Saturday, March 28, 2026

Palm Sunday and the Donkey

Holy Week :  Palm Sunday

*Gospel :  Mt 26: 14-27:66*

*First Reading : Is 50: 4-7*

*Responsorial Psalm : 22:8-24*

*Second Reading : Phil 2:6-11*

*Palm Sunday and the Donkey*

*1) Why did Jesus choose a donkey?*

In ancient times, kings rode horses when going to war, but rode donkeys when they came in peace. By choosing a donkey, Jesus was making a powerful statement:

He is a King of peace, not violence. His kingdom is spiritual, not political domination
He fulfills prophecy, especially Book of Zechariah 9:9: “See, your king comes to you… humble and riding on a donkey.”

So, the donkey represents humility, peace, and divine purpose.

*2) What is the importance of the donkey in this journey?*

The donkey plays a quiet but crucial role:

It carries Jesus, but does not draw attention to itself
It participates in a sacred mission without pride
It becomes an instrument of God’s plan

Without the donkey, the symbolic fulfillment and visual message of Palm Sunday would be incomplete. The donkey shows that even the ordinary and overlooked can carry the extraordinary.

*3) How can one “become a donkey” in daily life?*

This is a beautiful spiritual metaphor. To “become the donkey” means:

*Be available* – ready to serve when called
*Be humble* – not seeking recognition or praise
*Carry goodness* – bring love, peace, and truth into situations
*Trust the rider* – let God guide your direction

In daily life, this could look like:

Helping others quietly without expecting thanks
Doing small acts of kindness consistently
Letting your actions reflect faith rather than ego

*4) The Powerful message from the Donkey*

The donkey teaches us: Greatness lies in humility. You don’t need status to serve a divine purpose. God works through the simple and willing

While the crowd in Jerusalem shouted praises, the donkey remained steady and silent. It reminds us that being faithful is more important than being famous.

*5) The need of “becoming the donkey” today*

Today’s world is marked by:

Constant self-promotion (social media, status)
Desire for visibility and validation
Competition for power and recognition

In this context, the donkey becomes more relevant than ever.

Why we need this today: To counter ego with humility. To replace noise with quiet faithfulness. To shift from “Look at me” to “Let goodness pass through me”

The world doesn’t just need more leaders—it needs more servants.

*6) Point to Ponder*

The donkey did not preach, perform, or shine. Yet, it carried the One who changes the world.

Maybe the invitation of Palm Sunday is this: Don’t try to be the center—be the carrier.

*Think about it*

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

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

Good works of Jesus and Two different Responses

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Lenten Season : Lenten Season :  Fifth Week :  Saturday*

*Gospel :  John 11:45-57*

*First Reading : Ez 37: 21-28*

*Responsorial Psalm : Jer 31: 10-13*

*Good works of Jesus and Two different Responses* 

*1) Same Event, Different Hearts*

The miracle is undeniable—Lazarus was dead and is now alive. Yet: Some people open their hearts and believe. Others become fearful, defensive, or threatened.

Truth doesn’t automatically produce faith. It depends on the condition of the heart. People interpret the same reality differently based on their inner disposition.

Even today, people can encounter goodness, truth, or even personal transformation—and respond either with openness or resistance. It challenges us to ask: Am I receptive to truth, or do I resist it when it unsettles me?

*2) Faith vs. Fear of Losing Control*

Those who plotted against Jesus (like the leaders connected to Sanhedrin) were not ignorant—they were afraid: Afraid of losing power. Afraid of social or political consequences (see John 11:48)

Sometimes rejection of truth isn’t about lack of evidence—it’s about fear of change or loss.

We may resist what is right because it threatens: Our comfort. Our status, Our habits 

Ask yourself: Am I rejecting something because it’s wrong—or because it costs me something?

*3) The Hardening of the Heart*

Repeated resistance to truth can lead to deeper opposition. What starts as doubt can become hostility.

