Wednesday, May 13, 2026

Servants and Friends

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Easter Season : Sixth Week:  Thursday*

*Gospel :  John 15:9-17*

*First Reading : Acts 1: 15-17, 20-26*

*Responsorial Psalm : 113:1-8*

*Servants and Friends*

*1) Difference Between “Servants” and “Friends”*

*A) Servant* :

obeys orders without necessarily understanding the master’s heart,
acts mainly out of duty, fear, or obligation,
has limited access to the master’s plans,
belongs to a relationship of hierarchy and distance.

Jesus says: “A servant does not know his master’s business.”

This means a servant may work for the master, but may not truly know the master.

*B) A friend* : 
is loved personally, 
is trusted,
shares intimacy and closeness,
knows the heart, desires, and plans of the other,
acts not merely from duty but from love.

Jesus says: “Everything that I learned from my Father I have made known to you.”

Friendship with Christ means: 
God is not distant, 
He shares His heart with us,
we are invited into relationship, not mere religion.

*2) Logic behind the Phrase Friend*

Jesus is changing the disciples’ understanding of God.

Many people think: “I must obey God because He is powerful.” “I am only a servant trying not to fail.”

But Jesus reveals something deeper: God desires communion. He wants love, not mechanical obedience,
discipleship is relational.

This does not mean there is no obedience. Jesus still says: “If you keep my commandments, you will remain in my love.”

But now obedience flows from: love, trust, friendship, not fear alone.

A servant asks: “What must I do?”
 
A friend asks: “How can I remain close to the one I love?”

*3) The Relevance to Our Life Today*

*A) From Fear to Relationship* : Some people relate to God only through: guilt, fear, pressure, performance.

Jesus invites us to: speak openly with Him, walk with Him daily, trust Him personally. Prayer becomes conversation, not only ritual.

*B) We Are Chosen, Not Merely Used* : Jesus says: “You did not choose me, but I chose you.” This gives dignity and assurance.

Our worth does not come from: success, status, perfection, but from being loved by Christ.

*C) Friendship Produces Love for Others* : The center of this passage is: “Love one another as I have loved you.”

Real friendship with Christ changes how we treat people: less domination, less manipulation, more compassion, more sacrifice. If we claim friendship with Jesus but fail to love others, we miss the heart of the passage.

*4) Important Reflection: Friend Does Not Mean Casual*

Sometimes modern culture hears “friend of Jesus” and thinks: “God is just my buddy.”

But biblical friendship is sacred and transformative.

Jesus is still: Lord, Teacher, Savior. The disciples still follow Him with reverence.

So Christian friendship with Christ includes: intimacy and obedience, love and reverence, closeness and transformation. 

*5) Spiritual Reflections* 

*A) God Wants Your Heart* : God does not merely want workers for His kingdom. He wants people who know Him personally. Christianity is not only: rules, morality, religious duty. It is relationship.

*B) Love Is Greater Than Fear* : Fear can force temporary obedience. Love transforms the person from within. Jesus forms disciples through love.

*C) True Friendship Requires Remaining* : In this passage, Jesus repeatedly says: “Remain in my love.” Friendship with Christ is not a one-time feeling. 

It is a daily abiding:  prayer, trust, forgiveness, obedience, love.

*D) We Become Like the One We Love* : The more we live as friends of Christ: the more patient we become, the more forgiving, the more truthful,  the more compassionate. Friendship with Jesus reshapes character.

*Think about it*

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

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

I have still many things to Say to you : What are these things?

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Easter Season : Sixth Week:  Wednesday*

*Gospel :  John 16:12-15*

*First Reading : Acts : 17:15, 22-18: 1*

*Responsorial Psalm : 148: 1-14*

*I have still many things to Say to you : What are these things?*

*1) What are the “many things” Jesus is speaking about?*

Jesus does not list them explicitly in that verse, but from the surrounding chapters and the rest of the New Testament, we can understand that these “many things” include:

The deeper meaning of His death and resurrection.
The coming and work of the Holy Spirit.
The future mission of the Church.
The inclusion of Gentiles into God’s covenant.
Spiritual truths about suffering, love, sacrifice, and eternal life.
The full understanding of God’s kingdom.

The disciples at that moment were emotionally overwhelmed. They were struggling even to accept that Jesus was leaving them. So Jesus teaches according to their capacity to receive.

