Thursday, July 16, 2026

Service on the Day of Sabbath

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Ordinary Season : Fifteenth Week:  Friday*

*Gospel :  Mt 12:1-8*

*First Reading : Is 38: 1-8, 21-22*

*Responsorial Psalm : Is 38: 10-16*

*Service on the Day of Sabbath*

*1) The Sabbath Was Made for Human Good*

God instituted the Sabbath as a day of rest after creation (Gen 2:2-3). It was meant to

give people physical rest,
deepen their relationship with God,
strengthen family life,
remind Israel that they were once slaves but are now free.

The Sabbath was God's gift to humanity.

Over time, however, religious leaders added hundreds of detailed regulations. Instead of becoming a blessing, the Sabbath became a burden.

Jesus restores its original meaning.

The Sabbath exists to serve people—not people to serve the Sabbath.

*2) Hunger Cannot Wait*

The disciples were not harvesting crops for profit.

They were hungry.

Jesus recognizes a simple truth: Human need is more important than ritual regulations.

God never intended religious laws to ignore genuine human suffering.

When a child is hungry, a mother does not refuse food because it is Sunday.

Love always comes before legalism.

*3) The Priests Worked on the Sabbath*

Jesus points out something surprising.

Every Sabbath the priests performed sacrifices.

They : prepared animals, carried water, lit fires, cleaned the Temple, conducted worship.

Technically, they were working.

Yet God approved because their work was service to God and His people.

This teaches us that : Work done out of love and service is holy work.

*4) Mercy Is Greater Than Sacrifice*

Jesus quotes Hosea: "I desire mercy, not sacrifice."

God values : compassion over ceremonies, kindness over rituals, love over legal perfection.

Prayer without mercy becomes empty. Religious practices should produce loving hearts.

*5) Jesus Is the Lord of the Sabbath*

By saying, "The Son of Man is Lord of the Sabbath," Jesus reveals His divine authority.

He alone can explain God's intention behind the law. The Sabbath points toward Christ. Real rest is ultimately found in Him.

*6) Applicating to our Life*

*A) Worship Should Lead to Service* : Coming to church is important. 

But after Mass, visiting the sick, feeding the poor, helping an elderly neighbour,  comforting someone in grief, are beautiful ways of honoring God. True worship continues outside the church.

*B) Religion Should Never Make Us Less Compassionate* : Sometimes people become so focused on rules that they forget people.

For example: A person may say, "I cannot help because I am praying." But perhaps God is calling them to pause their prayer briefly and help someone in urgent need. Helping a person in need is also prayer.

*C) Sunday Is Not Simply a Day of Rest* : Christians keep Sunday holy by worship, rest, family, acts of charity.

A Sunday lived only for entertainment misses its deeper meaning. A Sunday filled only with work also loses balance. A holy Sunday combines worship, rest, and love.

*7) Practical Examples*

*The Doctor* : A doctor is called to the hospital on Sunday to save a patient's life. He misses part of his holiday. Is he breaking God's command? No. Saving life is honoring God.

*The Nurse* : A nurse works throughout Sunday caring for patients. Her work becomes an act of mercy. Her hospital is, in a sense, her place of worship that day.

*Parents* : A mother stays home from church because her child has a high fever. She is not neglecting God. She is serving Christ through her child.

*Helping After Mass* : After Sunday Mass, parishioners notice an elderly man struggling to carry groceries. Instead of rushing home, they stop to help him. That small act of kindness extends the grace of the Eucharist into daily life.

*A Beautiful Reflection*

A violin kept safely in its case never produces music. Its purpose is fulfilled only when it is played.

Likewise, religion locked inside church walls loses its purpose. Faith becomes beautiful when it reaches out in love.

Jesus teaches us that the highest form of worship is not merely observing religious regulations but reflecting God's mercy.

*Think about it*

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

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

The Burden of Jesus - Light

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Ordinary Season : Fifteenth Week:  Thursday*

*Gospel :  Mt 11:28-30*

*First Reading : Is 26: 7-9, 12, 16-19*

*Responsorial Psalm : 102: 13-21*

*The Burden of Jesus - Light*

*1) What is the Burden of Jesus?*

The burden of Jesus is not a burden imposed from outside but a burden born of love. It includes:

Living according to the Gospel.
Loving God and our neighbor.
Forgiving those who hurt us.
Carrying our daily crosses with faith.
Remaining faithful to God's will.

