Saturday, 25 March 2017

Reflection for Fourth Sunday of Lent with REV. FR. JOHN MGBEAHAURIKE, SMMM





Reflection for Fourth Sunday of Lent with REV. FR. JOHN MGBEAHAURIKE, SMMM

 CHRIST, THE LIGHT OF OUR LIFE

(4th Sunday of Lent, Year A
1 Sam 16:1b. 6-7.10-13a - Ps 23 - Eph 5:8 - Jn 9:1-41)

Today is called LAETARE SUNDAY. Laetare is a Latin word which means "REJOICE." The Church calls us to rejoice, thus making us to have a feel of the Easter Joy, the Joy of the RESURRECTION. The human person is made from the dust and the breathing of God (Gen. 2:7). The human soul (in which we resemble God as the Catechism teaches us) is that spiritual part of man(which comes from God) that enables him to commune with God who is spirit (cf. Jn 4:24). Whenever the soul is wounded by sin(s), man's communion with God is weakened or destroyed, leaving man in isolation, pains, suffering and above all, in DARKNESS. To bring man out of darkness (to enable him enjoy the original GOODNESS at creation), God, who desires man's constant communion, sent His only begotten Son Jesus Christ, the LIGHT of the World (Jn 8:12; 9:5;12:46) for man's redemption. In today's Gospel pericope (Jn 9:1:41), Jesus shows and proves that He is truly the Light of the world by healing the man born blind. St. Augustine once said, "God created us without our contribution, but he will not save us without our contribution." A great Lesson in this healing is the fact that the blind man contributed to his salvation. His OBEDIENCE to the words of Jesus,"Go and wash in the Pool of Siloam," facilitated his healing. His humility in acknowledging his blindness and his doggedness in testifying to Jesus' healing and saving power count. Beloved in Christ, Jesus made it clear that he came to give sight to the spiritually blind, and to give judgement to those who think they see. (Jn .9:39). THINGS TO AVOID:(The attitude of the Pharisees). 1.Refusal to admit their sinfulness. 2. Pride. 3. Unbelief. 4. Self-righteousness. 5. Disobedience. 6. Seeing Jesus as their rival and enemy. Finally, as we approach Easter, we ask God for the grace to confess our spiritual blindness so as to receive Spiritual Sight.Also, we wish our dear Catholic mothers a very happy 'Mothering Sunday'. God bless your families. Happy Sunday!

 

Saturday, 18 March 2017

REFLECTION FOR THIRD SUNDAY OF LENT with FR. JOHN MGBEAHURUIKE, SMMM

                                             


                                             
                                                      

                                             with FR. JOHN MGBEAHURUIKE, SMMM

                                            Theme:  IN GOD IS OUR PEACE

                                                   3rd Sunday of Lent, Year A                                                                    
                                             Exo. 17:3-7 - Ps. 95 - Rom. 5:1-2,5-8 - Jn. 4:5-42.    
          
Man is a composite being with body and soul. As such, he has both material and spiritual longings. While the world can care for the former, the latter can only be taken care of by God. Peace of Soul is a gift from God which material things can't give. To have peace of soul entails leading a good life and being in communion with God. Unfortunately, this communion is marred by sins which create horizontal and vertical barriers and boundaries between us and God. In today's Gospel(Jn 4:5-42), Jesus in his encounter with the Samaritan, proves that God's MERCY is for all, breaks barriers and crosses boundaries simply to reconcile her with God by quenching her spiritual thirst. In other words, Jesus with love and mercy, converted the woman who out of joy confessed the Messiahship of Jesus. She also imitates the good examples of Jesus; by breaking the barrier of hatred by calling her people who have rejected her, and announcing the Gospel of joy of Jesus Christ, the Messiah to them. THIS IS A GREAT LESSON FOR US. WHEN WE EXPERIENCE FAVOUR IN LIFE, LET'S SHARE IT WITH OTHERS. In this season of lent, we are called to renew our communion with Jesus by BREAKING the BARRIERS and CROSSING the BOUNDARIES between us and  God, created by our SINS. The barriers include Animosity, Rivalry, Greed, Rancour, Jeolousy, Disunity, selfishness and indifference. This is the only way we can regain our communion with Jesus, who alone can quench our spiritual thirst with his LIVING WATER. In the presence of Jesus are: HAPPINESS, PEACE AND FULFILMENT. This is why the psalmist says, "my soul is thirsting for God" (Ps 63:1). Let us always thirst for God; bearing in mind that to thirst for God is the thirst for Righteousness which brings blessings (Mt.5:6). May God sustain us in our lenten observance so that we shall experience the Joy of Easter. God bless your family. Happy Sunday!

