Saturday, March 21, 2026

Jesus Raised the Dead Lazarus with one Word, But asked them to Role back the Stone. Why?*

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Lenten Season : Lenten Season :  Fifth Week :  Sunday*

*Gospel :  Joh 11:1-45*

*First Reading : Ez 37: 12-14*

*Responsorial Psalm : 130: 1-8*

*Second Reading : Roman 8:8-11*

*Jesus Raised the Dead Lazarus with one Word, But asked them to Role back the Stone. Why?*

*1) Why didn’t Jesus remove the stone Himself?* 

*A) God invites human participation* 

*One key idea*: God often does what only God can do, but leaves what humans can do for us.

Raising the dead → only Jesus can do
Moving the stone → humans can do

This shows a pattern: Divine power + human cooperation

The “logic” is not limitation—it’s invitation.

*B) It requires an act of faith before the miracle*

At that moment, the stone is sealing a dead body. Removing it seems pointless—and even disturbing (Martha mentions the smell).

By asking them to move it, Jesus is asking: “Will you trust Me before you see the result?” Faith here is not just belief—it’s action before evidence.

*C) It prepares the witnesses* 

If Jesus had done everything instantly: People would just see the result. But not participate in the process

By involving them: They remember their role. They become witnesses, not just spectators.

*D) It reveals spiritual symbolism* 

The stone can also be seen as a symbol: Barriers, Fear, Doubt, Sin, Hopeless situations

Jesus removes death—but asks us to confront and move what blocks life.

*2) What does this mean for our life?* 

*A) Do your part, even if it seems small* 

Sometimes we wait for God to do everything, but this story suggests: You move the stone. God brings the miracle

Example: You take the first step → God opens the door. You forgive → God heals the relationship. You try → God multiplies the result

*B) Obedience often comes before understanding* 

Those people didn’t fully understand why they were moving the stone. In life too: We are often asked to act without full clarity. Meaning comes after obedience

*C) Face what you would rather avoid* 

Opening that tomb meant facing death, decay, and discomfort.

In our lives: We avoid painful truths. We keep “stones” over wounds

But healing begins when we are willing to open what we’ve closed off

*D) God’s miracles don’t remove responsibility* 

This is very important: Faith is not passive. Prayer is not a substitute for action. Trust is not avoidance

Instead: God works through our willingness, not instead of it

*E) Community matters*

Jesus didn’t tell Lazarus to roll the stone from inside. He asked others to do it.

This reminds us: Some breakthroughs in our lives require help from others. We are also called to help remove “stones” for others

*3) Points to Ponder* 

“God will do the impossible—but He expects me to do the possible.”

What “stone” in my life am I waiting for God to remove…
When He may actually be asking me to move it?

*Think about it*

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

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

Friday, March 20, 2026

Jews Views on No Prophet from Galilee

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Lenten Season : Lenten Season :  Fourth Week :  Saturday*

*Gospel :  Jn &; 40-53*

*First Reading : Jer 11: 18-20*

*Responsorial Psalm : 7: 2-12*

*Jews Views on No Prophet from Galilee*

*1) Why did some Jews believe no prophet comes from Galilee?*

This belief was not entirely accurate, but it reveals a few attitudes:

*A) Regional prejudice*: Galilee was considered less refined than Judea, especially Jerusalem, the religious center. People from Galilee were often looked down upon as less educated or less strict in religious observance.

*B) Messianic expectation*: Many Jews expected the Messiah to come from Bethlehem (based on Book of Micah 5:2), and since Jesus was known as “Jesus of Nazareth,” they dismissed Him.

*C) Ignorance of Scripture/history*: In reality, prophets like Jonah were from Galilee (2 Kings 14:25 mentions Gath-hepher, a Galilean town). So their claim was factually wrong.

This shows how partial knowledge and bias can blind people to truth.

*2) Why is Nicodemus associated with Galilee?*

In Gospel of John 7:50–51, Nicodemus speaks up cautiously in defense of Jesus, urging a fair hearing.

