Wednesday 27 January 2021

Thursday of The 3rd Week in Ordinary Time Year B, 28th January, 2021. The Memorial of St. Thomas Aquinas

 Thursday of The 3rd Week in Ordinary Time Year B, 28th January, 2021.

The Memorial of St. Thomas Aquinas

Readings: Heb. 10: 19-25, Ps.24, Mark 4:21-25

Rev. Fr. Emmanuel Emenike Onyia.


HE WHO HAS EARS LET HIM HEAR


The ears as we know are organs of hearing which consist of the pinna. It is a gift from God through which we have the faculty of being able to perceive sounds and recognize something in an auditory way. To exercise the faculty of this organ effectively we must learn to use it to listen attentively to information. The world no doubt is full of noise, echoing different things in our minds through our ears.


But what are we feeding our ears with? How are we use these organs? How has this organ helped us in our spiritual life despite this noisy world? How have we managed the noise in our lives, in families and society which distract us from listening to God? What are the things we hear or listen to? The Word of God we hear everyday how has it develop our relationship with God and our neighbour? 


Therefore, when Jesus said in our Gospel reading today, “he who has ears let him hear”, he is referring to our ability to listen to God's Word and act on it even in the midst of this noisy world. Thus, what Jesus means is that the person who seeks to gain some spiritual insight into what he is saying will have that insight increased when they listen, whereas whoever does not listen to him will end up in spiritual ignorance. To avoid this, we are reminded in our first  reading that through the blood of Jesus we have the right to enter the sanctuary, by a new way which he has opened for us which stirs a response in love and good works when we listen to Jesus.


Dear friends, by listening, hearing and following Jesus, we grow in familiarity with his voice and hears him more. And by so doing we make Jesus the light of our lives placed on the lampstand to give light and insight to our souls as individuals, family and society, illuminating all the darkness around us. And this is evident in the life of St. Thomas Aquinas whose memorial we celebrate today. For he was the famous theologian, who understands what it means to listen and do the will of God. He is remembered for his great work, the Summa Theologiae and  many other contributions, writings and works which still influenced and inspired so many people. Thereby showing us the important of listening and paying heed to what we hear.


 LET US PRAY: Heavenly Father, our ears are gift from you, help us to use them properly. And as we carry out our activities today, may our ears hear the consoling words of Jesus guiding and directing us towards the light of his presence. We ask this through Christ our Lord. Amen. Remain blessed.


Tuesday 26 January 2021

Wednesday of The 3rd Week in Ordinary Time Year B, 27th January, 2021.

 Wednesday of The 3rd Week in Ordinary Time Year B, 27th January, 2021.

Readings: Heb. 10:11-18, Ps.110, Mark 4:1-20

Rev. Fr. Emmanuel Emenike Onyia.


HAVING A RIGHT DISPOSITION TOWARDS THE WORD OF GOD


A good disposition and positive response towards whatever we do in life has a way of building up our confidence and interior life, and this of course, leads us to great success. Little wonder in our Gospel passage today, Jesus uses the parable of the sower to describe different kinds of response to God's Word. He  explained the parable by pointing out our different disposition towards the Word of God in relation to our interior life. This will help us to know whether our soul is like dry rocky ground or do we regularly seek to nourish our soul and prepare it to receive the holy Word of God. So we are called to create a fertile disposition within our heart in order to do the will of God. 


In the scriptures, there are many who hear the words of Jesus and do not understand it because of poor disposition, for instance the religious leaders who are against his teachings, the crowds that responded positively to Jesus, especially to his miracles of healing, yet turned against him at the end and demand his crucifixion. Some disciples such as Judas might also be included among those who fall away when trouble or persecution came on account of the Word. While the rich young man who was unable to part with his possessions, provides a clear example of one who hears the word, but the love for the passing things of this world and the lure of wealth choked the word, and it yielded nothing. 


But what about the good soil? These are those who hear the Word, understands it and internalize it. They indeed bear fruit and yield an abundant harvest. Our mother Mary and the disciples excluding Judas are good example of such people. Therefore, the different kinds of ground on which the seed falls represent different ways by which we  receive the Word of God. 


