Saturday, February 14, 2026

Jesus' Teaching o Anger

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Ordinary Season:  Sixth Week :  Sunday**

*Gospel :  Mt 5:17-37*

*First Reading : Sir 15:15-20*

*Responsorial Psalm : 119: 1-2; 4-5,17-18; 33-34*

*Second Reading :1 Cor 2:6-10*

*Jesus' Teaching o Anger*

*1) Jesus o Anger* 

He teaches that: Sin begins in the heart. Anger is the seed of violence. Reconciliation is more important than ritual worship.

It is not merely about avoiding physical murder — it is about removing the inner poison that leads to it.

*2) The Danger of Anger According to Jesus*

*A) Anger Leads to Judgment* : Jesus equates uncontrolled anger with moral guilt. It separates us from God and from others.

*B) Anger Dehumanizes Others* : Using insults (“Raca,” “fool”) strips others of dignity. Anger turns people into enemies instead of brothers and sisters.

*C) Anger Blocks Worship* : Jesus says if you are offering your gift at the altar and remember someone has something against you, go and reconcile first. → Reconciliation comes before religion.

*D) Anger Escalates* : Unresolved anger grows: irritation to resentment, resentment to  hatred, hatred to destruction

*3) Ultimately, What Does Anger Do to Us?* 

Hardens the heart
Distorts judgment
Feeds pride
Breaks peace
Damages relationships
Separates us spiritually
Anger makes us react instead of reflect.

*4) What Do We Lose by Anger?* 

Peace of mind
Healthy relationships
Spiritual intimacy
Credibility and trust
Emotional stability

*5) Relevance to Our Life Today* 

*In modern life*: Social media fuels outrage. Political divisions amplify hostility. Family conflicts escalate quickly.

*Jesus’ teaching is radical because it asks us to*: Examine the heart, not just behavior. Seek reconciliation quickly. Value people over pride.

*It challenges us to replace*: revenge with forgiveness, insult with understanding, retaliation with mercy

*6)  Points to Ponder*

*Anger reveals what we love* : Often we get angry when our ego, control, or expectations are threatened.

*Anger is easier than humility* : Reconciliation requires courage and vulnerability.

*Anger promises strength but produces weakness* : It feels powerful in the moment but leaves emptiness afterward.

*Jesus calls for interior transformation* : Christianity is not only about outward obedience but inward purity.

*Peace begins in the heart* : If anger is not healed inside, it will appear outside.

*Think about it*

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

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

Friday, February 13, 2026

Feeding of the 4000 : Why this Number is important?

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Ordinary Season:  Fifth Week : Saturday

*Gospel :  Mark 8:1-10*

*First Reading : 1 Kings 12: 26-32; 13:33-34*

*Responsorial Psalm : 106: 6-22*

*Feeding of the 4000 : Why this Number is important?*

*1) Why Mention the Number 4,000?*

It Shows This Was a Real, Historical Event

Specific numbers (4,000 people, 7 loaves, 7 baskets) suggest eyewitness testimony. Ancient writers did not randomly invent precise figures; numbers help anchor the story in history.

Mark distinguishes this miracle from the earlier feeding of 5,000 (Mark 6). Jesus Himself later refers to both events separately (Mark 8:19–20), showing they were distinct occasions.

*2) The Symbolic Meaning of 4,000*

Biblically, numbers often carry symbolic weight.

*A) The Number 4 — Universality*

In Scripture, 4 often represents the whole world: Four directions (north, south, east, west), Four winds, Four corners of the earth

The feeding of the 4,000 likely took place in a predominantly Gentile region (the Decapolis). This is important.

It may symbolize: Jesus’ provision is not just for Israel — but for the whole world. The earlier feeding of 5,000 mainly involved Jews.  The 4,000 feeding emphasizes outreach beyond ethnic or religious boundaries.

*B) The Number 7 — Completeness*

There were: 7 loaves, 7 baskets leftover.
In biblical symbolism, 7 represents completeness or divine perfection.

