Wednesday, March 11, 2026

The Identity of the Mute Demon

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Lenten Season : Lenten Season :  Third Week :  Thursday*

*Gospel :  Luke 11:14-23*

*First Reading : Jeremiah 7:23-28*

*Responsorial Psalm : 95:1-9*

*The Identity of the Mute Demon*

*1) What Does “Mute Demon” Mean?*

In the ancient Jewish worldview, certain illnesses were sometimes associated with demonic oppression. Here, the demon is called mute because its effect on the man was inability to speak.

There are two main ways to understand this:

*A) Literal Understanding*

The demon caused physical muteness. When Jesus cast it out, the man regained speech.

This shows: Jesus’ authority over evil spirits. His power to restore human dignity and communication. That the Kingdom of God has arrived (Luke 11:20).

*B) Symbolic / Spiritual Understanding*

Many Christian interpreters see a deeper spiritual meaning: The demon silences the person.

It prevents: speaking truth, praising God, confessing faith, praying

When the demon leaves, the man begins to speak — meaning his relationship with God and community is restored.

*2) Why Is Muteness Important in the Story?*

Speech has strong meaning in the Bible.

In Scripture, speech is connected with: faith (“confess with your mouth” – Epistle to the Romans 10:9), praise, truth, witness. So muteness represents spiritual blockage.

The demon prevents the man from doing what humans are meant to do: speak truth, praise God, communicate with others.

Jesus restores voice — restoring human freedom.

*3) The Reaction of the Crowd (Luke 11:15–16)*

Not everyone rejoices. Some accuse Jesus of working through Beelzebul.

Jesus responds: “Every kingdom divided against itself will be ruined.”

He explains that Satan cannot cast out Satan. His miracles prove that God’s kingdom is overcoming evil.

*4) The “Strong Man” Teaching (Luke 11:21–22)*
 
Jesus adds a short parable: 
The strong man = Satan guarding his domain.
The stronger man = Christ.

Jesus says: When a stronger man attacks and overpowers him, he takes away his armor.

Meaning: Christ defeats the power of evil and liberates those under its control.

*5) Spiritual Meaning for Our Lives Today*

This passage is not only about one miracle. It reveals a pattern of spiritual struggle.

*A) Evil Often Silences People*

Sometimes people cannot speak about: truth, faith, justice, their suffering.
Fear, shame, or spiritual oppression can make a person “mute.”

*B) Christ Restores Our Voice* 

Jesus frees people so they can: pray, speak truth, share faith, express dignity.
The miracle shows that God wants people to recover their voice.

*C) Neutrality Is Impossible* 

Jesus ends with a strong statement: “Whoever is not with me is against me.” (Luke 11:23). This means discipleship requires commitment.

*6) Points to Ponder* 

What keeps me silent about truth or faith?
Do fear, shame, or pressure make me spiritually “mute”?
Where do I need Christ to restore my voice?
Am I using my speech to build life or destroy it?

*Think about it*

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

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

Tuesday, March 10, 2026

Jesus on the Law : to Fulfill or to Complete?

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Lenten Season : Lenten Season :  Third Week :  Wednesday*

*Gospel :  Mt 5:17-19*

*First Reading : Deuteronomy 4:1; 5-9* 

*Responsorial Psalm : 147: 12-20*

*Jesus on the Law : to Fulfill or to Complete?*

*1) What Does “Fulfill” Mean?*

The Greek word used in the Gospel, means to fill up, bring to fullness, complete, or bring to its intended goal. So Jesus is not abolishing the Law, but bringing it to its deepest and complete meaning.

Three key dimensions of fulfillment:

*A) Fulfillment in His Life* 

Jesus perfectly lived the Law. Complete obedience to God. Perfect love of neighbor, Sinless life. The Law pointed toward the ideal human life, which Jesus embodied.

*B) Fulfillment of Prophecy* 

The Law and the Prophets also contained messianic expectations.

Christ fulfills them through: His birth, His teaching, His suffering, His resurrection. Thus the Old Testament reaches its completion in Christ.

*C) Fulfillment of the Law’s True Meaning* 

Jesus deepens the Law from external rules → internal transformation. Examples later in Matthew 5:

*Old Law* : Do not murder, Do not commit adultery, Love neighbor
*Jesus’ Fulfillment*: Do not harbor anger, Do not lust, Love even enemies
The Law becomes a law of the heart.

