Sermon for Cycle A – 24th Sunday Sermon: Experiencing Forgiveness

006-unforgiving-servant
The need to experience forgiveness (Mt 18:21-35)
24th Sunday in Ordinary Time – Cycle A
When people (especially the young) ask me, why we Catholics have to go to a priest for confession, and why can’t we confess our sins directly to God, I try to offer them several reasons as to why I myself go for confession. One of the more meaningful answers that I give is: I want to hear through a human voice that God has forgiven me.  This reason is consistent with the theology of sacraments – visible signs of internal grace.
When  I was making the 30-day Ignatian Spiritual Exercises, one of the high points during that retreat was the celebration of the sacrament of reconciliation.  After the first eight days of silence and prayer, memories of hurt and guilt […]

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Sermon for 23rd Sunday in Ordinary Time – Year A Homily

0_AA2011_040_23Dom_Comum_040911The Christian in Dialogue (Mt 18:15-20)
 Faced with an enemy or an unjust aggressor, an animal has basically three possible responses (3 F’s): Flight, Fight and Freeze. Faced with an unpleasant situation we humans too have the these options. What do you do when we come across situations we don’t like in the street, or even in our parish community?  But we humans have a fourth option: dialogue.  We can use our gift of reason to appeal to others’ reason. We can appeal to the goodness of the heart of others. This presupposes a basic trust in the goodness of human nature itself, namely, that others are capable of reasoning and feeling just as I do.
In the gospel passage, Jesus tells us how we could be dealing with unchristian attitude and behaviour in our communities.  It is interesting to note that, in the text of […]

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Sermon for 22nd Sunday in Ordinary Time – Year A Homily

b21af1bd614bdb7f62f91f98ca2b2296If you want to be a follower of mine…
An online dictionary offers four possible meanings for the word ‘devotion’. I would reduce the four definitions to two:
(a) earnest attachment to a cause, person, etc.
(b) a form of prayer or worship for special use.
My reflection this morning is on the significance of these two points for our Christian life journey – being disciples of Jesus wholly ‘devoted’ to him,  and living the Christian spirituality in our daily lives.  In classical Christian literature, the word ‘devotion’ is often used in place of the more contemporary word ‘spirituality’. For instance, the classical work of St Francis de Sales is entitled, Introduction to the Devout Life. By ‘devout life’ he simply means spirituality and fulfilling the universal call to holiness.  In short, my reflection is about spirituality – based on the Liturgy of the Word on this 22nd Sunday in ordinary time.  What is spirituality?
Spirituality is letting ourselves be […]

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Sermon for Cycle A – 21st Sunday Homily: Who is Jesus?

Jesus - who do u say i amBut you, who do you say I am? (Mt 16:13-20)
21 Sunday – Year A
 In my mother tongue, Tamil, while speaking about great people, speakers and writers often refer to: “the Buddha, Jesus and Gandhi”. These three persons are mentioned as a matter of fact in the same breath.  We Christians may feel proud that even non-Christians refer to Jesus as a great man.  Looking at it at a deeper level, this expression may not reflect the authentic experience of Jesus.
Who then is Jesus for you?  Is he merely a great man?  The gospel text of today once again invites us to reflect on this question.
This event – of Jesus asking his disciples – “Who do people say the Son of man is?” and “But you, who […]

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Sermon for 20th Sunday in Ordinary Time – Year A Homily

Canaanite

Jesus insults a Canaanite Woman (Mt 15:21-28)
Thanks to our easy means of communication and fast means of travel today, many of us enjoy the privilege of constantly coming in contact with people and places that are new to us, that are strange to us, that are different from our own.  The Word of God today invites us to examine our attitude towards ‘strangers’ in the light of Jesus’ own mission to the nations. Do we still look at others in terms of in-group and out-group categories?
Jesus, being a man of his culture, also had to refine his own attitude towards the “out-group”.  And this ability of Jesus to learn even from a woman of the “out-group”, and his openness to discern the will of His Father through this woman, would determine the future […]

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