about the disciples.
It was about the one who needed liberation.
Jesus crosses a storm for one broken man.

*Spiritually, “the other side” is* :
The place we avoid
The person we fear
The situation that feels unclean, risky, or overwhelming
Jesus deliberately moves toward that space.

*5) A Deeper Interior Meaning*

On a personal level, the crossing speaks to inner transformation:

The near shore = comfort, control, familiarity
The other side = trust, surrender, transformation

Every disciple must eventually cross:
From fear to faith
From control to trust
From spectatorship to participation

The storm exposes what’s already inside the disciples:
“Teacher, do you not care…?”

The crossing reveals not only who Jesus is,
but who they are—and who they are becoming.

*6) Spiritual Applications for Today*

*A) Jesus Initiates the Crossing* : We don’t choose every transition. Some crossings are commanded, not requested.

*B) Fear Does Not Mean Failure* : The disciples are afraid—but still with Jesus. Fear is not the opposite of faith; refusal is opposite of Faith

*C) Jesus Is Lord of the Chaos* : When Jesus calms the sea, the question shifts:“Who then is this?”
The real miracle is not calm water— but the revelation of the identity of Jesus

*D) The Other Side Is Where Healing Happens* : Breakthrough often lies beyond resistance. Freedom often lies past discomfort.


*Think about it*

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

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

Thursday, January 29, 2026

The Growing seed and our life

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Ordinary Season:  Third Week :  Friday*

*Gospel :  Mark 4:26-34*

*First Reading : 2 Sam 11:1-17*

*Responsorial Psalm : 51:3-11*

*The Growing seed and and our life*

*1) The Concept of Growing Seed* 

Reasons Jesus chose this image

*1) The Kingdom does not grow by force*
People expected a dramatic, political Messiah. Jesus says instead: God’s reign grows quietly, organically, and patiently.

*B) Growth happens beyond human control* 
Once a seed is planted: You cannot force it to grow
You cannot fully explain how it grows
You can only trust the process
Jesus is teaching that God’s work is not manipulated—it is trusted.

*C) The seed reflects everyday life*
Jesus speaks in images ordinary people understand. Farming was familiar.
The message: God is at work even in ordinary, unnoticed moments.

*2) How to understand the concept of the growing seed (Mark 4:26–28)*

Various  elements of the parable
Seed : Word of God / Kingdom message
Soil : Human hearts / world
Sower: Anyone who shares God’s Word
Growth : God’s transforming work
Harvest : Fulfillment of God’s purpose

Jesus emphasizes this line: “The seed sprouts and grows, though he does not know how.”
Core truth : The Kingdom grows by God’s power, not human effort.
The farmer is active at the start (sowing), but passive during growth.

*3) How this concept relates to our life and Christian faith*

*A) In our personal spiritual growth*

Faith often grows: Slowly, Quietly, Without dramatic signs
You may not feel different day to day—but God is shaping you.
Transformation is happening even when you don’t feel it.

*B) In prayer and obedience*

Sometimes: 
We pray and see no immediate answer
We obey and see no results
Jesus says: growth is still happening.
Faith means trusting God’s timing, not demanding instant fruit.

*C) In witnessing and ministry*

When we share the gospel:
We don’t control hearts
We don’t force results
Our role is to plant seeds, not produce conversions.
God brings growth in His time.

*4) Lessons we learn from the growing seed*

*A) God works invisibly* : Just because we can’t see it doesn’t mean nothing is happening. Silence is not absence.

*B) Growth is gradual* : “First the stalk, then the head, then the full grain.” Spiritual maturity takes time. Be patient with yourself and others.

*C) Faithfulness matters more than speed* : God values: Consistency, Obedience, Trust, Not quick success.

*D) Results belong to God* : We are responsible for obedience. God is responsible for outcomes. This frees us from anxiety and pride.

*E) There is a promised harvest* : God’s work is purposeful. What He begins, He completes. Hope is guaranteed.

*5) Points to Ponder* 

*A) Trust the hidden work of God* 
Where am I impatient with God’s timing?
Can I trust Him when I cannot see progress?

*B) Be faithful in small beginnings* 
Small acts of love, prayer, forgiveness, and faith matter deeply to God.

*C) Let go of control* : Christian faith is not about managing God—it is about surrendering to Him.

*D) Live with hope* : Every seed planted in faith has a future.

*Think about it*

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

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

Wednesday, January 28, 2026

Pay attention to what you hear”

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Ordinary Season:  Third Week :  Thursday*

*Gospel :  Mark 4:21-25*

*First Reading : 2 Samuel 7:18-29*

*Responsorial Psalm : 132:1-14*

*“Pay attention to what you hear”*

*1) General Understanding*

The entire Mark Chapter 4 is all about hearing the word of God.
Just before this passage: Jesus tells the Parable of the Sower (Mark 4:1–20)
That parable explains different kinds of listeners and how they respond to the word

So when Jesus says: “Pay attention to what you hear” (v.24)
He is clearly referring to how people hear God’s teaching, not just ordinary sounds.

*2) Meaning of “Pay attention to what you hear”*

In this context, it means:
Be intentional about how you receive God’s word
Don’t hear casually, passively, or carelessly
Recognize that hearing is a spiritual act, not a neutral one
Jesus is warning that hearing without response is dangerous.
You can hear the truth and still miss it — or even lose it.

