Gospel: Mk 4:35-41
On that same day, when evening had come, Jesus said to them, “Let’s go across to the other side of the lake.” So they left the crowd, and took him along in the boat he had been sitting in, and other boats set out with him. Then a storm gathered and it began to blow a gale. The waves spilled over into the boat, so that it was soon filled with water. Jesus was in the stern, sleeping on a cushion.
They woke him up, and said, “Master, don’t you care if we drown?” And rising up, Jesus rebuked the wind, and ordered the sea, “Quiet now! Be still!” The wind dropped, and there was a great calm. Then Jesus said to them, “Why are you so frightened? Do you still have no faith?”

But they were terrified, and they said to one another, “Who can this be? Even the wind and the sea obey him!”

Reflections
CREATE A CLEAN HEART IN ME O LORD
What does a clean heart mean? Somehow in the development of our spirituality, we associate cleanliness with chastity, and relate it mainly to the 6th and the 9th commandments. But actually purity of heart is much wider than this. To have a pure heart means to have a heart free of falsehood, of evil intentions, of scheming thoughts and plans. Stated positively, it means authenticity, simplicity, guilelessness. Our constant prayer is for God to create a clean heart in us because we know that our ego is so tricky that it worms its way into everything we think and do even in our good deeds and intentions. When we admonish someone we convince ourselves that it is for his/her own good but if we examine our hearts carefully there can be a secret satisfaction lurking there in discovering some defect in our neighbor and we can become smug and self-righteous about not having that defect. When we say we are doing good things for other people, don’t we sometimes use people to make us appear good and generous? CREATE A CLEAN HEART IN ME, O LORD!

Daily Reflection 2018

Bible Diary ® is a product of Claretian Publications, a division of Claretian Communications Foundation, Inc. (CCFI) which is a pastoral endeavor of the Claretian Missionaries in the Philippines that brings the Word of God to people from all walks of life. CCFI aims to promote integral evangelization and renewed spirituality that is geared towards empowerment and total liberation in response to the needs and challenges of the Church today.

CCFI is a member of Claret Publishing Group, a consortium of the publishing houses of the Claretian Missionaries all over the world: Bangalore, Barcelona, Buenos Aires, Chennai, Colombo, Dar es Salaam, Lagos, Madrid, Macao, Manila, Owerry, São Paolo, Varsaw , Yaoundé.

Biblical Texts are taken from Christian Community Bible, Catholic Pastoral Edition (57th Edition) The New English Translation for the ROMAN MISSAL

With permission from the EPISCOPAL COMMISION ON LITURGY of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines

 

Bible Diary ® 2018
Copyright © 2O17 
Claretian Communications Foundation, Inc.
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Tel.: (63-2) 921-3984
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Daily Reflection 2018

Gospel: Mk 4:26-34 (or Lk 10:1-9)
      Jesus also said, “In the kingdom of God it is like this: a man scatters seed upon the soil. Whether he is asleep or awake, be it day or night, the seed sprouts and grows; he knows not how. The soil produces of itself; first, the blade; then, the ear; then the full grain in the ear. And when it is ripe for harvesting, they take the sickle for the cutting: the time for the harvest has come.”
      Jesus also said, “What is the kingdom of God like? To what shall we compare it? It is like a mustard seed which, when sown, is the smallest of all the seeds scattered upon the soil. But once sown, it grows up and becomes the largest of the plants in the garden; and even grows branches so big, that the birds of the air can take shelter in its shade.” Jesus used many such stories, in order to proclaim the word to them in a way that they would be able to understand. He would not teach them without parables; but privately, to his disciples, he explained everything.

Reflections
RIPE FOR HARVESTING
     Whenever we go to the wake of an acquaintance, we cannot help but think of our own mortality. We know that all of us will die but somehow we shelve the thought of our own death and we go on with our everyday preoccupations as if it were not coming. But when we are informed of the death of someone even younger than us, maybe, we are forced to face our own reality. Today’s Gospel speaks of death as being “ripe for the harvest”. When we hear of 30-year-old people dying of a stroke, we shake our heads and say they are too young to die. But maybe in God’s time they are ripe for the harvest. Actually, the important thing is not to live a long life but to live it fully. Every moment of life is precious and we have no right to it. So when we get up in the morning, aren’t we pleasantly surprised and feel totally grateful that we have awaken to a new day of life? We can imagine how even more grateful people are who have survived an accident, or got healed of a terminal disease. They feel they have a new lease in life and they make a resolution to make most of the days that they have been suddenly gifted with. And maybe they become more generous, more compassionate, more forgiving, more appreciative of the goodness of people and of the beauty of nature around them. God of the living, we thank you for life and for good health. Help us to spend these days in the service of our neighbors and when we are ripe for the harvest, help us to surrender our lives to you in joy. Amen

