Thursday, June 25, 2015

MAN IS A SOCIAL BEING

Genesis 17:1, 9-10, 15-22
Psalm 128:1-2, 3, 4-5
Matthew 8:1-4

Man is a social being.
We all need others in our journey of life, including our spiritual life. Many songs, poems and stories have been written to highlight that fact.

There can be times in a person's life when they equate their spirituality solely on their individual relationship with God. They can take on the perspective that it is all about "God and me." One might call it a vertical concept of religion.

The gospel for today 
(Matthew 8:1-4), relates the miracle of Jesus cleansing the leper. It is of interest that after the healing, Jesus told the man to "show thyself to the priest and offer the gift which Moses commanded as a testimony." Jesus assumes that the priests will restore the man into the religious community.

Let this reading serve as a reminder to us that our spiritual lives have both a "vertical" and a "horizontal" perspective, namely that we need the community, and that both are intertwined.


Wednesday, June 24, 2015

ST. THOMAS APOSTLE OF INDIA

SOLEMNITY OF ST. THOMAS, APOSTLE OF INDIA
Introduction:          Tradition tells us that Thomas, one of the twelve apostles of Jesus, after evangelising other parts of the East, finally came to India. He evangelised many parts of this country, especially the South and at the end received the martyr’s crown at Mylapore. We thank God for giving Thomas as our apostle, and pray for our country in a special way. We shall pray that our nation, known for its relentless search for God from time immemorial, may come to recognise and accept Jesus Christ as their Saviour.
The Homily:           Today is the Solemnity of St. Thomas, Apostle of India. ‘Solemnity’ is a big word, usually reserved for the Feasts of the Lord, not the feats of the Saints. So how did Thomas sneak into this honour reserved for the Lord? Can any canonised do-gooder be foisted on to the Lord’s domain? Well, if you look more closely you’ll understand that there wouldn’t be a Thomas unless there was a Jesus. Were it not for Jesus, Thomas would have lived and died in Palestine and no one would have coined the expression “doubting Thomas.”
It is in St. John’s Gospel that Thomas emerges as a personality. There are three scenes in John’s Gospel where we meet with Thomas the apostle.

Scene one:             Jesus is at work across the Jordan away from Jerusalem. Martha sends word that Lazarus, her brother and Jesus’ friend is ill. Two days after receiving the news, Jesus decides to go to Lazarus, who by then is dead. The disciples are jittery about going to Jerusalem where hatred and enmity towards Jesus has been growing; they’d rather not take the risk. But Thomas speaks up: “let us go that we may die with him.” To share fully in the life and perils of Christ: that is what Thomas is ready to embrace.
Scene two:   the discourse after the last supper. Jesus has been telling the apostles about his departure from this world, about his return to the Father, to prepare a place for them. This sort of talk went above their heads; so Thomas, speaking on their behalf, asks: “Lord, we do not know where you are going, so how can we know the way?”  Jesus gives the never-before-heard reply: “I am the Way, I am the Truth and I am the Life.” We owe to Thomas this mysterious but beautiful revelation of who Jesus is. Through Jesus Christ the Father takes possession of us. Thomas’ question not merely manifests his ignorance, but also his searching and probing mind, his desire for clarity and comprehension.
Scene three is the Gospel reading we have just heard today. It gives us a glimpse of two sides of Thomas. First, the unbelieving Thomas will submit only after some physical assessment of the body of Jesus. (Could our friend have been an MBBS?) Jesus takes on Tom on the latter’s terms and invites him to do the physical. Which brings us to the other side: Thomas the unbeliever is demolished and in his place Thomas the humble proclaimer: “My Lord and my God!” This is the most beautiful confession of faith ever recorded in human literature. Jesus our dear Lord replies with that last and most reassuring beatitude: “Blessed are they who have not seen and yet believe.”
In all these three scenes Thomas is presented as a man of loyalty and courage. He is ready to share the lot of Christ. Yet, like the other apostles, he lacks understanding. Not one of them really understood Jesus. His whole person, his words and deeds are from and to the Father. So when Jesus speaks of his departure to the Father, they are nonplussed. Thomas has the courage to confess his ignorance and ask for clarification. When he’s in doubt, he says so; he can show himself different from the others. He even puts conditions to Christ. And when the light of truth shines on him he is humble and receptive. We often speak of the doubting Thomas; but we oughtn’t to forget the loyal and courageous Thomas; the questioning and searching Thomas; the open, humble and adoring Thomas. And is there anything to stop us internalising these qualities for ourselves and our countrymen?
          So with St. Thomas, let us today affirm our loyalty to Jesus Christ and say: “Let us go with him in order that we may die with him, cost what it may,” knowing that Jesus goes ahead of us, making it easier for us to follow, since we also affirm our total and profound faith in Jesus Christ “Our Lord and our God.” Then in the stillness of our hearts we shall hear him saying: “Blessed are you since you have believed without seeing with the eyes of the flesh; blessed are you for accepting me the Way, the Truth and the Life. And go tell everyone that I am the Way for all people to follow in order that they come to the Truth and have Life to the full.”