Monday, 13 March 2017

Tradition and Customs Behind LENTEN SEASON and Its Spiritual Import




LENTEN SEASON: A Moment of God’s Invitation to Return to Him

PIUSRALPH EFFIONG, SMMM


INTRODUCTION
The service of Ash Wednesday has come and gone. The ashes have been washed off, but the spirit of the event continues with a forty day of Lenten walk with the Lord through prayer, fasting and alms giving. The annual observance of Lent is a special season for each and every one of us. It is a moment of sober reflection and response to God’s invitation for repentance. This period goes beyond public show of piety, but interior self-examination. Which ignite in us the thirst to approach God with humility and self-emptiness and not with the pharisaic attitude. Our repentance must come from the heart as Prophet Joel exclaimed (cf. Joel 2:12-13).  Through its twofold themes of repentance and baptism, the season of Lent disposes both the catechumens and the faithful to celebrate the paschal mystery. Catechumens are led to the sacraments of initiation by means of the rite of election, the scrutinies, and catechesis. While the faithful on the other hand, listening more intently to the word of God and devot­ing themselves to prayer, and are prepared through a spirit of repentance to renew their baptismal promises. (cf. Ceremonial of Bishops no. 249). No wonder Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI in one of his Lenten homilies avers: "Lent is like a long 'retreat' during which we can turn back into ourselves and listen to the voice of God, in order to defeat the temptations of the Evil One. It is a period of spiritual 'combat' which we must experience alongside Jesus, not with pride and presumption, but using the arms of faith: prayer, listening to the word of God and penance. In this way we will be able to celebrate Easter in truth, ready to renew the promises of our Baptism."
Bearing this in mind that we are going to reflect with you as we journey with the Lord within these forty days of spiritual exercise. Before we proceed let us dig deep a bit into the threshold of the tradition and custom behind this season of Lent and its significance, then God’s invitation for repentance and Church’s teaching on the Lenten observances.

