19th Sunday in Ordinary Time: August 10, 2025
Readings: Wisdom 18:6–9; Psalm 33:1, 12, 18–22; Hebrews 11:1–2, 8–19; Luke 12:35–40
1. Being alive means being confident
19th Sunday in Ordinary Time: August 10, 2025
Readings: Wisdom 18:6–9; Psalm 33:1, 12, 18–22; Hebrews 11:1–2, 8–19; Luke 12:35–40
1. Being alive means being confident
18th Sunday in Ordinary Time: August 03, 2025
Readings: Ecclesiastes 1:2; 2:21–23; Psalm 90:3–17; Colossians 3:1–5, 9–11; Luke 12:13–21
1. The Uncertainty of Earthly Security
We have this beautiful Gospel reading from St Luke 12:13-21. It's a parable about the rich man who cared very little about others. He believed in his wealth, harvest, grains and the barns that he had built. The parable of the rich fool is not just about money — it’s about where we place our ultimate trust. The man had a great harvest, bigger barns, and grand plans. He was big in terms of material things, and now he wants to be even bigger. But he failed to realize that life is fragile and fleeting, and true security can never be stored in a barn.
17th Sunday in Ordinary Time(Year C): July 27, 2025
Readings: Genesis 18:20–32; Psalm 138:1–3, 6–8; Colossians 2:12–14; Luke 11:1–13
1. “Lord, teach us to pray.”
St Luke writes (Luke 11:1–13) about the tender request made by one of Jesus' disciples. This request stems from a deeper longing and intimate connection with the Divine. The disciple did not ask, “Teach us how to preach,” or “Teach us how to perform miracles,” but “Teach us to pray.” It reveals a desire for intimacy with God, a longing to dwell in the mystery of His presence. In other words, the disciples had seen their master praying. So they wanted to imitate him, for they had seen the power of prayer in his preaching and healing. Often the world reminds us of our failures, inadequacies, and debts but Jesus gives us the liberating truth: You are not your past. You are not your mistakes. In Christ, your story has been rewritten.
16th Sunday in Ordinary Time: July 20, 2025
Readings: Genesis 18:1–10; Psalm 15:2–5; Colossians 1:24–28; Luke 10:38–42
1. Hospitality as a Door to Divine Encounter
In the passage Genesis 18:1–10a, Abraham welcomes three unknown visitors at the oak of Mamre. Though he doesn’t immediately recognize them as divine, he hastens to offer generous hospitality. His openness to strangers becomes the very channel through which God confirms His promise of new life — the birth of Isaac. In theology, this episode is also likened to the concept of the Holy Trinity. Three people taking the hospitality of Abraham are richly rewarded with a new lease of life for Abraham.
15th Sunday in Ordinary Time: July 13, 2025
Readings: Deuteronomy 30:10–14; Psalm 69:14–37; Colossians 1:15–20; Luke 10:25–37
1. Being a Wounded man on the street and the care from the Unknown.
In the Gospel reading of today, Luke 10:25–37, a scholar of the law approaches Jesus with a question: “What must I do to inherit eternal life?” It is a noble question, one that should stir the heart of every Christian. But Jesus, as He often does, turns the question back to the seeker: “What is written in the Law? How do you read it?” The scholar responds correctly: "Love the Lord your God with all your heart... and your neighbour as yourself." Jesus affirms the answer, not as a theory, but as a way of life: “Do this and you will live.”
14th Sunday in Ordinary Time: July 06, 2025
Readings: Isaiah 66:10-14; Psalm 66:1-7, 16, 20; Galatians 6:14-18; Luke 10:1-12, 17-20
What is it like listening to a master and then the master asks the disciples to follow in his footsteps, including doing those unimaginable things like healing the sick and driving out the demons? Listening to the master means following what the master does. This is called true discipleship. For this, the disciples need a deep faith and a strong conviction. In fact, the disciple has to learn more from the master and unlearn what is not necessary, in order to possess the content and connection of the master. This is the experience of the disciples of Jesus when they were sent on a mission of preaching and healing. The liturgical readings of this Sunday are not only rich in content but also beautiful and tell us how God is nursing and caring for us through the Prophet Isaiah. And St Paul finds his abundance and fullness only in Christ Jesus of Nazareth. His radical love for Jesus is truly transformative and motivating for all of us who profess Christ as our Lord and Master.