  Prayer: (Erasmus [1466-1536]): Lord Jesus Christ, you said that you are the Way, the Truth, and the Life. Let us never stray from you, who are the Way; nor distrust you who are the Truth; nor rest in any other but you who are the Life, beyond whom there is nothing to be desired, either in heaven or on earth. We ask this for your name’s sake.

Tuesday, June 23, 2015

WOMAN WITH HAEMORRHAGE


The Woman with the Haemorrhage

If I touch even his garments, I shall be made well. - Mark 5:28
She touched the hem of his garment, she approached him in a spirit of faith, she believed, and she realized that she was cured. . . . So we too, if we wish to be saved, should reach out in faith to touch the garment of Christ. 
- Ambrose of Milan,
Exposition Evangelii sec.
Lucam, VI, 56, 58
Reflecting on the Word
Imagine how discouraged this woman must have felt! For twelve years she had futilely sought a cure for her bleeding disorder, only to be disappointed time and time again (Mark 5:25). She had spent all her money on doctor after doctor, but had only gotten worse (5:26). Yet what tremendous faith she exhibited when she reached out to Jesus in her distress!
Jesus’ healing of the woman with the hemorrhage is one of many instances in which he showed concern for women. In fact, Matthew, Mark, and Luke all relate that this encounter occurred while Jesus was on his way to help Jairus’ daughter, whom he raised from the dead (Matthew 9:18-25; Mark 5:21-43; Luke 8:40-56). He also healed Peter’s mother-in-law of a fever (Mark 1:29-31), showed his compassion for the widow of Nain by restoring her only son to life (Luke 7:11-18), and straightened the bent back of a woman who had suffered from her deformity for eighteen years (13:10-17). He treated the woman caught in adultery with mercy and kindness as he encouraged her to sin no more (John 8:1-11), freed Mary Magdalene from the demonic influences that plagued her (Luke 8:2), and enjoyed deep friendship with Martha and her sister Mary (10:38-42; John 11:1-3; 12:1-3). Women were among Jesus’ most dedicated followers (Luke 8:2-3; Matthew 27:55-56), and it was to them that he first showed himself after the resurrection (Matthew 28:1-10; Mark 16:1-10; Luke 24:1-11; John 20:11-18).
Scripture commentators describe this woman’s physical ailment in various ways.  Whatever its cause, the disorder was chronic—and surely quite unpleasant. Besides the pain and inconvenience the woman suffered from such steady bleeding, she probably experienced weakness, weight loss, and anemia.  No medical treatment relieved her symptoms or cured her.
Much more than this woman’s physical well-being was affected by her condition. According to Mosaic law, a woman was considered “unclean” each month for seven days during the “regular discharge from her body” (Leviticus 15:19). The purpose of this law was not to demean or disparage women; rather, it reflected the high regard the Israelites had for the sacredness of life, and for a woman’s contact with that sacredness in reproduction. But the nature of the ailment of the woman in this gospel scene—a continuous flow of blood—would have rendered her constantly unclean nonetheless: 
If a woman has a discharge of blood for many days, not at the time of her impurity, or if she has a discharge beyond the time of her impurity, all the days of the discharge she shall continue in uncleanness; as in the days of her impurity, she shall be unclean. Every bed on which she lies, all the days of her discharge, shall be to her as the bed of her impurity; and everything on which she sits shall be unclean, as in the uncleanness of her impurity. And whoever touches these things shall be unclean, and shall wash his clothes, and bathe himself in water, and be unclean until the evening. (Leviticus 15:25-27)
If this woman was relatively young, it’s quite likely that her condition would have made marriage and childbearing impossible. If she was already married and had borne children before the onset of her disorder, its chronic nature would have severely restricted her contact with her husband and family and curtailed her activities. Regardless of her age or marital status, her continual “uncleanness” would have cut her off from her friends, since any contact with her would have made them ritually unclean, too. Moreover, she was isolated from participation in the public worship of God.
This woman “had heard the reports about Jesus” (Mark 5:27). Encouraged by stories of how he had healed so many people of diseases and physical impairments, she dared to hope the same for herself. Her belief in Jesus’ power made her bold—she was determined to reach out to him for help. But because she was legally unclean and embarrassed by her illness, she wanted to slip through the crowd and touch his robe without attracting any attention. Just coming in contact with the fringe or hem of Jesus’ garment—a detail Matthew and Luke tell us (Matthew 9:20; Luke 8:44)— would be enough to heal her, she reasoned with amazing faith.
