Sunday, May 24, 2026

The importance of Starting near the Cross

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Ordinary Season : Eight Week:  Monday*

*Gospel :  John 19: 25-35*

*First Reading : Genesis 3:9-15; 20*

*Responsorial Psalm : 87:1-7*

*The importance of Starting near the Cross*

*1) Standing near the cross means remaining with Jesus in suffering*

Many disciples had fled in fear. But these women, along with the beloved disciple, stayed close even when the situation looked hopeless.

The cross was: a place of pain, humiliation, rejection, apparent defeat.

Yet they remained.

*Spiritually, standing near the cross means:*

Not abandoning Christ during difficult times,

Staying faithful when faith is costly,

Remaining with God even when we do not understand His ways.

Faith is tested not only in moments of blessing, but also in moments of darkness.

The cross reveals the depth of God’s love

The cross is the clearest revelation of divine love in Christianity.

*To stand near the cross is to contemplate*:

The seriousness of sin,

The cost of forgiveness,

The immeasurable love of Christ.

*The cross says*:

God does not remain distant from human suffering,

God enters suffering Himself.

When believers meditate on the cross, pride softens, gratitude grows, and the heart becomes more humble.

*3) Standing near the cross changes the human heart*

People who remain close to the cross are transformed.

*Near the cross:*

Anger can become forgiveness,

Selfishness can become surrender,

Fear can become trust,

Despair can become hope.

The cross confronts us with truth about ourselves and truth about God at the same time.

That is why Christian spirituality often emphasizes meditation on the passion of Christ — not to remain in sadness, but to enter deeper love and conversion.

*4) The cross teaches silent companionship*

The women near the cross could not “fix” the situation. They could not stop the crucifixion.

Yet their presence mattered.

*Sometimes love is simply*:

Remaining present,

Refusing to leave,

Sharing another’s suffering.

*This becomes a model for caring for others:*

Accompanying the sick,

Standing with the grieving,

Remaining faithful in broken situations.

Presence itself can become an act of love.

*5) Standing near the cross means accepting sacrifice in discipleship*

Jesus had already said:

“Take up your cross and follow me.”

To stand near His cross is to accept that authentic Christian life involves:

Self-denial, Perseverance, Obedience, Sacrificial love.

Not every cross is suffering for its own sake. Often it means:

Choosing truth over convenience,

Forgiveness over revenge,

Service over self-centeredness,

Faithfulness over comfort.

*6) The cross is also the place of new relationships and new life*

Near the cross, Jesus entrusted His mother to the beloved disciple:

“Behold your mother.”

Even in suffering, Jesus was creating community, care, and spiritual family.

The cross is therefore not only about death; it is also about:

Reconciliation, New beginnings, Spiritual adoption, Hope beyond suffering.

*7) Why is there a “need” to stand near the cross?*

Because human beings naturally try to avoid pain, sacrifice, and uncomfortable truth.

But avoiding the cross often means avoiding transformation.

Standing near the cross helps a person:

grow in compassion,

deepen faith,

understand love more fully,

become spiritually mature,

learn surrender to God.

The cross becomes a school of love.

Spiritual reflections
Here are a few reflective thoughts for prayer or meditation:

“Am I close to Christ only in blessings, or also in suffering?”

“What crosses in my life am I trying to escape rather than carry with faith?”

“Can I remain faithful even when God seems silent?”

“Whom can I accompany in their suffering?”

“What does the cross teach me about love?”

*Think about it*

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

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

Saturday, May 23, 2026

Fire and Tongue in the Holy Spirit

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Easter Season : Feast of Pentecost:*

*Gospel :  John 20:19-23*

*First Reading : Acts 2:1-11*

*Responsorial Psalm : 104: 1-34*

*Second Reading : 1 Cor 12: 3-13*

*Fire and Tongue in the Holy Spirit*

*1) Fire and the Holy Spirit*

*A) Fire in the Bible is never ordinary. It is God’s presence:*

Moses encountered God in the burning bush.
Elijah called down fire from heaven.
At Pentecost, fire descended upon ordinary people.
Easter Night : Blessing new fire and Light is the symbol of the Risen Christ

*B) Fire gives:*

Light in darkness
Warmth in coldness
Purification by burning away what is false
Energy to move and transform

The disciples were fearful before Pentecost. After the fire of the Spirit touched them, they became fearless witnesses.

*C) The Holy Spirit still comes like fire:*

burning away resentment,
igniting compassion,
awakening courage,
rekindling faith when the heart grows cold.