*2) Why Does Jesus Say “Not the Smallest Letter Will Pass Away”?* 

In verse 18, Jesus says not even “a jot or tittle” will disappear.

This shows: The Law has divine authority, God's word is permanent. 

The Law remains meaningful until it reaches its fulfillment. But after fulfillment, its deeper purpose becomes clear.

*3) The Shift Jesus Introduces* 

Jesus moves the focus from legalism to love.

The Old Law emphasized: Ritual observance, External behavior

Jesus emphasizes: Inner purity, Intentions, Love

Later, He summarizes the whole law in two commands: Love God - Love neighbor

*4) The Significance for Christian Faith*

This teaching explains the relationship between Old Testament and New Testament.

The Old Testament is not rejected.

Instead: Old Covenant → Preparation
Christ → Fulfillment
New Covenant → Transformation

It shows that Christianity grows out of the Jewish tradition, rather than replacing it entirely.

*5) Relevance to Our Life Today* 

*A) Faith Is More Than Rules* : Jesus invites us beyond rule-following to heart transformation.

Example: Not just avoiding wrongdoing, Cultivating love, forgiveness, humility

*B) Integrity of Life* : Jesus calls for consistency between inner life and outer actions. Our thoughts, intentions, and attitudes matter.

*C) Living the Spirit of the Law* : Instead of asking: “What is the minimum I must do?” Jesus asks us to consider: “What does love require here?”

*D) Moral Responsibility* : Verse 19 warns against relaxing God's commandments. Christian freedom does not mean moral indifference.

*6) Points to Ponder* 

This passage invites a shift: 

From law → love
From external obedience → inner transformation
From minimum duty → fullness of life

Jesus completes the Law by showing its ultimate goal: love.

As Augustine of Hippo famously expressed: “Love, and do what you will.” Because true love naturally fulfills the law.

*Think about it*

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

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

Monday, March 9, 2026

Peters 7 Times forgiveness

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Lenten Season : Lenten Season :  Third Week :  Tuesday*

*Gospel :  Mt 18:21-35*

*First Reading : Daniel 3:25; 34-43*

*Responsorial Psalm : 25: 4-9*

*Peters 7 Times forgiveness*

*1) Why Did Peter Say Seven Times?*

In Jewish teaching during that time, some rabbis suggested forgiving a person up to three times. After that, forgiveness was not required.

So when Peter suggested seven times, he probably thought he was being very generous. The number 7 in the Bible also represents completeness or perfection.

Examples:
God created the world in seven days
The Sabbath is the seventh day
Seven often symbolizes fullness.

So Peter might have thought: “Forgiving seven times should be more than enough.”

*2) Why Did Jesus Say Seventy-Seven (or Seventy Times Seven)?*

Jesus’ answer does not give a literal number to count forgiveness.

Instead, it means: Forgiveness should not be limited or calculated. Jesus shifts the idea from mathematics → mercy.

In other words: Do not keep score of forgiveness. Forgiveness should be continuous and unlimited. Jesus is teaching that love is not measured by numbers.

*3) Connection with the Old Testament*

Jesus’ answer may echo Genesis 4:24, where Lamech said: “If Cain is avenged seven times, then Lamech seventy-seven times.” Lamech spoke about revenge multiplying.

Jesus reverses that logic: Instead of unlimited revenge, He teaches unlimited forgiveness. So Christianity replaces cycles of revenge with cycles of mercy.

*4) The Spiritual Meaning of the “Calculation”*

Peter’s “calculation” shows a human mindset: We often count how many times someone hurts us. We think forgiveness has a limit.

Jesus teaches a divine mindset: God’s mercy has no limit. If God forgives us endlessly, we must forgive others. Forgiveness becomes a way of life, not a counted act.

*5) Lessons for Christian Life*

*A) Forgiveness is a Daily Practice* : People will hurt us repeatedly. Forgiveness must be renewed again and again.

*B) Forgiveness Reflects God’s Mercy* : God forgives us far more than seventy-seven times.