Dear friends, our hearts are the fields in which the Word of God is scattered. But, to which do our hearts belong? the path way, the rocky ground, the thorns or the good soil? Whichever one, we are called to have right disposition and positive response to the Word of God. We are to pay attention and take some time to appreciate God’s Word in our lives by allowing it to bear solid root in us so that we can bear great fruits . 


LET US PRAY: Lord God, oftentimes our disposition and response towards your Words is so poor. As we listen to your Words today, give us grace to remain open to receiving your Words, so as to bear fruit abundantly. We ask this through Christ our Lord. Do have a favourable day.


Monday 25 January 2021

The Memorial of SS Timothy and Titus. (Today is My Birthday, Do Pray for Me)

Tuesday of The 3rd Week in Ordinary Time Year B, 26th January, 2021.

The Memorial of SS Timothy and Titus. (Today is My Birthday, Do Pray for Me)

Readings: 2Tim 1:1-8, Ps. 96, Mark 3:31-35

Rev. Fr. Emmanuel Emenike Onyia.


DOING THE WILL OF GOD IS THE ONLY WAY TO BELONG TO THE TRUE FAMILY OF JESUS


The feeling for the sense of belonging is fundamental to human happiness and well-being, for it gives value to our life and helps us in coping with some painful emotions. Hence, we often want to belong with one another, to our friends and families, to our culture or from one association to another. However, one of the common and safest place to belong is our families, especially when it is rooted in the love of God and neighbour. 


So, today in our Gospel passage, Jesus speaks about belonging to his family and his relationship with members of his family when he said: ‘Here are my mother and my brothers. Anyone who does the will of my Father in heaven, he is my brother and sister and mother.’ From the Gospel, Jesus speaks of two ways the people around him could be identified as members of his family. Firstly he talks about those who belong to the family of his birth that is, his mother, father and relations. Then his other family which is made up of those who do the will of God.


 This family he says, is his true family where doing the will of God is the only way of belonging to this family. This is not to say that Jesus is rejecting his family; to do so would be contradicting his own teaching about loving ones parents and loving ones neighbours. However, Jesus is using this opportunity to emphasize that relationship with God is more important and this should depends on our total commitment to doing the will of God through him. Surprisingly, Mary the mother of Jesus belongs to both sides of the family, for she gave birth to Jesus and also the first to do the will of God when she  said, “let it be done unto me according to your word” (Luke 1:38). For this reason she is the first disciple of Jesus and a model for all Christians.


Thus, to be a Christian or a disciple is to enter into the family of Jesus and embrace a new relationship with God and with one another for this is the most important place to belong. All other bonds, including those of blood should be considered secondary. Because, belonging to God is fundamental to our basic relationships, prior to all human relations. Since we belong first to God before belonging to our families, after which we all go back to God where we ultimately belongs, which is determined by how we have been doing God’s will here on earth.


Dear friends, where do we ultimately and truly belong? As Christians, we claimed to belong to God, do our attitudes and decisions show that we truly belong to God? Do we not often commit ourselves to things contrary to the faith we professed in God? Today we celebrate the memorial of SS Timothy and Titus, servants who truly understood what it means to belong to the true family of Jesus. For they were both close collaborators of St. Paul who entrusted to them the care of the flock of the faithful, of which they are regarded among the first Bishops of the Church. They were great servants of God with great commitment and dedication to doing the will of the Lord and suffer martyrdom for their faith. 


Thus, SS Timothy and Titus contributed greatly to the growth of the early Church and became good examples to their fellow Christians. Hence, admonishing them, St Paul in our first reading today, tells us to fan into a flame the gift that God gave us when hands were laid on us.  For God’s gift was not a spirit of timidity, but the Spirit of power, and love, and self-control. So we should never be ashamed of witnessing to the Lord, but we should bear the hardships for the sake of the Good News, while relying on the power of God who has saved us and called us to be holy in doing his will.