Sometimes people pray for comfort, but the Spirit first brings fire — because transformation always begins with purification.

*2) Tongues: The Spirit that Creates Understanding*

The second symbol is the tongue — language, speech, communication.

At the Tower of Babel, humanity was divided by confused languages. At Pentecost, people from many nations suddenly understood one another. The Holy Spirit reverses division.

The Spirit teaches us:

how to speak truth with love,
how to heal instead of wound,
how to encourage instead of condemn,
how to listen deeply.

A tongue can destroy a person’s spirit with one harsh sentence. But a Spirit-filled tongue can heal a wounded heart.

The miracle of Pentecost is not merely speaking different languages — it is learning the language of love, compassion, forgiveness, and unity.

Jesus tells his disciples not to worry about how to defend themselves when facing persecution. He promises that the Holy Spirit will give them the exact right words to speak at that moment. : Matthew 10:19-20

*3) Reflection on Pentecost*

Pentecost is not only an event from the past. It is a living invitation.

The world today is filled with: 
loud voices but little truth,
endless communication but little understanding,
technology connecting people but hearts remaining distant.

The Holy Spirit still descends wherever people pray, forgive, reconcile, encourage, and love courageously.

The real question of Pentecost is not: “Did the disciples receive the Spirit?”

But: “Are we willing to become flames?”

A single candle can light thousands without losing its own flame. A Spirit-filled person can bring hope to an entire family, workplace, parish, or community.

May the fire of Pentecost burn away fear within us, and may our tongues speak words that heal, unite, and inspire.

*Think about it*

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

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

Lord What about this Man : Who is this Man?

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Easter Season : Seventh Week:  Saturday*

*Gospel :  John 21:20-25*

*First Reading : Acts 28:16-31*

*Responsorial Psalm : 11:4-7*

*Lord What about this Man : Who is this Man?*

*1) Who is “this man”?*

Most Christian tradition identifies him as: John the Apostle, the witness behind the Gospel, the “beloved disciple”

The Gospel itself never directly names him, which gives the figure a symbolic depth as well: the faithful witness, the disciple who remains close to Jesus, the model of contemplative discipleship

*2) Why does Jesus speak differently about him?*

Jesus speaks differently because: Peter and John are given different vocations. discipleship is not identical for everyone

Peter receives: leadership, pastoral responsibility (“Feed my sheep”), martyrdom

John receives: witness, remembrance, enduring testimony,

The contrast is intentional: Peter’s path is active, sacrificial leadership. John’s path is abiding, witnessing, remaining.
Jesus refuses comparison between disciples.

*3) The Key Line: “What is that to you?”*

This is the center of the passage.

Jesus is teaching Peter: do not measure your calling against another person’s calling. Faithfulness matters more than comparison. Another disciple’s destiny is not your concern

This has enormous spiritual relevance.

People constantly ask:
Why is someone else’s life easier?
Why does one person suffer more?
Why does God use people differently?
Why are some called to public ministry and others to hidden prayer?

Jesus answers: “You follow me.” That is the heart of Christian discipleship.

*4) Did Jesus mean John would never die?*

No. The Gospel itself immediately clarifies this misunderstanding: “Jesus did not say to him that he would not die…”

Apparently an early rumor spread that the beloved disciple would live until Christ returned.

The author corrects it carefully.

Jesus was speaking hypothetically: “If I want him to remain…”

The emphasis is not on John’s immortality. The emphasis is: Peter must not be distracted by another disciple’s destiny.

*5) Symbolic Meaning*

Many theologians see Peter and the Beloved Disciple as representing two dimensions of the Church:

Peter : authority, mission, shepherding, visible leadership, action

The Beloved Disciple: contemplation, intimacy with Christ, spiritual insight, faithful witness, love

The Church needs both.

*6) Spiritual Reflections*

*A) God does not deal with everyone the same way* 

Christ calls each person uniquely.

Some are called to: suffering, leadership, hiddenness, scholarship, family life, silence, public witness. Comparison destroys peace.

*B) Curiosity about others can distract from obedience* 

 Peter has just heard about his martyrdom. Immediately he asks: “What about him?” This is deeply human. We often avoid our own calling by focusing on others. 

Jesus redirects Peter back to himself: “Follow me.”

*C) Love and leadership are different gifts*

Peter loves Jesus passionately but impulsively. The beloved disciple is quieter and more contemplative.

Jesus values both.