*C) Forgiveness Frees the Heart* : Holding anger imprisons the soul. Forgiveness brings peace and healing.

*D) Forgiveness Does Not Mean Weakness* : It is spiritual strength. Jesus forgave even on the cross.

*E) Forgiveness Builds Community* : Families, parishes, and communities survive only when people forgive one another.

*6) Points to Ponder*

When Peter asked about forgiveness, he was trying to set a limit. Jesus removed the limit.

The real question for us is not: “How many times should I forgive?” but rather: “How much mercy has God shown me?”

When we remember how much God forgives us, our hearts slowly learn to forgive others.

“Peter wanted to count forgiveness, but Jesus teaches us that love cannot be counted. In God’s kingdom, forgiveness is not mathematics; it is mercy.”

*Think about it*

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

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

The widow of Zarephath and Naaman the Syrian

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Lenten Season : Lenten Season :  Third Week :  Monday*

*Gospel :  Luke 4:24-30*

*First Reading : 2 Kings 5:1-15*

*Responsorial Psalm : 42:2-3; 43:3-4*

*The widow of Zarephath and Naaman the Syrian*

The widow of Zarephath helped by Elijah

Naaman the Syrian healed by Elisha

*1) The Context: Jesus Rejected in His Own Town*

Just before mentioning these stories, Jesus says: “No prophet is accepted in his hometown.” (Luke 4:24)

The people of Nazareth expected special miracles because Jesus grew up there. But they did not truly believe in him.

To illustrate this problem, Jesus reminds them of two moments in Israel’s history when God worked miracles for outsiders instead of Israelites.

*2) The Widow of Zarephath – Faith in Unexpected Places*

During a severe famine in Israel, God sent Elijah not to Israelite widows, but to a poor widow in Zarephath, a Phoenician town (Gentile territory).

She had only a handful of flour and a little oil, yet she trusted Elijah’s word from God.

Result: Her flour and oil miraculously never ran out.

Why Jesus mentions her? Because Jesus is showing that: Many Israelites lacked faith. A Gentile widow believed and received God’s blessing.

*3) Naaman the Syrian – Humility Opens the Door to Healing*

Naaman was: a commander of the Syrian army, an enemy of Israel, suffering from leprosy

Through Elisha, God told him to wash seven times in the Jordan River.

At first he was angry because the instruction seemed too simple. But when he humbled himself and obeyed, he was healed.

Why Jesus mentions him? Again, the point is striking: There were many lepers in Israel. Yet only this foreigner was healed

*4) The Main Message*

*A) God’s grace is not limited by nationality* : God blesses whoever responds with faith, not just those with religious identity. Faith matters more than heritage.

*B) Outsiders sometimes receive what insiders reject* : The widow and Naaman were outsiders, yet they trusted God. The people of Nazareth were “insiders”, yet they lacked faith. This is a warning against spiritual familiarity without faith.

*C) Pride blocks God’s work* : Naaman had to humble himself. The people of Nazareth refused to humble themselves before Jesus. Pride prevents miracles; humility opens the door.

*D) God’s mission is for all nations* : By mentioning Gentiles, Jesus hints at the future: God’s salvation will extend beyond Israel to all nations. This becomes central later in the New Testament.

*5) Spiritual Lessons for Us Today*

*A) Don’t let familiarity make you blind* : The people who knew Jesus longest rejected him. Sometimes people close to spiritual things stop recognizing their value.

*B) Faith matters more than religious background* : Being in the “right place” spiritually means little without trust in God.

*C) God often works through unexpected people* : A poor widow and a foreign soldier became examples of faith. God’s grace often appears where we least expect it.

*D) Humble obedience releases God’s power* : Naaman’s healing began when he stopped arguing and obeyed. Many blessings come after simple obedience.

Am I like the people of Nazareth who think they already know everything about God?
Or like the widow and Naaman, willing to trust and obey even when it is difficult?

*Think about it*

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

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

Three Cries of Thirst: From Desert to Cross

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Lenten Season : Lenten Season :  Third Week :  Sudnay*

*Gospel :  John 4:5-42*

*First Reading : Ex 17: 3-7*

*Responsorial Psalm : 95: 1-9*

*Second Reading : Romans 5:1-2; 5-8*

*Three Cries of Thirst: From Desert to Cross*

*1) “Give Us Water” – The Cry of a Complaining People*

In the first reading, the people of Israel cry out to Moses: “Give us water to drink.”
This happened at the place called Massah and Meribah, during the journey after the Exodus from Egypt.