This is followed immediately by John 16:13: “When the Spirit of truth comes, he will guide you into all truth.”

The idea is that spiritual understanding is progressive. God reveals truth as people mature spiritually.

*2) Deeper Understanding*

*A) God reveals truth gradually* : Jesus recognizes human limitation. Spiritual growth often happens step by step, not all at once. Like a teacher who does not give advanced lessons to beginners, Jesus gives truth according to readiness.

*B) Spiritual maturity affects understanding* : The disciples loved Jesus, but they were not yet spiritually prepared for everything. Understanding is not only intellectual; it is also emotional and spiritual.

Some truths can only be understood through: suffering, experience, prayer, obedience, and time.

*C) The Holy Spirit continues Jesus’ teaching ministry* : Jesus was not abandoning them. The Holy Spirit would continue guiding believers. Christian faith therefore involves ongoing discernment, reflection, and transformation.

*3) Present-day relevance*

Many people want immediate answers, but this passage reminds us: not everything is understood instantly, growth takes time, and wisdom develops progressively.

It also speaks to: personal crises, faith struggles, leadership, education, relationships, and social change.

Sometimes we are “not ready” for certain truths until experience prepares us.

*4) Spiritual Reflections* 

*A) Patience with spiritual growth* : Jesus Christ did not condemn the disciples for their limitations. He patiently walked with them. Growth in faith is a journey, not a race.

*B) Truth requires readiness* : Some truths can burden rather than heal if received too early. Wisdom is not merely knowing truth, but being prepared to carry it.

*C) God understands human weakness* : Jesus recognized their emotional exhaustion and fear.
Divine compassion includes understanding human limits.

*D) The Holy Spirit still guides people* : Christians believe God continues to guide believers through conscience, Scripture, prayer, and discernment. Spiritual understanding is ongoing, not finished in one moment.

*E) Humility is necessary* : This verse challenges intellectual pride. No person fully understands everything immediately. Openness and humility are essential for deeper truth.

*5) Modern application* 

parents teach children gradually,
doctors explain difficult diagnoses carefully,
leaders reveal responsibility step by step,
teachers build understanding over time.

Jesus models the same wisdom: truth should be given with love, timing, and discernment.

*Think about it*

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

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

Hearts filled with Sorrow and the Holy Spirit

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Easter Season : Sixth Week:  Tuesday*

*Gospel :  John 16:5-11*

*First Reading : Acts : 16:22-34*

*Responsorial Psalm : 138: 1-8*

*Hearts filled with Sorrow and the Holy Spirit*

*1) Why did sorrow fill their hearts?*

The disciples were attached to Jesus in a visible, human way: they walked with Him, listened to Him, depended on Him, found security in His presence.

When Jesus spoke about leaving, they felt: fear, uncertainty, loneliness, confusion, loss.

This is very human. Whenever something familiar changes, the heart often fills with sorrow before it understands the larger purpose.

The disciples could not yet see that what appeared to be a loss would become a greater presence through the Holy Spirit.

*2) The surprising teaching of Jesus*

Jesus says something unexpected: “It is for your good that I am going away.” (John 16:7)

Why? Because if He remained only physically present, His presence would still be limited by place and time. 

Through the Holy Spirit: God would dwell within believers, guide every person personally, strengthen hearts inwardly, continue Christ’s work across the world.

The disciples first experienced absence, but later discovered deeper communion.

This reveals an important spiritual principle: Sometimes sorrow prepares the heart for a deeper grace.

*3) Role of the Holy Spirit in this context*

In this passage, the Holy Spirit becomes: Comforter, Advocate, Guide, Teacher, Source of courage, Presence of God within.

The Holy Spirit does not merely remove sorrow instantly. Instead, He transforms it.

The disciples changed dramatically after receiving the Spirit: fear became courage, confusion became clarity, weakness became strength, isolation became mission.

This is why the Holy Spirit is often understood not only as consolation, but as inner transformation.

*4) Relevance to our life today*

This teaching is deeply relevant because everyone experiences seasons where: expectations collapse, relationships change, prayers seem unanswered, certainty disappears, grief enters the heart.

Many people ask: “Why is this happening?” “Why has God allowed this?” “Why do I feel abandoned?”

The Gospel reflection suggests that:
sorrow is not always the end of God’s work,
painful transitions may open us to deeper spiritual growth,
God may work inwardly when outward supports disappear.

