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RELIGION LITURGY AND LIFE

Archive for the month “March, 2026”

Palm Sunday

On Ash Wednesday we placed the ashes on our foreheads as a sign of our humility as we began our Journey for Lent. Today on Palm Sunday, we remember Jesus entrance into Jerusalem on a donkey as the people raised their voices in joyful acclamation as they sang hosanna to the Son of David. We stop and reflect for a moment on how we began our journey on Ash Wednesday and where we are now as we approach the life changing and life-giving events of Holy Week.  The first reading from Isaiah, speaks of a courageous and obedient messiah-figure, who says, “I have set my face like flint” against the beatings and scourging that lie ahead, “knowing that I shall not be put to shame.” The second reading from Philippians reminds us of Jesus’ total emptying of His divinity in order that He might identify Himself with the lowest criminal being led to His execution, “obedient to the point of death, even death on a cross.” And the reading continues but God raised him high and gave him the name above all other names.

The entrance into Jerusalem is one of the very few events in Jesus’ life which is mentioned in all four gospels.  It is the only time that Jesus accepts and encourages public acclaim as Messiah.  He even goes as far as organising his entrance by telling the disciples to go and fetch the donkey.  The key moment in God’s plan of salvation is about to begin, and Jesus knows exactly how it will unfold as he understood what the will of the father would mean for him. The full drama of the Gospel begins with the crowd’s fickle acclamation of Jesus as King. It reminds us of our own fickle responses and our lack of courage as we respond to His love and truth. Palm Sunday is about Jesus’s suffering for our inadequacies and our own sins. Our journey during Holy Week is a journey about god’s love for all of us that is manifest in the cross of Good Friday.  In just three years of his public ministry, Jesus set in motion a change in the hearts of many people. Just three years of walking around healing the broken, freeing person’s enslaved spirits, bringing hope, purpose, and meaning to the poor. Those “poor” included people with wealth, with power, with influence.  As we enter Holy Week, let us pause from the rush of daily life and open our hearts to the transformative power of Christ’s example. In doing so, we honour the journey Jesus made for us on the first Good Friday and allow ourselves to be renewed in faith, hope, and love. The Church leaves us in no doubt on Palm Sunday that we have now set out on the solemn journey of Holy Week.

How will we mark this journey in the coming days? Will we let it pass by with little interruption to our normal routines? Or will we walk prayerfully with Jesus through Holy Thursday to the cross of Good Friday and then to the Feast of the resurrection at Easter. We move towards the heavenly Jerusalem because Christ himself made the journey to the Cross for us and now he offers to make it with us here and now in 2026.   May the passion story inspire all of us to try to imitate in some small way the all loving all forgiving Jesus who went through betrayal to the cross and finally came to the resurrection for us so that we will have life and have it to the full. Over the next few days let us prepare well as we walk through Holy Thursday, Good Friday and Holy Saturday and then we will really be able to enjoy the Easter feast which we have been preparing for since Ash Wednesday.

5th Sunday of Lent

It seems no time since we began Lent with the ashes of Ash Wednesday and now, we have come to the 5th Sunday of lent. We look forward to Palm Sunday and Holy Week and all the opportunities that they give us to prepare for the Easter Feast. in the 1st Reading Ezekiel tells us that our God is the God of Life, able to bring life even to dry, scattered bones. He can do the same with our broken lives and shattered communities—this is the powerful promise He made to the people of Israel.in our 2nd Reading from St. Paul’s letter to the Romans we are told that 8:8-11 Living according to the flesh brings death, but life in the Spirit brings eternal life through Jesus’ resurrection, the firstborn of the dead. This is our calling, nurturing both body and soul.

