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.

The Survival of the Seed : Parable of the Sower

The Survival of the Seed 

1. The Seed on the Path – Hope for Hardened Hearts

The path is hard because it is constantly walked upon.

It represents hearts hardened by sin, disappointment, pride, or indifference.

Normally, seeds cannot penetrate such ground.

Yet occasionally we see grass growing through cracks in a road or between paving stones.

This teaches us that life is stronger than hardness.

Likewise, no human heart is so hard that God cannot soften it.

Many people who once rejected God later became saints.

God's grace finds the smallest opening.

Reflection

Some people appear unreachable.

But one prayer...

one illness...

one act of kindness...

one retreat...

one encounter with Christ...

can crack open the hardest heart.

Never stop sowing.

2. The Seed on Rocky Ground – Hope Through Deep Roots

Rocky ground has little soil.

Plants usually dry up because they cannot develop deep roots.

Yet around the world, trees grow from cliffs and flowers bloom from mountain rocks.

Their roots patiently search for hidden moisture.

So too, Christians who endure suffering often develop the deepest faith.

Trials force our roots to go deeper into God.

Reflection

Easy faith rarely lasts.

Faith that survives suffering becomes mature faith.

Sometimes the rocks that seem to hinder us actually strengthen us.

3. The Seed Among Thorns – Hope Amid Distractions

Thorns represent anxiety, greed, pleasure, ambition, and worldly concerns.

They compete with the plant for light and nourishment.

Yet nature sometimes surprises us.

A beautiful flower rises above thorn bushes.

A young tree grows through dense shrubs until it reaches the sunlight.

Likewise, many holy people live in difficult environments.

They work in corrupt systems.

They raise families amid many pressures.

They struggle with worries and temptations.

Yet they continue to bear fruit.

Reflection

Holiness does not require a perfect environment.

It requires perseverance.

Grace enables us to rise above the thorns.

4. The Seed on Good Soil – God's Dream for Every Heart

Good soil does not happen by accident.

It has been cultivated.

It has been ploughed.

Stones have been removed.

Weeds have been cleared.

Likewise, a fruitful Christian life requires continual conversion.

Prayer softens the heart.

The Eucharist nourishes it.

Confession removes the weeds of sin.

Acts of charity enrich the soil.

Good soil is not a gift given to a few.

It is the result of cooperating with God's grace.

The Greatest Miracle Is Not the Seed

Most people think the miracle is the abundant harvest.

But an even greater miracle is the transformation of the soil.

The hard path becomes soft.

The rocky ground becomes deep.

The thorny field becomes clean.

This is exactly what God does in our lives.

The Gospel is the story of transformed hearts.

A Beautiful Biblical Pattern

Throughout Scripture we see this transformation.

Moses was a fearful shepherd, yet God made him a liberator.
David was an overlooked shepherd boy, yet God made him a king.
Peter was impulsive and weak, yet became the rock of the Church.
Paul persecuted Christians, yet became the Apostle to the Gentiles.
Mary Magdalene encountered Christ and became the first witness of the Resurrection.
Augustine wandered far from God, yet became one of the Church's greatest saints.

Each of them was once "difficult soil."

God cultivated them until they became fruitful.

A Lesson from Nature

After a forest fire, the land appears dead.

The soil is black.

The trees are gone.

Everything seems lost.

Yet after the first rains, tiny green shoots begin to appear.

Seeds that had lain hidden beneath the ground suddenly germinate.

Life returns.

The place that looked dead becomes alive again.

So it is with God's grace.

Sometimes God does His greatest work after the fires of failure, suffering, loss, or sin.

Homiletic Conclusion

The Parable of the Sower invites us to examine the condition of our hearts. But nature adds another inspiring lesson: life is astonishingly resilient. Seeds sometimes emerge from cracks in the pavement, from rocky cliffs, and even from thorny places. They remind us that God's grace is even more powerful than nature.

Perhaps today you feel like the hardened path, the rocky ground, or the thorny field. The Gospel proclaims hope. The Divine Sower never abandons His field, and the Divine Farmer never stops cultivating it.

