REFLECTIONS TODAY Our readings today contain two stories on envy and greed. In the First Reading, the 11 brothers were envious of Joseph being their father’s favorite and so threw him in a cistern and then sold him to the Midianite traders. This caused their father Jacob so much...
REFLECTIONS TODAY That which separates poor Lazarus from the rich man is not so much the door of the latter’s grand house but his indifference to and low regard of the beggar. He sees himself as master who looks at people to do his bidding. Even in the afterlife where he finds himself in...
REFLECTIONS TODAY Joseph is described as a righteous man. His righteousness is not manifested by his strict adherence to the Law of Moses that would make him expose Mary’s pregnancy. Instead, he exercises understanding and mercy despite of a mixture of anger, confusion, and sadness at what...
REFLECTIONS TODAY Chapter 23 of Matthew contains Jesus’ denunciation of the scribes and the Pharisees which reflects Jesus’ conflicts with the Jewish leaders in his time and the tenuous relationship of the Matthean community with the Jews who did not believe in Jesus. The scribes and the...
REFLECTIONS TODAY Our First Reading is an admittance of sins committed by the whole community of Israel. Daniel makes his confession in the name of the people. The essence of this prayer is summed up in the Responsorial Psalm: “Lord, do not deal with us according to our sins.” The things...
REFLECTIONS TODAY First Reading • Gn 15:5-12, 17-18 The Lord God took Abram outside and said, “Look up at the sky and count the stars, if you can. Just so,” he added, “shall your descendants be.” Abram put his faith in the Lord, who credited it to him as an act of...
REFLECTIONS TODAY At the time of Jesus, the Jews saw the Gentiles as enemies and thus should be shunned and avoided. In the Gospel. Jesus speaks to the Jews who often misinterpreted God’s Law, “You shall love your neighbor as yourself” (Lv 19:18). They meant it to say, “Love your neighbor...
REFLECTIONS TODAY “Do I indeed derive any pleasure from the death of the wicked? says the Lord God? Do I not rather rejoice when he turns from his evil way that he may live?” (v 23, First Reading). God’s mercy never ceases. He is a father who forgives our sins if we are willing to...
REFLECTIONS TODAY Queen Esther’s plea in the First Reading was not for her sake but for the Jews who were in danger of being wiped out because of the evil designs of their mortal enemy Haman. Despite her fear and the near-impossibility of her request being granted, God disposed King Ahasuerus’...
REFLECTIONS TODAY In the First Reading, Nineveh is described as an “awesomely great city” (v 3) not just for its enormous size and power, but for its enormous sins. The Assyrians had destroyed the northern kingdom of Israel (Samaria) and driven the people into exile. No wonder, Jonah...
REFLECTIONS TODAY In telling us to call God “Abba,” the commonly used Jewish word for “father” or “Dad,” Jesus designates us as God’s children. And as we are his children, Jesus is our brother. The risen Jesus tells Mary Magdalene, “I am going to my Father and your...
REFLECTIONS TODAY The parable of the Last Judgment or the Judgment of the Nations tells us how we shall be judged personally once we pass on from this life or in the universal judgment at the glorious coming of our Lord Jesus Christ. The criterion of judgment is not how we have attended to...