HISTORICAL BACKGROUND OF LENTEN SEASON
The term “Lent” which we employ to denote the forty days of fasting, prayer and almsgiving preceding Easter festival of our redemption, originally meant no more than the spring season. Still it has been used from the Anglo-Saxon period to translate the more significant Latin term Quadragesima, Quaresima in Italian, and Tessarakosti in Greek, meaning the “forty days”, or more literally the “fortieth day”. This therefore is an imitation of the Greek name for Lent tessarakoste (fortieth), a word formed on the analogy of Pentecost (pentecoste), which last was use for the Jewish festival before New Testament times. (www.newadvent.org). The custom of this period is dated to the Apostolic era. That is why some theologians are of the opinion that the season of Lent was established by the apostles themselves or in the immediate post-apostolic era at the latest. They assumed this season of fasting was closely connected with preparation for Easter baptisms - a practice likewise considered to be of apostolic foundation (cf. Romans 6), and observed everywhere throughout the Church since its earliest days. Also some of the fathers of the Church supported this view, for instance St. Leo exhorts his hearers to abstain that they may “fulfill with their fasts the apostolic institution of the forty days”. Taking a closer look into most of the ancient sources on the custom of Lenten season, it reveals a more gradual historical development. While fasting before Easter seems to have been ancient and widespread, the length of the fast varied significantly from place to place and across generations. Towards the latter half of the 2nd century for instance, In Gaul, Irenaeus of Lyons and  there in the North Africa Tertullian tell us that the preparatory fast lasted one or two days, or forty hours—commemorating what was believed to be the exact duration of Christ’s time in the tomb. By the mid-third century, Dionysius of Alexandria speaks of a fast of up to six days practiced by the devout in his See; and the Byzantine historian Socrates relates that the Christians of Rome at some point kept a fast of three weeks. Only following the Council of Nicaea in 325 AD. (cf. Peter Gunning, The Paschal or Lent Fast: Apostolic and Perpetual (Oxford, UK: John Henry Parker, 1845, pp. 82-85).
In the light of this, we find in the early years of the fourth century the first mention of the term tessarakoste which means “fortieth”. This term occurs in the fifth canon of the Council of Nicaea in 325 AD. Soon after the Council of Nicaea, the theory speculates, this fast would have been moved from its original position after Theophany and joined to Easter creating the Lent we know today.
Notably, St. Athanasius in his festal letter enjoined his flock to observe a forty day fast. And in 339 AD, while returning from Rome still re-emphasized the obligation to fast. Despite this justified suspicion, there are other indicators revealing that the post-Theophany fast may be something more than a late fabricated legend. As early as the mid-third century, we begin to find references to a forty-day fasting period that is not specifically connected to Easter. The earliest of these is found in a series of Homilies on Leviticus composed by Origen, a third-century
theologian from Alexandria, Egypt. To dissuade Christians from observing the Jewish Day of Atonement, Origen argues that “we [Christians] have forty days dedicated to fasting; we have the fourth [Wednesday] and sixth day [Friday] of the week on which we regularly fast.” (Homilies on Leviticus 10.2:5-6; English translation in Gary Wayne Barkley, Origen: Homilies on Leviticus: 1-16, Fathers of the Church 83 Washington, DC: Catholic University of America Press, 1990), pp. 206-207).
However, how this period came to be forty days duration is believed to be a predominant influence from the episode of Israelites experience in the Wilderness (cf. Deut 8:2-5; Ps 95:10), forty days Moses was in the Mount and received the law of God, (cf. Ex 24:18), forty days that Moses was in the mount after the sin of the Golden Calf, (cf. Deut 9:18, 25), forty days of Elijah in Horeb, (cf. 1Kgs 19:8), forty days of Jonah and Nineveh, (cf. Jonah 3:4); and in the Christian Testament (New Testament), Christ fasted for forty days and forty nights (cf. Matt 4:2), for forty days after resurrection Christ was on the earth with His disciples. The number “forty” is mentioned 143 times in the scripture to symbolize trial, testing or probation.
It is so believed that on account of this historic events and its importance in the salvation history of man that the Lenten season is being designated with forty days of prayer, fasting and alms giving.

GOD’S INVITATION TO REPENTANCE
God’s unfathomable mercy upon humanity cannot be measured. Beginning from creation He has been in constant communication with man and later in history through the prophets. God created all and saw that it was beautiful and left the first man – Adam with an instruction which he could not keep (cf. Gen 3:1-13). Thus bringing about the beginning of man’s suffering and death. Just as St. Paul’s epistle to the Romans will say: that through one man sin and death entered the world, and through Christ life was given back to humanity by the redemptive power of His paschal mystery. (cf. Rom 5:12-15). That is why at the appointed time God sent His only begotten that whosoever believed in Him may have eternal life. (cf. Jn 3:16).
In allusion to God’s invitation to repentance, prophet Ezekiel earlier prophesized, “If a wicked man turns away from all the sins he has committed and keeps all God’s decrees and does what is just and right, he will surely live; he will not die. None of his offences will be remembered against him. Because of the righteous things he has done he will live.” (Ezekiel 18:21-22). Prophet Joel further cried out: … return to the Lord with all your heart, with fasting, weeping and mourning. (cf. Joel 2:12-13).  This same proclamation was made by Christ in the New Testament inviting you and I to repent of our sins for the kingdom of God is at hand. (cf. Matt 4:17). God in any way does not desire the death of a sinner rather He often give him or her an opportunity to make amends. The time is here before us to say a total “yes” to Him who is ever ready to receive us no matter the gravity of our offences as in the parable of the prodigal son. (cf. Lk 15:11-32). That is why the public ministry of Christ had the message of repentance at the centre. The act of repentance is not a matter of season or time, it is a continuous spiritual exercise which demands an interior self-examination. It is an acknowledgement that we are sinners and that we need a Saviour. One of the clearest pictures of this message came in the person of John the Baptist, forerunner of the Messiah. His message was simply, “Repent and be baptized.” He simply told the people that they were lost and in need of repentance. This message has not changed since that time. This same invitation is what the Holy Mother Church presents before us during this solemn season of Lent, with an invitation to grab it with sincere observance of the spiritual exercise behind to it.