The final message of the parable is not failure but abundance. God's desire is that every heart, however wounded or resistant, may one day become good soil, yielding thirtyfold, sixtyfold, and a hundredfold for His Kingdom. This is the triumph of grace: God not only sows the seed—He transforms the soil so that it can bear fruit.

The Generosity of the Sower

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Ordinary Season : Fifteenth Week:  Sudnay*

*Gospel :  Mt 13: 1-23*

*First Reading : 55:10-11*

*Responsorial Psalm : 65: 10-14*

*Second Reading : Romans 8:18-23*

*The Generosity of the Sower*

*1) The Sower Does Not Discriminate*

The sower scatters seed everywhere—on the path, rocky ground, thorns, and good soil.

Human logic says, "Don't waste seed." God's logic says, "No one is beyond hope."

God offers His grace to saints and sinners alike. He does not first examine whether a person deserves His Word.

We often decide who is worthy of our love or attention.
God continues to speak even to those who ignore Him.
The Church must never stop proclaiming the Gospel because of people's past failures.

Do I sow God's love selectively, or generously?

*2) The Sower Takes the Risk of Failure*

Most of the seed appears to be wasted. Three-fourths of the seed does not bear fruit. Yet the sower continues sowing.

God is not discouraged by rejection. Isaiah 55 says God's Word never returns empty, even when we cannot immediately see the results.

Sometimes Parents, Teachers, Priests, and Catechists wonder,  "I have tried so much. Nothing changes."

Jesus says, Keep sowing. Faithfulness matters more than immediate success.

*3) The Sower Believes More in the Seed Than in the Soil*

Notice that Jesus never says the seed is defective. The problem is never the Word. The Word itself possesses life.

The Gospel has its own transforming power. Sometimes we rely more on techniques than on the power of God's Word.

A homily, a Bible verse, one confession, one retreat can change a person's life forever. Never underestimate one seed.

*4) The Sower is Extravagantly Generous*

The sower almost seems "wasteful." He throws seed everywhere.

God's grace is abundant. He does not calculate. He gives forgiveness repeatedly. He keeps calling. He keeps waiting. The Cross itself looks extravagant. God never loves in small quantities.

*5) The Sower Never Stops Sowing*

Every season is another opportunity.

God never says, "I've had enough." Every sunrise is another sowing. Every Mass is another sowing. Every confession is another sowing. Every suffering can become another sowing. God's patience is remarkable.

*6) The Sower Goes Out*

The parable begins: "A sower went out to sow."

God never waits for people to come first. He comes searching.

Throughout Scripture: God searched for Adam. Jesus searched for Zacchaeus. Jesus searched for the Samaritan woman. Jesus searched for Peter after his denial.

Mission begins with movement. The Church is called not merely to welcome people but to go out to them.

*7) The Sower is Hopeful*

Imagine looking at hard ground. Most people would give up. The sower does not. 

He believes that today's hard ground may become tomorrow's fertile soil.

Peter was once rocky ground. Paul persecuted Christians. Augustine wandered for years.

Yet grace transformed them. Never label people permanently.

*8) The Sower Works Quietly*

The sower scatters and walks on.  He cannot force growth. Growth belongs to God.

Sometimes priests become anxious about numbers. Parents become anxious about children. Teachers become anxious about results. 

Our task is sowing. God's task is growing. As St. Paul says: "I planted, Apollos watered, but God gave the growth." (1 Cor 3:6)

*9) The Sower Accepts Freedom*

God does not compel anyone to receive His Word. Love requires freedom. 

Some reject. Some delay. Some accept. The sower respects human freedom.

This reveals the humility of God.

*10) The Sower Looks Beyond the Present*

The parable ends with extraordinary fruitfulness: Thirty... Sixty... A hundredfold.

God sees what we cannot. 

Today's unnoticed prayer... Today's hidden sacrifice... Today's small act of kindness... may bear fruit years later.