In this weekend’s gospel reading we listen to the story of Lazarus, and we hear about the compassion that Jesus had towards him and his sisters Martha and Mary. This story is also the faith that Martha and Mary had in Jesus when they sent the message to him that Lazarus was sick; indeed, he had died and was in the tomb for four days when Jesus arrived and called him to come out from the tomb. When Lazarus was called from the tomb, it was the last sign worked by the Lord before his triumphant entrance into Jerusalem, everything seems to flow to that ‘new reality’ inaugurated by Jesus who is Emmanuel, God with us. Sharing our lives and our existence, Jesus loves us with a supreme passion right up to sacrificing Himself for us on the cross of Good Friday. He was moved by those who were linked to him by ties of the most profound friendship who understood that jesus could not be anything but God’s presence amongst them.  John’s message for us today is that Jesus raises us to new life even with all the wars that are going on in the world at the present time. This raising to new life does not mean that we no longer suffer. As a matter of fact, this new life leads through pain and suffering before it reaches fullness of resurrection. Jesus demonstrates this to us as it leads to his painful death on the Cross on Good Friday.

But the new life we live leads us to a new way of living. The proof of this is Christ who rose from the dead on Easter Sunday. After his resurrection he appears to those at the beginning of their new life in Christ. We ask the Lord for the courage to listen to the voice that is calling us. The story of Lazarus invites us to look at our own lives and ask what might need to be brought back to life. Lent for 2026 may be winding down as next Sunday is Palm Sunday, but there is still time for us to do a bit spiritual spring cleaning. As we prepare for Holy Week, let us embrace these remaining days of lent trusting that, with God’s grace, even the most hidden parts of our hearts can be made new. So that when we come to the Easter celebration, we will be able to accept the invitation of Jesus to be his people and walk in his light.

4Th Sunday of Lent

On the Fourth Sunday of Lent the Church celebrates Laetare Sunday, a moment of joy in the middle of the penitential season. With the Iran war continuing and the Middle East and other countries in turmoil there does not seem to be a lot to happy about this weekend however as people of faith we continue to pray for the Peace of the world. Peace should be at the heart of anything we do but sadly for some peace is not an option, and war is the easy way out of doing the right thing. As we continue our Lenten journey this week, we are at the midpoint of Lent as we celebrate laetare Sunday at the midpoint of Advent in the same way we celebrate Gaudete Sunday these are the 2 days in the annual penitential seasons when we rejoice because the Lord is near. Hopefully, the things that we have given up or taken up have not been as stressful as we thought. Lent is a time for giving things up that might not be as good as we think it is also a time for taking up other more meaningful spiritual things. Things that lead us out of the darkness into the light of Christ that we celebrate at Easter.

In the first reading we hear about Young David’s selection as Israel’s king, and it shows God’s plan unfolding and we are reminded that he values the heart over outward appearances. In the second reading, St. Paul reminds us that baptism makes us “light in the Lord,” calling us to live as “children of light” in a world shadowed by false values and mis-placed priorities we are called to be a light to the nations. Our gospel is the story of the blind man, in this story we have another example of God’s choice, one which confuses the religious leaders of the day. John’s beautifully crafted story tells how a blind man comes to see the light in Jesus, both physically and spiritually. When Jesus’ disciples first see the blind man, they presume that his affliction is a result of sin. But Jesus sees in the blind man something else: this roadside beggar who has always inhabited a world of darkness will be the one to display the work of God and point to who Jesus really is. If we are to really see clearly, we need to let Jesus heal us of our blindness and open our eyes as He did the man born blind in this weekend’s Gospel.  This is a challenging gospel story for all of us even today because so many people are spiritually blind. It is possible that the places and things we think we are seeing clearly are not as clear as they should be. Remember that the ones, who were 100% sure they knew what was going on, the Pharisees, were blind to God. They were religious experts, like other experts they missed the truth staring them in the face. The one who is turning their world upside down was the Son of God who was trying to open their eyes and send them along the right road. There may be things that raise questions and upset our routines these may be the very places God is trying to open our eyes and give us the vision to set things in the right light for our lives.