Daily Reflection 2018

Bible Diary ® is a product of Claretian Publications, a division of Claretian Communications Foundation, Inc. (CCFI) which is a pastoral endeavor of the Claretian Missionaries in the Philippines that brings the Word of God to people from all walks of life. CCFI aims to promote integral evangelization and renewed spirituality that is geared towards empowerment and total liberation in response to the needs and challenges of the Church today.

CCFI is a member of Claret Publishing Group, a consortium of the publishing houses of the Claretian Missionaries all over the world: Bangalore, Barcelona, Buenos Aires, Chennai, Colombo, Dar es Salaam, Lagos, Madrid, Macao, Manila, Owerry, São Paolo, Varsaw , Yaoundé.

Biblical Texts are taken from Christian Community Bible, Catholic Pastoral Edition (57th Edition) The New English Translation for the ROMAN MISSAL

With permission from the EPISCOPAL COMMISION ON LITURGY of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines

 

Bible Diary ® 2018
Copyright © 2O17 
Claretian Communications Foundation, Inc.
U.P. P.O. Box 4, Diliman,
1101 Quezon City, Philippines
Tel.: (63-2) 921-3984
Fax: (6352) 921-7429
Email: ccfi@claretianpublicationscom
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Web: www.claretianph.com
Daily Reflection 2018

Gospel: Mk 16:5-18
      Then he told them, “Go out to the whole world and proclaim the Good News to all creation. The one who believes and is baptized will be saved; the one who refuses to believe will be condemned. Signs like these will accompany those who have believed: in my name they will cast out demons and speak new languages; they will pick up snakes, and if they drink anything poisonous, they will be unharmed; they will lay their hands on the sick, and they will be healed.”

Reflections
THE ROAD TO DAMASCUS
      The Road to Damascus has become synonymous to the experience of conversion. This is taken from the dramatic conversion of Saul, the persecutor of Christians, to Paul, the apostle of Christ. Even in our days there are examples of such dramatic conversions. I watched in YouTube the story of a Moslem woman who was teaching in a university. She had a colleague who is a zealous Christian and she used to be intrigued by this woman’s faith. She can however not believe when this woman keeps on saying at certain situations: “With God, nothing is impossible”. They were not actually friends. Years after they parted ways, the Moslem woman was diagnosed with a 4th degree breast cancer. She fell into deep depression and then remembered her Christian colleague. She looked for her present address and went to seek her out. When she found her she said she remembered that she always said with God nothing was impossible, so could she pray over her and ask God to cure her of her cancer. The Christian woman reluctantly did so. The Moslem woman then went home and when she went to the doctor for her next breast examination, the doctor said unbelievingly that there was no more trace of the cancer. The woman then had herself baptized and is now a lay preacher.
     We thank God for such extra-ordinary show of grace but we thank God also for the less spectacular conversions that happen in our daily life — the cure of an addiction, the grace to forgive, the discovery of a vocation.

Daily Reflection 2018

Bible Diary ® is a product of Claretian Publications, a division of Claretian Communications Foundation, Inc. (CCFI) which is a pastoral endeavor of the Claretian Missionaries in the Philippines that brings the Word of God to people from all walks of life. CCFI aims to promote integral evangelization and renewed spirituality that is geared towards empowerment and total liberation in response to the needs and challenges of the Church today.

CCFI is a member of Claret Publishing Group, a consortium of the publishing houses of the Claretian Missionaries all over the world: Bangalore, Barcelona, Buenos Aires, Chennai, Colombo, Dar es Salaam, Lagos, Madrid, Macao, Manila, Owerry, São Paolo, Varsaw , Yaoundé.