This suggests: God’s provision is complete and sufficient. 
Even in a “wilderness” place, there is no shortage in Christ.

*3)  The Deeper Theological Meaning*

*A) Compassion for Physical Needs*

Mark 8:2 records Jesus saying: “I have compassion for these people.”
The Greek word implies deep, gut-level mercy.

This shows: God cares about physical hunger.
Spiritual ministry does not ignore practical needs.
Jesus does not say, “Only pray.” He feeds them.

*B) Wilderness Imagery*

The setting echoes: Israel in the wilderness. Manna from heaven

Jesus is portrayed as the new and greater Moses — but instead of manna falling daily, He multiplies bread directly.

This points forward to: The Eucharistic imagery (bread broken and given). Christ as the Bread of Life

*4)  Why 4,000 Specifically?*

Unlike some biblical numbers (like 7 or 12), 4,000 itself does not carry a clear mystical code. Rather:

It emphasizes abundance.
It stresses magnitude.
It reinforces the universality theme (4 × 1000 — large global fullness).
It communicates scale: No crowd is too large for Christ’s provision.

*5) What Does This Mean for Us Today?* 

*A) God Sees Crowds as Individuals*

We see statistics. Jesus sees people.

In our world of: Billions of people, Global crises, Mass poverty, this passage reminds us: No number overwhelms God.

*B) Compassion Must Accompany Faith*

Modern spirituality can become abstract.
But Jesus demonstrates embodied compassion.

Application: Feed the hungry. Care for the marginalized. Engage real-world suffering.
Faith is not detached from human need.

*C) Scarcity vs. Trust*

The disciples saw: Seven loaves. A massive crowd.

Jesus saw: Enough. 

Modern life often operates from scarcity: “Not enough time.”, “Not enough money.” “Not enough influence.”

This story invites trust in divine multiplication.

*D) Inclusion Matters* 

If this miracle occurred in Gentile territory, it speaks powerfully about inclusion.

*Modern reflection*: Who do we unconsciously exclude? Who do we assume is “outside” God’s care?

The 4,000 reminds us: The table of Christ is wider than we think.

*6) Points to Ponder*

What limited resources am I focusing on?
Who around me is spiritually or physically hungry?
Am I willing to offer my “seven loaves” to God?

*Think about it*

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

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

The Gesture of Putting the Fingers into the Ears, Spitting and Touching the Tongue of Deaf and Mute Man by Jesus

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Ordinary Season:  Fifth Week : Friday*

*Gospel :  Mark 7:31-37*

*First Reading : 1 Kings 11:29-31; 12:19*

*Responsorial Psalm : 81:10-15*

*The Gesture of Putting the Fingers into the Ears, Spitting and Touching the Tongue of Deaf and Mute Man by Jesus*

*1) Why these physical gestures?*

*A) Communication in the man’s own “language”*

The man could not hear. Jesus does not begin with words — He uses visible signs.
*Fingers in the ears* → “I am going to heal your hearing.”
*Touching the tongue* → “I am going to heal your speech.”
*Looking to heaven* → “The power comes from God.”
*Sighing* → Compassion and deep sorrow over human suffering.

Jesus meets him at the level he can understand. Before the miracle, there is already communication.
*Reflection*: God speaks to us in ways we can understand — through experiences, symbols, people, silence, suffering, beauty.

*B) The importance of touch*

In ancient times, saliva was sometimes believed to have healing properties, but more importantly, touch meant closeness and compassion.

This man likely lived in social isolation. Deafness in that culture often meant exclusion.

*Jesus*: Takes him aside (dignity). Touches him (acceptance). Speaks personally to him

The miracle is not mechanical — it is relational.

*Reflection* : Healing often begins with being seen, known, and touched with compassion.

*C) The sigh*

Jesus “sighed deeply.” This is very powerful.

*It reflects* : Grief over the brokenness of creation. The weight of human suffering. The frustration of sin’s effects

This is not a cold miracle-worker. This is a Savior who feels.

*Reflection* : God is not indifferent to our struggles. Christ enters into our pain.