Every disciple has a burden. The question is not whether we carry a burden, but which burden we carry.

Many people carry the heavy burdens of guilt, hatred, anxiety, selfishness, greed, and fear. Jesus invites us to exchange these burdens for His own burden—the burden of love, truth, and discipleship.

*2) What is a Yoke?*

A yoke is a wooden beam placed on two oxen so that they can pull a load together.

When Jesus says, "Take my yoke upon you," He is not asking us to carry life alone. He is inviting us to be yoked with Him.

The beautiful image is this: Christ is carrying the greater weight, while we walk beside Him. The burden becomes lighter because we are not carrying it by ourselves.

*3) How Does the Burden Become Light?*

*A) Love Makes the Burden Light*

When a mother stays awake all night caring for her sick child, she is tired, yet she does not complain because love carries her.

Love transforms duty into joy.

Saint Augustine said: "Where there is love, there is no burden; or if there is a burden, the burden itself is loved."

*B) Jesus Carries the Burden with Us*

Jesus never asks us to carry a cross that He Himself has not carried.

When we suffer, He walks with us. Prayer, the Eucharist, and faith allow us to experience His presence.

A load shared becomes lighter.

*C) Grace Strengthens Us*

Human strength alone is often insufficient. God's grace gives us inner strength to bear difficulties that would otherwise crush us. Many saints endured immense suffering, yet they experienced deep peace because Christ sustained them.

*4) Why Does Jesus Compare His Burden with Other Burdens?*

In the context of Matthew 11, many people were weighed down by legalism, rigid religious rules, and oppressive interpretations of the Law.

The religious leaders often placed heavy burdens on people without helping them carry them.

Jesus offers a different way: Not slavery, but relationship. Not fear, but love. Not endless regulations, but a living friendship with God.

His burden is lighter because it is rooted in mercy and grace.

*5) Application to Our Life*

*A) Carry the Right Burden* : Everyone carries something. If we refuse the burden of Christ, we often end up carrying heavier burdens—resentment, addiction, anxiety, loneliness, or selfish ambition. The burden of Christ leads to freedom.

*B) Do Not Carry Life Alone* : Many people try to solve every problem by themselves. Jesus invites us to place our burdens in His hands through prayer and trust.

*C) Serve with Love* : A duty done without love becomes heavy. The same duty done with love becomes meaningful. Whether in family life, priestly ministry, religious life, or daily work, love makes burdens lighter.

*D) Help Others Carry Their Burdens* : Those who follow Christ should not add burdens to others but help lighten them. We are called to imitate Jesus by encouraging, supporting, and accompanying those who struggle.

Jesus does not promise a burden-free life; He promises a burden-shared life.

"A burden carried alone becomes heavy; a burden carried with Christ becomes a path to holiness."

The more closely we walk with Christ, the lighter our burden becomes and the deeper our peace.

*Think about it*

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

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

Revelation of the Hidden things to the Little Children

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Ordinary Season : Fifteenth Week:  Wednesday*

*Gospel :  Mt 11:25-27*

*First Reading : Is 10:5-7, 13-16*

*Responsorial Psalm : 94: 5-15*

*Revelation of the Hidden things to the Little Children*

*1) Who Are the "Little Children"?*

The "little children" Jesus speaks about are not primarily children by age but people with childlike hearts.

They are those who:

are humble rather than proud,
trust rather than depend only on themselves,
remain open to God's guidance,
know that they need God,
are willing to learn and be transformed.

Children naturally depend on their parents. Likewise, spiritual "little children" depend on God instead of placing absolute confidence in their own wisdom.

In contrast, the "wise and learned" in this passage are those who think they already know everything and therefore leave no room for God to teach them.

*2) What Are the "Hidden Things"?*

The hidden things are the mysteries of God's Kingdom:

that Jesus is the Son of God,
that salvation comes through love and humility,
that true greatness is found in service,
that the Cross leads to Resurrection,
that God's mercy is greater than human merit.

These truths cannot be fully grasped merely by intelligence. They are understood through faith and an open heart.

As St. Augustine beautifully said: "It is not understanding that leads to faith, but faith that opens the way to deeper understanding."