Mission requires long-term vision.

*Think about it*

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

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

What I tell you in the dark, say in the light; and what you hear whispered, proclaim from the housetops."

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Ordinary Season : Fourteenth Week:  Saturday*

*Gospel :  Mt 10:24-33*

*First Reading : Isaiah 6:1-8*

*Responsorial Psalm : 93: 1-5*

*"What I tell you in the dark, say in the light; and what you hear whispered, proclaim from the housetops."*

*1) "What I Tell You in the Dark" – The Place of Intimacy*

Jesus is not referring to secrecy or hidden knowledge. Rather, "the dark" symbolizes the quiet, private moments of formation. Before the disciples could preach publicly, they had to first sit quietly at the feet of Jesus.

Many of Jesus' teachings were first given privately to His disciples after He had spoken to the crowds (cf. Mt 13:36). They learned in silence before they preached in public.

Darkness here represents: 

Prayer before preaching.
Listening before speaking.
Formation before mission.
Relationship before responsibility.

God often speaks most deeply in the "dark" moments of our lives—not only during the night in prayer but also in times of suffering, loneliness, confusion, and silence.

Many people want a microphone before they have spent time in the Master's classroom. Jesus teaches that every authentic proclamation begins in attentive listening.

We cannot speak God's Word unless we have first heard God's voice.

*2) "Say It in the Light" – Truth Is Never Meant to Remain Hidden*

Once the disciples have received the Gospel, Jesus commands them not to keep it to themselves.

The "light" symbolizes: openness, courage,  public witness, fearless proclamation.

The Gospel is not private property but Good News for the whole world.

The movement is always: Prayer → Mission, Silence → Witness, Receiving → Giving

A lamp is not lit to remain under a basket (Mt 5:15). The Word entrusted to us must become a light for others.

Faith that remains hidden out of fear has not yet become mature discipleship.

*3) "What You Hear Whispered"*

In ancient Judaism, rabbis often taught their disciples quietly, almost whispering into their ears. The disciple would then preserve and faithfully transmit the teaching.

Jesus uses this familiar image.

The whisper represents the personal encounter with Christ.

The proclamation represents the mission of the Church.

The disciple is not an inventor of the message but a faithful messenger.

*4) "Proclaim It from the Housetops"*

In Palestine, houses had flat roofs. Important announcements were often made from the rooftops where everyone could hear.

Jesus is saying: Do not whisper the Gospel to the world. Announce it boldly.

Not with arrogance, but with conviction. Not with fear, but with faith. Not to draw attention to ourselves, but to draw people to Christ.

*5) The Journey of Every Christian*

Every disciple experiences three stages:

*a) The Dark Room* : Where God forms us through prayer, Scripture, silence, failures, suffering, and hidden acts of love.

*b) The Inner Whisper* : Where the Holy Spirit speaks to the heart.

*c) The Public Witness* : Where our words and actions reveal Christ to the world.

Without the first stage, the third becomes empty performance.

*6) Relevance for Our Life Today* 

*We live in a noisy world* Everyone has opinions. Few spend time listening to God. Jesus reminds us that before speaking to people about God, we must first listen to God.

*Many Christians hide their faith* : Sometimes out of fear of criticism. Sometimes because faith is considered "private." Jesus invites us to witness naturally and courageously through our words, decisions, compassion, honesty, forgiveness, and integrity.

*Our hidden life shapes our public life* : The strength of our witness depends on the depth of our prayer. If there is little conversation with Christ in private, there will be little conviction when speaking of Him in public.

*7) Questions for Personal Reflection*

Do I spend enough time listening to Jesus before speaking about Him?
Is my public witness rooted in a personal relationship with Christ?
Am I silent about my faith because of fear, comfort, or indifference?
What has God been whispering to my heart that He now wants me to live and proclaim?

