This week is the 11th Sunday of ordinary time. We continue our journey of faith, from Sunday to Sunday, to be nourished by Christ through his Words.
For the first thousand years of Christianity, bishops, priests, and all the faithful would talk about the Christian Community as the “real” body and blood of Christ.
There has been a saying going around our Community that the Feast of the Ascension reminds us that Jesus decided thereafter “to work from home”.
One of the exciting events in Track and Field is the 4 X 100 metre relay. There’s a team of four athletes and they’re standing 100 metres apart and the first athlete runs for 100 metres then they pass the baton to the next athlete and the fourth athlete gets the baton and runs straight until the finish line.
The Easter Season is almost drawing to a close with the feast of Pentecost approaching in two weeks’ time. Next week we will celebrate the solemnity of the Ascension of the Lord.
The Gospels show Jesus teaching the people of His time about His Father using parables, stories, and metaphors that they were very familiar with.
We just celebrated Easter last month. Each Easter season presents a deep meaning of salvation. As we celebrate each season of Easter, it moves us toward a deep meaning of the mystery of death and resurrection of Christ, writes Fr Phuong Vu SVD.
The death of Christ on the cross is reflected in many salvation aspects of Christian life. The cross becomes an icon for salvation, and it has no end, and it represents this for all nations on earth. It becomes a personal attachment as well. It empowers us into life.
Who is Jesus Christ? This has been an age-old question that many people particularly theologians have tried to answer.
When I was learning how to drive, my instructor insisted that before changing lanes or before entering the traffic, it was not enough to look at the side mirrors but also to turn my head to the back of my shoulder so that I would be able to cover my “blind spot”.
Someone once said that we are affirmed by our successes but can be enlightened by our mistakes and those situations which challenge us, reflects Fr Michael Knight SVD.
What is God trying to teach us in in the darkness of our own personal cross? How can the light of Easter make a positive difference in my daily life?
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