The others respond sarcastically: “Are you from Galilee too?”

This is likely mockery, not a literal statement about his origin.

They imply: “Only someone ignorant like a Galilean would defend Jesus.”

So Nicodemus is not necessarily a Galilean; he is being ridiculed for sympathizing with Jesus.

*3) How should we understand this passage?*

This moment highlights a deeper spiritual issue: 

*Closed minds*: The leaders had already decided who Jesus could not be.

*Superficial judgment*: They judged based on origin (“Nazareth”) instead of truth.

*Failure to investigate*: They didn’t look deeper—Jesus was actually born in Bethlehem.

*Nicodemus represents a contrast* : He seeks truth quietly. He calls for justice and discernment, even when unpopular.

*4) Deeper Reflections*

*A) God works beyond our expectations* : People rejected Jesus because He did not fit their preconceived ideas. God often works in unexpected places and people.

*B) Danger of prejudice* : Like the dismissal of Galilee, we too can reject truth because of background, status, or assumptions.

*C) Courage to stand for truth* : Nicodemus shows that even a small voice for justice matters, especially in hostile environments.

*D) Faith requires openness* : True faith is not just knowledge, but a willingness to seek, question, and accept truth humbly.

*5) Points to Ponder*

Do I judge others (or even God’s work) based on appearances or background?
Am I open to truth, even when it challenges my assumptions?
Like Nicodemus, am I willing to stand up—at least quietly—for what is right?

*Think about it*

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

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

Thursday, March 19, 2026

Jews Fest of the Booths

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Lenten Season : Lenten Season :  Fourth Week :  Friday*

*Gospel :  John 7: 1-2, 10, 25-30*

*First Reading : Wis 2: 1, 12-22*

*Responsorial Psalm : 34: 17-23*

*Jews Fest of the Booths*

*1) Significance of the Feast of Booths (Sukkot)*

Sukkot has two main meanings:

*A) Historical Meaning*

It commemorates Israel’s journey in the wilderness after the Exodus. 

The people lived in temporary shelters (“booths” or sukkah), remembering: God’s protection, Their dependence on Him, A life of trust rather than security

*B) Agricultural Meaning* 

It is also a harvest festival, thanking God for: Provision, Blessings of the land, Joy of abundance. 

So, it is both a feast of remembrance and gratitude.

*2) Why is it mentioned in John 7?*

In Gospel of John 7, Jesus goes to Jerusalem during Sukkot—but not in a public, triumphant way.

This is important because:

*A) “Living Water” (John 7:37–38)*

During Sukkot, a ritual involved pouring water at the Temple, asking God for rain. 

In that exact context, Jesus Christ declares: “If anyone thirsts, let him come to me…”

Jesus is saying: He is the true source of life, not just physical water, but spiritual fulfillment.

*B) Light of the World (John 8:12, same context)*

Another Sukkot ritual involved lighting huge lamps in the Temple.

Jesus says: “I am the light of the world.”, 

He presents Himself as: God’s presence, The one who leads people out of darkness

*C) A Deeper Claim*

Sukkot celebrated God dwelling with His people.

Jesus is revealing: God now dwells among them in Him.

*3)  How to Understand This?*

Jesus uses the feast as a living symbol:

Water → He is Living Water
Light → He is True Light
Dwelling → He is God with us

The feast becomes fulfilled in Christ.

*4) Application to Our Life* 

*A) Life is Temporary* : Just like the booths: Our life is not permanent. We are pilgrims. Are we attached to comfort, or trusting God?

*B) Where Do We Seek Satisfaction?* : We chase: Success, Money, Recognition. Jesus invites: “Come to me and drink.” Only He satisfies the deep thirst of the heart.

*C) Walking in Light* : We often live in: Confusion, Fear, Sin. Christ says: “I am the light.”  Are we allowing Him to guide our choices?

*D ) Gratitude and Dependence* : Sukkot teaches: Gratitude for blessings, Dependence on God.  Do we thank God, or take things for granted?