The Israelites are in the desert, tired and thirsty. Their cry is not only physical thirst; it becomes a cry of doubt and complaint.

They say: “Why did you bring us out of Egypt?”  This shows the first stage of human thirst: People are thirsty for water

But deeper inside, they are thirsty for security, trust, and faith. Yet instead of trusting God, they complain and blame.  Still, God responds with mercy. Water flows from the rock. This teaches us that even when our faith is weak, God still provides.

*2) “Give Me a Drink” – The Thirst of Jesus for the Human Heart*

In the Gospel, Jesus meets the Samaritan woman at the well. Jesus begins the conversation with a surprising request: “Give me a drink.” 

Jesus appears to be thirsty for water. But soon the conversation reveals something deeper. The woman came to draw ordinary water, but Jesus speaks about living water.

He says: “Whoever drinks the water I give will never thirst.” 

Here we see the second stage of thirst: The human heart is thirsty for meaning, thirsty for love, thirsty for forgiveness, thirsty for God.

The Samaritan woman had tried many things to satisfy her life, but her heart was still empty. Jesus reveals that only God can quench the deepest thirst of the human soul.

*3) “I Thirst” – The Cry of Divine Love*

Finally, on the cross Jesus says: “I thirst.” (John 19:28) After hours of suffering, Jesus’ body is dehydrated and exhausted.

But the Gospel of John reveals something deeper: This is not only physical thirst. This is the thirst of God for humanity. 

Jesus thirsts: for our love, for our faith, for our salvation.

The story that began with human thirst in the desert ends with God’s thirst on the cross.

*4) The Deeper Spiritual Meaning of Thirst*

These three moments reveal three levels of thirst.

*A) Physical thirst* : Israel in the desert needed water to survive.

*B) Emotional and spiritual thirst* : The Samaritan woman was thirsty for love, dignity, and truth.

*C) Divine thirst* : On the cross, Jesus reveals that God Himself thirsts for us.

This is the most surprising truth of Christianity: We thirst for God — but God also thirsts for us.

*5) Points to Ponder*

Every human heart carries a deep thirst: thirst for happiness, thirst for peace, thirst for love, thirst for meaning.

People try to satisfy this thirst with: success, wealth, pleasure, power.

But the thirst remains. Only Christ gives living water.

The whole Bible is the story of thirst — humanity thirsting for God and God thirsting for humanity.

And only when we drink the living water of Christ will our hearts finally be satisfied.

*Think about it*

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

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

Friday, March 6, 2026

Prodigal Son, Piggery and the pods fed to pigs

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Lenten Season : Lenten Season :  Second Week :  Saturday*

*Gospel :  Luke 15:1-3; 11-32*

*First Reading : Micah 7:14-15, 18-20*

*Responsorial Psalm : 103: 1-12*

*Prodigal Son, Piggery and the pods fed to pigs*

*1) Why a Piggery? (Cultural and Spiritual Meaning)*

In Jewish culture during the time of Jesus: Pigs were considered unclean animals according to the Book of Leviticus (Leviticus 11:7). Jews were not supposed to raise or eat pigs.

So when the younger son ends up working in a piggery, it shows the lowest possible humiliation for a Jewish person.

Symbolic meaning: It represents moral and spiritual degradation. The son who once lived in dignity now lives far below his identity.

The Connection goes like this : Rebellion against the father, Waste of inheritance, Famine and poverty, Working with pigs (lowest social condition). It is a descending spiral.

*2) Why Are the Pods Mentioned?*

The Bible says he wanted to eat the pods that the pigs were eating. These were likely carob pods—cheap animal feed.

Important details: They were food for animals, not people. Even that food was not given to him.

Meaning: This highlights three levels of loss: 
Loss of wealth – he wasted his inheritance.
Loss of dignity – he works with pigs.
Loss of basic human care – he envies pig food.

Spiritually, this shows how sin empties a person.

*3) The Turning Point: “He Came to Himself”*

The piggery is not the end of the story. The text says “he came to himself.”