*2) The symbolic Meaning*

*A) Deafness and spiritual deafness*

Throughout Scripture, people are often described as: “Having ears but not hearing” (Jeremiah 5:21)

Being spiritually dull, the physical healing points to a deeper truth: Humanity needs its ears opened to hear God.

*B) The tongue loosed*

When his ears open, his speech is restored. Hearing comes before speaking.

*Spiritually* : We must first hear God’s Word. Then we can speak rightly. Faith begins with listening.

*3) Relevance for today* 

This passage speaks powerfully to modern life.

*A) We live in a noisy world* 

Yet many are spiritually deaf.

We hear: Media, Opinions, Politics, Noise

*But do we hear* : Conscience?, God’s Word?, The cry of the poor?
We need our ears opened again.

*B) The healing of communication*

Our world suffers from: Misunderstanding, Harsh speech, Online cruelty, Division.

Jesus heals both: The ability to listen, The ability to speak.
True healing restores communication.

*C) Jesus still touches*

Today Christ touches us through: Scripture, Sacraments, Prayer, Community, Moments of grace
He still says, “Be opened.”

*4) Points to Ponder*

Where am I deaf?
What truth have I refused to hear?
What words need healing in my life?
Do I speak life or harm?

*Think about it*

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

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

Wednesday, February 11, 2026

The Demon of the Syrophoenician woman's Daughter

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Ordinary Season:  Fifth Week :  Thursday*

*Gospel :  Mark 7:24-30*

*First Reading : 1 Kings 11:4-13*

*Responsorial Psalm : 106: 3-4, 35-36, 37, 40*

*The Demon of the Syrophoenician woman's Daughter* 

*1) Understanding the Demon in This Context*

*A) What does “demon possession” mean here?*

*In the Gospels, demons represent*: Forces opposed to God’s reign, Spiritual oppression, Destructive powers that distort human dignity

The daughter is described as having an “unclean spirit.” “Unclean” is important — it connects to Jewish purity laws.

*But notice*: The child is Gentile. She is outside Israel. Yet she is still under spiritual bondage.

*This shows something profound*: Evil is universal — not limited by geography, ethnicity, or religion.

*B) The Region of Tyre and Sidon*

Tyre and Sidon were: Ancient Phoenician cities, Wealthy, powerful trading centers. Historically associated with pagan worship (e.g., Baal, Jezebel in the Old Testament)

In Jewish memory, this region symbolized: Idolatry, Spiritual corruption, Foreign influence

So when Jesus enters this territory and confronts a demon, it symbolically means: The Kingdom of God invades even territories once associated with idolatry and spiritual darkness.

*2) The Significance of This Event*

*A) The Messiah Enters “Enemy Territory”*

This is not just a healing. It is a spiritual invasion.

Jesus: Crosses geographic boundaries. Crosses ethnic boundaries. Confronts spiritual darkness outside Israel.

This anticipates the global mission of the Church.

*B) The Demon and “Uncleanness”*

In Mark 7, just before this story, Jesus teaches: It is not what enters a person that makes them unclean, but what comes from within.

Then immediately: He heals a Gentile child labeled “unclean.”

The deeper theological message: Uncleanness is not about ethnicity or culture — it is about spiritual brokenness. And Christ’s power overcomes it everywhere.

*C) A Mother’s Intercession*

The demon is in the daughter. The faith is in the mother.

Spiritually this is powerful : One person’s faith can bring deliverance to another.

*Intercessory prayer matters* : It mirrors: Abraham interceding, Moses interceding. The Church praying for the world

*3) Deeper  Meanings*

*A) Cosmic Expansion of Salvation*

Up until this point: Jesus’ mission is primarily to Israel.

Here: A Gentile receives deliverance. 

No physical touch. No ritual. Just a word spoken at a distance.

This foreshadows: The inclusion of the Gentiles in Acts. The breaking down of the wall between Jew and Gentile (Ephesians 2).

*B) Spiritual Geography*

The Bible sometimes portrays regions symbolically:

Egypt → bondage
Babylon → exile
Tyre & Sidon → pagan wealth and pride

When Jesus performs exorcism here, it signals: No land is beyond redemption.

