2nd Sunday of Lent (A)

 Gen 12: 1-4; Tim 1: 8-10; Mt 17: 1-9 

There is an ancient story told about a young apprentice who worked in the workshop of a master sculptor. Day after day the boy watched the master strike a rough block of stone, chipping away patiently. One day the apprentice asked, “Master, how do you know what is inside this stone?” The sculptor smiled and replied, “I do not put anything into the stone. I simply remove what does not belong there, until the hidden beauty is revealed.” Years later, when that apprentice became a sculptor himself, he realized that the greatest transformations do not come from adding something new, but from revealing what was already present, hidden beneath layers of dust, fear, and misunderstanding. This simple story opens a doorway into the mystery of the Transfiguration, where Jesus does not become someone else on the mountain, but reveals who he truly is, and in doing so, begins to reveal who we are meant to become.

Jesus takes Peter, James, and John up a high mountain, away from the noise, the crowds, and the constant demands of daily ministry. Mountains in the Bible are not merely geographical features; they are sacred meeting places between heaven and earth.

1st Sunday of Lent (A)

 Gen. 2:7-9; 16-18, 25, 3:1-7; Rom. 5:12-19; Mt. 4:1-11

The Gospel places before us one of the most profound and revealing moments in the life of Jesus: his forty days in the wilderness, led not by accident but by the Spirit, into a place of hunger, silence, struggle, and decision. Before Jesus heals the sick, proclaims the kingdom, or confronts injustice, he first enters the desert. The desert in the Bible is never just a geographical place; it is the space where illusions are stripped away, where a person confronts God, self, and the powers that seek to divert the heart. Israel passed through the desert for forty years, learning painfully what it meant to trust God. Moses fasted forty days on Sinai before receiving the law. Elijah walked forty days to Horeb before encountering God in the still small voice. Now Jesus fasts forty days, reliving the story of Israel and of humanity itself, but this time with a decisive difference: where others faltered, he remains faithful.

The first temptation comes at the most vulnerable moment: “He was famished.” Hunger is real. Jesus does not pretend otherwise. The devil’s suggestion is subtle and seemingly reasonable: “If you are the Son of God, command these stones to

Ash Wednesday (A)

Joel 2:12-18; 2 Cor 5:20-6:2; Mt 6:1-6, 16-18

On a cold winter morning, a young executive stood in front of the mirror adjusting his expensive suit. His calendar was full, his phone constantly buzzing, his life seemingly successful. That same evening, he received a call that his father had suddenly passed away. Standing at the cremation ground, watching ashes return to ashes, he whispered through tears, “All this running… for what?” That moment shattered his illusion of control and permanence. Ash Wednesday begins exactly there—at that honest moment when human pride collapses and truth stands bare before us.

Ash Wednesday confronts us with a reality we often avoid: “Remember that you are dust, and to dust you shall return.” These words are not meant to frighten us but to free us. In the Bible, ashes symbolize humility, repentance, and dependence on God. When Jonah preached