The people who reported Jesus didn’t just disbelieve—they became instruments in a plan to destroy Him.

When we continually ignore conscience or truth: We become desensitized. We justify wrong actions, We may even oppose what is good

This is a warning to stay attentive and humble.

*4) Miracles Don’t Force Faith*

Even a powerful miracle like raising the dead didn’t convince everyone.

Faith is not just about seeing miracles—it’s about willingness to trust and surrender.

People often think, “If only I saw something extraordinary, I would believe.” But this passage shows: even the extraordinary doesn’t guarantee faith.

Faith involves: Openness, Humility, Willingness to change.

*5) The Cost of Belief*

Those who believed in Jesus were stepping into something risky. 

Following Him could mean: Social rejection, Conflict with authorities

Belief is not just intellectual—it’s a commitment.

Standing for truth, integrity, or faith today can still come with cost: Being misunderstood, Going against the crowd, Making difficult moral choices

*6) God’s Work Continues Despite Opposition*

Ironically, the plot to kill Jesus becomes part of the larger divine plan leading to the cross.

Human resistance cannot ultimately stop God’s purpose.

Even when truth faces opposition: Goodness is not defeated. God can bring purpose out of resistance and suffering

*7) Points to Ponder*

Do I respond to truth with openness or defensiveness?
What fears might be preventing me from embracing what is right?
Am I allowing my heart to soften—or harden—over time?
What does it cost me to live truthfully today?

*Think about it*

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

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

Good Works Vs Stones

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Lenten Season : Lenten Season :  Fifth Week :  Friday*

*Gospel :  John10:31-42*

*First Reading : Jeremiah 20:10-13*

*Responsorial Psalm : 18: 2-7*

*Good Works Vs Stones*

*1) Why Goodness Sometimes Faces Resistance*

Good works can: Expose hypocrisy. Challenge established norms. Make others feel insecure or convicted

People may “throw stones” not because something is wrong—but because something is too right for their comfort.

If the works are good, why the violence?
If the light is clear, why the resistance?

It reveals a timeless truth: goodness does not always get applause—it often provokes opposition.

*2) Stones in Today’s World*

“Stones” represent more than violence—they symbolize resistance to truth.

We may not face literal stones, but the modern versions are real: Criticism or mockery, Misunderstanding your intentions, Being excluded or judged, Online negativity or hostility

Doing the right thing—standing for honesty, kindness, integrity—can still attract resistance.

*3) Jesus' Good Work and the Result*

*Jesus' visible good works* : Healing the sick, Restoring dignity to the rejected, Teaching truth, love, and mercy, Bringing hope to ordinary people

*The Unexpected opposition* : Misunderstanding, Accusations, Hatred from some leaders, Ultimately, rejection and crucifixion

So the same good works produced admiration in some and hostility in others.

*4) The Inner Question for Us*

Jesus’ question echoes into our lives: “For which good work are you being opposed?” 

Sometimes, when you’re misunderstood or criticized, it’s worth asking: Am I doing something wrong? Or am I simply doing something right that others resist?

That distinction matters.

*5) How to Respond to “Stones”*

Jesus doesn’t retaliate—He questions, reveals truth, and remains grounded.

In our lives, this can look like: 

Staying calm instead of reacting emotionally
Continuing to do good without needing approval
Letting your actions speak over time
Choosing integrity over popularity

*6) A Paradox to Accept*

There’s a quiet paradox here: The more authentic and good your actions are, the more they may disturb what is false around you.

Not everyone celebrates light—some resist it.

*7) Inspiring Reflections* 

*A) Not all opposition is failure* : Sometimes opposition is the shadow cast by light.

*B) Stay rooted, not reactive* : Jesus didn’t throw stones back—He stayed grounded in purpose.

*C) Let your works speak over time* : People may reject today what they will understand tomorrow.

*D) Don’t stop doing good* : If goodness stops because of criticism, the world loses light.