In today’s language: No culture, system, or nation is outside Christ’s authority.

*C) The “Children’s Bread”*

*Jesus initially says*: Let the children be fed first. 

This implies order — not exclusion.

*God’s plan*: Israel first. Then the nations.

The woman understands this but trusts abundance: Even crumbs are enough.

*Theologically*: Grace is not diminished by sharing. God’s mercy multiplies.

*D) The Hidden Miracle*

Interestingly: Jesus never sees the child. He does not go to her house. The demon leaves at a distance.

This emphasizes: The authority of Christ’s word. Divine power transcends physical presence.

It anticipates the Church age: We do not see Jesus physically — Yet His word still liberates.

*4) Relevance Today*

*A) Spiritual Forces Still Exist*

While we may interpret demons differently today (psychological, systemic evil, oppression), the story reminds us:

Evil is real. Bondage is real. Christ’s authority is greater.

*B) Intercession for the Next Generation*

Many parents today: Worry about their children. See cultural or spiritual confusion. Feel powerless.

This mother teaches: Persistent faith changes spiritual outcomes.

*C) Crossing Cultural and Religious Boundaries*

Jesus enters unfamiliar territory.

For today’s believers: Faith must not stay inside comfort zones. Compassion must cross borders.

*D) Humility Unlocks Grace*

The woman does not argue entitlement. She appeals to mercy.

In a rights-driven world, This posture is revolutionary.

*5) Spiritual Reflections*

*A) Darkness is not territorial* : Evil may dominate spaces, but Christ steps into them.

*B) Grace overflows boundaries* : The crumbs of Christ are sufficient to break chains.

*C) Faith can travel where we cannot* : Her faith reached her daughter before she did.

*D) Old Hostilities Collapse* : Tyre and Sidon once symbolized opposition to Israel. Now they witness mercy.

*Think about it*

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

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

Feast of Our Lady of Lourdes

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Ordinary Season:  Fifth Week :  Wednesday*

*Gospel :  John 2:1-11*

*First Reading : Is 66:10-14*

*Responsorial Psalm : Jdt 13:18-19*

*Feast of Our Lady of Lourdes*

*1) Our Lady of Lourdes and the Wedding at Cana*

At first glance, Lourdes and Cana seem very different—one a quiet grotto with a poor young girl, the other a joyful wedding feast. Yet the spiritual thread is strong and intentional.

*A) Mary’s role as intercessor*

At Cana, Mary notices the need: “They have no wine.” At Lourdes, Mary appears to Bernadette and gently directs people toward prayer, repentance, and trust in God’s mercy.

In both moments, Mary does not draw attention to herself—she leads people to Jesus.

*B) “Do whatever He tells you”* 

 This is Mary’s only recorded command in the Gospels (Jn 2:5). At Lourdes, her messages echo this same spirit: prayer, conversion, penance, humility—obedience to God’s will.

*C) From water to grace*

At Cana, ordinary water becomes extraordinary wine. At Lourdes, ordinary spring water becomes a sign of healing, hope, and God’s closeness, not magic, but grace-filled.

*D) Manifestation of God’s glory* 

Cana is the first sign through which Jesus reveals His glory. Lourdes is a continuing sign of God’s compassion, especially for the sick, the poor, and the forgotten.

Mary stands quietly at both places, pointing beyond the visible to the saving action of God.

*2) Important Messages of Lourdes* 

The Lourdes apparitions (1858) are simple but profound. They are deeply Gospel-centered.

*Core messages*: 

*A) Prayer, especially the Rosary*

Mary repeatedly prays the Rosary with Bernadette.
Lourdes reminds us that prayer is not escape, but relationship.

*B) Penance and conversion* 

“Penance, penance, penance.”
A call not to guilt, but to turn back to God with sincerity.

*C) Care for the sick and suffering* 

Lourdes has become a global center of compassion.
It proclaims that human dignity remains even in weakness.