*3) Connection to the lamp (vv. 21–23)*

Jesus says a lamp is not meant to be hidden but to give light.
This means: 
God’s truth is meant to be revealed and lived out
What you hear is not just for knowledge, but for transformation
If someone hears but does not act, the light is effectively being hidden.

*4)  “The measure you use will be the measure you receive” (v.24)*

This is key. It means:
The effort, openness, and seriousness you bring to hearing God’s word determines what you gain from it
If you listen superficially, you gain little
If you listen deeply and obediently, you receive more understanding

In other words: Spiritual growth depends on how you listen.

*5) The warning in verse 25*

“Whoever has will be given more; whoever does not have, even what they have will be taken from them.”
This sounds harsh, but it’s about responsiveness.
Those who accept and live by what they hear grow spiritually
Those who ignore or resist what they hear gradually lose insight, sensitivity, and faith

Truth is never static: It either grows in you Or it fades

*6) How to understand this practically*

Jesus is teaching that:
Hearing God’s word is a responsibility
Understanding is not automatic
Obedience deepens insight

So “pay attention” means:
Listen with humility
Reflect seriously
Act faithfully

*7) Reflections on this Teaching*

*A) Not all hearing is equal*:  Two people can hear the same message and leave changed in completely different ways.

*B) Spiritual blindness is not sudden* — it happens slowly when truth is ignored.

*C) More is Given* : God gives more light to those who walk in the light they already have.

*D) The Effect* : Every encounter with God’s word moves you in one direction or the other — closer or further away.

Take God’s word seriously, receive it deeply, live it faithfully — because your response determines whether light increases or fades in your life.

*Think about it*

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

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

Tuesday, January 27, 2026

Seed on the Path and the Satan : Present Day Application

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Ordinary Season:  Third Week :  Wednesday*

*Gospel :  Mark 4:1-20*

*First Reading : 2 Samuel 7:4-17*

*Responsorial Psalm : 89:4-30*

*Seed on the Path and the Satan : Present Day Application*

*1) “The seed on the path”: what does it mean?*

In the parable:
*The seed* = the Word of God (truth, invitation, grace, call to conversion)
*The path* = a heart that is hard, exposed, and unreceptive
Trampled by constant traffic
No depth, no openness
Satan taking the seed = the word never gets a chance to sink in
So the problem is not the seed (God’s word is powerful), but the condition of the heart. The word is heard, but not received.
Jesus is describing a spiritual moment where truth arrives… and disappears almost instantly.

*2) Why does Satan come “immediately”?*

This is key.
The word is most vulnerable at the moment it is heard.
Before reflection
Before prayer
Before commitment
Before it becomes embodied in action

Satan doesn’t need to destroy deep faith here—only to prevent faith from beginning.
The strategy is subtle: Not persecution, Not suffering
Just distraction, dismissal, or indifference

*3) “Satan” in present-day context (how does this look today?)*

Satan in Scripture is not just a horned figure—it means the adversary, the one who opposes God’s work. Today, this opposition often appears through systems, habits, and inner voices.
Here are some common modern “forms”:

*A) Distraction and noise*

Constant scrolling, notifications, overstimulation
No silence for the word to echo
The word is heard… then buried under content
The seed doesn’t disappear violently—it gets drowned out.

*B) Cynicism and intellectual pride*

“I’ve heard this before.”
“That’s too simple.”
“Religion is outdated.”
This hardens the heart like a well-worn path.
The mind closes before the heart can open.

*C) Fear of change*

The Word often calls us to:
Forgive, Let go, Repent, Trust

Satan works by whispering:
“This will cost you too much.”
“You’re fine as you are.”
“Later.”
Resistance disguised as self-protection.

*D) Superficial familiarity*

Knowing Christian language without living it
Hearing sermons as background noise
Treating the Word as information, not encounter
The seed is recognized—but not welcomed.

*E) Cultural pressure*

Faith reduced to a private opinion
Moral truth seen as intolerant
Faith treated as optional or irrelevant
The environment itself becomes hostile soil.

*4) The spiritual significance*

*A) It explains why the Word doesn’t always “work”*

Not every failure of faith is rebellion.
Sometimes it’s unawareness.
Jesus is compassionate here, not condemning.

*B) It warns us to guard our hearts*

The heart can become hardened without us noticing.
Routine, busyness, and unexamined habits slowly turn soil into stone.
“Today, if you hear his voice, do not harden your hearts…” (Hebrews 3:15)

*C) It shows the urgency of response*

The Word needs: Reflection, Prayer, Action
Even a small response—“Lord, help me understand”—can protect the seed.

*D) It reveals the spiritual battle*

Faith is not neutral territory.
The Word matters so much that it is contested.
If Satan rushes to take it away, it’s because the Word is dangerous to the kingdom of darkness.

*5) Points to Ponder*

What kind of “path” might exist in my own heart?
Do I create space for silence after hearing God’s Word?
Do I dismiss truth too quickly because it challenges my comfort?
Am I more informed than transformed?

*Think about it*

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

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

Woman Who suffered from a chronic hemorrhage for twelve years

GOSPEL THOUGHTS *Ordinary Season:  Fourth Week :  Tuesday* *Gospel :  Mark 5:21-43* *First Reading : 2 Sam 18:9-10, 14, 24-30; 19:3* *Respon...