*E) Transform stones into strength* : What is thrown at you can either: Hurt you, Or shape you. The choice is yours.

Do good anyway. Even if misunderstood. Even if resisted. Even if alone. Because Truth Never Dies 

*Think about it*

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

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

The greatness of Jesus and Abraham

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Lenten Season : Lenten Season :  Fifth Week :  Thursday*

*Gospel :  John 8:51-59*

*First Reading : Gen 17:3-9*

*Responsorial Psalm : 105:4-9*

*The greatness of Jesus and Abraham*

*1) What is the argument about?*

The discussion begins when Jesus says: “Whoever keeps my word will never see death.”

This shocks His listeners, who respond by referring to Abraham: Abraham died. The prophets died. So how can Jesus claim something greater than them?

Their question: “Are you greater than Abraham?”

This is not just curiosity—it’s a challenge to Jesus’ authority and identity.

*2) Key turning point of the argument*

Jesus responds with two shocking claims:

*A) Abraham rejoiced to see Jesus’ day* : This suggests: Abraham had a prophetic vision or anticipation of the Messiah. Jesus is not after Abraham in importance—He is the fulfillment of what Abraham hoped for.

*B) “Before Abraham was, I AM”* : This is the climax. “I AM” echoes the divine name revealed in Book of Exodus 3:14. Jesus is not just saying He existed before Abraham. He is claiming eternal existence and divine identity.

This is why the listeners attempt to stone Him—they understand it as a claim to equality with God.

*3) How is Jesus greater than Abraham?* 

*(a) Abraham is a patriarch; Jesus is the source* : Abraham is the father of a nation. Jesus is presented as the source of eternal life.

*(b) Abraham looked forward; Jesus fulfills* : Abraham lived by promise. Jesus is the fulfillment of that promise.

*(c) Abraham experienced death; Jesus conquers it* : Abraham died physically. Jesus offers life beyond death.

*(d) Abraham is human; Jesus claims divine identity* : Jesus’ “I AM” statement places Him beyond time.

*4) Important points to note*

*A) Misunderstanding of “death”* : The listeners think only of physical death. But Jesus speaks of: spiritual death vs eternal life

*B) Relationship over ancestry* : The Jews rely on: “We are descendants of Abraham.” Jesus emphasizes: 
obedience to God’s word matters more than lineage.

*C) Radical identity claim* : This is one of the clearest moments where Jesus: Claims pre-existence. Claims divine identity

*5)Lessons for our Life*

*A) Faith is not inherited* : Being part of a tradition is not enough. True faith = hearing and keeping the word.

*B) Eternal life begins now* : “Will never see death” points to: a present relationship with God, not just future hope.

*C) Jesus stands at the center of history* : Abraham points forward. Jesus is the turning point.

*D) Truth can be uncomfortable* : The reaction of the crowd shows: People resist truths that challenge their assumptions.

*Think about it*

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

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

Why God Chose Mary and not Others

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Lenten Season : Lenten Season :  Fifth Week :  Wednesday*

*Solemnity of the Annunciation of the Lord*

*Gospel :  Luke 1:26-38*

*First Reading : Is 7: 10-14; 8:10*

*Responsorial Psalm : 40: 7-11*

*Second Reading : Hebrews 10:4-10*

*Why God Chose Mary and not Others*

*1) Not Random Choice, but Prepared Grace*

God does not choose arbitrarily. His choice of Mary is both gift and preparation.

The angel greets her: “Hail, full of grace.” Mary is not simply good—she is graced in a unique way.

The Church understands this through the mystery of the Immaculate Conception: She is completely open to God. Not hindered by sin. Interiorly free to respond fully

God chooses a heart that is already capable of total welcome.

*2) Her Uniqueness: Interior Availability*

Many people in Israel were holy. Many prayed. Many waited for the Messiah.

But Mary stands apart in one essential way: She is completely available to God.

She does not say: “Let me think about my plans first” “What will people say?” “How will this affect my future?”