This is important spiritually: Not all holiness looks the same. Not all disciples serve in the same way

*7) Relevance Today*

This passage speaks powerfully against: jealousy, comparison, competition in ministry, anxiety about destiny

Its message is timeless: Your task is not to understand everyone else’s path. Your task is to follow Christ faithfully in your own path.

*Think about it*

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

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

Loving more than these

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Easter Season : Seventh Week:  Friday*

*Gospel :  John 21:15-19*

*First Reading : Acts 25: 13-21*

*Responsorial Psalm : 103:1-20*

*Loving more than these*

*1) Who are the “these”?*

There are three major interpretations.

*A) “These” = the other disciples* 

Jesus may be asking: “Do you love me more than these other disciples love me?” This connects strongly to Peter’s earlier boastful confidence. Earlier, Peter had said that even if everyone else fell away, he would not. In effect: “Others may fail you, but I won’t.”

So Jesus may now be gently confronting Peter’s old spiritual pride. Peter once compared himself favorably to others. After failure and humiliation, he no longer does that. He simply answers: “Lord, you know that I love you.” No comparisons. No boasting.

Failure often removes comparison from love. Before brokenness, people may say: “My faith is stronger.” “My loyalty is greater.” “I’m more devoted.”

After brokenness, love becomes quieter, humbler, more dependent on grace. 

This interpretation makes the passage a healing of Peter’s ego.

*B) “These” = the fishing equipment and old life*

The conversation happens right after the disciples have been fishing. Nets, boats, fish, and the familiar life of Galilee surround them.

Jesus may be asking: “Do you love me more than these things — this work, this security, this former life?”

Peter had returned temporarily to fishing after the trauma of the crucifixion. Fishing represented: familiarity, economic survival, identity before discipleship.

If so, Jesus is asking Peter whether he is willing once again to leave behind security for mission.

Every calling competes with something comfortable.

For Peter: boats, routine, competence, old identity.

For people today it may be: status, career, comfort, control, self-protection.

The question becomes: “What do you return to when your heart is wounded?”

Peter returned to fishing. Jesus returned to Peter.

That is one reason the scene is so powerful.

*C) “These” = everything present around him*

Some interpreters think the ambiguity is deliberate and expansive.

Jesus may be asking: “Do you love me more than all this world around you?”

Not merely people or objects, but every competing attachment.

This echoes a central biblical theme: love of God above all, the re-centering of life around divine relationship, discipleship as ultimate allegiance.

The deepest spiritual question is often not: “Do you believe?” but: “What do you love most?”

Because love reveals the true center of a person’s life.

*2)  Why compare at all?*

The comparison matters because love always competes with rival loyalties.

In Scripture, comparison language often reveals hierarchy of devotion:

family, possessions, reputation, ambition, even religious self-image.

Jesus is not asking Peter for emotional intensity alone. He is asking about priority.

The question is existential: “What stands first in your heart now?

*3) Why ask Peter publicly?*

The restoration is public because the denial was public. Peter failed openly. Now he is recommissioned openly.

Immediately after each answer, Jesus says: “Feed my lambs.” “Tend my sheep.” “Feed my sheep.”

Love is tied to responsibility. This is one of the most important transitions in Christian spirituality: love for Christ becomes service to people.

*Think about it*

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

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

Wednesday, May 20, 2026

I Wish where I am they also may be with me

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Easter Season : Seventh Week:  Thursday*

*Gospel :  John 17: 20-26*

*First Reading : Acts 22:30; 23:6-11*

*Responsorial Psalm : 16:1-11*

*I Wish where I am they also may be with me*

*1) “Where I am” — Where is Jesus?*

Jesus speaks on more than one level here.

*A) Jesus is “with the Father”*

Throughout Gospel of John, Jesus repeatedly says he came from the Father and returns to the Father. So “where I am” points toward divine communion — life in the love of God.

He is speaking of: resurrection life, glory, eternal fellowship with the Father.

This is not merely a physical location like a city or throne room. It is participation in God’s own life and love.

*B) Jesus is also present among his people*

Elsewhere Jesus says: “I am with you always” (Matthew 28:20) “Abide in me, and I in you” (John 15)

So Jesus is not only speaking of a future heaven. He speaks of a relationship already beginning now.

To be “where Jesus is” means: to live in his love, to share his truth, to participate in his way of life, to dwell in communion with God.

*2) What is the place of the disciples?*

Jesus does not describe disciples as servants standing far away. The astonishing thing in this prayer is intimacy.

He prays: “that they may be one, as we are one” “I in them, and You in Me”

The disciples are invited into: unity, shared love, participation in divine life.

