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Friday of Week 7 Year 2

Posted on Sunday, January 26, 2014 by Andrew Kooi Posted in 7th, Friday, Ordinary Time, Weekday, Year 2 Leave a comment

When we say we would do something, do we really mean it? Sometimes we say “yes” but our hidden meaning is “no.” Other times, we say “yes” but actually mean “maybe.” But how many of us are consistent when we say “yes” and really mean “yes?”

Today’s reading reminds us: “do not swear by heaven or by the earth, or use any oaths at all. If you mean ‘yes’, you must say ‘yes’; if you mean ‘no’, say ‘no.’ Otherwise you make yourselves liable to judgement.” Sometimes we get caught in a situation where we make a promise and are unable to keep it. We may only end up embarrassing ourselves and create problems because of our folly. This is why we should not simply make oaths or promises without seriously and carefully considering the consequences. Why “cari pasal” or “look for trouble” in this way? Are we committing ourselves just to please others and hopefully look good? Or are we doing so to glorify God?

Thursday of Week 7 Year 2

Posted on Saturday, January 25, 2014 by Andrew Kooi Posted in 7th, Ordinary Time, Thursday, Weekday, Year 2 Leave a comment

Are we a just people? Do we treat others fairly? Some of us have maids helping to care for our loved ones at home. Are we just in our treatment towards them? From time to time, we hear horror stories of maids, factory workers and other migrant workers being mistreated. Some are even being paid pittance for the amount of work they do. Some don’t get a rest day, because some of us think that we had paid a huge sum to hire them and bring them into the country, and we think that it is right for us to get the most of our money.

However, today’s reading serves us a warning: “Labourers mowed your fields, and you cheated them – listen to the wages that you kept back, calling out; realise that the cries of the reapers have reached the ears of the Lord of hosts. On earth you have had a life of comfort and luxury; in the time of slaughter you went on eating to your heart’s content. It was you who condemned the innocent and killed them; they offered you no resistance.” When we mistreat other people for our own gain, we are only bringing condemnation towards ourselves. We may not experience punishment here on earth, as we think that we are clever enough to circumvent the law. However, we forget that God is watching us. Are we ready to answer Him when we meet Him face to face?

Wednesday of Week 7 Year 2

Posted on Saturday, January 25, 2014 by Andrew Kooi Posted in 7th, Ordinary Time, Wednesday, Weekday, Year 2 Leave a comment

Every now and then, we hear people say: “I am proud of my accomplishments” or “that man became rich because he is a self-made man.” Also, we hear in advertisements on television selling products with words like: “Proudly produced by XYZ Corporation.” Is it wrong for us to be proud? If we are proud because what we are doing is ultimately to glorify God, then that is a different matter. But how many of us are proud in this way? How many of us would take credit and think that we did it our way and succeeded? When we become proud, we become so full of ourselves and think that we can do without God’s help.

This is precisely what the reading warns us. The reading says: “You never know what will happen tomorrow: you are no more than a mist that is here for a little while and then disappears. The most you should ever say is: ‘If it is the Lord’s will, we shall still be alive to do this or that.’ But how proud and sure of yourselves you are now! Pride of this kind is always wicked. Everyone who knows what is the right thing to do and doesn’t do it commits a sin.” Have we forgotten who we are and where we come from? Let us take heed and change our ways, walking humbly before God.

Tuesday of Week 7 Year 2

Posted on Friday, January 24, 2014 by Andrew Kooi Posted in 7th, Ordinary Time, Tuesday, Weekday, Year 2 Leave a comment

How content are we in life? Some of us may be guilty of wanting more and more of things and even people, causing us to commit sin in our pursuit to attain what we want and satisfy our desire (which can never be fully satisfied). Today’s reading tells us: “Where do these wars and battles between yourselves first start? Isn’t it precisely in the desires fighting inside your own selves? You want something and you haven’t got it; so you are prepared to kill. You have an ambition that you cannot satisfy; so you fight to get your way by force. Why you don’t have what you want is because you don’t pray for it; when you do pray and don’t get it, it is because you have not prayed properly, you have prayed for something to indulge your own desires.” The problem that we face is, are we praying to God for our own selfish wants, or have we learnt to pray for His glory?

Instead of focusing our efforts in attaining temporary things here on earth, perhaps we should take heed of what the reading reminds us: “Give in to God, then; resist the devil, and he will run away from you. The nearer you go to God, the nearer he will come to you. Clean your hands, you sinners, and clear your minds, you waverers. Look at your wretched condition, and weep for it in misery; be miserable instead of laughing, gloomy instead of happy. Humble yourselves before the Lord and he will lift you up.” Are we wanting to be with God for eternity, or are we setting ourselves up for an eternity away from God? Let us choose wisely, as we have only one choice.

Monday of Week 7 Year 2

Posted on Thursday, January 23, 2014 by Andrew Kooi Posted in 7th, Monday, Ordinary Time, Weekday, Year 2 Leave a comment

The minds of people are not easy to understand and discover. People can sometimes play games or pretend by putting up a front, hoping that others will not realise who they really are. Even people who appear to be respectable or upright could have a hidden side. There is more than meets the eye for some people, and unless one is very observant, one could be misled by such people.

Today’s reading reminds us that “If there are any wise or learned men among you, let them show it by their good lives, with humility and wisdom in their actions.” How many of us are genuinely wise or learned? We may have plenty of degrees, doctorates or other qualifications, but does that really make us wise? Sometimes we see such people with so called high qualifications behaving in a manner quite the opposite. Are we living good lives, with humility and wisdom in our actions? Or are we hiding behind our intellect, while in actual fact our hearts remain darkened and cold?