*3) Why Are These Things Revealed to the Little Children?*

God does not hide Himself out of favoritism. Rather, pride blinds people from seeing Him.

A humble person is like fertile soil that receives the seed. A proud person is like a closed door; even if light shines outside, it cannot enter.

The Pharisees knew the Scriptures thoroughly, yet many failed to recognize Jesus standing before them.

The fishermen of Galilee had little formal education, yet they left everything and followed Him because their hearts were open. 

God's revelation depends less on intellectual ability than on spiritual receptivity.

*4) What Gives the Little Children Credibility?*

Their credibility lies in their humility and openness, not in their social status or academic qualifications.

God entrusts His mysteries to them because they: seek truth sincerely, listen before speaking, obey before arguing, trust before demanding proof, allow God to lead them.

Mary is the perfect example. Though a simple young woman from Nazareth, she believed God's word with complete trust: "Let it be done to me according to your word."

Likewise, the apostles were ordinary fishermen, tax collectors, and common people. Yet Jesus entrusted them with the Gospel because they were teachable.

*5) Humility Opens the Eyes of Faith*

Many people see only with their physical eyes. The humble learn to see with the eyes of faith.

The proud often ask, "How can this be?"

The humble ask, "Lord, what do You want me to do?"

Faith begins where self-sufficiency ends.

*6) What Does This Teach Us Today?*

Our world values degrees, titles, achievements, influence, and expertise. These are gifts and should be respected. Yet Jesus reminds us that none of them automatically makes a person wise before God.

A person may possess vast knowledge yet fail to know God's heart.

Another may have little education but possess deep faith, compassion, and holiness.

God measures the heart more than the résumé.

*7) How Is This Applicable to Our Daily Life?*

Jesus invites us to become "little children" every day.

We become little children when: we pray before making decisions, 
we admit our mistakes instead of defending them,
we forgive instead of seeking revenge,
we remain teachable throughout life,
we trust God's providence even when we do not understand His plans.

Every challenge becomes an opportunity to say, "Lord, teach me." 

That is the prayer of a spiritual child.

*8) A Challenge for Self-Examination*

Before revealing His Kingdom, God first asks us:

Is your heart open?
Can you still be taught?
Do you seek God more than your own opinions?
Are you humble enough to admit you need His grace?

The Kingdom of God is not hidden because God is unwilling to reveal it. It is hidden only from hearts that are closed by pride and self-reliance.

*Think about it*

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

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

Repentance with Sackcloth and Ashes

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Ordinary Season : Fifteenth Week:  Tuesday*

*Gospel : Mt 11: 20-24*

*First Reading : Is 7:1-9*

*Responsorial Psalm : 48: 2-8*

*Repentance with Sackcloth and Ashes*

*1) Sackcloth and Ashes Are Visible Signs of an Invisible Change*

In the Bible, repentance begins in the heart, but it often finds expression through outward actions.

Sackcloth was a rough garment made from coarse goat's hair. People wore it to express sorrow, humility, and mourning.
Ashes were placed on the head or body as a sign of grief, repentance, and recognition of one's mortality.

These external signs were never meant to replace inner conversion. Rather, they expressed what was happening within.

The Bible repeatedly emphasizes that God desires a repentant heart more than external rituals. Sackcloth and ashes have value only when they reflect genuine sorrow for sin.

Many people can change their clothes without changing their hearts. God asks us to change our hearts first, and then let our actions reveal that change.

*2) Why Does Jesus Mention Tyre, Sidon, and Sodom?*

Tyre, Sidon, and Sodom were known for their wickedness in the Old Testament.

Yet Jesus says something surprising: "If these pagan cities had seen the miracles you have seen, they would have repented."

The problem was not lack of evidence. The problem was hardness of heart.

This teaches us an important principle: The greater the grace received, the greater the responsibility to respond.

Chorazin and Bethsaida had every opportunity to believe. They saw miracles. They heard Jesus preach. They experienced God's presence. Yet they remained unchanged.

*3) Repentance Means More Than Feeling Sorry*

Biblical repentance (metanoia) literally means a change of mind and direction.

It is not merely: feeling guilty, becoming emotional, shedding tears.

It means: turning away from sin, returning to God, changing one's priorities, living differently.

Sackcloth and ashes symbolize this decision to begin a new life. Real repentance always produces visible fruits.

