GOSPEL THOUGHTS
*Lenten Season : Lenten Season : First Week : Thursday*
*Gospel : Mt 7:7-12*
*First Reading : Esther 4:17m -17z*
*Responsorial Psalm : 138:1-8*
*Bread vs Stone; Fish vs Serpent*
*1) The Specialty of the Images*
Jesus asks: If your child asks for bread, will you give him a stone? If he asks for a fish, will you give him a serpent?
The expected answer: Of course not.
Why These Images?
In Galilee, small round loaves looked like stones.
Some serpents resembled eels or fish.
The contrast is between: Life-giving vs lifeless, Nourishment vs harm, Good gift vs deceptive substitute
*2) The Core Message of the Contrast*
*A) God Is Not Deceptive*
God does not trick His children. If imperfect human parents give good gifts, how much more will God give what is good?
God does not Replace nourishment with emptiness.
God does not Replace life with danger.
God does not Replace blessing with harm.
*B) The Fatherhood of God*
The deepest point is relational: God is not distant power — He is Father.
This is revolutionary in Jesus’ teaching. The contrast teaches trust in prayer.
When you ask: You are not bargaining.
When you ask: You are not manipulating.
When you ask: You are not risking punishment.
When you ask: You are asking a Father.
*C) Spiritual Application*
Sometimes we think:
“May be God will give me something harmful.”
“May be what I receive is a stone.”
“May be I asked for bread but got suffering.”
But Jesus reframes this:
What appears to be a stone may actually be: Protection, Redirection, Growth
God gives what is truly good, not merely what is immediately desired.
*D) Connection to Luke 7*
Now connect this to Luke 7: The centurion trusted Jesus’ word. The widow received life instead of permanent loss.
These are examples of: Bread, not stone., Life, not serpent., Mercy, not abandonment.
The miracles demonstrate what the teaching promises: God gives life.
*3) The Spiritual Significance*
The contrast reveals three deep truths:
*A) God’s goodness exceeds human goodness* : If flawed humans give good gifts, God’s goodness is infinitely greater.
*B) Faith is trusting the Giver*: The centurion didn’t need Jesus physically present — he trusted His word.
*C) Divine gifts are life-giving* : Everything Jesus does restores: Dignity, Health, Relationship, Hope
*4) Points to Ponder*
Do I secretly fear God may give me a “stone”?
Do I trust His timing when I don’t immediately see “bread”?
Can I ask boldly in prayer, believing He gives what truly nourishes?
The heart of this teaching is: God is good. God is Father. God gives life, not harm.
*Think about it*
*God bless you and your family. Praying for you and your dear ones*
*Fr Maxim DSouza*
*Jeppu Seminary*
*Mangalore*