LENT DAY 18: WE ARE ALL DEBTORS. (Homily for March 1, 2016. Tuesday of the Third Week of Lent)


Bible Study:  Daniel 3, 25 and 34 to 43. Matthew 18, 21 to 35.


There are certain facts about the way we humans are wired that never ceases to amaze me. Back then in school, I used to wonder how I forget things so easily. There were times I read all through the night preparing for an examination only to get into the hall the following morning and completely forget everything I stood up all night to read. However, when someone offends me, I start praying for the gift of forgetfulness. I not only remember the incidence, I even remember the very words the person spoke, the way those words were said, the time it happened and the reasons why such happened.

Isn’t it funny that when we do things for people, we never forget it but at the same time, we easily forge the favours we ourselves have received from others? Sometimes, when we receive gifts from people, there is a sense of entitlement attached to it. We just say “thank you” yet deep within us, we say “I deserved it after all.” Our “thank you” does not come from the heart and no sooner had we started using the gift, we forget how we got it. However, when we give things to people, we keep saying to ourselves “I know what it cost me to give him or her that gift oh.” There is a feeling of expectation about how that person ought to behave and when our expectations are not met, we easily notice and begin to feel bad.

Where does all this lead to? In today’s Gospel passage, Peter asked Jesus how often he was to forgive and Jesus responded with a parable about a certain servant who was forgiven so much debt by his master yet went on to arrest his fellow servant who owed him very little. The truth is that we are very much like this servant. After receiving the gift of forgiveness, he quickly forgot about it because of the sense of entitlement and immediately he remembered the servant who he had given something in the past. He could not forget and let go.

We are all debtors. If God were to charge us, none of us would be alive today. Let us pray for the gift of forgetfulness. Not that we forget what we read when preparing for examination, but the ability to forget the wrongs that people do to us.

Let us Pray:
Lord Jesus, just as Daniel prayed in today’s first reading, do not hold our guilt against us. Grant us something of your heart that we may forgive just like you always forgive us. Amen.

God bless you. Good morning. Be Happy. Live Positive. Have Faith. It is well with you. Happy new month. Hurray!!! It is my month! May you march into success and favour. Amen.


LENT DAY 17: SICKNESS IS NO RESPECTER OF PERSONS NEITHER IS FAITH. (Homily for February 29, 2016. Monday of the Third Week of Lent)


Bible Study:  2 kings 5, 1 to 15. Luke 4, 24 to 30.


In our first reading this morning, we read about an army general who had everything going on well for him, he was a man of honour, a valiant fighter and rich in material wealth. However, he was also a leper. Usually the sickness of leprosy is one that is mostly found among the poorest of the poor in the society and lepers are treated with the least possible dignity and even quarantined. How come a rich man like Naaman contacted the disease?

That people experience sickness, suffering and pain is a mystery no one is yet to explain. Yesterday, Jesus made us understand that those who suffer much are not necessarily greater sinners than any of us meaning that it is not because of his sins that Naaman was afflicted with leprosy. The truth is that no one has it all. We all have our little deficiencies here and there, none of us has got a perfect life. Never envy anyone from a distance because you never can tell what is hidden behind that smile, or that super beautiful face, or that show of wealth as the case may be.

Just as sickness is no respecter of persons, faith does not care who you are or where you come from. Faith does not care about your age, your language, your gender, and the position you hold in society. Faith is the ability to obey the voice of God without questioning the medium or the nature of the command. For Naaman, his test of faith was to obey the voice of God speaking through the prophet Elisha and bathe seven times in the Jordan.

Like Naaman, we tend to question God’s instruction at times, we think we know better or that God’s mouthpiece (the prophet) might just be mistaken. First Naaman is disappointed that Elisha did not come out of his house to invoke healing directly on him. Again he feels insulted that of all the clean rivers in Syria, it is the Jordan Elisha asks him to bathe in. Thanks to the slave girl’s intervention, Naaman would have gone home with leprosy still in him. At least, Naaman did not consider himself too big or too important to listen to her. Faith demands humility!

Coming to the Gospel passage, we find a people who found it difficult to accept the authenticity of Jesus as a prophet because they knew everything about him and watched him grow before their very eyes. They lacked Faith and failed to see him as God’s mouthpiece not to mention seeing him as God’s own Son.