LET US PRAY: Lord God, today we are called to do your will always in order to truly belong to that true family of Jesus where love of you and of our neighbour unites us together. Grant that through the intercessions of SS Timothy and Titus, we may learn to do your will and be a good collaborators with others in the mission and vocation entrusted to us. We ask this through Christ our Lord. Do have a blessed day.


Sunday 24 January 2021

Monday of The 3rd Week in Ordinary Time Year B, 25th January, 2021.The Feast of the Conversion of St. Paul

 Monday of The 3rd Week in Ordinary Time Year B, 25th January, 2021.

The Feast of the Conversion of St. Paul.

Readings: Act: 22:3-16, Ps. 117, Mark 16:15-18

Rev. Fr. Emmanuel Emenike Onyia.


AN ENCOUNTER THAT LEADS TO TRUE CONVERSION


There is something deep and unique about every person, sometimes it takes personal experience to discover this uniqueness. This is evident in our first reading today as we celebrate the feast of the conversion of St. Paul, an event that prompt me to reflect on my personal experience of God. I am confident enough to tell you that everyday is an opportunity to encounter God through different events that occur in our lives. 

I don't know if you have ever had an experience that made you realize the emptiness of this life, a kind of experience that turns pride into humility, sinfulness into righteousness, an experience that changes your perspective about things or people?


This is the kind of experience that Saul had with Jesus that made him realize the emptiness of his life and how wrong he was, fighting against God’s people. For Saul was a young and zealous Pharisee who was deeply involved in the persecutions of early Christians. He was present at the moment when St. Stephen was martyred and stoned to death. Saul was also a leading figure among the Sanhedrin in their attempt to destroy the Church and the followers of Christ, for he went from place to place and carried out violent attacks against the followers of Christ until he encountered the Lord on his way to Damascus. 


This very encounter brought true conversion in his life and changed his perspective about Christians. This encounter gave him a new identity, changing his name from Saul to Paul. A name indicating his new mission. A mission he so carried out with all his zeal and passion that he is regarded as one of the apostles and today his works still speak about the effect of his personal encounter with Jesus.


Dear friends, as we celebrate the feast of the Conversion of St. Paul, we are called to reflect on our own conversion. Today like St. Paul, we are called to reflect on our personal experience with God. How have we personally experienced God? When was your spiritual turning point? Do we have a personal conviction about God that does not based on what people told us of him?  Remember that by the virtue of our baptism we are called to share in the same ministry and calling that St. Paul himself had received from the Lord. So, in case you have not personally experience the Lord, all you need to do is to sincerely seek God in those common events in your life and you will realize how much God is willing to reveal himself to you. 


LET US PRAY: Lord God, we really need to have a personal encounter of your presence in our lives. As we reflect on the encounter and conversion of St. Paul, may we experience your presence in a unique way and through this experience discover our purpose and mission in life. We ask this through Christ our Lord. Do have a blessed and favourable week.


Saturday 23 January 2021

Third Sunday in Ordinary Time Year B, 24th January, 2021

 Third Sunday in Ordinary Time Year B, 24th January, 2021

The Sunday of the Enthronement of the Word of God.

Readings: Jonah: 3:1-5.10, Ps. 24, 1Cor.7:29- 31, Mark 1:14-20

Rev. Fr. Emmanuel Emenike Onyia.


WHAT IS OUR RESPONSE TOWARDS THE WORD OF GOD WE HEAR EVERYDAY


Today is the third Sunday in Ordinary Time year A, the Sunday we are called to celebrate the Word of God. This is very important and significant since our Holy Father Pope Francis in his Apostolic Letter Aperuit Illis on 30th September, 2019, declared and instituted “A Sunday for the Word of God”, which is to be celebrated every third Sunday in Ordinary Time of the Church’s Liturgical Year. 

The purpose of this declaration is to remind all Christ faithful that the Word of God as contained in the Scriptures are very vital and integral in the development of our faith in God. The Word of God in this case does not just refer to the Scriptures as we know it, but is also refers to Christ himself as our Lord and Saviour, the Divine Word made Incarnate.