As John the Baptist said: "Bear fruits worthy of repentance."

*4) Ashes Remind Us of Our Human Condition*

Ashes also remind us: "You are dust, and to dust you shall return." They teach humility. 

Every human achievement eventually becomes dust. Every position, wealth, and power are temporary.

Repentance begins when we stop pretending to be self-sufficient and recognize our dependence on God.

That is why on Ash Wednesday we receive ashes while hearing words that call us to conversion.

*5) The Greatest Miracle Is a Changed Heart*

The people of Chorazin wanted miracles. Jesus wanted conversion.

Miracles may amaze us for a moment. Repentance transforms us forever.

A healed body will one day die. But a converted heart receives eternal life.

God's greatest miracle is not restoring sight to blind eyes—it is opening blind hearts.

*6) Application to Our Life*

This Gospel speaks powerfully to Christians today.

Many of us have received blessings greater than Chorazin and Bethsaida:

We have the Eucharist.
We have the Scriptures.
We have the Church.
We have countless opportunities for confession.
We hear God's Word every week.

Yet familiarity can make us spiritually indifferent.

Sometimes we admire Jesus without allowing Him to change us.

We attend Mass but hold on to resentment.

We pray but refuse forgiveness.

We know the Gospel but fail to live it.

Jesus reminds us that privilege without repentance leads to accountability.

Every grace carries a responsibility.

*7) Questions for Personal Reflection* 

Have God's blessings changed my life or merely impressed me?
Do I only feel sorry for my sins, or do I truly change?
What "sackcloth and ashes" might God be asking of me today—not necessarily outward symbols, but genuine humility, confession, reconciliation, and a new way of living?
Am I becoming more like Christ through the graces I have received?

*Think about it*

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

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

Sunday, July 12, 2026

The Story of the Sword

The Story of the Sword

"Do not think that I have come to bring peace to the earth; I have not come to bring peace, but a sword." (Mt 10:34)

The story of the sword in the Bible is fascinating. At the beginning of human history, the sword represented violence, fear, and division. By the time of Jesus, it had become a symbol of power, war, and domination. Yet Jesus gives the sword a completely new meaning. He transforms it from a weapon that destroys lives into a symbol of truth that transforms hearts.

1) The First Sword – The Sword of Human Violence

The first mention of violence in the Bible comes with Cain killing Abel. As human sin spread, violence became one of the greatest tragedies of history. Kings built kingdoms with swords, empires expanded through wars, and many believed that power came from military strength.

This is the story of the world's sword—a sword that sheds blood, creates fear, and leaves behind broken lives.

Jesus came to write a different story.

2) The Sword of Jesus is the Sword of Truth

When Jesus says, "I have not come to bring peace, but a sword," He is not asking His followers to fight with weapons.

His sword is the truth of the Gospel.

Truth always divides because people respond differently to it.

Some welcome the light.

Others prefer darkness.

Some repent.

Others resist.

The sword of Christ cuts away lies, hypocrisy, pride, and sin so that new life can begin.

3) Every Great Change Begins with a Sword

Throughout salvation history, God brings renewal by confronting what is false.

The prophets challenged kings.

John the Baptist challenged Herod.

Jesus challenged the religious leaders.

The apostles challenged the pagan world.

None of them used violence.

Their only weapon was God's truth.

Truth disturbed comfortable lives before it transformed them.

4) The Sword First Enters Our Own Heart

Before changing the world, Christ's sword changes us.

His Word asks uncomfortable questions:

Am I truly forgiving?
Do I seek God's will or only my own?
Am I honest?
Am I humble?
Do I love my neighbour?

The sword removes everything that keeps us from becoming holy.

This is often painful because conversion always requires letting go of something.

5) The Sword Can Divide Families

Jesus says that even families may become divided because of Him.

He is not encouraging conflict.

Rather, He recognizes that choosing Christ may bring misunderstanding or opposition from those closest to us.

Throughout history, many saints experienced this.

Some lost friendships.

Some were rejected by family.

Some even gave their lives.

Yet they remained faithful because Christ was their greatest treasure.

6) The Sword Finally Leads to Peace

The greatest paradox is this:

Jesus speaks about a sword in order to establish peace.

Real peace cannot exist without truth.

Just as a surgeon cuts in order to heal, Christ cuts away sin in order to restore life.