Biblical Texts are taken from Christian Community Bible, Catholic Pastoral Edition (57th Edition) The New English Translation for the ROMAN MISSAL

With permission from the EPISCOPAL COMMISION ON LITURGY of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines

 

Bible Diary ® 2018
Copyright © 2O17 
Claretian Communications Foundation, Inc.
U.P. P.O. Box 4, Diliman,
1101 Quezon City, Philippines
Tel.: (63-2) 921-3984
Fax: (6352) 921-7429
Email: ccfi@claretianpublicationscom
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Web: www.claretianph.com
Daily Reflection 2018

Gospel: Mk 4:1-20
Again, Jesus began to teach by the lake; but such a large crowd gathered about him, that he got into a boat and sat in it on the lake, while the crowd stood on the shore. He taught them many things through parables. In his teaching he said, “Listen! The sower went out to sow. As he sowed, some of the seed fell along a path; and the birds came and ate it up. Some of the seed fell on rocky ground, where it had little soil; it sprang up immediately, because it had no depth; but when the sun rose and burned it, it withered, because it had no roots. Some of the seeds fell among thorn bushes; and the thorns grew and choked it; so it didn’t produce any grain. But some seeds fell on good soil, grew and increased and yielded grain; some seeds produced thirty times as much, some sixty, and some one hundred times as much.” And Jesus added, “Listen then, if you have ears.”

When the crowd went away, some who were around him with the Twelve asked about the parables. He answered them, “The mystery of the kingdom of God has been given to you. But for those outside, everything comes in parables, so that, the more they see, they don’t perceive; the more they hear, they don’t understand; otherwise they would be converted and pardoned.”
Jesus said to them, “Don’t you understand this parable? How, then, will you understand any of the parables? What the sower is sowing is the word. Those along the path, where the seed fell, are people who hear the word, but as soon as they hear it, Satan comes and takes away the word that was sown in them. Other people receive the word like a rocky ground. As soon as they hear the word, they accept it with joy. But they have no roots, so it lasts only a little while. No sooner does trouble or persecution come because of the word, than they fall. Others receive the seed, as seed among thorns. After they hear the word. they are caught up in the worries of this life, false hopes of riches and other desires. All these come in and choke the word, so that finally it produces nothing.
And there are others who receive the word as good soil. They hear the word, take it to heart and produce: some thirty, some sixty, and some one hundred times as much.”

Reflections
WHAT KIND OF A GROUND ARE WE?
The parable of the sower has been read by people throughout the ages. Certainly there are nuances of meaning in different contexts — agricultural, urban, industrial, technical, cyber, but the meaning remains: THE DIFFERENT WAYS OF RECEIVING THE WORD OF GOD. In our times, who could be the Satan that plucks the word of God out of our hearts — would it be the love of money, prestige, power? What about the people who at first receive the word of God with joy but since they have no roots, the seed dies. What are our roots — good family life, religious education, fidelity in prayer? What are the thorns that choke up the life of the seed — worries about our loss of power, loss of material things, loss of our positions of influence? Then there is the good soil. What makes soil good? Could it be a radical openness to what the word demands from us? Could it be fidelity to this word amid temptations, challenges, difficulties, suffering and misery? Could it be nourishment through prayer, sacrifice and service to people?
Lord, please give me first of all the gift of listening with the ear of my heart. Help me to understand what your word is telling me at the moment. Give me the courage to do what you are asking from me in spite of obstacles and difficulties. And finally, grant that when the seed grows in me and bears fruit, help me to share it with others in compassion and love. Amen.

Daily Reflection 2018

Bible Diary ® is a product of Claretian Publications, a division of Claretian Communications Foundation, Inc. (CCFI) which is a pastoral endeavor of the Claretian Missionaries in the Philippines that brings the Word of God to people from all walks of life. CCFI aims to promote integral evangelization and renewed spirituality that is geared towards empowerment and total liberation in response to the needs and challenges of the Church today.

CCFI is a member of Claret Publishing Group, a consortium of the publishing houses of the Claretian Missionaries all over the world: Bangalore, Barcelona, Buenos Aires, Chennai, Colombo, Dar es Salaam, Lagos, Madrid, Macao, Manila, Owerry, São Paolo, Varsaw , Yaoundé.

Biblical Texts are taken from Christian Community Bible, Catholic Pastoral Edition (57th Edition) The New English Translation for the ROMAN MISSAL

With permission from the EPISCOPAL COMMISION ON LITURGY of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines

 

Bible Diary ® 2018
Copyright © 2O17 
Claretian Communications Foundation, Inc.
U.P. P.O. Box 4, Diliman,
1101 Quezon City, Philippines
Tel.: (63-2) 921-3984
Fax: (6352) 921-7429
Email: ccfi@claretianpublicationscom
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Web: www.claretianph.com
Daily Reflection 2018