Just as faith does not care if one is a foreigner or not, faith does not also care if one claims to be a son of the soil. As long as you believe in God and pray, be sure that God will reward you for your faith. God is neither a politician nor is he tribalistic.


Let us Pray:
Lord Jesus, teach me not to envy others nor to see myself as better than anyone else but may my faith grow deeper and deeper in you daily. Amen.

God bless you. Good morning. Be Happy. Live Positive. Have Faith. It is well with you. Happy new week. And Happy New Month in advance!


ARE YOU “SAVED” OR “SLAVED”? (Homily for February 28, 2016. Third Sunday of Lent, Year C.)


Bible Study:  Exodus 3, 1 to 15, 1st Corinthians 10, 1 to 12 and Luke 13, 1 to 9.


Slavery can be described as a terrible crime of man’s inhumanity to man. To be enslaved is to be reduced from the dignity of a human being to an object lacking any rights or privileges that is now used by a fellow human being. To be enslaved is to suffer the brutality and scorn of a master and yet remain compelled to obey the voice of the master without even daring to complain. To be enslaved is to be oppressed and afflicted. Sin by its very nature is form of slavery. It is an affliction, a suffering that God so much desires to free us from hence he said to Moses at the burning bush: “I HAVE SEEN THE AFFLICTION OF MY PEOPLE AND HAVE HEARD THEIR CRY. I KNOW THEIR SUFFERINGS.”

Now, just as Moses was sent by God to free the people from slavery in Egypt, Jesus was sent by God to free us from the slavery of sin, evil and corruption. Again, just as the Israelites were afflicted and agonized over the sufferings imposed on them by the Egyptian taskmasters, we are all afflicted as long as we remain under the dominion of sin. This is exactly what St. Paul is trying to explain in the second reading when he said: “These things are WARNINGS for us, not to desire evil as they did. Do not be idolaters as some of them were; as it is written, "The people sat down to eat and drink and rose up to dance." We must not indulge in immorality as some of them did, and twenty-three thousand fell in a single day. We must not put the Lord to the test, as some of them did and were destroyed by serpents; nor grumble, as some of them did and were destroyed by the Destroyer.”

Quite often we do not really understand the gravity or the seriousness of sin as a new taskmaster. We are readily moved by physical calamity such as the report of some Galileans whose blood Pilate mixed with the sacrifices or the report of the 18 persons on whom the tower of Siloam fell BUT when it comes to sin, we so much trivialize it that we only end up laughing about it.

The point Jesus want us to get in today’s Gospel passage is this: sin by itself is just as deadly and dangerous as having a whole tower fall on top of a person, sin is a vicious and bloody as having one’s blood extracted and mixed with sacrifices. Jesus want us to understand that God did not allow those things happens as a form of punishment for their sins because those persons were not worse sinners than any of us. Their death is not a punishment but as long as we allow our lives to be ruled by sin, we are destroying ourselves daily. Sin afflicts, sin is wicked, sin is deadly, sin destroys. In fact, sin in itself is worse than any physical, human or natural disaster you can think of. This is why Jesus says: “Unless you repent, you will all likewise perish.” Jesus is not saying, unless you repent, one day a big stone will fall on your head. No, he is saying, unless you repent, that sin you allow to linger in your life will have the same effect on your soul as a heavy stone will on your head.

We must be able to see sin for what it really it is, as an oppressive force that makes us slaves, slaves to our flesh, slaves to our passions, slaves to material possessiveness, slaves to power and lust. As long we remain in sin, we are not yet saved and just as slaves are not free to take personal decisions, we cannot bear the fruits expected of us by God when we are enslaved to sin. Salvation happened for the people of Israel when they finally left Egypt forever. Pharaoh had no power over them anymore, there was no way he could give them any instruction and they were not under any compulsion to obey him. That was a physical salvation.

True salvation is being able to walk out of Egypt to a place where sin no longer has dominion over your life. If you are still struggling with sin, you know something is not right and God is not happy about it and you still feel compelled to do it, then you are not yet saved. If fall into a pit, you need someone on the surface to drag you out. As long as you still remain inside, you are not yet saved. Now, if someone were to give you a rope and tells you to hold tightly to it while he pulls you out, you are being saved. But then let’s say, upon getting out, you change your mind and let go of the rope, what happens? You fall back inside. Jesus has given us Christians the rope by suffering and dying for us. But it is sad to say that we are not yet saved so long as we have come to fall in love with our sinfulness and would rather prefer to sin than bear the right fruits of virtue expected by God.