CHURCH’S TEACHING ON LENTEN OBSERVANCES
The Season of Lent remains a period for the preparation for the great festival of Easter, an event which reminds us of the salvation brought about through Christ’s paschal mystery of passion, death and resurrection. According to the Liturgical Year General Norms (LYGN) no. 27, the liturgy of this Season prepares both the catechumens and faithful for the celebration of the paschal mystery by the various stages of Christian initiation, and recalling of the baptism promises as well as doing penance in preparation for Easter respectively.
Within this season in the Church’s liturgical year, Gloria is omitted in all Masses with Alleluia and in the Divine Office as well, the Te Deum is as well omitted during the Office. The weekdays of Lent from Ash Wednesday to Saturday before Palm Sunday take precedence over the memorials of a saint occurring on a particular day. (cf. Instructions on the Liturgy of the Hours no. 237 – 239, pp. xiv-xv). During this period except for some genuine need or pastoral advantage Votive Masses and daily Masses for the Dead are not permitted. Altar is not decorated with flowers during Lent, while musical instruments are not used except on Laetare Sunday and for Solemnities and feasts or to sustain singing.
In addition to these stipulated guidelines, the Church urges us to try as much as we could to avoid every occasion of sin, to repent and return to God by  a good sacramental confession and do appropriate penance both those imposed at confession and other voluntary acts of penance. Regular attendance at Stations of the Cross every Wednesday and Friday is highly encouraged. The universal Church law also stipulates fasting and abstinence from meat, or from some other food as determined by the Bishop’s conference on Ash Wednesday and Good Friday. (cf. Canon 1251). The Canon further states that the law of abstinence binds those who have completed their fourteenth year of age, while the law for fasting binds those who have completed their sixteenth year of age and have not reached sixty years of age. Above all the pastors of souls and parents are to ensure that even those who by reason of their age are not bound by the law of fasting and abstinence, are taught the true meaning of penance. (cf. Canon 1252). Following the Church’s teaching on the Lenten observances, penance and abstinence exercising within this moment in the liturgical life of the Church point to: recalling the memory of the passion and death of the Lord, sharing in Christ’s suffering, as an expression of inner conversion and as a form of reparation for sin.

CONCLUSION
The code of Canon law states clearly that all Christ’s faithful are obliged by divine law, each in his or her own way, to do penance. However, so that all may be joined together in a certain common practice of penance…. On these days Christ’s faithful are in special manner to devote themselves to prayer, to engage in works of piety and charity, and to deny themselves, by fulfilling their obligations more faithfully and especially by observing the fast and abstinence which the canons prescribe. (Canon 1249). With this ecclesiastical injunction in mind, we are bound by conscience for our spiritual growth and sanctification of our souls to keep to this rules, not for the sake of keeping but reflecting soberly over the mysteries surrounding them.
 As we journey with the universal Church within these forty days of prayer, fasting and abstinence let us prayerfully remind God of our weakness with the words of St. Gregory the Great: “Remember, Lord, though frail we be, by your own kind hand were we made; and help us, lest our frailty cause your great name to be betrayed”. (An Extract from a Hymn composed by him, used for the Season of Lent, Divine Office Vol. II p. 572*).
Finally, my dear brothers and sisters in Christ, let us once more pause, ponder and remind ourselves of these words by Fulton J. Sheen, "Lenten practices of giving up pleasures are good reminders that the purpose of life is not pleasure. The purpose of life is to attain to perfect life, all truth and undying ecstatic love – which is the definition of God. In pursuing that goal we find happiness. Pleasure is not the purpose of anything; pleasure is a by-product resulting from doing something that is good. One of the best ways to get happiness and pleasure out of life is to ask ourselves, 'How can I please God?' and, 'Why am I not better?' It is the pleasure-seeker who is bored, for all pleasures diminish with repetition." Wishing you all a spirit-filled Lenten Season.