Often we seek only external security: visible success, constant reassurance, emotional comfort, predictable outcomes.

But the Holy Spirit works internally: forming wisdom, patience, discernment, faith, resilience, compassion.

*5) Practical application* 

*A) In times of loss* : Instead of asking only “Why is this happening?”, we can also ask: “What is this experience teaching me?” “How is my heart being formed?” “What deeper dependence on God is emerging?”

*B) In prayer* : The Holy Spirit is often experienced not through dramatic signs, but through: quiet strength,
peace amid uncertainty, clarity in confusion, courage to continue. 

*C) In relationships* : Sorrow can soften the heart. People who suffer deeply often become: more compassionate, less judgmental, more attentive to others’ pain. 

*D) In spiritual growth* : Faith matures when it moves from: dependence on feelings, to trust even in silence. The disciples moved from emotional dependence on Jesus’ physical presence to spiritual communion through the Spirit.

*Think about it*

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

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

Whoever kills you will think he is offering service to God.”* : (John 16:2)

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Easter Season : Sixth Week:  Monday*

*Gospel :  John 15:26-16:4*

*First Reading : Acts : 16:11-15*

*Responsorial Psalm : 149:1-9*

*“Whoever kills you will think he is offering service to God.”* : (John 16:2)

*1) Meaning of Jesus" Words*

*A) Religious sincerity is not the same as truth*

A person may honestly believe they are serving God and still commit evil.
Jesus says persecution will come from people who are convinced they are defending religion, purity, tradition, or divine will.

This is one of the most sobering teachings in the Gospel:

A person can pray, worship, quote scripture, and yet oppose God’s work.
Zeal without humility can become dangerous.

Jesus immediately explains why: “They will do these things because they have not known the Father nor me.” (John 16:3). In other words, true knowledge of God produces love, mercy, truth, and humility—not violence and hatred.

*B) Following truth may bring rejection*

Jesus wants His disciples not to be shocked when suffering comes.

He says:

the world may reject them,
authorities may condemn them,
even religious institutions may oppose them.

This is not because truth is weak, but because truth exposes pride, hypocrisy, and power.

*C)  The Holy Spirit will help believers*

Just before this warning, Jesus speaks about the “Advocate” or “Spirit of Truth” (John 15:26).

The message is: You will not suffer alone. God’s Spirit will strengthen, guide, and testify through you.

So the passage is both a warning and a consolation.

*2) How history proved this saying*

*A) Early Christians persecuted by religious authorities*

The first Christians were persecuted by some leaders who believed they were protecting true religion.

A major example is Saul of Tarsus (later Saint Paul).

Before his conversion: he imprisoned Christians, approved violent persecution, sincerely believed he was defending God. Later he realized he had been opposing the very truth he thought he was serving.

*B) Religious wars and inquisitions*

Across centuries: Christians persecuted other Christians, people killed in the name of defending doctrine,
courts and empires used religion to justify violence.

Many participants sincerely believed they were serving God.

Jesus’ words reveal a tragic human tendency:
people can use religion to justify fear, power, nationalism, hatred, or control.

*C) Other religions and ideologies too*

This teaching is universal.
Not only Christians, but followers of many religions and ideologies have sometimes harmed others believing they were defending truth, purity, nation, revolution, or divine will.

Jesus exposes the danger of fanaticism: when certainty loses compassion.

*3) ow this applies today*

This passage is still deeply relevant.

*A) Moral certainty can become cruelty*

Today people may: attack others online, shame and destroy reputations, justify hatred, exclude or dehumanize others, while believing they are morally righteous.

The spirit behind this is similar: “I am doing good,” while harming human dignity.

Jesus invites self-examination: Does my zeal produce love? Does my conviction leave room for humility? Am I defending God, or defending my ego and tribe?

*B) Genuine faith may still face opposition*

People who speak truth about: justice, corruption, compassion, peace, human dignity, may still face rejection—even from their own communities. Jesus teaches that opposition does not automatically mean failure.

*C) Discernment is necessary*

Not every action done “in God’s name” truly reflects God. Jesus gives a criterion: true knowledge of God resembles: love, truth, mercy, humility, willingness to suffer rather than make others suffer.