Repentance is the key to salvation. If we still trivialize sin, paint it as “normal” or laugh about it, it means we are special types of slaves; slaves who have come to love their master so much that there is nothing their master does that moves them. To tell a lie, to steal, to commit adultery and so on may look trivial, but in the real sense, these evils are of equal gravity of having a whole building collapsing on one’s head. The thought of this connection should make us repent, we should hate the pit so much that we hold on to the rope and have Jesus pull us out.

Let us Pray:
Lord Jesus, grant me the grace of freedom from the captivity of sinfulness that I may bear the fruits of goodness you have deposited in me. Amen.

God bless you. Good morning. Be Happy. Live Positive. Have Faith. It is well with you. Happy Sunday.


LENT DAY 16: A MERCIFUL FATHER. (Homily for February 27, 2016. Saturday of the Second Week of Lent)


Bible Study:  Micah 7, 14 to 15 and 18 to 20. Luke 15, 1 to 3 and 11 to 32.


Whenever we read the story of the prodigal son, there is a re-awakening of this feeling of “no-matter-what,” God will forgive me my sins. But then, what happens is that like the prodigal son, we go out again and again to continue squandering the father’s wealth hoping to come home again and again and be welcomed with a party.

Dear friends, let us not forget that the story of the prodigal son is not a report of how things are done in heaven. The story is just a parable, a vehicle that Jesus used to convey a message to his critics; the Scribes and Pharisees who saw him eating with tax collectors. And what is the message? That we ought to love rather than discriminate others simply because of their sins.

When we say God is merciful, it does not mean that he does not care about whatever we do. He is not a tissue paper who is just there to wipe us off each we mess up. He is a Father and deserves more than that. Yes, Jesus ate with tax collectors and sinners but all those who sat at table with him had a complete change of heart. Jesus was not encouraging them to sin more, he only decided to shift the location of the pulpit from the altar to the table! He did this so perfectly that a man like Levi swore to return fourfold whatever he had taken deceitfully from people.

Rather than write people off and condemn them, Jesus was saying, why not show them love and allow your love touch their hearts in a way that your words can’t. The story of the prodigal son shows us that God continues to love even the most hardened sinners and values their return much more than the steadfastness of those keeping the faith. So if we want to make God happy, we must do all we can to bring sinners back to God and we would win more persons with an attitude of love and concern than we would with an attitude of condemnation.

Let us Pray:
Lord Jesus, the prophet Micah asks: “Who is like you, a God who pardons our guilt and takes away our faults?” Help me never to take advantage of your mercy but continue to strive each day to walk in your light. Amen.

God bless you. Good morning. Be Happy. Live Positive. Have Faith. It is well with you. Happy Saturday rest!


LENT DAY 15: THERE IS NO REWARD FOR WICKEDNESS. (Homily for February 26, 2016. Friday of the Second Week of Lent)


Bible Study:  Genesis 37, 3 to 28. Matthew 21, 33 to 46.


The story of Joseph and his brothers is very much our own story. Too often, we behave like his brothers, we get to hate others simply because of the favour they enjoy and we do everything possible to prevent their dreams from coming true. Eventually these brothers of Joseph would find themselves kneeling before an Egyptian Prime Minister someday not knowing he is their brother.

By the way, one may ask, what does it mean to be wicked? Every time we tell a lie, we are displaying wickedness! Every time we insult others or prevent them from getting their rights and privileges, we are wicked. Every time we place our own needs before that of others, we are wicked. Every act of selfishness is wickedness.

In the Gospel passage, Jesus gave a parable of some selfish tenant who refused to give a share of the harvests of the land to the land owner. They not only maltreated the servants he sent, they went as far as killing them and upon seeing his own son, they took away his life hoping the land would then become theirs. By being selfish, by thinking only of themselves, they displayed the height of wickedness.

The opposite of wickedness is empathy. It is putting yourself in the shoes of others, being able to feel their problems, being able to understand their plight and helping them succeed in fulfilling their dreams.

Wickedness does not pay. It only locks you up in your own miserable world and the pain you inflict on others, you surely get double of it.