“In the temporary tents of life, Christ becomes our living water, our guiding light, and our lasting home.”

*Think about it*

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

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

Joseph is the Model for Listening, Reflecting and Practicing to Carry out the Mission of God

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Lenten Season : Lenten Season :  Fourth Week :  Thursday*

*Feast of St Joseph : Patron of the Universal Church*

*Gospel :  Mt 1:16; 18-21; 24*

*First Reading : 2 Samuel 7:4-5; 12-16*

*Responsorial Psalm : 89: 2-29*

*Second Reading Roams 4 :13; 16-22*

*Joseph is the Model for  Listening, Reflecting and Practicing to Carry out the Mission of God*

*1) Joseph: The Silent Listener*

Joseph never speaks in the Gospel, yet he hears God clearly. In Matthew 1:20, God speaks through a dream. Joseph doesn’t argue, question loudly, or delay—he listens attentively.

In today’s noisy world—filled with constant notifications, opinions, and distractions—Joseph reminds us: Silence is not emptiness; it is space for God. Listening is not passive; it is active openness.

What if Joseph had ignored the dream? : Salvation history would still unfold, but Joseph would miss his role. Likewise, when we ignore God’s gentle voice, we risk missing our purpose.

*2) Joseph: The Reflective Thinker*

Before the dream, Joseph is described as a “righteous man” who plans to quietly divorce Mary (Mt 1:19). This shows: He reflects deeply before acting, He balances justice with compassion

Joseph teaches us discernment: Not every decision should be impulsive. True righteousness includes mercy

Imagine Joseph lying awake that night: Torn between law and love, Confused yet peaceful, Unsure, yet open

This is where God often speaks—in the tension of our uncertainty.

*3) Joseph: The Man of Action*

After listening and reflecting, Joseph acts immediately: “When Joseph woke from sleep, he did as the angel of the Lord commanded him” (Mt 1:24) No hesitation. No excuses.

Faith is not complete until it becomes action.

Joseph’s obedience is not dramatic—it’s ordinary faithfulness: Taking Mary into his home, Protecting the child, Living a hidden life

Yet these ordinary acts changed the world.

*4) The Message for Our Life Today* 

*A) Listening in a Distracted World*  : Today, we struggle to hear God because: We fill silence with noise. We seek quick answers instead of deep truth

Joseph invites us to: Practice intentional silence. Trust God’s voice even when it comes quietly

*B) Reflecting in a Reactive Culture* : Modern life pushes us to: React instantly, Judge quickly

Joseph shows us: Pause before deciding. Let compassion shape truth

*C) Acting in Faith Amid Uncertainty* : Joseph’s situation was unclear and socially risky.

Today: Careers are uncertain, Relationships are complex, Moral choices are not always easy

Yet Joseph teaches: Clarity is not required for obedience. Trust grows when we take the next step

*5) Present-Day Application* 

*In Family Life* : Be like Joseph: a quiet pillar of strength. Protect, support, and love without needing recognition

*In Work & Society* : Practice integrity even when unnoticed. Do the right thing quietly

*In Spiritual Life* : Create daily moments of silence. Reflect before making decisions. Act on what you discern

*6) Points to Ponder* 

“Three Dreams of Joseph – Three Calls for Us”

*Dream 1*: Do not be afraid : → Let go of fear in making right choices

*Dream 2* : Rise and protect : → Stand for truth and protect the vulnerable

*Dream 3* : Return in trust : → Believe that God leads even after difficulties

Joseph’s greatness lies not in extraordinary words but in extraordinary faithfulness.

In a world that celebrates visibility, Joseph shows the holiness of hiddenness.
In a culture of noise, he teaches the power of silence.
In times of confusion, he models trust.

*His message today* : “Listen deeply. Reflect wisely. Act faithfully. God will do the rest.”