The story of the blind man getting his sight gives us the opportunity to pause and ask ourselves:  How well do I see? Do I see what is really going on in my life? Has the road I have taken made me lose my way? What is dulling our appreciation of life and gods place within it? As we remember the Blind spots in our own lives, we also remember that faith always remains a choice that we make that helps us to see with great clarity of vision. When we choose to trust in God and believe in what he reveals to us, we exercise our freedom to believe. Our hearts and minds freely cooperate with God’s grace. Faith in God and each other is a journey that we take during our Lent. The 6 weeks of Lent lead us to Jesus the light of the world at Easter. The question we should ask ourselves this weekend is this: will we continue to be blind, or will we let our faith in God heal the blindness of our lives and our world so that we will be a light to the nations.

3rd Sunday of Lent

As we gather this weekend to celebrate the Third Sunday of Lent, all of us are troubled by the news of the conflict in Iran. The United States and Israel initiated military action against Iran, resulting in the deaths of that nation’s leadership and many other people mostly civilians. This operation, called Operation Epic Fury, has drawn widespread criticism from the international community, as many nations have condemned the lack of proper consultation and authorisation for this act of war. In these uncertain times, we unite in prayer for peace not only in the Middle East, Ukraine, and all places afflicted by violence, but also within our own hearts that we may be people of peace as we journey towards Holy Week and Easter. In the First Reading we hear about the Israelites, thirsty and doubting God’s presence, quarrel with Moses. God instructs Moses to strike a rock at Horeb, miraculously providing water, and the place is named “Massah” and “Meribah.” In the Second Reading – we are told that Through faith, we are made right with God, gaining peace and the hope of sharing His glory. God’s love, given through the Holy Spirit, affirms this hope, shown in Christ dying for us.

The gospel reading from Johns Gospel tells us about the Samaritan woman. One of the responses for the Easter Vigil is with joy you will draw water from the wells of salvation, and this sums up what this reading from john’s gospel is about. Jesus breaks the law to speak to a Samaritan woman who had come to Jacob’s well to draw water. What a surprise it must have been to her, when Jesus, tired, hungry and thirsty, asks her for a drink of water! He broke all the rules in speaking to her. Now, he keeps on talking, ignoring her hostility, aware that, in this unexpected encounter, the Father has provided Him with an opportunity for piercing the heart of this sinful woman with his love leaving an example for all those who thirst. Jesus suggests that He can give her living water that is far superior to anything she had ever tasted. We know that she had tried cheap love, and we presume she was no stranger to intoxication, power, and money! This isn’t a gentle lady who comes to draw water from the well, but a toughened cynic. Cynical with the world around her in her time as so many are cynical in our modern world for many different reasons. Jesus forgets His own needs and offers this woman living water that is spiritual grace. Finding her heart curious and open to this miraculous water, He proceeds to raise her vision. He asks her to go back and bring her husband to the well with her.  Of course, this is the turning point of the story. When He confronts her with the truth, she could have flounced off in righteous indignation and denial as many people do when confronted with the truth, but she doesn’t. In true humility, she accepts the reality of her life.  Because of her humility, Jesus floods her soul with grace. Dropping the bucket, she runs back to spread the good news. “I’ve found the Messiah!” And she had!  

Lent is a time for us to let Jesus satisfy our thirst for the truth and life. Like that woman, we too have tried the wrong kinds of water to quench our thirst for happiness, satisfaction, and peace of mind without really finding it. The psalm in the Easter Vigil tells us that with joy we will draw water from the wells of salvation, and this is the time for us to find real joy and satisfaction of letting the Lord fill us with the grace during the season of Lent so that we will be able to enjoy the season of Easter. We will find that our joy is greatest when we share the gift of salvation with others by really listening to them, praying from the heart in a quiet place, reflecting on the Word privately or at Mass, and letting the Eucharist change us into the Body of Christ. The Samaritan woman reminds those who doubt, or struggle with faith that we are asked to stay in a conversation with Christ.  It’s all about shunning the type of thirst-quencher that doesn’t really satisfy and actively seek the Living Water that wells up to salvation that Jesus gives us.

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