Hence our readings today, emphasis on the important and significant of the Word of God the lives of his people. In the first reading, we heard how Jonah was compelled by God to preach his Word to the people of Nineveh. For the scriptures says: that the word of the Lord was addressed to Jonah: ‘Up!’ he said ‘Go to Nineveh, the great city, and preach to them as I told you to.’ Jonah set out and went to Nineveh in obedience to the word of the Lord. He went on into the city, making a day’s journey as he preached saying, ‘Only forty days more and Nineveh is going to be destroyed.’ And the people of Nineveh believed in God; they proclaimed a fast and put on sackcloth, from the greatest to the least and repented from their sins.


In a similar way, in our Gospel passage we heard how our Lord Jesus went into Galilee. There he proclaimed the Good News from God saying: ‘The time has come and the kingdom of God is close at hand. Repent, and believe the Good News. Then, he called the first four of his apostles who were fisherman and they left everything and followed him and he made them fishers of men as they committed themselves to living and preaching  the Word of God.


Here, we see how God has chosen Galilee of the gentiles, to be the place where his Word will be proclaimed so that they will repent and believe in the Good News and by so doing conquer the darkness of sin around them.  For the Word of God conquers evil and sin. It brings order over chaos, security over danger, joy over sorrow, truth over falsehood, life over death and salvation over condemnation. Yes, Jesus begins his ministry in Galilee, his mission will be extended to the whole world. Hence he called his disciples who will be instruments to extend his mission to the whole world. 


Thus, Jesus calling these fisherman to follow him offers them the opportunity to observe him closely on a daily bases. And by doing so, they will learn more from him. In order to become familiar with his ways of doing things. They will unconsciously copy his manner of speaking, his gestures, his dealings with people. They will see how he solves problems and counters opposition. So that gradually, they will become like Jesus in thoughts, words and deeds. 


This tells us about the sacrificial nature of discipleship which the people of Corinth failed to understand as we read in our second reading. Thus, we heard St. Paul telling them that our time in this passing world is growing short. That those who have wives should live as though they had none, and those who mourn should live as though they had nothing to mourn for; those who are enjoying life should live as though there were nothing to laugh about; those whose life is buying things should live as though they had nothing of their own; and those who have to deal with the world should not become engrossed in it. Because the world as we know it is passing away. 


Dear friends, the question we need to ask ourselves are: what is our response towards the Word of God we hear everyday? How much of this Word dwells in us? What is my relationship with Jesus the Living Word of God made flesh and dwells among us? So, the emphasis on the Word of God today is very important to all of us the faithful people of God who have been called to follow the Lord. 

Therefore, if we are to follow Christ faithfully, we must cultivate the habit of studying the scriptures because the Word of God is our daily sustenance and the source of our strength and faith. Hence, we are called to make the Word of God the guiding principle in our lives. For in the scriptures we find the strength and courage to promote good over evil, order over chaos, security over danger, joy over sorrow, truth over falsehood, life over death and salvation over condemnation.


LET US PRAY: Lord God, as we enthroned your Word in our lives, our families and in your Church today, grant we pray, that through the power of the Holy Spirit, we may come to discover the power and the efficacy of the scriptures in our lives as individuals, families and community of God’s people. We ask this through Christ our Lord. Amen. Do have a blessed and lovely Sunday.


Friday 22 January 2021

Saturday of The 2nd Week in Ordinary Time Year B, 23rd January, 2021

 Saturday of The 2nd Week in Ordinary Time Year B, 23rd January, 2021

Readings: Heb.9:2-3.11-14, Ps.46 , Mark 3:20-21

Rev. Fr. Emmanuel Emenike Onyia.


THE SACRIFICE OF JESUS ON THE CROSS IS THE SEAL OF THE NEW COVENANT


From the beginning of creation God has always been making covenant with humanity and this covenants are made in different ways and in different occasions. In the old testament, this covenants were often made and sealed with the blood of animals. However, this has to change by the very act of the incarnation of Christ the Lord. Who in accordance with the plan of God to redeem humanity has sacrificed his blood completely for the salvation of all. Thereby doing away with the old covenants sealed with blood of animals.