*Think about it*

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

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

My Father is Working until Now and I am working

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Lenten Season : Lenten Season :  Fourth Week :  Wednesday*

*Gospel :  John 5:17-30*

*First Reading : Is 49:8-15*

*Responsorial Psalm : 145:8-18*

*My Father is Working until Now and I am working*

*1) What “work” is Jesus speaking about?*

Here, Jesus is not talking about ordinary human labor like earning a living. He is referring to the continuous, loving action of God the Father in the world.

God’s “work” includes: Sustaining creation (keeping life going), Showing mercy and compassion, Healing and restoring people, Bringing salvation

When Jesus says “I am working,” He is saying: “I am doing the same divine work as the Father — giving life, healing, saving.”

*2) Why did Jesus say this?*

In that passage, Jesus had healed someone on the Sabbath, and people questioned Him.

By saying this, He reveals: God’s love never stops, even on a Sabbath. Doing good, giving life, and showing mercy is always right. Jesus is united with the Father in purpose and action

*3) What does this mean for us?*

“My father is working, I am working — what about me?”

This is where the message becomes very personal.

We are also called to “work,” but in a deeper sense:  Not just for survival, but to participate in God’s work.

*4) How do we “work like the Father”?*

We imitate God’s work in our daily life through:

*A) Acts of love and compassion* : Helping the poor, supporting someone in need, forgiving others.

*B) Doing our duties with sincerity* : Your job, your responsibilities — when done honestly and lovingly — become part of God’s work.

*C) Bringing life, not harm* : Encouraging others, not hurting them; building, not destroying.

*C) Serving beyond convenience* : God doesn’t “take a break” from loving — we are invited to love even when it’s difficult.

*5) The deeper significance*

This verse teaches us: 
God is always active in our lives — even when we don’t see it
Work is not just physical effort — it is participation in God’s mission

Every small good act has divine value. So your daily work is not separate from God. It can become a continuation of God’s love in the world.

The Father works → gives life, love, care
Jesus works → reveals that love through action
We work → continue that love in our own lives

*Think about it*

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

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

Monday, March 16, 2026

The Vague Answer of the Man who was sick for 38 Years

GOSPEL Thoughts

*Lenten Season : Lenten Season :  Fourth Week :  *

*Gospel :  John 5:1-16*

*First Reading : Ez 47:1-9;12*

*Responsorial Psalm : 46: 2-9*

*The Vague Answer of the Man who was sick for 38 Years*

*1) The Man Was Stuck in His Old Way of Thinking*

For 38 years, the man had believed that healing would happen only through the water of the pool. His mind was fixed on that one method.

So when Jesus asked him if he wanted healing, he immediately spoke about the pool and the water, because that was the only solution he knew.

Sometimes people become so used to their problems and their usual solutions that they fail to recognize God’s new way of acting in their life.

*2) He Focused on His Problem Instead of the Person Before Him*

Instead of saying “Yes, Lord, heal me,” the man begins explaining his difficulty: “I have no one to put me into the pool.” 

His mind is on: his limitation, his loneliness, the competition with others reaching the water first. Meanwhile, the healer himself is standing in front of him.

Many times we also focus more on: our problems, our circumstances, the means of help, rather than trusting God who is present with us.

*3) He Put More Faith in the System than in Jesus*

At that moment, the man’s faith seems to be in the healing power of the water, not in Jesus. Yet Jesus still heals him.

This shows something beautiful: Jesus often helps people even when their faith is incomplete.

God’s grace often reaches us even before we fully understand Him.

*4)  Jesus Breaks His Limited Expectation*

The man believed healing required: the stirring of the water, someone to carry him, being the first into the pool. 

But Jesus heals him simply by saying: “Rise, take up your mat and walk.” Healing comes without the pool, without help, without waiting.

God’s power is not limited to the methods we expect.

*5) Applications for Our Life*

*A) Don’t Limit God*  : Like the man, we sometimes think: “My problem can be solved only this way.” “If this person helps me, then things will change.” But God may have another path we never imagined.

*B) Stop Living Only in the Past* : The man had waited 38 years. His thinking was shaped by his long suffering. 

Sometimes our past failures make us believe: “Nothing will change.” “This is my fate.” Jesus shows that change can come suddenly.

