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Showing posts from July, 2023

Homily for 30 July 2023

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  Imagine you are going through a jungle and you chance upon a magic lamp. You rub the lamp and lo and behold there is a genie standing before you and he says, “You have one wish.. ask whatever you want!”  What would you ask for?   In today’s first reading taken from the first book of Kings we witness the coming of age of the young King Solomon. Having just taken over the reigns of the kingdom Solomon like any other ruler begins to take measures to protect his kingdom. He marries the daughter of Pharaoh despite a law forbidding such marriages (Deuteronomy 7:3-4). Royal alliances were a way of consolidating power and ensuring peace. The enemy Pharaoh would surely not attack the kingdom where his daughter is queen! However, Yahweh expects Solomon to trust Him rather than royal alliances. It is Yahweh, not Pharaoh, who has the power to guarantee the future of Solomon’s kingdom. And it is in this context that Solomon, the son of King David is faced with an important choice....

16th Sunday of Ordinary time 2023 | Homily for 23 July 2023

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  “He’s come a long way”, haven’t you heard this idiom often being used by teachers when their students come back to meet them many years after they pass out from school? There is a sense of pride for the teachers to see their students grown and matured into good and successful adults from the timid and even naughty children that they used to be all those years ago. The readings today in a way point out to us that good things take time. On this 16th Sunday in ordinary time, the first reading is taken from the Wisdom of Solomon. Now this book was written sometime between 50 –30 BCE in Greek in Alexandria which was the then capital city of Egypt. The Jews at that time were treated as outcastes in the sophisticated Alexandrian society. The author of the Wisdom of Solomon wanted to reclaim Judaism from wavering and the book is therefore addressed to the Jews to tell them of their rich heritage and to encourage them to take pride in their traditional faith. The reading shows us a mercif...

Sunday Homily for 16/7/2023.

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  My dear friends on this 15th Sunday in Ordinary time the readings focus on giving hope when there seems to be no hope and urging us to sow where we doubt the possibility of fruit. In the first reading taken from Prophet Isaiah, the prophet is preparing the people for the end of their exile and their return to Jerusalem. The Babylonian Exile was a truly traumatic experience. The people witnessed their beloved city destroyed; their families torn apart; their houses demolished; and their country wiped out. The people were not so sure anymore whether they still believed in the God of their ancestors. It is in this context that the prophet is presenting these doubters with a word of hope from the Lord that has the purpose of transforming the exiles’ lives. Isaiah uses natural imagery- rain and snow to convey this message. In the dry climate of that region, rain and snow were very important symbols of life. They cause the seed to sprout and plants to grow. Like rain and snow that water...

Sunday Homily for 14th Sunday of Ordinary time year A - 9th July 2023

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  My dear brothers and sisters on this 14 th Sunday in Ordinary Time the 1 st reading presents before us a very familiar picture – The Palm Sunday image of Jesus riding on a donkey. Jesus’ entry into Jerusalem is in fulfilment of the prophecy contained in today’s reading (Zech 9:9). The prophet Zechariah is a post-exilic prophet, which means that he writes in a period after Judah was taken into exile by Babylon in 587 BC. The exile lasted for close to 70 years after which the Persian emperor Cyrus the Great, permitted the Jews to return to their homeland. With this turn of events, the people were hopeful for restoration of Judean independence and the Davidic monarchy. However, those dreams never materialized. The foreign kings of Persia remained in charge for another 200 years, only to be replaced by Greek and then Roman rule. The words of comfort and hope that we hear in today’s reading emerge from this long yearning for restoration when the oppression at the han...