Later in Mark’s Gospel, we read that “wherever Jesus came, in villages, cities, or country, they laid the sick in the market places, and besought him that they might touch even the fringe of his garment; and as many as touched it were made well” (Mark 6:56; see also Matthew 14:35-36). It is likely that Jesus, a pious Jew, wore tassels called tzitzi attached to the corners of his robe or cloak, as enjoined by the law: “The LORD said to Moses: ‘. . . Bid [the people of Israel] to make tassels on the corners of their garments throughout the generations, and to put upon the tassel of each corner a cord of blue; and it shall be to you a tassel to look upon and remember all the commandments of the LORD’” (Numbers 15:37-39; see also Deuteronomy 22:12). Consequently, the popular belief that such tassels had the power to heal or bring good fortune, especially when worn by holy men, may have influenced this woman’s thinking.
The woman’s hemorrhage ceased when she touched Jesus’ clothing, and she immediately felt that she had been healed (Mark 5:29). She had come up behind Jesus, unseen by him as she stretched her hand out to his robe (5:27). Now her hope had been fulfilled—after so many years of suffering, she was well, her body healthy and free of pain! But when she tried to disappear into the noisy throng unnoticed, Jesus gave her away. 
Jesus was certain that he had not simply been jostled accidentally in the press of the crowd. He’d been touched purposefully by a hand reaching out in eager faith, and he felt energy go out from him (Mark 5:30). When Jesus asked “Who touched me?” (5:31), he wanted to know who had drawn upon his power with such firm confidence in him. 
The woman must have trembled, ashamed to admit that in her uncleanness she had dared to touch the teacher. Yet she was sure of his mercy, for had he not just granted her healing? So falling at his feet, she told “the whole truth” (Mark 5:33). Her story, so long one of repeated disappointments, had culminated in joy and gratitude. She “declared in the presence of all the people why she had touched him, and how she had been immediately healed” (Luke 8:47). In reply, Jesus commended and affirmed her: “Daughter, your faith has made you well; go in peace, and be healed of your disease” (Mark 5:34).
In summing up the significance of this woman’s encounter with Jesus, biblical scholar George Montague, S.M., noted that the account has much to teach us:
 First, healing is a personal encounter with Jesus. It is not a magical or mechanical event, though physical touch may be involved. The healed person must meet Jesus, even if the meeting takes place after the healing. Second, a public confession of Jesus is part of the healing process. Others may thus come to faith through this woman’s witness. Finally, even though the physical event of her healing has taken place already, Jesus’ word of healing completes the action. He further personalizes it, and teaches that her touch would have been meaningless without faith. (Mark: Good News for Hard Times)
Not only did Jesus restore this woman’s health, he also restored her place in society. When Jesus called the woman forth from the crowd to publicly acknowledge her healing, he established her as clean in the eyes of all. By Jesus’ gracious affirmation of her, she was given full and abundant life.



Scri

Who was the woman in today's gospel, the woman with the haemorrhages?

Matthew does not tell us her name. Rather, he identifies her by her sickness, which was serious. What was it like for that woman, enduring bleeding for twelve long years?

Certainly, she had tried many remedies, yet still, there she was, bleeding again, probably anemic, "unclean" according to Jewish law. That day she may have been hot, dusty, and miserable, but still, she didn't give up.

Let's picture her now, quietly jostling her way through a noisy, rowdy crowd. She's planning to reach out, simply to touch Jesus' garment. That contact alone, she believes, can cure her. One simple touch will remedy what 12 years of doctors and medicine could not. No, we don't know her name, but she certainly has faith in Jesus' power. And she is not disappointed!

This nameless little woman elbows her way past one more big, sweaty man, and yes! Finally! She's close enough now! She reaches out - way out - and the tip of her finger barely brushes ever so lightly over the tassel of His cloak. And she is instantly cured! She is sure of it - and so is Jesus!