*D) Humility*

Mary appears not to the powerful, but to a poor, sickly, uneducated girl.
God’s grace flows where hearts are humble.

*E) Hope beyond suffering* 

Not all are physically healed—but many are spiritually transformed.
Lourdes teaches that healing is deeper than cure.

*3) Significance of This Feast* 

The Feast of Our Lady of Lourdes is also observed as the World Day of the Sick, which deepens its meaning.

*Its significance lies in this truth*:

God is not distant from pain.
Faith does not eliminate suffering, but transfigures it.
The Church is called to be a place where the wounded are not hidden, but embraced.
Just as Cana moves from embarrassment to abundance, Lourdes moves from suffering to hope-filled trust.

*4) Relevance for Today*

In our modern world, the message of Lourdes and Cana is strikingly relevant.

*Today we face*:

Emotional and mental illness
Burnout and spiritual dryness
A culture that avoids weakness and vulnerability

*Lourdes speaks clearly*:

Bring your emptiness to Christ.
Trust Mary’s intercession when you don’t know what to pray.
Allow God to work through ordinary means.
Let compassion—not efficiency—define how we treat the suffering.
Like the servants at Cana, we are not asked to understand everything—only to fill the jars and trust.

*5) Points to Ponder* 

Mary still notices when the “wine” of joy, hope, or faith runs out.
Jesus still transforms what we place in His hands.
Lourdes reminds us that faith is lived not in perfection, but in trustful surrender.
The sick, the weak, and the poor are not on the margins of the Church—they are at its heart.

*Think about it*

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

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

Jesus on Fine ways of Rejecting Gods Commandment

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Ordinary Season:  Fifth Week :  Tuesday*

*Gospel :  Mark 7:1-13*

*First Reading : 1 Kings 8: 22-30*

*Responsorial Psalm : 84:3-11*

*Jesus on Fine ways of Rejecting Gods Commandment* 

*1) What “ways” is Jesus referring to in Mark 7:1–13?*

*A) Elevating human tradition above God’s command*

The immediate issue is ritual hand-washing. The Pharisees treated their traditions as if they were equal to (or greater than) God’s Law. The problem wasn’t the tradition itself—it was giving it divine authority.

Tradition became a substitute for obedience.

*B) Using religion to bypass moral responsibility (the Corban example)*

Jesus highlights a particularly disturbing practice called Corban. A person could declare their possessions “dedicated to God,” which legally excused them from using those resources to care for their parents—despite God’s clear command to honor father and mother.

This is the heart of Jesus’ critique: They sounded religious. They appeared devout. But they violated the plain will of God. Religion became a loophole for selfishness.

*C) External purity replacing inner obedience*

The focus was on what touched the hands, not what shaped the heart. Jesus exposes a faith obsessed with appearances but disconnected from love, justice, and mercy.

*2) Gods Commandment & Human Tradition* 

Gods Commandment is Rooted in God’s character. Human Tradition is  Rooted in culture or convenience
Gods Commandment is Aimed at love and life. Human Tradition is Aimed at control or identity
Gods Commandment Transforms the heart. Human Tradition Manages behavior

Jesus is not anti-tradition. He is anti-tradition that cancels God’s Word.

The deeper issue is authority: Who ultimately defines what faithfulness looks like? God’s revealed will—or religious systems built over time?

*3) Why is this significant?*

*A) It exposes religious hypocrisy*

Jesus quotes Isaiah: “This people honors me with their lips, but their heart is far from me.”

That’s devastating—not because they don’t worship, but because their worship is empty. The danger isn’t rebellion; it’s religiosity without relationship.

*B) It protects the heart of God’s law*

God’s commandments are not arbitrary rules. They are meant to: Protect relationships, Shape love, Reflect God’s compassion

When traditions override this, faith becomes harsh instead of holy.

*C) It redefines holiness*

Holiness is not about looking clean but being faithful. Jesus shifts the center of faith from ritual performance to heart alignment.