This is one of the highest ideas in Christian spirituality: human beings are invited into communion with God.

Not equality with God in essence, but participation in God’s love and life.

Their “place” is: in Christ, in the Father’s love, among one another in unity.

*3) Unity is Central*

Jesus repeats “that they may be one.” This is not merely organizational unity or agreement on every detail. It is a living unity rooted in love.

The model is the relationship between Father and Son: mutual giving, trust, self-emptying love, shared glory.

So disciples are meant to become a community where: ego decreases, love deepens, divisions heal, truth and compassion meet.

This remains deeply relevant because human life easily fragments into: isolation, rivalry, identity conflicts, fear of others.

Jesus presents unity as a witness: “that the world may know…” Meaning: love itself becomes testimony.

*4) Relevance to ordinary life*

This passage becomes practical in surprising ways.

*A) We become like How we live*

If a person lives constantly in anger, fear, greed, or vanity, those realities shape the soul.

Jesus invites people to “abide” in divine love instead.

So this prayer asks: What are we rooted in? What forms our inner life?

*B) Relationships matter spiritually*

Jesus connects love of God with unity among people. Spirituality is not merely private meditation or belief. It appears in: forgiveness, patience, reconciliation, humility, truthfulness, care for others.

*C) Human longing for belonging*

Many people experience loneliness even when surrounded by others.

This prayer speaks to a deep human desire: to be fully known and fully loved.

Jesus prays not for distant followers, but for people to dwell in love: “that the love with which You loved Me may be in them.”

*Think about it*

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

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

Son Of Destruction

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Easter Season : Seventh Week:  Wednesday*

*Gospel :  John 17:11-19*

*First Reading : Acts 20:28-38*

*Responsorial Psalm : 68:29-36*

*Son Of Destruction*

*1) What does “son of destruction” mean?*

The expression is a Hebrew-style way of describing a person characterized by something.

Examples: “sons of light” = people belonging to light/truth. “sons of thunder” = fiery people

So “son of destruction/perdition” means: one moving toward ruin, one aligned with destruction, one who chose a path away from truth and life.

It is not merely a label of punishment; it describes a tragic spiritual direction.

*2) Why is Judas called this?*

Judas is a deeply tragic figure because: he lived close to Jesus, heard the teachings, witnessed miracles, yet gradually allowed greed, disappointment, darkness, and betrayal to grow within him.

The Gospel of John especially presents Judas as someone whose heart slowly closed itself to love and truth.

This is important: Jesus did not suddenly reject Judas. Even at the Last Supper, Jesus still offered him friendship and opportunities to turn back.

So the passage is less about predestination and more about the mystery of human freedom.

*3) Spiritual and existential meaning*

The “son of destruction” is not only about one historical person. It becomes a warning and mirror for every believer.

*A) Nearness to holiness is not the same as transformation*

Judas walked with Jesus physically but was not inwardly converted.

A person can: belong externally to religion, know scripture, participate in worship, even serve spiritually. Yet inwardly become disconnected from truth, love, humility, and integrity.

*B) Small compromises can slowly destroy the soul*

The Gospels suggest Judas’ fall was gradual: attachment to money, hidden dishonesty, disappointment, resentment,
secrecy. Destruction rarely arrives suddenly.  Spiritual collapse often begins in unnoticed habits.

This has deep relevance today: cynicism, greed,  addiction to power, manipulation, loss of conscience, betrayal of trust, living divided lives.

The passage asks: “What am I allowing to grow silently within me?”

*C) Human freedom is real*

Jesus loved Judas, warned Judas, and stayed patient with him. Yet Judas still chose betrayal.

This reveals a serious biblical truth: Love cannot be forced. God invites, warns, guides, and calls — but human beings retain freedom. That gives both dignity and responsibility to human life.

*D) The tragedy of refusing grace*

One of the saddest dimensions of Judas’ story is not only betrayal but despair afterward. Gospel of Matthew portrays Judas overwhelmed by guilt, but unable to believe in forgiveness.

In contrast, Simon Peter also failed Jesus by denying him — yet Peter returned in repentance and hope. That difference matters profoundly. 

The Christian tradition often reflects: Peter fell and returned. Judas fell and despaired.

The danger is not merely sin, but the refusal to believe redemption is still possible.

*4) Points to Ponder*

In Gospel of John, “destruction” is not merely physical death. It is separation from life, truth, and communion with God.

Jesus says elsewhere: “I came that they may have life.”

So Judas represents the tragedy of turning away from life itself even while standing near it.