*4) Deeper Reflections* 

*A) Beware of self-righteousness* : The most dangerous spiritual state is not weakness, but the conviction:
“I cannot possibly be wrong.” Jesus warns that people can commit evil while feeling holy. Humility protects the soul.

*B) Truth and love must stay together* : Truth without love becomes harshness. Love without truth becomes sentimentality. Jesus combines both.

*C) God is not defended by hatred* : Whenever religion produces contempt, violence, cruelty, or dehumanization, something essential about God has been forgotten. Jesus Himself accepted suffering rather than destroy His enemies.

*D)  The disciple should not fear rejection* 

Jesus tells the disciples beforehand so they will not lose faith when difficulties come.

The message is: misunderstanding is not new, suffering for truth is not meaningless, God remains present through the Spirit.

*Think about it*

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

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

The Holy Spirit as Paraclete

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Easter Season : Sixth Week:  Sunday*

*Gospel :  Jn 14:15-21*

*First Reading : Acts 8:5-8, 14-17*

*Responsorial Psalm : Ps 66:1-3, 4-5, 6-7, 16, 20*

*Second Reading : 1 Pt 3:15-18*

*The Holy Spirit as Paraclete*

*1) Why is the Holy Spirit called “another Paraclete”?*

Jesus himself was the first advocate and companion for the disciples. He walked with them, taught them, corrected them, protected them, and revealed the Father.

Before his death and resurrection, Jesus promises “another Paraclete” — meaning:

Jesus would no longer remain physically with them,

but the Holy Spirit would continue Christ’s presence within them.

The Spirit becomes the living continuation of Christ’s work in the believer and in the Church.

*2)/The Role of the Paraclete*

*A) The Spirit teaches and reminds*

“The Holy Spirit… will teach you everything and remind you of all that I told you.” — John 14:26

The Spirit:

deepens understanding,

helps truth become alive,

reminds the heart of what is good and holy.

This is not merely intellectual knowledge. It is inner illumination.

Many people experience this quietly:

a Scripture suddenly becomes meaningful,

conscience awakens,

clarity comes during confusion,

wisdom appears beyond one’s own strength.

*B) The Spirit comforts and strengthens*

The Paraclete is often understood as Comforter — but not comfort in the weak sense of mere soothing.

The Spirit gives:

courage during suffering,

endurance in trials,

hope when discouraged,

peace amid fear.

The disciples were terrified after Jesus’ crucifixion. After Pentecost, they became fearless witnesses. Christianity sees this transformation as the work of the Paraclete.

*C) The Spirit convicts and guides into truth*

“He will guide you into all truth.” — John 16:13

The Spirit:

awakens conscience,

reveals sin,

calls people toward repentance,

leads toward what is true and life-giving.

The Paraclete does not merely make us feel good. The Spirit transforms.

Sometimes this guidance feels like:

an inner warning,

a movement toward honesty,

discomfort with selfishness,

attraction toward goodness and love.

*D) The Spirit intercedes within us*

Saint Paul writes:

“The Spirit himself intercedes for us with sighs too deep for words.” — Romans 8:26

There are moments when a person cannot pray clearly:

grief, exhaustion, confusion, silence.

Christian spirituality teaches that the Holy Spirit prays within the human heart even then.

The Paraclete is God helping us from within.

*3) How to understand the Holy Spirit personally*

One way to understand the Paraclete is this:

The Holy Spirit is God’s presence experienced inwardly, Not merely an external law,
not merely an idea,
but the living movement of God within the soul.

The Spirit: enlightens the mind, softens the heart, strengthens the will, enlarges love.

The Spirit often works quietly rather than dramatically.


*4) The Fruits of the Paraclete in life*


love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, self-control

Where these grow authentically, Christians see the work of the Holy Spirit.

*5) Relevance to everyday life*

The idea of the Paraclete becomes deeply practical.

*In loneliness*:  The Spirit means we are not abandoned.

*In moral confusion* : The Spirit helps conscience awaken.

*In suffering* : The Spirit gives endurance and hope.

*In prayer* :  The Spirit helps when words fail.

*In relationships* :  The Spirit forms compassion, forgiveness, and humility.

*In vocation and decisions* :  The Spirit guides gradually through wisdom, peace, discernment, and truth.

*6) A deeper reflection*

The title “Paraclete” reveals something profound about God:
God does not save humanity from a distance.