Little wonder, in our first reading today we are reminded of the redemptive work of our Lord Jesus Christ on the Cross. Where as a high Priest, he has offered himself as a worthy sacrifice for our sake and for the forgiveness of our sins. This he did in order to deliver us from death and led us into a new hope and a new life of love and obedient to God. By this redemptive work, Christ has become our high Priest who has taken away the sins of humanity. This he accomplished by pouring out his most precious blood on the cross. His blood which is far more precious than the blood of any animal has replaced the old covenantal seals and has become the new covenantal seal by this singular act of love on the cross.


Dear friends, in Christ Jesus, God has accomplished his redemptive work, for there is no need for any other sacrifices. What is needed is for us to identify ourselves with this covenantal sacrifice through our active participation in the celebration of the Holy Eucharist during the Holy Mass. For during the Holy Mass, the very same Sacrifice of our Lord at Calvary is enacted by Christ himself through his priest of which he has entrusted to his Church and his priests, the power and authority to constantly make present to the people this covenantal sacrifice. Therefore, we are called to embrace this sacrificial love of Christ and turn away from our ugly and sinful ways of life in order to embrace this love and mercy with a new heart and be ever more grateful to God for such an act of kindness and compassion. 


LET US PRAY: Heavenly Father, we thank you for such great act of love which you have shown to us through Christ your Son who is our eternal high Priest. Grant that we may be ever more faithful in following and doing your will, who lives and reigns forever and ever. Amen. Do have a blessed and favourable weekend.


Thursday 21 January 2021

Friday of The 2nd Week in Ordinary Time Year B, 22nd January, 2021.

Friday of The 2nd Week in Ordinary Time Year B, 22nd January, 2021.

Readings: Heb.8:6-13. Ps.84 , Mark 3:13-19

Rev. Fr. Emmanuel Emenike Onyia.


WE ARE CALLED AND CHOSEN IN ORDER TO BEAR WITNESS OF OUR SALVATION IN CHRIST JESUS


As Jesus continues his work of evangelization and mission towards the salvation of humanity, he needed to have people who will be entrusted with this mission. Thus, in our Gospel passage today, Jesus chose twelve apostles out of his disciples. He called and separated them from the crowd so that they will be with him. And he gave them power to preach the gospel, to heal the sick, and to cast out devils. 


Here Jesus clarifies the extreme nature of his mission which he will entrust to his apostles, so that those who would follow him must first count the cost, because they will definitely share in his sufferings in order to share in his glory. Thus, Jesus who has earlier given the disciples explicit instructions about his mission makes know to the apostles their specific mission. 


Consequently, each one of us like the apostles are called by name into a deep personal and intimate relationship with Jesus in order to be sent to bear witness of him in the world. Absolute commitment is a necessary quality for this mission. Because, Jesus did not choose people because of what they were. Rather, he chose them for what they could become under his direction and power. Thus, we heard in our first reading that Christ has been given a ministry of a far higher order, and to the same degree it is a better covenant of which he is the mediator, founded on better promises. So, he will make a new covenant with us. And will put his laws in minds and write it in our hearts. Then he will be our and  we shall be his people.


Dear friends, how are we responding to God's call? How best are we carrying out this mission of preaching the Gospel, healing the sick and casting out devil? How are we relating with those we judge to be sinners? What efforts are we making to convert them. Remember, as followers of Christ we are called to journey with Jesus in love and compassion towards other people even in the midst of sufferings, rejection and persecution.


LET US PRAY: Lord God, you called and chose us to be with you in order to bear witness of our salvation to humanity, help us to have the missionary zeal that will enable us to live with integrity, purity and detachment from the thing of this passing world. We ask this through Christ our Lord. Amen. Do have a favourable day.


Homily For Monday Seventh Week in Ordinary Time Year B, The Memorial of Mary, Mother of the Church (Mater Ecclesiae) 20th May, 2024

  Readings: Gen. 3:9-15.20, Ps.86; John 19:25-34 Rev. Fr. Emmanuel Emenike Onyia.   CELEBRATING MARY AS OUR MOTHER   As the Holy season of...