At that moment, He turns around, and - oh no! He's seeking her out!

She freezes in fear! She's mortified! So embarrassed that she wishes she could disappear right into the dust beneath her feet. She hadn't planned anything more than to touch Him; that was all! She hadn't planned to confront Him, hadn't wanted any personal contact. Perhaps this nameless woman is shy by nature; perhaps she never calls attention to herself. She doesn't want attention now, certainly not here in this huge, boisterous crowd. Everyone will see!

But Jesus wants to see her, to look into her eyes, face to face. Reassure her that all is well, that she will never suffer from this malady again. And she needn't be embarrassed at all. He wants her to know that it was His power that cured her, of course, but the reason for it was because of her faith. Her complete, blind trust in Him.

So here He is, this Jewish healer, this miracle man that everyone's talking about. Right in front of her! How frightened she is to confront Him!

But wait - suddenly she knows there's nothing to fear. No. Because He looks at her with a deep kindness like she's never known. His eyes are full of mercy and love. And recognition too, as if He's known her forever. As if He's waited for all eternity, just to arrive at this moment. Here, now, with her. As if they are the only two people on the planet - right in the middle of this crazy, rowdy crowd. And with a beautiful smile, He looks at her and says the words she will never forget:

"Courage, daughter! Your faith has saved you."

And with that simple sentence, she is a changed woman. Not just her body, but her whole being. Her soul is filled with light, and flooded with peace, just looking at His face, His smile, and hearing His words.

And now, perhaps, we finally know her name. 
Perhaps . . . her name is . . . Faith.

O Lord Jesus, 
give me the strong faith of the woman in today's gospel.
Let me never give up,
and please give me the faith to trust You for my healing,
in every respect.
Amen
.




Wednesday, June 17, 2015

ANAWIM YAHWEH

ANAWIM YAHWEH
Usually this expression is mistranslated as “the poor of Yahweh.” It is not primarily a question of material poverty, for by itself poverty has never sanctified anybody. Extreme cases of poverty and destitution are found in city slums, and usually slums breed criminals, not saints. Nor is it merely spiritual poverty in the sense of inner detachment in the midst of abundance. The spirituality of the “anawim”, reflecting the mentality of Jesus, is characterised mainly by dependence and openness with regard to God. The “anawim” are simple and sincere, they spontaneously cling to God, they are empty of self. Their ego is nowhere visible. With childlike simplicity they have recourse to God in all their needs, material and spiritual. For them, God has become their own dear “Abba”, a living and loving person, almost a member of their own family. They speak to him, they beg him, they entreat him, they just feel at home with him. Reverential fear hardly enters into their vocabulary. All their relations with God are pervaded by a quiet trust and trustful confidence. All these particular virtues are in reality the result and flowering of a remarkably deep faith. Their faith is like the hidden root of a tall, healthy tree that produces a variety of flowers and fruits: the virtues of the “anaw.” The visible fruits of the tree are conspicuous testimony of the strength of the root.
This spirituality that goes to the heart of the discipleship preached by Jesus produces people who are open to God, confident trustful, poor and lowly in their own eyes, dependent on God, simple, childlike, joyful, peaceful, restful, unperturbed. The “anaw” cannot boast of his own achievements, for he knows that he owes everything to God. He is a perpetual receiver, who can only empty himself to be filled by God. When everything is said and done, the “anaw” is a person caressed by God, and the caresses of his “Abba” make him genuinely humble and deeply grateful. (L. Bermejo, Alone with God alone, Book II, pp. 85-86)


Wednesday, June 3, 2015

EUCHARISTIC FAITH

 EUCHARISTIC FAITH

Let me relate an incident in the life of Mother Teresa. On one occasion she was visiting in South America and was walking towards a poverty stricken village, accompanied by a few of her sisters and some press photographers - since by then she was quite famous. As Mother approached the edge of the village, the children out to meet her, screaming with delight, holding and kissing her hands, dancing round her as she walked on. The poor village elders waited to greet her. The press reporters exchanged glances and speculated what these people would ask of her:  some tins sheets for their shanty houses, bags of broken wheat and milk powder, used and oversized clothes from Germany? So they were flabbergasted when Mother reached the group and they extended their hands and said:  “Mother, give us God. Mother, give us God!”
Some years ago, I spent a month in Nainital, staying in St. Francis’ Church, overlooking the lake. One morning, after Mass I stood outside the church by the railing of the church property. Two senior school girls, apparently Punjabi Hindus, walked right up to me and said, “Father, please open the church; we want to see God.”  Their request sounded very sincere, and the point is that it seemed to echo the request the poor of that South American village made to Mother Teresa: “Mother, give us God.” Let’s admit it: under the refinery of riches and the rags of poverty there is a hunger for God, of which the hunger for material bread is but a pale reflection.  God knows about this hunger; he placed it there deep in the pit of our beings. The hunger for divine reality is somewhat continuous with but of a much higher nature than our hunger for food and drink, our craving for appreciation and affection, our desire for immortality. The Holy Eucharist reminds us of that mystery within us that we must always keep open and alive and not smother by gluttony for material food, drink and worldly pleasure.