The Spirit is God beside us,
with us,
and within us.

Christian mystics often describe the Holy Spirit not as coercion but as a gentle interior presence:

inviting, illuminating, consoling, purifying, transforming.

The Paraclete does not erase human freedom. The Spirit works through cooperation, openness, prayer, truthfulness, and love.

*Think about it*

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

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

The World Hates You

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Easter Season : Fifth Week:  Saturday*

*Gospel :  Jn 15:18-21*

*First Reading : Acts 16:1-10*

*Responsorial Psalm : Ps 100:1b-2, 3, 5*

*The World Hates You*

*1) What does “the world” mean here?*

Jesus is not saying that every human being is evil or that Christians should hate society. 

In John’s Gospel, “the world” often means:

A mindset opposed to God,

Systems built on pride, power, selfishness, injustice, or falsehood,

Human life organized without reference to truth and love.

So “the world” is not creation itself, nor ordinary people, but a spirit of resistance to God’s way.

*2) Why does the world hate?*

Jesus gives several reasons in this passage and throughout the Gospel.

*A) Truth exposes darkness*

Jesus says elsewhere: “People loved darkness rather than light because their deeds were evil.” (John 3:19)

Truth makes people uncomfortable when it exposes: hypocrisy, corruption, selfishness, injustice, moral compromise.

A person who tries to live honestly, forgive, remain pure, or defend the vulnerable may unintentionally challenge others simply by their way of life.

*B) Different values create tension*

The Gospel values are often opposite to worldly values.

Gospel Values : Humility, service, forgiveness, Truth, Sacrifice, purity

Worldly Values: status, domination, revenge, convenience, self-centeredness, indulgence

When someone chooses conscience over popularity, conflict naturally appears.

*C) Jesus Himself was rejected*

Jesus reminds the disciples: “It hated me first.”

He healed people, forgave sinners, and preached love—yet He was opposed because:

He challenged religious hypocrisy,

confronted power,

refused manipulation,

claimed divine authority.

The passage teaches that discipleship includes sharing in both Christ’s love and His rejection.

*D) People resist what threatens control*

Many systems—political, economic, cultural, even religious—can resist voices that call for justice, repentance, or truth because such voices threaten established power.

History repeatedly shows hostility toward people who challenge injustice.

Examples include:

Martin Luther King Jr.

Dietrich Bonhoeffer

Mother Teresa in some circles faced criticism and suspicion despite lives of service.

*3) How is this seen today?*

This passage can appear in subtle or strong ways today.

*A) Social pressure*

People may be mocked for:

faith,

moral convictions,

refusing corruption,

honesty in business,

defending unpopular truths.

A student, employee, or public figure may face exclusion for not following the crowd.

*B) Misunderstanding Christianity*

Some hostility comes because Christianity itself has sometimes been poorly represented through:

hypocrisy,

abuse of power,

judgmental attitudes,

political misuse of religion.

So not all criticism is persecution. Sometimes criticism is deserved correction. Christians are called to humility and repentance too.

*C) Consumer culture and spiritual emptiness*

Modern culture often promotes:

constant self-gratification,

image and success,

distraction,

individualism.

The Gospel calls people toward silence, sacrifice, compassion, and responsibility. That tension remains strong.

*D) Online culture*

Social media often rewards outrage, mockery, tribalism, and instant judgment. Nuanced faith or moral conviction can quickly become a target.

At the same time, believers themselves can also fall into hatred and hostility online, which contradicts Jesus’ teaching.

*4) Important balance: Jesus did not teach paranoia*

This passage should not be misunderstood as:

“Everyone is against us,” or

“Any disagreement means persecution.”

Jesus also taught:

love your enemies,

bless those who persecute you,

be humble,

examine yourself first.

Sometimes rejection comes from faithfulness. Other times conflict comes from human pride or lack of wisdom. Discernment is important.

*5) Spiritual reflection*

This passage invites several deep reflections.

*A) Following truth has a cost*

A life centered on truth, integrity, compassion, and faith may not always be rewarded socially.

*B) Love and rejection can coexist*

Jesus was perfectly loving and still rejected. Being disliked does not automatically mean failure.

*C) Christians are called to witness, not domination*

The response to hatred is not hatred back. Jesus answered rejection with:

patience,

courage,

forgiveness,

steadfastness.

