Saturday, March 25, 2023

RESURRECTION FROM THE DEAD: DO YOU BELIEVE?

HOMILY FOR 5TH SUNDAY OF LENT - YEAR A

THEME: RESURRECTION FROM THE DEAD: DO YOU BELIEVE?

R1: Ezekiel 37:12-14 

R2: Romans 8:8 - 11

Gospel: John 11: 1 - 45

Dear friends, we are gradually approaching Easter which is the summit of our Christian belief. We are gathered here because Christ resurrected from death. With Christ’s resurrection, we are sure and we have hope of resurrection. With the resurrection of Christ we have a view of what resurrection is like:

1. Liberation from earthly suffering 

2. A total transformation.

As long as we remain on earth, we, like the Israelites who were carried to exile in Babylon, may experience several persecutions, rejection, condemnation and trials. 

Within our trying times, we may pray like the siblings of Lazarus who sent a message “Your friend Lazarus, is sick.” The term your friend, stands for every follower of Christ. It indicates someone close to Jesus (a Christian). On receiving this message, Jesus stayed for an extra two days; he didn’t go immediately until after  Lazarus’s death. Jesus’s delay was intentional for two major reasons: 

1. That physical suffering and death is a common experience of everyone and Jesus  didn’t come to stop physical death.

2. Jesus wanted to teach about the resurrection and to manifest God’s glory.

Even though everyone will! have to die someday, not everyone will resurrect to life of everlasting happiness. So who are those who will resurrect? It is only those who believe in Jesus that will resurrect to life. To confirm this Jesus asked Martha, “Do you believe?” Believing in Jesus is a necessary condition for resurrection. By the time we got baptised, we were initiated into the family of those who believe; we become interested in spiritual things. With baptism we are committed to the life of Christ, hence, we must live and act like Christ always  so that even though we may die a physical death, we shall rise with Christ. 

Resurrection sets us free from every physical chain of mortality and makes us immortal. In resurrection we are liberated from slavery to sin and the world of corruption to a better experience to live in freedom in the presence of God. Resurrection leads to a total transformation, our physical bodies will become a glorified body. It is a total change, that was why even Jesus’s closest companions didn’t know him when he resurrected.

May God help us to focus more on the things above, Amen.

HOMILY by:

Rev. Fr Chukwuemeka Vincent Livinus, SMMM

Saturday, March 18, 2023

HAVING A SPIRITUAL SIGHT

HOMILY FOR 4TH SUNDAY OF LENT - YEAR A

THEME: HAVING A SPIRITUAL SIGHT

R1: 1 Sam 16:1,6-7, 10-13

R2: Eph 5:8-14

Gospel: John 9:1-41

Did you notice the wonderful drama of the first reading? Samuel went to the house of Jesse to anoint one of his sons as king of Israel. Jesse presented all his seven sons with good appearances but none of them was chosen except the last who was being looked on as not having the physical capacity for leadership. Why were they rejected? Because the spirit of the Lord did not rest on them, therefore, they lacked that grace to lead. 

Friends, is it possible that we may be called  followers of Christ without enjoying God’s favour? Do you know it is possible that on the last day some of us may be chosen while others will be left out? God forbid that this will be our portion. No wonder Matthew 7:21 maintains,  “Not everyone who says to me ‘Lord, Lord’ will enter the kingdom of God.”

What could cause our rejection by God? What could deprive us of God’s choice and favour? What could make us to be like these rejected sons of Jesse? This is found in the attitude of the Pharisees who were obstinate to God’s will. They rejected the miraculous work of God through Jesus even though they claimed to be believers of God. Instead of praising the mighty deeds of Jesus, they thought of  killing him. They knew the truth but refused to acknowledge it. They claimed to be wise but were spiritually foolish. They pretended to be lovers of God but lacked spiritual insight to understand the things of God. They were  spiritually blind, hence, Jesus told them, “judgment will come upon you” (John 9:39).

Therefore, spiritual blindness comprises of total rejection of God. It is obstinacy in sin and lack of openness to spiritual possibilities. It is negligence to spiritual things. It is being full of pride, selfishness and spiritual emptiness. Like the sons of Jesse, it is appearing huge but spiritually empty. Like the Pharisees, it is intelligent to worldly things but foolishness and empty to heavenly things. For these, Jesus says, “…your guilt remains with you.”( Jn 9:41).

Dear friends, the readings of today challenge us to be cured of our blindness, to have a spiritual sight. It is an invitation to let go of our Pharisaic pride and empty  ourselves to the healing mercy of God. St Paul in the second reading rightly puts it, “Once we were in darkness but now are in light.”  This light was given to us at the moment of baptism when we made a commitment to be a people of God. Through our baptism which initiates us to God, we become like the blind man who was cured by Jesus today. Like the blind man from birth, we share in the original sin of our first parents which Christ has wiped away and has brought us to light.

Even though we have been healed by Christ, St Paul also advises that we must try to discover what God wants which has nothing to do with darkness (Eph 5:10-11). Discovering what God wants is concretised in the profession of faith of the blind man, “I believe and worshipped him” (John 9:38). We must therefore always believe and worship God. This demands standing up to the defense of our faith, especially when people say “we are old enough to speak for ourselves.” Defending the faith is a proof of your spiritual sight. This demands doing the will of God, and this is the meaning of having a spiritual sight.

God bless you.

Rev Fr Chukwuemeka Vincent Livinus, SMMM.