*C) Recognize Jesus When He Comes* : The tragedy is that the man did not even recognize Jesus at first. 
In our lives, Jesus often comes through: people, opportunities, unexpected situations. But we may still keep looking at our “pool”.

*D) Move From Complaining to Trust* : The man explains his difficulty instead of expressing faith. 

Jesus invites us to move from: complaining → trusting; excuses → obedience

When Jesus says “Rise,” the man obeys—and healing happens.

*Think about it*

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

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

The Official at Capernaum - Various Lessons

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Lenten Season : Lenten Season :  Fourth Week :  Monday*

*Gospel :  4:43-54*

*First Reading : Is 65:17-21*

*Responsorial Psalm : 30 : 2-13*

*The Official at Capernaum - Various Lessons*

*1) The Social Status of the Official: Faith Beyond Privilege*

The man is described as a royal official, likely serving under Herod Antipas. This means he was probably wealthy, educated, and politically connected.

Status does not remove human suffering. Even powerful people face helpless situations.

*Lesson for life*:  Money, power, and influence cannot solve every problem. In moments of crisis, everyone stands equal before God.

*Application* : In modern life, people rely on career, technology, or social power, but when deep problems arise—illness, family crisis, anxiety—faith becomes essential.

*2) A Father’s Desperation: Love Drives Faith*

The official travels about 20–25 miles from Capernaum to Cana to meet Jesus.

This shows that the father’s love breaks social barriers and personal pride.

*Lesson* : Love often becomes the doorway to faith. Suffering can lead people closer to God.

*Application* : Sometimes our deepest pain becomes the path that leads us to God.

*3) From Weak Faith to Mature Faith*

At first the official begs Jesus to come physically to heal his son. This shows limited faith.

But Jesus says, “Go, your son will live.” The man believes the word and leaves.

This is a turning point: He moves from faith in miracles → faith in the word of Christ.

True faith trusts God even without visible proof.

*Application* : Many people believe only when they see results. Mature faith trusts God’s word before the evidence appears.

*4) Faith That Influences a Household*

When the official returns home and learns the exact time of healing, the text says: “He himself believed, and all his household.” Faith becomes contagious.

*Lesson* : One person’s faith can transform an entire family.

*Application* : Your faith journey can influence: children, friends, workplace, community

Leadership in faith often begins with one courageous believer.

*5) Why the Official Becomes the Center of the Story* 

This man stands out because he represents several tensions:

*A) Power vs helplessness* : A powerful man becomes a beggar before Jesus.

*B) Distance vs faith* : Jesus heals without physically going to Capernaum, showing divine authority.

*C) Personal faith vs communal belief* : His faith spreads to his whole household.

*D) Human need vs divine grace* : The miracle is not just healing; it is a transformation of belief.

Thus the story is not only about the son—it is about the father’s faith journey.

*6) Creative Spiritual Reflections* 

*A) The Walk of Faith* : The official’s journey home is a symbol of faith. He walks many miles holding only one sentence from Jesus: “Your son will live.”

Life is often like that walk— we move forward holding onto God’s promise without seeing the outcome yet.

*B) Faith Between Two Cities* : The story moves between Cana and Capernaum.

Symbolically: Cana = place of encounter with Christ. Capernaum = place of everyday life. Faith must travel from church experience to daily living.

*C) The Miracle Happened Before the News* : The son was healed before the father even knew it.

*Reflection* : God often works before we realize it. Sometimes we discover later that God had already begun solving our problem.

*D) The Authority of the Word* : Jesus does not go physically. He simply speaks. This highlights the power of God’s word.

In life: circumstances may look impossible. But a single divine word can change everything.


*Think about it*

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

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

Jesus Raised the Dead Lazarus with one Word, But asked them to Role back the Stone. Why?*

GOSPEL THOUGHTS *Lenten Season : Lenten Season :  Fifth Week :  Sunday* *Gospel :  Joh 11:1-45* *First Reading : Ez 37: 12-14* *Responsorial...