1. Being moved to transform the world
In Luke 10:1-12, 17-20, Jesus sends out seventy-two of his disciples ahead of him, two by two, into every town and place he himself intended to go. It’s not just a logistical move—it's a deeply spiritual commissioning. These disciples are not simply messengers; they are the torchbearers of Christ’s peace, his patience, his perseverance, his presence, and his power. They go out with nothing but trust and obedience, called to rely not on earthly resources or managerial plans, but on the hospitality of strangers and the movement of God. They have to listen to God alone.
This has been the experience of two of my friends who passed away: One recently in Russia due to a massive brain hemorrhage, and the other in Ukraine in a car accident in the war-stricken country a year ago. Both played a vital role in my Jesuit life. Both were family people. They had great compassion and love towards me, and they showed it in various ways.
Death is a cruel nail in our lives. Death puts an end to our precious lives. However, death does not win. The life of the person wins as it continues to live by the acts and the intentions the person has lived by. When death comes into life so suddenly, there is not even much time to say goodbye to the person or at least to have some conversations before the person moves into the other world. This gives sadness and remorse. Sadness because the death came in so early in one’s life, whereas remorse because a feeling of emptiness continues to haunt, “wish if I knew I would have talked to the person, had responded to the person,” etc. The list goes on.
What is eternal is the friendship that we experience and cherish, either in person, living in close proximity or far away through communication channels. Both of my friends who are no more have been very special to me. We came from different countries, languages and cultures, but our bond as Christians brought us all the more closer. We have shared our joys and sorrows, our agony and beautiful moments of peace together. Listened to the painful episodes of life, but also laughed at the lighter moments and shared the meals, walks and eucharist together. All has its purpose.
May they rest in peace!
Olvin Veigas, SJ
July 01, 2025Solemnity of Saints Peter and Paul, Apostles: June 29, 2025
Readings: Acts 12:1-11; Psalm 34:2-3, 4-5, 6-7, 8-9; 2 Timothy 4:6-8, 17-18; Matthew 16:13-19
Today, the Church invites us to celebrate two giants of our faith, two pillars of the Church, two very different men, called and united by one Lord—Saint Peter and Saint Paul. It is rare and beautiful that these two apostles are remembered together on one solemn feast. And this year, the celebration is all the more special—falling on a Sunday—when the Church gathers in her fullest form to honour them. Let us begin by falling in love with these saints—not just admiring their heroism from a distance, but allowing them to speak into our lives.
1. Saint Peter: The Rock who Fell, then Rose
Peter, the fisherman from Galilee, was impulsive, emotional, often confused, but deeply faithful. When Jesus asked, “Who do you say that I am?” Peter answered with a boldness that shook the heavens: “You are the Christ, the Son of the living God” (Matthew 16:16). And yet, this same Peter denied Jesus three times. He wept bitterly. But his story did not end in failure. The risen Christ looked at Peter not with condemnation, but with love, and entrusted him again: “Feed my sheep.”
Solemnity of the Most Holy Body and Blood of Christ (Corpus Christi): June 22, 2025
Readings: Genesis 14:18–20; Psalm 110:1–4; 1 Corinthians 11:23–26; Luke 9:11–17
1. Corpus Christi: "Do this in memory of me!"
What a magnificent feast we celebrate today! On this solemn feast of Corpus Christi, the Church pauses to gaze upon the profound mystery at the heart of our faith — the Real Presence of Jesus Christ in the Holy Eucharist. It is a day to rediscover the sacred gift given to us not as a symbol, but as Christ Himself, truly present: Body, Blood, and Divinity. Corpus Christi is more than a celebration of a sacrament. It is a call to live Eucharistically. That means: To center our lives around the Mass — not as a weekly duty, but as the source and summit of our faith. To become what we receive — to be broken open in love for the world, especially for the hungry, lonely, and forgotten.