7th Sunday in Ordinary Time Year A

Posted on Tuesday, January 21, 2014 by Andrew Kooi Posted in 7th, Ordinary Time, Sunday, Year A Leave a comment

Over the centuries and decades of human history, we have seen much anger, hatred, revenge, opposition, defiance, destruction, etc. as people are unable to love and forgive. It seems easier to get back at others than to forgive, reconcile, let bygones be bygones and move on. Perhaps there is a certain amount of pride and stubbornness which makes people behave and react in this way.

However, today’s Gospel and readings remind us of the need to love. Often we may think that love is only for those who love us. We find it difficult or impossible to love those who hate us. But if we consider the big picture: when we continuously and consistently love others, regardless whether they are friends or otherwise, these people may slowly change their attitude or behaviour towards us. Love is capable of transforming foes to friends, if we make effort to love genuinely. However, we should note that love is not just a feeling, it also requires action. We need to show love towards others, by being good to them, praying for them, being generous to them, etc. It is when we show true and genuine love towards others over time, people begin to change, and our environment changes too.

Often, we may try to take the easy way out by being nasty or indifferent towards those who are mean or difficult to us. We may feel as if our time and effort could be used for other things. But it is through God’s grace we can love and help bring peace on earth. If each of us make effort and not give up so easily, if we are willing to be consistent and make sacrifices, then perhaps we may all truly be God’s children.

Friday of Week 6 Year 2

Posted on Monday, January 20, 2014 by Andrew Kooi Posted in 6th, Ordinary Time, Weekday, Year 2 Leave a comment

Whenever we sing the hymn “They will know we are Christians,” I wonder whether we are fully aware of what we are singing. Sometimes we sing without realising the meaning or implications of the song. We get carried away with the melody, but do we mean what we sing?

In today’s reading, we are reminded that “Faith is like that: if good works do not go with it, it is quite dead.” Also, the reading tells us that “A body dies when it is separated from the spirit, and in the same way faith is dead if it is separated from good deeds.” We say that we have faith; we believe in God; we recite the creed every Sunday; we call ourselves Christians; but is our faith merely words? Is our faith all talk but no or little action? Let us show our faith by the way we behave; the way we live; the way we love others, regardless of who they are or whether they are our family, friends, or even those who are against us; then only would people “know we are Christians by our love.”

Thursday of Week 6 Year 2

Posted on Monday, January 20, 2014 by Andrew Kooi Posted in 6th, Ordinary Time, Weekday, Year 2 Leave a comment

I have observed that at times and in some churches, some people tend to treat a person according to the person’s appearance, the way a person dresses, or according to the person’s status or rank in society. When a person is well dressed or has got a title or something, some may treat such a person like a VIP. But when a beggar or shabbily dressed person comes to church, some of us may begin to form all sorts of thoughts and assume all sorts of scenarios, whether good or bad. This is precisely what today’s reading is warning us: “Can’t you see that you have used two different standards in your mind, and turned yourselves into judges, and corrupt judges at that?”

Today’s reading also tells us that “the right thing to do is to keep the supreme law of scripture: you must love your neighbour as yourself; but as soon as you make distinctions between classes of people, you are committing sin, and under condemnation for breaking the Law.” Are we segregating and treating people differently in church? Have we forgotten that we are all brothers and sisters in Christ, regardless of how we look or who we are? If we are continuing to treat people in such a manner, how different are we compared to the world? Are we followers of Christ, or have we allowed the ways of the world to corrupt us?

Wednesday of Week 6 Year 2

Posted on Sunday, January 19, 2014 by Andrew Kooi Posted in 6th, Ordinary Time, Weekday, Year 2 Leave a comment

How conscious are we when we say something? Are we aware of what we are saying? Do we realise that words, once said, cannot be taken back? Proverbs 12:18 tells us: “Reckless words pierce like a sword, but the tongue of the wise brings healing.” In today’s reading, we are also cautioned to “be quick to listen but slow to speak and slow to rouse your temper; God’s righteousness is never served by man’s anger.” There is a reason why God gave us two ears and one tongue, and sometimes we end up saying more than we should and are unable to listen because of the noise generated within us and around us.

Think carefully before you say anything. Your tongue can be a weapon far mightier than any weapon created by humankind. You can make or break someone with a simple comment. Are you speaking your mind, and meaning what you say with a lifestyle and actions to match? Sometimes we say faster than we think, and that could only make us look foolish at the end.

Tuesday of Week 6 Year 2

Posted on Saturday, January 18, 2014 by Andrew Kooi Posted in 6th, Ordinary Time, Weekday, Year 2 Leave a comment

When we commit sin or fall into temptation, it is interesting to see how some of us behave. Some readily admit their sin and go for confession to seek forgiveness from God. Some try to make all sorts of excuses or denials, saying that they sinned because someone else had caused them to sin, blaming their spouse, their children, their parents, their friends, even their cat or dog. Some even start talking about other people’s faults, hoping to divert attention from their own sin.

Today’s reading remind us that “Everyone who is tempted is attracted and seduced by his own wrong desire. Then the desire conceives and gives birth to sin, and when sin is fully grown, it too has a child, and the child is death.” The sins we commit is because of our own fault, not others. We had a choice and we chose to commit sin, due to pride, envy, jealousy, selfishness, etc. No one can force us to commit sin. So we should be humble enough to admit it and seek forgiveness, and not try to deny it or sweep it under the carpet.

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