*D) Hope remains central*

The passage is not meant to create fear, but perseverance. Jesus prepares His disciples so they are not shocked by opposition.

*Think about it*

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

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

The Concept of Slave

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Easter Season : Fifth Week:  Friday*

*Gospel :  Jn 15:12-17*

*First Reading : Acts 15:22-31*

*Responsorial Psalm : Ps 57:8-9, 10 and 12*

*The Concept of Slave*

*1) What does “slave” mean here?*

In the biblical and ancient Mediterranean context, a slave:

obeyed the master’s commands,

often did not know the master’s intentions,

had little personal freedom,

existed mainly to carry out orders.

Jesus uses this familiar social image to describe a relationship based only on command and obedience.

But then he says:

“I no longer call you slaves…”

This is striking. Jesus is not rejecting obedience altogether — because he still gives commandments (“love one another”) — but he is transforming the relationship.

The disciples are no longer merely people who receive orders. 

They are now: trusted, included, loved, brought into the Father’s plan.

The key sentence is: “Because I have made known to you everything I heard from my Father.”

Friendship here means shared intimacy and revelation.

*2) Why does Jesus use the concept of slave?*

Jesus often teaches through realities people already understood:

shepherd and sheep,

vine and branches,

father and children,

master and servant/slave.

The image works because everyone in that society understood the distance between a master and a slave.

So Jesus uses the strongest contrast possible:

From slavery → to friendship

This expresses:

a change of status,

a change of relationship,

a change of understanding.

The disciples are not treated as tools but as companions in God’s mission.

In the wider context of John 15:

Jesus speaks about abiding in love,

remaining in him,

bearing fruit,

loving one another.

So the movement is: obedience, intimacy, participation in divine love.

*3) Is Jesus rejecting service and obedience?*

No. Christianity still speaks about serving God. Even figures like Paul the Apostle sometimes call themselves “slaves of Christ.”

But there is a difference between:

forced slavery, and loving self-giving service.

Jesus redefines authority through love.

In many human systems:

power dominates,

masters use servants.

But in Jesus:

love comes first,

knowledge is shared,

dignity is given,

relationship becomes mutual.

This fits with another scene in Gospel of John where Jesus washes the disciples’ feet (John 13). The master becomes the servant.

*4) What is the relevance today?*

This passage remains deeply relevant spiritually, psychologically, and socially.

Spiritually
Many people relate to God mainly through fear:

“I must obey or I’ll be punished.”

“Religion is only duty.”

John 15 moves beyond fear-based religion.

Jesus invites believers into:

friendship,

communion,

participation in God’s love.

Christian discipleship is not mechanical obedience but relational life.

Psychologically
A slave mentality can still exist today:

acting without understanding,

living only by external pressure,

obeying systems without inner freedom.

Jesus calls people toward mature love:

understanding,

freedom,

responsibility,

conscious participation.

The ideal disciple is not a robot but a friend who understands the heart of the Master.

Socially and ethically
Historically, slavery has caused enormous suffering. This text should never be used to justify human slavery.

Instead, the movement of the passage points toward human dignity:

people are not instruments,

persons are worthy of trust and friendship,

authority should serve life and love.

Many Christian thinkers later used the deeper logic of the Gospel to challenge slavery and oppressive systems.

*5) A deeper theological insight*

There is also a paradox here.

Jesus says: “I no longer call you slaves,”

yet : disciples still belong completely to God.

The Christian mystery is: true freedom is found not in isolation,

but in loving communion.

So Christian spirituality holds together:

obedience and freedom,

surrender and friendship,

service and dignity.

The disciple obeys not because of fear, but because love creates unity of heart.

*6) Some reflections for meditation*

Do I relate to God mainly through fear or through friendship?

Do I obey externally while remaining inwardly distant?

What does it mean that Jesus shares the Father’s heart with his disciples?

Can love transform duty into joy?

In my relationships, do I treat people as instruments or as friends?

A beautiful summary of the passage could be:

Slaves receive commands.
Friends receive the heart.

And Jesus invites his disciples not merely to work for him, but to abide in his love and continue his way of loving others.

*Think about it*

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

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

Servants and Friends

GOSPEL THOUGHTS *Easter Season : Sixth Week:  Thursday* *Gospel :  John 15:9-17* *First Reading : Acts 1: 15-17, 20-26* *Responsorial Psalm ...