14 Sunday in Ordinary Time (A)

 Zech. 9:9-10; Rom: 8:9, 11-13; Mt. 11:25-30

A touching way to enter today's Gospel is through a scene from Victor Hugo's masterpiece, Les Misérables. After spending nineteen years in prison, Jean Valjean leaves with a heart filled with bitterness. Society rejects him everywhere he goes. No inn welcomes him, no family trusts him, and every door seems closed. Finally, an elderly bishop opens his home to the weary stranger. During the night, Valjean steals the bishop's silver and runs away. When the police capture him and bring him back, expecting the bishop to condemn him, the bishop astonishes everyone. Instead of accusing him, he says, "My friend, you forgot the silver candlesticks also." The police release Valjean. The bishop then tells him that with this gift he has bought his soul for God. That act of mercy breaks the chains that prison never could. Valjean walks away carrying the same body, the same past, and the same scars, but no longer carrying the crushing burden of hopelessness. Compassion gave him rest before his circumstances ever changed.

The words of Jesus in today's Gospel speak directly to every weary heart: "Come to me, all you that are weary and are carrying heavy burdens, and I will give you rest." There is perhaps no invitation in the Gospel more tender than this. Jesus does not first  

13th Sunday in Ordinary Time (A)

 2 Kgs. 4:8-12a, 14-16; Rom. 6:3-4, 8-11; Mt. 10:37-42

Many years ago, during the Second World War, a remarkable incident took place in a small French village called Le Chambon-sur-Lignon. The village was led not by soldiers or politicians but by an ordinary Protestant pastor, André Trocmé. When the Nazi government ordered the villagers to hand over the Jews hiding among them, Pastor Trocmé gathered his people and said, "These people have come here seeking refuge. We do not know what a Jew is. We know only human beings." The villagers risked everything. They hid thousands of Jewish children and families in their homes, barns, schools, and churches. They knew that if they were caught, they could lose their property, their freedom, or even their lives. Yet they continued. After the war, historians estimated that nearly five thousand lives had been saved because an entire community chose to lose its security in order to preserve the lives of strangers.

Years later, when one of the villagers was asked why they had taken such a terrible risk, she gave a simple answer: "What else could we do? If someone knocks on your door in need, you open it."

12th Sunday in Ordinary Time (A)

Jer. 20:7, 10-13; Rom. 5:12-15; Mt. 10:26-33

A young prince once asked an old wise man, “What is the greatest prison in the world?” The old man smiled and handed him a copy of John Bunyan’s The Pilgrim’s Progress. As the prince read, he came across the journey of Christian, the pilgrim, who left the City of Destruction in search of the Celestial City. Along the way, Christian was mocked, threatened, imprisoned, and tempted to abandon his journey. At one point he was locked inside the terrible Doubting Castle by Giant Despair. The giant constantly whispered to him, “Give up. There is no hope. No one will rescue you.” Christian almost believed the lie. But one night he remembered that he carried in his pocket a small key called Promise. With that key he unlocked every door of the prison and walked out into freedom.

John Bunyan himself wrote this masterpiece while imprisoned for preaching the Gospel. The authorities could imprison his body, but they could not imprison his faith. They could chain his hands, but not his hope. They could silence his voice in the marketplace, but not the truth that echoed through generations. Bunyan teaches us a lesson that perfectly introduces today's Gospel. Fear is the greatest prison. It is fear that keeps us silent when we should speak, inactive when we should act, and

11th Sunday in Ordinary Time (A)

 Exo. 19:1-6; Rom. 5:6-11; Mt. 9:36-10:8

The Gospel today begins with one of the most moving sentences in the whole Bible: “When Jesus saw the crowds, he had compassion for them, because they were harassed and helpless, like sheep without a shepherd.” Before Jesus sends the disciples, before He gives them authority, before He asks them to preach, He first looks at people with compassion. Mission begins not in power but in compassion. The heart of the Christian mission is not to conquer, control, or dominate; it is to see the suffering of humanity through the eyes of Christ and respond with love.

Many years ago, a young woman named Priti Sinha was waiting at a railway station in India. As she stood on the platform, she noticed a little girl scavenging for food among piles of garbage. Hundreds of passengers passed by. They saw the child, but they

The Most Holy Body and Blood of Christ (A)

 Deut. 8:2-3, 14-16; 1 Cor. 10:16-17; Jn. 6:51-59

There is an old saying that all of us have heard: "You become what you eat." Nutritionists remind us that the food we consume eventually becomes part of us. Good food strengthens the body; unhealthy food weakens it. What enters us shapes us.

A story is told about a young boy who dreamed of becoming a champion athlete. He greatly admired a famous runner and one day asked him, "What is the secret of your success?" The athlete smiled and replied, "Before I eat anything, I ask myself one question: Will this food help me become the person I want to be?" The boy never forgot that advice. Years later he became a champion himself. He learned that what we take into ourselves eventually influences what we become.

That simple truth helps us understand the mystery we celebrate today. Jesus says in the Gospel: "I am the living bread that came down from heaven. Whoever eats this bread will live forever." The people listening to Him were shocked. They asked, "How