His Cross appeared to be the greatest defeat, yet it became the source of salvation for the whole world.

The sword prepares the way for peace.

7) The Story Continues Today

The story of the sword did not end in the first century.

Every Christian continues that story.

Whenever we:

choose honesty over corruption,
forgive instead of taking revenge,
defend the weak,
speak truth with love,
remain faithful despite opposition,

we allow Christ's sword to work through us.

The world may resist us, but God's Kingdom grows wherever truth and love meet.

Reflection

The story of the sword is really the story of every disciple. Each day we must choose between the sword of violence and the sword of truth, between selfishness and sacrifice, between comfort and commitment. Jesus asks us not to conquer people but to conquer our own hearts. His Word is the sword that removes whatever separates us from God and from one another. When we allow that sword to shape our lives, we become peacemakers—not because we avoid difficult truths, but because we embrace them with love.

Thought for the Day

"The world's sword conquers by force. Christ's sword conquers by truth. The world's sword creates enemies; Christ's sword creates disciples. The world's sword ends in death; Christ's sword leads to the peace and life of God's Kingdom."

The Sword of Jesus and the Peace

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Ordinary Season : Fifteenth Week:  Monday*

*Gospel :  Mt 10: 34-11:1*

*First Reading : 110-17*

*Responsorial Psalm : 50:8-23*

*The Sword of Jesus and the Peace*

*1) Jesus Does Not Bring Violence but Truth*

Jesus never used a physical sword to spread His message. In fact, when Peter drew a sword to defend Him in the Garden of Gethsemane, Jesus said: "Put your sword back into its place, for all who take the sword will perish by the sword." (Mt 26:52)

The sword in Matthew 10 is not a weapon of violence. It is the sword of truth, God's Word, and the demand for a decision.

The Letter to the Hebrews describes God's Word as : "Sharper than any two-edged sword, piercing until it divides soul from spirit." (Heb 4:12)

Jesus' teaching cuts through falsehood, hypocrisy, selfishness, and sin. It exposes what is hidden in the human heart.

*2) The Sword Brings Division, Not Because Jesus Wants Conflict*

Immediately after speaking of the sword, Jesus says: "For I have come to set a man against his father, and a daughter against her mother..."

Jesus is not encouraging family conflict. Rather, He is preparing His disciples for the reality that following Him sometimes creates opposition, even within one's own family.

Whenever someone chooses Christ wholeheartedly: dishonest people may oppose them, unjust systems may reject them,
even loved ones may misunderstand them.

The division is not the goal of Jesus' mission. It is often the result of choosing truth over compromise.

*3) Jesus Brings True Peace Through Conversion*

There are two kinds of peace.

*A) False Peace* : This is peace that avoids conflict at any cost.

Remaining silent before injustice.
Accepting corruption to keep everyone happy.
Ignoring sin for the sake of comfort.

This is not the peace Jesus came to give.

*B) True Peace* : True peace is born from justice, truth, forgiveness, and holiness.

Sometimes surgery is painful before healing begins.

Likewise, Jesus first removes sin before giving lasting peace.

The sword is like a surgeon's scalpel. It wounds only to heal.

*4) The Sword Separates Good from Evil Within Us*

The first battle is not with others but within ourselves.

Every disciple experiences a struggle between: faith and fear, forgiveness and revenge, generosity and selfishness, humility and pride, holiness and temptation.

Jesus' Word cuts away whatever prevents us from becoming the people God created us to be. The sword first enters our own hearts.

*5) The Sword Calls for Radical Commitment*

Jesus continues: "Whoever loves father or mother more than me is not worthy of me."

This is not a rejection of family. Rather, Jesus teaches that God must have first place.

When Christ becomes the center of life: family relationships become healthier, love becomes purer, responsibilities become more meaningful.

When God is first, everything else finds its proper place.

*6) The Sword Challenges Society*

Throughout history, saints experienced this sword.

The prophets challenged kings.
The apostles challenged religious hypocrisy.
Many martyrs preferred death to denying Christ.

Their faith disturbed the comfort of those living in injustice.

Truth often creates resistance before it creates renewal.

*7) The Sword Today*

The sword of Christ still cuts deeply.
 
It asks us:

Will I tell the truth even if it costs me friendships?
Will I remain honest when corruption is easier?
Will I forgive when revenge feels natural?
Will I defend the dignity of the poor and vulnerable?
Will I remain faithful to Christ when society pressures me to compromise?