Saturday, 11 March 2017

REFLECTION FOR SECOND SUNDAY OF LENT with FR. JOHN MGBEAHURUIKE, SMMM

With FR. JOHN MGBEAHURUIKE, SMMM


THEME: LOOK FORWARD TO THE GLORY 
(2nd Sunday of Lent, Yr.A; Gen 12:1-4a/Ps33/2Tim1:8b-10/Mt.17:1-9)

As Christians our stay here on earth is temporary. We are on a pilgrimage. Our journey is a journey of faith filled with hopes that at the end, having followed Jesus faithfully, He will lead us to our final destination where we shall be with Him in His GLORY in Paradise(Cf.Jn14:3). One of the ENCOURAGING things about God's call is that it goes with a promise, which He will always fulfill. Though God's call goes with some challenges, it brings a GLORIOUS REWARD at last provided we answered it faithfully. Dear in Christ, the call of Abraham in the 1st reading of today is a good example. In this call, Abraham was asked to leave his father's land and comfort zones, to a place only God knows. He was also promised blessings. This promise was an ENCOURAGEMENT to him. It also  ENLIGHTENED him. Thus, he was enabled to answer that call with and in Faith hoping for or looking forward to the promised blessings. Similarly, in today's Gospel(Mt.17:1-9), Jesus through His Transfiguration, encourages and enlightens His followers (represented by Peter, James and John) about the nature of His GLORY which awaits them at last. We recall that Jesus did this shortly after He had told His disciples about His SUFFERING, DEATH & RESURRECTION(Mt.16:21). By revealing His GLORY to them, He wants them to know  that a  REWARD awaits them; that there is GREAT HOPE amidst the sufferings of this passing world.       Lessons: 1. We are encouraged by Jesus in this Lenten season to be firm in our observances despite our difficulties. That the GLORY that awaits us (Rom.8:18) should be our Hope, Inspiration and Motivation. 2. From the Office of the Readings, St.Leo the Great tells us that Jesus, the Son of God and the Messiah, transfigured before His disciples to avoid the disgrace of His passion and the scandal of the cross to break their faith. LET'S NOT GIVE UP. God bless your family. Happy Sunday!

Sunday, 5 March 2017

FIRST SUNDAY OF LENT HOMILY with FADA JOHN

                                                                                                             With FADA JOHN


                                          OVERCOMING TEMPTATION WITH JESUS
                  (1st Sunday of Lent, Yr A; Gen.2:7-9;3:1-7/Ps.51/Rom 5:12-19/Mt.4:1-11).  
 Today is 1st Sunday of Lent. In his 2017 Lenten Message, Pope Francis describes Lent as "a favourable season for deepening our spiritual life through the means of Sanctification offered us by the Church: Fasting, Prayer and Almsgiving. At the basis of everything is the Word of God, which during this season we are invited to hear and ponder more deeply."     The 1st and the Gospel readings (taken from Genesis and Matthew as listed above) talk about temptation. While the 1st is about Adam, the 1st Man; the 2nd concerns Jesus Christ. St Paul in the 2nd reading (Rom.5:12-19), describes Adam as the means through which Sin entered the world, and then death. He was tempted by the devil and he failed. On the other hand, grace greater than sins comes through the one Man Jesus Christ, the 2nd Adam; and life is restored. He was tempted but he conquered the devil.  Today, our attention focuses more on Jesus and his Victory over the devil and sin. The temptation of Jesus is a remarkable Experience that teaches us, his followers, great Lessons. First, that temptation in itself is not evil. Second, that it's very possible to overcome temptations. Third, that overcoming temptation once doesn't mean the end of it, it comes repeatedly in the spiritual life. Furthermore, Jesus Christ used the scripture to overcome temptations. Other ways to conquer the devil and his tricks include: Deep knowledge of the Word of God (Heb4:12); Adherence to the will of God like Jesus (Jn4:34); Being vigilant of and recognizing temptation(1Pt.5:8); Prayer (Mt.6:13); Avoid the occasion of temptation(2Tm.2:22); Call on Jesus for help (Heb.4:15-16); Avoid the pursuit of earthly glory and deification like Adam did; Be contented with what you have and fast for the glory of God and not for self glory. WE CAN OVERCOME TEMPTATION WITH JESUS, THE WORD OF GOD (Jn 1:1). God bless your family. Happy Sunday!