Saturday, March 11, 2023

THE SAMARITAN WOMAN: MY OWN EXPERIENCE

HOMILY FOR THE 3RD SUNDAY OF LENT,  YEAR A


THEME: THE SAMARITAN WOMAN: MY OWN EXPERIENCE


R1: Ex 17: 3-7
R2: Rom 5:1-2, 5-8
Gospel: John 4: 5-42

Dear friends, the story of the Samaritan woman in the gospel is a very peculiar one. Jesus, who
was tired by the day’s journey, sat beside the well at Sychar to wait for his disciples who had
gone to buy food. A woman (a Samaritan) came to draw some water by the well and there she
saw Jesus (a Jew) who was free to engage her in a discussion.This woman was an unfaithful
woman, that even though she wasn’t married she had lived with seven men.

This woman and her story represents all of us who have been unfaithful to God. Jesus meets
us and wants to lead us back to God in a new and eternal covenant. She came to draw some
water from the well, the disciples went in search of food, these represent our constant search for
material pleasure which can only grant us a momentary satisfaction. That is why Jesus speaks
of giving this woman the living water which when she drinks she will never get thirsty again. This
living water is the spirit of God that when received we are sure of salvation (eternal satisfaction).

At the start of the discussion with the woman, she was only interested in water (material
pleasure). Continuous discussion with Jesus opened her to a deeper understanding of the gift of
God. In the same way, we have been invited to a relationship with Christ through our baptism. At
the beginning we only understand that God provided our material needs and will never let us go
hungry. When our encounter and journey with Jesus to God becomes intensified we realize
sometimes how difficult the road is and like the Israelites we soon forget the initial enthusiasm
that led us to embrace the faith. We begin to complain, “why did you bring us out of Egypt into
the desert to die of thirst?” (Ex 17:3). We start reclining in our faith instead of asking for the
living water, that which wells up to eternal life. We put God to test by asking Him for signs to
show that He loves us.

Dear friends, our Christian journey is a journey of faith. The journey of faith is the journey of
hope. These are what the second reading calls us to adopt, faith and hope. Faith and hope are
built by patience, that in every situation God is there. The Samaritan woman understood this
well that was why she persisted in the discussion with Jesus. With that persistence she realized
that Jesus was not just sir but a prophet and later a messiah. With this reality she was no longer
interested in the physical water rather the living water (salvation), thus she forgot her jug and
went and call others to come and see the saviour of the world.

May we ask God for the gifts of faith and hope so that we may be persistent in the pursuit of
salvation which he has brought for us, Amen.

*Rev Fr Chukwuemeka Vincent Livinus, SMMM.*

Saturday, March 4, 2023

LEAVE YOUR FATHER’S HOUSE, FOR THE LAND I WILL SHOW YOU

HOMILY FOR 2ND SUNDAY OF LENT -YEAR A

THEME: LEAVE YOUR FATHER’S HOUSE, FOR THE LAND I WILL SHOW YOU

R1: Gen 12: 1- 4

R2: 2 Tim 1: 8 - 10

Gospel:  Mt 17:1 - 19

The first reading of today begins with an instruction from the Lord to Abram; “Leave your country, your family house and your father’s, for the land I will show you.” (Gen 12:1). This divine instruction forms the basis of our reflection this Sunday. 

Dear friends, this command; “LEAVE”, is a gentle reminder and a reawakening of the consciousness that the Lenten season is a time we embark on a spiritual journey. This journey has at its end a transforming effect, just as Abram became Abraham when he moved according to God’s instruction. It has the resurrection and salvation at its end. It is not a physical movement rather an internal movement which must transform the inner self. 

It is an invitation to break away from the self-imprisonment to sin and the world. The journey must challenge our comfort zones, from where this movement will begin. “Leave your father’s house”, the phrase, “your father’s house”, implies one’s comfort zone. Therefore, this is an invitation to take a risk and to make a step forward and break off from one’s shell. “Your father’s house”, stands for one’s bad habits, imprisonment to sin and careless lifestyle. Sometimes, we feel very comfortable with these lifestyles as though we were at home. God invites us today to break up from them, or to leave them. St Paul in the second reading encourages that we should bear all things for the sake of Christ and what awaits us (2 Tim 1:8). Thus, for the sake of Christ, move.

This invitation to leave this our comfort zone (bad character) is not usually an easy one. It is like swallowing a bitter pill. It is not simple to leave what one is used to and to start thinking of a new pattern. Thus, we may ask, what would the new pattern look like? What will be my fate in the new one? This reality confronted the apostles and they asked, Lord, we have left everything to follow you, what shall we gain? (Mt 19:27). It is a movement that is characterized by uncertainties.  

God’s invitation to embark on this journey is not a movement to nowhere. It is a movement to a better place;  “the land he will show us.” It is a movement to the land of transformation. Jesus made this movement to the mountain today and he was transfigured. When Moses made this movement away from the Israelites, his face became as bright as the sun (Ex 34:35). Hence, it is a movement to where we shall become new, with many possibilities and opened doors. It is a movement to the land of salvation.

The Lenten season offers us an opportunity for this spiritual exercise, in which we may develop an inner disposition to recognise what is important for this movement. It offers us an opportunity to take this difficult step with Jesus to the mountain of transfiguration. Therefore, God is calling on us to go beyond our natural limits and move higher in spirit. It is a call to move from bad to God. It is a sweet invitation to what awaits us ahead which is the land of milk and honey (the kingdom of God).

Homily by:

Rev Fr Chukwuemeka Vincent Livinus, SMMM.

A DISCIPLE’S CROSS

REFLECTION FOR 22ND SUNDAY OF YEAR A THEME: A DISCIPLE’S CROSS R1: Jeremiah 20:7-9 R2: Romans 12: 1-2 Gospel: Matthew 16: 21-27 Dear friends...