Instead, she says: “Let it be done to me according to your word.”

Her uniqueness is not status—but surrender.

*3) The Courage to Trust the Impossible*

Mary’s situation is humanly impossible: She is a virgin. She faces misunderstanding, even rejection. Her future becomes uncertain

Yet she trusts. This echoes the faith of Abraham, who believed against hope.

Mary’s greatness is not that she understood everything, but that she trusted beyond understanding.

*4) God Chooses the Humble, Not the Powerful* 

God did not choose: a queen, a scholar, a person of influence

He chose a young woman from Nazareth—a place of no importance.

This reveals a pattern in God’s way of acting:  God looks not at power, but at openness.

As St. Augustine would echo: God is close to the humble because they make space for Him.

*5) Three Ways to Imitate Mary* 

*A) Be attentive* : Mary listens before she responds.
*B) Be trusting* : She accepts what she cannot fully understand.

*C) Be available* : She allows God to disrupt her plans.

*6) Closing Thought* 

“God did not choose Mary because she had everything. He chose her because she held nothing back.

And even today, God is still searching— not for perfection, but for a heart that says, ‘Let it be done.’”

*Think about it*

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

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

I have much to Say about you and much to Judge

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Lenten Season : Lenten Season :  Fifth Week :  Tuesday*

*Gospel :  John 8:21-30*

*First Reading : Numbers 21:4-9*

*Responsorial Psalm : 102:2-19*

*I have much to Say about you and much to Judge*

*1) About whom is Jesus speaking?*

In this passage, Jesus is speaking primarily to: The Pharisees and religious leaders. The broader group of people questioning Him

These were people who: Thought they understood God. Yet rejected Jesus and misunderstood His identity

So, His words are directed at: People who are religious outwardly but resistant inwardly to truth

*2) What are the “many things” He has to say?* 

Jesus is pointing to truths about them such as:

*A) Their spiritual blindness* : They believed they saw clearly, but they didn’t recognize who He was.

*B) Their misplaced confidence* : They relied on tradition, status, and identity rather than truth.

*C) Their misunderstanding of God* : They claimed to know God, yet rejected the One sent by God.

*D) Their need for transformation* : He wanted to call them beyond external religion into real relationship.

So, “much to say” = Truths about their inner condition, not just their outward behavior.

*3) What are the “things to judge”?*

“Judge” here doesn’t mean harsh condemnation alone. It means: 

*A) Exposing what is false* : Hypocrisy, Pride, Unbelief, 

*B) Revealing truth* : Judgment = bringing things into the light: Who truly belongs to God. Who is living in truth vs illusion

*C) Calling for accountability* : They are responsible for rejecting truth when it is revealed. So His judgment is: Not just punishment, but truth revealing reality

*4) Why does He restrain Himself?* 

He says He has much to say and judge, but doesn’t say everything immediately.
Because, His mission is first to reveal truth, not to condemn. He speaks what He hears from the Father.

Because People are not ready. Like earlier passages, they cannot fully understand yet.

Because Judgment will unfold over time : Through: His crucifixion and Their response to Him

*5) How is this applicable to our life?* 

*A) It challenges self-deception* : We may think: “I’m right” “I understand truth”. 

But this passage asks: Are we open to being corrected?

*B) It warns against superficial religion* : Outward practices don’t guarantee: Inner transformation and True understanding

*C) It calls for honesty* : Jesus “judges” by revealing truth: About our motives, Our pride, Our resistance

*D) It invites humility* Instead of defending ourselves: Be willing to listen. Be willing to change

*6) Significance in the present world* 

*A) In a world of strong opinions* : Everyone thinks they are right. But Jesus reminds us: Being confident is not the same as being correct.

*B) In a culture of quick judgment* : People judge instantly (especially online). But Jesus shows: True judgment is grounded in truth, not emotion

*C) In spiritual confusion* : Many claim truth, but: Not all truth is real. This passage asks: Are we aligned with truth—or just our version of it?