Every "yes" to Christ is also a "no" to something contrary to the Gospel.

*8) The Paradox: Peace Through the Sword*

Jesus indeed brings peace through the sword, but not by violence. 

The sword removes whatever destroys peace: sin, hatred, pride, lies, injustice, selfishness.

Only after these are cut away can genuine peace flourish.

Like a gardener pruning a tree, the cutting may seem harsh, but it leads to healthier growth and richer fruit.

*Think about it*

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

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

Saturday, July 11, 2026

Payment of Bills :Freely You Have Received; Freely Give"

"Freely You Have Received; Freely Give" (Matthew 10:8)

Jesus sends His disciples on mission with a profound command:

"Freely you have received; freely give." (Matthew 10:8)

These words remind us that the most precious gifts in life are not bought, earned, or deserved. They are pure gifts from God. We live in a world where almost everything has a price. Every day we pay bills—for electricity, water, internet, fuel, education, healthcare, and countless other necessities. Yet the greatest things that sustain life come to us without a price tag.

1. We Pay for Electricity, But No One Can Pay for the Sun

Without electricity, life becomes difficult. We pay monthly bills to keep our homes bright.

Yet every morning, God gives us sunlight free of charge.

The sun rises over the rich and the poor alike. No government sends us a bill for sunrise. No company owns the morning light. Every dawn is God's daily gift to humanity.

This reminds us that God's generosity is greater than human economy. What God gives is beyond human calculation.

2. We Pay for Oxygen in the ICU, But We Never Pay for the Breeze of Nature

A person in intensive care may need oxygen cylinders or ventilators, and these can cost a great deal.

Yet every day we breathe millions of breaths without paying a single rupee.

The cool morning breeze, the fresh mountain air, the gentle wind after rain—all are gifts flowing from God's loving hands.

We usually realize the value of breathing only when breathing becomes difficult.

Every ordinary breath is actually an extraordinary gift.

3. We Buy Bottled Water, But Rain Comes Freely

We spend money on drinking water.

But who pays for the clouds?

Who pays for the rain that fills rivers, lakes, and wells?

Rain is one of God's greatest acts of generosity. As Isaiah says,

"As the rain and the snow come down from heaven... so shall my word be." (Isaiah 55:10-11)

God's blessings fall freely before they become human resources.

4. We Cannot Buy Love

Money can buy a house but not a home.

Money can buy medicine but not health.

Money can buy a bed but not peaceful sleep.

Money can buy company but not genuine friendship.

Money can buy gifts but not unconditional love.

The deepest treasures of life come through relationships, not transactions.

5. Salvation Is the Greatest Free Gift

The greatest gift we have received is not sunlight or air.

It is Jesus Christ Himself.

His forgiveness, His mercy, His Cross, His Resurrection, and eternal life cannot be purchased.

As St. Paul says:

"The free gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord." (Romans 6:23)

We did nothing to deserve God's love.

Everything is grace.

6. Therefore, Freely Give

Jesus says that since we have received freely, we must also give freely.

Give encouragement.

Give forgiveness.

Give your smile.

Give your time.

Give compassion.

Give hope.

Give prayer.

Give kindness.

These cost little but are priceless to the one who receives them.

The world has enough business transactions; what it desperately needs are acts of grace.

7. Gratitude Is the Beginning of Generosity

People who recognize that everything is God's gift become generous people.

Those who think everything belongs to them become possessive.

Those who know everything belongs to God become grateful stewards.

The more we appreciate God's free gifts, the more willing we become to share our own gifts with others.

Conclusion

Every sunrise proclaims God's generosity.

Every breath testifies to His mercy.

Every drop of rain reveals His providence.

Every heartbeat is an undeserved blessing.

When we realize how much we have freely received from God, Jesus' command becomes natural:

"Freely you have received; freely give."

A Christian is not merely someone who believes in God, but someone who becomes a channel of God's generosity—sharing freely what God has first given freely.

Service on the Day of Sabbath

GOSPEL THOUGHTS *Ordinary Season : Fifteenth Week:  Friday* *Gospel :  Mt 12:1-8* *First Reading : Is 38: 1-8, 21-22* *Responsorial Psalm : ...