This gives the passage universal depth: Every person constantly moves toward either: to openness, truth, love, and life, or towards self-enclosure, falsehood, alienation, and destruction.

*Think about it*

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

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

Protection in the Hostile World

GOSPEL THOUGHTS 
Easter Season : Seventh Week:  Tuesday*

*Gospel :  John 17:1-11*

*First Reading : Acts 20:17-27*

*Responsorial Psalm : 68:10-21*

*Protection in the Hostile World*

*1) Highlights of Protection in John 17:1–11*
 
*A)  “Holy Father, protect them by the power of your name” (v.11)*

This is the central protection statement.

Jesus does not ask: “Take them out of the world” or “Make life easy for them” Instead, he asks the Father to keep them.

The protection is: preserving their faith, anchoring them in God, keeping them spiritually intact.

The phrase “your name” points to God’s character, authority, and presence.

So protection means: remaining connected to God’s truth and nature, not losing spiritual direction, staying faithful under pressure.

*2) Why Protection Is Highlighted Here*
 
*A) Jesus Is Leaving Physically* 

Jesus says: “I am no longer in the world, but they are in the world…”

The disciples had depended on: his presence, teaching, guidance, correction, and protection.

Now they must continue without seeing him physically.

This creates vulnerability: fear, confusion, persecution, temptation to abandon faith.

Protection becomes urgent because transition moments are dangerous moments.

*B) The World in John Often Means a System Opposed to God* 

In John’s Gospel, “world” can mean humanity organized apart from God: pride, hatred, falsehood, spiritual blindness, power without truth.

Jesus knows the disciples will face: rejection, opposition, misunderstanding, spiritual pressure.

So protection is about surviving spiritually in a hostile environment.

*C) Unity Needs Protection* 

Jesus immediately connects protection with unity: “that they may be one as we are one.”

Why? Because hostility often divides people through: fear, ego, competition, discouragement, betrayal.

One of the first things suffering attacks is community. Jesus prays that their relationships remain preserved.

*3)  What Kind of Protection Is This?* 

Not Protection From Difficulty. Jesus does not promise: comfort, wealth, absence of suffering, or easy circumstances.

The disciples would eventually face persecution. So this passage rejects the idea that divine protection means a trouble-free life. 

*B) Protection Through Difficulty*

The prayer suggests: 
God sustains people inside hardship,
truth can survive hostility,
faith can endure pressure,
love can remain alive in dark environments. The emphasis is endurance, not escape.

*4) Deeper Reflections*

*A) Human Life Is Spiritually Vulnerable*

The passage assumes people can: drift, lose heart,  become divided, become spiritually exhausted.

Protection matters because faith is fragile when isolated from God.

Jesus’ prayer acknowledges human weakness honestly.

*B) Spiritual Protection Is Relational*

Protection comes through remaining connected to: the Father, truth, Christ, and community. The passage does not portray protection as magical shielding. It is relational preservation.

*C) Identity Must Be Guarded* 

The disciples belong to God: “they were yours” 

The hostile world tries to redefine identity through: fear, status, success,  public opinion,power.

*5) Points to Ponder*

The Greatest Dangers Are Often Internal. Fear, cynicism, loss of hope, spiritual numbness, division, and compromise can damage a person more deeply than external hardship.

Jesus prays for the inner life of the disciples. 

*C) Protection Does Not Mean Isolation* The disciples are sent into the world, not removed from it.

This means: engagement without losing integrity, presence without assimilation, love without surrendering truth.

The Christian vision is not withdrawal from society, but faithful presence within it.

*C) Unity Is Sacred and Fragil* 

Jesus connects divine protection with human unity. Communities often fracture under pressure.

This prayer suggests: unity requires grace, humility, forgiveness,  and continual spiritual grounding. 

*D) God’s Keeping Power Matters More Than Human Strength* 

The disciples are not portrayed as self-sufficient heroes. Their endurance depends on being “kept” by God.

This creates a spirituality of: dependence, trust,  prayer, and perseverance.

*E) The Passage Speaks Strongly to Modern Life* 

Modern hostility is not always violent. It can appear as: distraction, moral confusion, constant noise, loneliness,
identity pressure, cynicism, loss of meaning.

The prayer remains deeply relevant because it speaks about remaining spiritually whole in environments that pull people apart internally.

*Think about it*

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

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

The importance of Starting near the Cross

GOSPEL THOUGHTS *Ordinary Season : Eight Week:  Monday* *Gospel :  John 19: 25-35* *First Reading : Genesis 3:9-15; 20* *Responsorial Psalm ...