This means: He realized his condition. He remembered his father’s house. He decided to return.

The piggery becomes the place of awakening. Sometimes the lowest point becomes the beginning of transformation.

*4) Why Jesus Used This Story*

Jesus was speaking to people who believed that sinners were beyond hope.

Through this parable, He shows: No fall is too deep. The Father (God) still waits. Repentance opens the way back.

The piggery shows how far someone can go, and the father’s embrace shows how great mercy is.

*5) Relevance to Our Life*

*A) Freedom without wisdom leads to loss* : The son wanted independence but used freedom irresponsibly. Many life failures begin with misused freedom.

*B) Sin promises satisfaction but ends in emptiness* : The son expected pleasure but ended up hungry and ashamed. Things that seem attractive can leave us spiritually empty.

*C) Rock bottom can be a moment of grace* : The pigsty becomes the place where he awakens to truth. Our failures can become turning points.

*D) True dignity comes from relationship* : Even the servants in the father’s house had more dignity than he had outside it. Human dignity comes from belonging and love, not possessions.

*E) God waits for return, not perfection* : The father runs to meet the son before he can prove anything. Restoration begins with returning, not earning.

The piggery and the pods show how empty life becomes when we lose our true direction, but they also show that awakening can begin even in the lowest place.

*Think about it*

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

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

The Killing of the Heir : Its Consequences

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Lenten Season : Lenten Season :  Second Week :  Friday*

*Gospel :  Mt 21:33-43; 45-46*

*First Reading : Gen 37: 3-4; 12-13; 17-28*

*Responsorial Psalm : 105: 16-21*

*The Killing of the Heir : Its Consequences*

*1) The Repercussion of This Evil Act*

Jesus himself asks: “What will the owner of the vineyard do?”

The answer: The tenants will be destroyed and the vineyard given to others who produce fruit.

*Spiritual consequences*

*Judgment* : Rejecting God’s messengers ultimately brings accountability.

*Loss of privilege* : The kingdom is given to those who bear fruit, not just those who claim authority.

*Reversal of power* : Jesus quotes Book of Psalms 118:22: “The stone the builders rejected has become the cornerstone.” This means God turns rejection into salvation.

*2) Reflection for Our Personal Life* 

*A) We are also “tenants”* 

God entrusts us with: Life, Talents, Responsibilities, Relationships, Creation. We are stewards, not owners.

Do I use what God has given me for my own interest or for God's purpose?

*B) We sometimes resist God's voice* 

The servants represent God’s warnings in our life: Conscience, Scripture, Wise people, Difficult experiences. Like the tenants, people sometimes ignore or reject these messages.

*C) Rejecting Christ still happens today*

The “killing of the heir” symbolizes the rejection of Christ’s authority.

In daily life this appears as: choosing selfishness over love, ignoring justice, rejecting truth when it challenges us

*3)  Application in the Modern Context* 

*A) Abuse of power* : The tenants misuse authority.

This happens today in: politics, religious institutions, corporations, social leadership

Whenever leaders serve themselves instead of the people, they imitate the wicked tenants.

*B) Greed and possession mentality* : 

The tenants say: Let us kill him and take the inheritance.”

Modern society often reflects this attitude: exploitation of nature, corruption, manipulation of power, desire to control everything

The parable reminds us: nothing truly belongs to us.

*C) Responsibility to produce “fruit”* 

God expects fruit, meaning: justice, compassion, faithfulness, service to others

Faith is not only belief but fruitful living.

*4) Points to Ponder* 

The most surprising part of the parable is this: The murder of the Son becomes the path of salvation.

The rejection of Jesus Christ eventually leads to the redemptive event of the Crucifixion of Jesus.

This shows a profound Christian belief: "God can transform even human evil into a greater good"

Am I acting as a faithful steward of what God entrusted to me?

Do I listen when God sends “messengers” into my life?

What fruits of justice, love, and faith do I produce?.

*Think about it*

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

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

The Identity of the Mute Demon

GOSPEL THOUGHTS *Lenten Season : Lenten Season :  Third Week :  Thursday* *Gospel :  Luke 11:14-23* *First Reading : Jeremiah 7:23-28* *Resp...