*Think about it*

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

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

Sheep, Wolves, Serpents, and Doves: Four Images for Christian Discipleship

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Ordinary Season : Fourteenth Week:  Friday*

*Gospel :  Mt 10:16-23*

*First Reading : Hosea 14:1-9*

*Responsorial Psalm : 51: 3-17*

*Sheep, Wolves, Serpents, and Doves: Four Images for Christian Discipleship*

*1) Sheep Among Wolves – The Reality of the Mission*

Jesus does not say, "I am sending you as wolves among sheep." Instead, He deliberately sends His disciples as sheep among wolves.

Sheep are: 

Gentle, not violent.
Defenseless, not aggressive.
Dependent on the shepherd.
Unable to survive alone.

Wolves symbolize: Persecution. Hatred. False accusations. Those who oppose the Gospel.

Jesus is realistic. Following Him does not guarantee comfort but often brings opposition. Christians are not called to conquer by force but by faithfulness.

The strength of the disciple is not in physical power but in trust in the Good Shepherd. History shows that the blood of martyrs has often been more powerful than the swords of persecutors.

*2) Wise as Serpents – Prudence Without Compromise*

In biblical imagery, the serpent is often associated with cunning (Genesis 3:1). Jesus does not praise the serpent's deceit but its prudence and alertness.

*Christian wisdom means:*

Knowing when to speak and when to remain silent.
Avoiding unnecessary conflicts.
Recognizing danger.
Acting thoughtfully rather than impulsively.

*Jesus Himself demonstrated this wisdom:*

He sometimes withdrew from hostile crowds.
He answered difficult questions with wisdom.
Before Pilate, He remained silent when silence served God's purpose.

Being holy does not mean being naïve. God expects His disciples to use intelligence, discernment, and good judgment in carrying out their mission.

*3) Innocent as Doves – Purity Without Deceit*

The dove symbolizes: Peace. Purity. Simplicity. The Holy Spirit.

A disciple must never imitate the violence or dishonesty of the wolves.

Even when persecuted:

Never return hatred for hatred.
Never lie to protect oneself.
Never seek revenge.
Continue to love and forgive.

The disciple's methods must reflect the character of Christ. We cannot preach the Gospel using the spirit of the world.

*4) Why Both the Serpent and the Dove?*

This is the heart of Jesus' teaching. Jesus combines two qualities that are often separated.

Some Christians are like doves without serpent-like wisdom:  Good-hearted but easily deceived. Kind but lacking discernment.

Others are like serpents without dove-like innocence: Clever but manipulative. Successful but lacking integrity.

Jesus wants both together. 
*Serpent's*: Wisdom, Discernment, Prudence, Intelligence
*Dove's*: Innocence, Purity, Peace, Integrity 

Christian maturity is the balance between wisdom and holiness.

*5) Sheep Need Both*

Notice the connection. 

Because disciples are sheep among wolves, they need: the wisdom of the serpent to survive, and the innocence of the dove to remain faithful.

Without wisdom, sheep are easily destroyed. Without innocence, sheep slowly become wolves.

*This is Jesus' concern*: never allow persecution to transform the disciple into the very thing he is called to oppose.

*6) Jesus Himself Is the Perfect Example*

Jesus perfectly united all four images.

Like a sheep, He accepted suffering without violence.
Among wolves, He endured rejection and persecution.
Like a serpent, He answered His enemies with remarkable wisdom.
Like a dove, He remained pure, forgiving even those who crucified Him.

The disciple follows not merely His teaching but His example.

*7) Lessons for Our Lives*

The Christian life is not a promise of safety but a call to faithful witness.
We must be courageous without becoming aggressive.
We must be intelligent without becoming dishonest.
We must be peaceful without becoming weak.
We must defend the truth without losing charity.
The world may act like wolves, but Christ never permits His disciples to become wolves themselves.

Jesus does not ask His followers to choose between wisdom and holiness. He calls them to possess both. The sheep survive not by becoming wolves, but by remaining close to the Shepherd, acting with the wisdom of the serpent and the purity of the dove. This balance is the mark of authentic Christian discipleship and the path to fruitful witness in a challenging world.

*Think about it*

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

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

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." (...