*4) How is this applicable to our lives today?*

*A)  When church culture replaces God’s Word*

“This is how we’ve always done it”
“That’s not our tradition”
“Good Christians don’t do that”
When these ideas silence Scripture, Jesus’ warning applies.

*B) When spirituality excuses lack of love*

Examples today: Being “too busy with ministry” to care for family
Using doctrine to avoid compassion
Hiding selfish choices behind spiritual language
Like Corban, we can sound faithful while avoiding obedience.

*C) When outward faith masks inner emptiness*

Perfect attendance, but no forgiveness
Correct beliefs, but no humility
Public prayer, private hardness of heart
Jesus is asking: What kind of people is our faith making us?

*Think about it*

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

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

Sunday, February 8, 2026

The Presence of Jesus at the land to Gennesaret

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Ordinary Season:  Fifth Week :  *Monday*

*Gospel :  Mark 6:53-56*

*First Reading : 132: 6-10*

*Responsorial Psalm : 1 Kings 8:1-7;9-13*

*The Presence of Jesus at the land to Gennesaret* 

*1) The Significance of the Place: Gennesaret*

*Gennesaret was*
A fertile, busy region near the Sea of Galilee
Known for agriculture, fishing, and trade
A place of ordinary life: work, sickness, crowds, movement
It was not a religious center like Jerusalem.
It was not famous for holiness or scholarship.

And yet, this is where Jesus chose to stop.

*Meaning* : Jesus enters ordinary spaces, not only sacred ones. He comes into marketplaces, homes, roadsides—into real life.

*2) The Presence of Jesus at Gennesaret*

Mark tells us something striking: “Wherever he went—villages, towns, countryside—they laid the sick in the marketplaces.” (Mk 6:56)

Nothing dramatic is described: No long sermons, No recorded miracles by name, No theological debates

Yet: The sick were brought, The suffering reached out, Even touching the fringe of his cloak healed them

The greatness was not in the place, but in His presence.

Where Jesus is present: Healing flows, Hope awakens, Faith becomes bold, Life is restored

*3) The Response of the People*

The people of Gennesaret responded in three powerful ways:

*A) They Recognized Him*

“People immediately recognized him.” (Mk 6:54)
They didn’t wait for proof.
They knew: “He is the one we need.”
Faith begins with recognition.

*B) They Acted Urgently*

“They ran about the whole region…” (Mk 6:55)
Faith did not remain an idea.
It became movement, effort, initiative.
They carried the sick.
They made space for healing.

*C) They Trusted Even a Small Contact*

“All who touched it were healed.” (Mk 6:56)

They did not demand:
A miracle show
Personal attention
Special words
They trusted His nearness.

Sometimes, a small act of faith opens great grace.

*4) The Spirituality of Gennesaret*

Gennesaret teaches us: 
Jesus transforms ordinary places
Faith does not need perfection—only presence
Healing happens when we bring our brokenness to Him

It also reminds us: Jesus does not wait for people to be worthy. He waits for them to come close.

*5) Application to Our Life Today*

*A) Make Your Gennesaret Available to Jesus*

Your home.
Your workplace.
Your routine.
Your weakness.

Invite Him there. Jesus does not ask for a temple— He asks for access.

*B) Bring Others to Jesus*

Like the people of Gennesaret: 
Carry the sick
Carry the wounded
Carry those who cannot walk by themselves

Sometimes the greatest charity is: bringing someone into the presence of Christ.

*C) Touch Him in Faith*

Today we touch Him through: Prayer, The Word, The Eucharist, Acts of love and mercy

Even a small, trembling touch of faith is enough.

*6) Points to Ponder*

Jesus’ presence turns ordinary land into holy ground
Where Jesus is welcomed, healing is never far away
Faith that moves—even quietly—moves the heart of God
We may live in an ordinary place, but with Jesus, nothing is ordinary


*Think about it*

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

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

Jesus' Teaching o Anger

GOSPEL THOUGHTS *Ordinary Season:  Sixth Week :  Sunday** *Gospel :  Mt 5:17-37* *First Reading : Sir 15:15-20* *Responsorial Psalm : 119: 1...