*Think about it*

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

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

The Contrast of Two Standards - Stones and Mercy

GOSPEL THOUGHTS

*Lenten Season : Lenten Season :  Fifth Week : Monday*

*Gospel :  John 8:1-11*

*First Reading : Daniel 13: 1-62*

*Responsorial Psalm : 23: 1-6*

*The Contrast of Two Standards - Stones and Mercy*

*1) The Contrast of Two Standards*

*A) The Standard of Stones (Pharisees)*

The Pharisees stand on the authority of the Torah.

Their mindset: “The law is clear—she must be punished.” “Justice must be visible and immediate.” “We are right; she is wrong.”

But beneath that: No self-examination, No compassion. A hidden agenda (to trap Jesus)

*Stones represent* : Final judgment, Moral superiority, Religion without relationship, Truth used as a weapon

They reduce a human being to a case, a crime, a spectacle.

*B) The Standard of Mercy (Jesus)* 

Jesus does not reject the law—but He fulfills it differently.

He responds: “Let anyone among you who is without sin be the first to throw a stone.”

And later: “Neither do I condemn you… go, and sin no more.”

*Mercy represents* : Truth + grace together. Inner transformation over outward punishment. Seeing the person beyond the sin. Justice tempered with humility

Jesus upholds righteousness—but refuses to dehumanize.

*2) What Is the Significance?* 

*A) It Exposes False Righteousness* 

The Pharisees appear righteous, but Jesus reveals: Their righteousness is external. Their hearts are unexamined

The story shifts the question from: “Is she guilty?” → to → “Who among us is truly innocent?”

*B) It Redefines Justice* 

The law demanded accountability. Jesus doesn’t deny that.

But He shows: Justice without mercy becomes violence. Mercy without truth becomes cheap grace. True justice must pass through humility

*C) It Reveals the Heart of God* 

God is not eager to condemn—but to restore.

God is not eager to : “Ignore sin” - But: “Transform the sinner”

This is the heart of what Christian grace means: Unmerited love that leads to changed living.

*3) A Mirror for Us* 

This story isn’t just about “them”—it’s about us. We tend to move between both roles: Sometimes we are the Pharisees (quick to judge, slow to understand). Sometimes we are the woman (ashamed, exposed, needing mercy)

Jesus meets us in both places: He humbles the proud. He restores the broken

*4) Creative Reflections* 

*A) The Weight of a Stone* 

Imagine holding a stone in your hand. It feels solid,  Justified, Deserved

But Jesus asks you to examine your own life… Suddenly, the stone feels heavier.

The more honest you are about yourself, the harder it becomes to condemn others.

*B) Jesus Writing on the Ground* 

Jesus bends down and writes—mysteriously. No one knows what He wrote.

Possibilities: The sins of the accusers, Words of the law, Nothing at all—just silence

Sometimes, God responds to accusation not with argument… but with quiet conviction

*C) The Sound of Dropping Stones* 

One by one—thud… thud… thud. The stones fall. The oldest leave first.

Why? Because time teaches: We are all flawed. We all need mercy

Spiritual maturity is not becoming stricter—it’s becoming more compassionate

*D) The Space After Judgment* 

The crowd disappears. Only Jesus and the woman remain.

This is the turning point: No audience. No shame performance. Just truth and mercy

Real change doesn’t happen in public humiliation… but in private encounter

*E) Mercy That Challenges* 

Jesus doesn’t say: “Do whatever you want.”

He says: “Go and sin no more.”

Mercy is not permission—it’s power to change

When you are tempted to judge → remember the stones
When you feel unworthy → remember the mercy

*Think about it*

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

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

Palm Sunday and the Donkey

Holy Week :  Palm Sunday *Gospel :  Mt 26: 14-27:66* *First Reading : Is 50: 4-7* *Responsorial Psalm : 22:8-24* *Second Reading : Phil 2:6-...