You must know this beautiful little verse
addressed to the Holy Eucharist:
“Heavenly sweetness unalloyed
Who eat thee hunger still;
Who drink of thee still feel a void
Which only thou canst fill.”

To paraphrase Ignatius of Antioch, in the Eucharist we not only puts our arms round Jesus but more importantly he squeezes us with a resounding bear hug. He just about takes our breath away. You cannot get any closer than that; and you probably don’t want to.
We have to admit, though, that when Jesus offered his flesh as the bread to eat and his blood as drink, he must surely have sounded as hard as nails. The Jews took Jesus’ words in a crass, material sense, and were shocked. But they need not have been, if only they had faith in him.

 When confronted with mystery, my advice is, “Believe now, understand later.” Jesus’ response to his shocked hearers was not to water down his teaching but to reinforce it and drive it home. Over the centuries, we Christians have come to understand that the “bread’ or the “flesh” is the person of Jesus, who gives himself in the Eucharist as food, which nourishes, supports and strengthens us, bringing us the fulfilment of our deepest needs and desires, and therefore profound joy. By eating his flesh, an intimate union of minds and hearts, an identity of ideals and attitudes emerges, so that it is no longer a merely human life we live, but Jesus Christ lives in us, and we are assimilated to him. {When you eat anything, the material you eat becomes your body; your body takes over. This is called assimilation. But when you receive Holy Communion, you become part of the Body of Christ, who takes over.}
If partaking of the Eucharist means anything, then it must mean transformation and renewal of mind and heart, becoming more Christ like. This is not some crude magical act. The Eucharist is the pledge and source of eternal life only to those who allow themselves to be “drawn into”, who consciously and freely “come to” Jesus in faith and self-surrender.
Let us now focus a little on our dear Lord Jesus himself. When cruel men were weaving the darkest plots against him, he was busy giving them the most precious gift he has. When they were only thinking of setting up an infamous cross to kill him, he was only thinking of setting up an altar to sacrifice himself daily for us. When they were preparing to shed his blood, the same Jesus Christ offered us his precious Blood as the drink of immortality, consolation and happiness. My dear friends, if you are in difficulties and sorrow, he will comfort and lighten your heart. If you are ill, he will heal you or strengthen you.
If the devil, the world and the flesh are battling against you, he will give you the weapons for resisting and winning. If you are poor, he will share his wealth with you for time and eternity. Allow yourself to be wrapped around by his love, and you will see what a loving God can do.
 And I get my cue from St. Thomas Aquinas, the Angelic Doctor of theology, who stated that a clear sign of one’s predestination was a special love of the Holy Eucharist. In other words, if over the years you have developed a loving habit of spending some time every day praying before the Blessed Sacrament, let me assure you that you are marked out for heaven; you’re probably there already; your life on earth is only a shadow, and death makes no difference.
To the Samaritan woman at Jacob’s well, Jesus said, “I have water you know not of, springing up unto everlasting life.” And the woman said, “Sir, give me this water.” To the people on the hillside he declared, “I am the Bread of life.” And they said, “Sir, give us this bread.” On the Feast of Tabernacles Jesus stood up in the Temple and cried out, “Let anyone who is thirsty come to me and drink.” And to him we reply, “Lord, slake our thirst as only you can.”
St. Thomas Aquinas wrote a good amount of Latin poetry extolling the Holy Eucharist, which is still sung in the original. One such is the “Adoro te devote,” the final verse of which goes like this:

“Jesu quem velatum nunc adspicio
Oro fiat illud quod tam sitio
Ut te revelata cernens facie
Visu sim beatus tuae gloriae.”
And that could be our prayer, if you don’t mind my translation:
“Jesus, whom now veiled I see,
I pray that what I so thirst for will be
That I may see thy countenance unfolding
And may be blessed thy glory in beholding”.