Saturday 12 October 2024

THE WORD OF GOD IS ALIVE AND ACTIVE

XXVIII SUNDAY IN ORDINARY TIME - Hebrews 4:12-13

Whenever we celebrate the Eucharist, after acknowledging our sinfulness, we sit to hear the word of God. During this part of the mass, our attention is concentrated on the lectern (ambo), where the word of God is proclaimed. Special honour is given to the proclamation of the Gospel in the liturgy of the Catholic and Orthodox Churches. We recognise publicly that the Word is Jesus Christ, the Son of the living God. At the beginning of his gospel, John makes it clear that Jesus is the Word incarnate. Through Him, the world was created. He is the life and the light of men (Jn 1:4). In the book of Genesis, we learn that God created everything through his word. And the Holy Scriptures, as they present to us the history of salvation, give witness to the continuous presence and action of the Word. The prophets are the great spokesmen for this Word, challenging, denouncing, calling to repentance and conversion. At the same time, this word reveals God’s plan of salvation while showing the way to faithfulness and fulfilment. Through the word, God commits Himself to carry out the Promise of sending the Messiah to redeem humanity, leading it to the fullness of peace and life.



In the letter to the Hebrews, we are given a short passage on the role of the Word of God. When the word is proclaimed, it becomes “alive and active”, and God speaks to us. It confronts and challenges us, bringing to the open our “secret emotions and thoughts”. It may be painful since “it cuts like any double-edged sword but more finely”. However, that pain is the pre-announcement of healing, bringing wholeness to our lives. We are reminded that “we must give account of ourselves” before God. The word of God is never proclaimed in vain, and we cannot behave as if we did not hear it. We will be answerable before God. Let us open our hearts and be docile to the work of the Spirit so that we listen and act accordingly to the Word of God.

Saturday 5 October 2024

DO NOT DIVIDE WHAT GOD UNITED

XXVII SUNDAY IN ORDINARY TIME - Mark 10:2-16

Time and again, the Pharisees approached Jesus to try his knowledge and his accordance with the law. So they came to Jesus and asked about marriage. At that time, there were two schools of thought: The followers of Beit Shammai held a strict approach, allowing divorce only for serious reasons, while the followers of Beit Hillel were much more lenient, accepting divorce even for trivial issues. The Pharisees wanted to know Jesus’ opinion: Did the Law allow or forbid divorce?

As he did many times, Jesus answered by asking: “What did Moses command you?” That is, what does the Law say? The Law allows the man to send away his wife, giving her a certificate of divorce (Dt 24:1-4).  

After this answer, Jesus had the opportunity to confront the Pharisees with God’s plan for marriage. Indeed, the Law allows divorce, but in doing that, the Law is in clear discordance with God’s will for marriage. The commandment concerning divorce was given “because of your hardness of heart”. In a given society, laws are made to regulate prevailing situations, and in doing so, those laws may be against the ideal that God proposes for us. Jesus makes it clear that divorce is always a sign of our sinfulness. From the beginning, God presents us with his plan for marriage. He took the bride to the groom, who accepted her as a partner with whom he could walk along the paths of life. In her, he could see a reflection of himself - “bone from my bones, and flesh from my flesh!” as both of them are made in the image of God. Bring them together, God intended them to be one. And Jesus gives the conclusion: “So then, what God has united, man must not divide.”

Let us pray for all married couples. May their love become stronger and give them the strength to overcome the difficulties they find in their journey together. May the Lord guide and protect them.