Let us Pray:
Lord Jesus, open my heart to love even those I fear would be greater than I am. Give me wisdom to be empathetic rather than being wicked. Amen.

God bless you. Good morning. Be Happy. Live Positive. Have Faith. It is well with you.


LENT DAY 14: MY NAME IS LAZARUS, PLEASE LISTEN TO ME. (Homily for February 25, 2016. Thursday of the Second Week of Lent)


Bible Study:  Jeremiah 17, 5 to 10. Luke 16, 19 to 31.


My name is Lazarus, look at me very well, I am sure you still recognize me. My body was always covered with sores, look at the scars of the sores still on my body. Your dogs loved licking my body after feeding fat from your table. I was always there by your gate, and I knew you were always having more than enough to eat and drink because every day you had a party going on in this house. You were always inviting people to come and dine with you. You invited senators, governors and the richest businessmen and women in town for your daily parties but you never looked at me or invited me even to eat even the scraps and leftovers from your table.

I was just by your gate all day and you were aware of my condition. Each time you saw me, you pretended as if I don’t exist. You wished I could just disappear. You thought I was simply lazy or that I was being cursed for living in such an impoverished condition. You always blamed my condition on the government and everybody else but never saw yourself as capable of giving me a helping hand.

When I died, I went to heaven and was taken to Abraham’s side but your Oga also died and was taken to Hell Fire. From the midst of hell, he saw me and begged Abraham to ask me to dip my finger in water to cool his tongue. In life he had gallons of water to drink and waste and here he was begging for just one drop. And he couldn’t get the drop so he begged Abraham to send me to you to warn you. Even from hell, your Oga still loves you, he doesn’t want you to come and experience hell fire so I am here to warn you.

This is my warning! Hell is real, please do all your best to avoid it! Be kind and generous to the poor and needy. Whatsoever you do to the least of my brothers, Jesus says, that you do unto me. Don’t share your food only with the rich, also invite poor people to table. You should be ashamed that there is gross inequality in society, whereby you have so much to waste, whereby you even spray dollars at your occasions and people like me are scattered all over the place unable to eat even one square meal a day.

Above all, I want you to know that God sees everything that happens. All the while I was suffering and dejected in your gate, God knew my situation. Do not think that God is not aware of what is happening. For years I was there at your gate, God was giving you countless opportunities to change your heart and do something for me but you refused. I warn you before it is too late. Your Oga is already in hell, please that place is not funny at all. Just look at what Jeremiah says in today’s reading: “I the Lord, search the mind and try the heart, to give to every man according to his ways, according to the fruit of his doings.”

You cannot pretend before God. God sees your heart and knows when you are kind or cold to the poor. He knows when you fake charity by inviting television and media to announce your “good deeds.” And for those suffering, don’t worry too much about having food to eat, instead strive to enter heaven because it profits you nothing to gain the world and lose your soul.

Although Abraham told your Oga that even if someone rise from the dead, you will not believe, I decided to come all the same. Believe me or not, my name is Lazarus and this is my message to you!

Let us Pray:
Lord Jesus, may I always remember that nothing is hidden from you and that I will surely get the just reward of my actions. Amen.

God bless you. Good morning. Be Happy. Live Positive. Have Faith. It is well with you.


LENT DAY 13: TO SERVE OTHERS IS TO BE GREAT. (Homily for February 24, 2016. Wednesday of the Second Week of Lent)


Bible Study:  Jeremiah 18, 18 to 20. Matthew 20, 17 to 28.


Humans are naturally ambitious. Given that we have God’s DNA in us, there is something within us that longs for perfection. We are never truly satisfied with our current state in life no matter where we have gotten to. I remember struggling to come first in class in primary school only to get home and my dad complained about my average point. Then it was no longer a matter of first position, I started aiming for a higher average point.

That we are ambitious creatures is not a problem, the problem is that we are often ambitious for the wrong things. There is absolutely no problem with aspiring for heaven. That is why the Jesus does not condemn James and John out rightly for bringing their mother to ask for seats at his right and left. Jesus only wanted to be sure that they were ready to drink the cup of suffering and pain which are part of following the narrow path to heaven.

And when Jesus got a positive response, he told them the secret to achieving such greatness. WHOSOEVER WILL BE GREAT AMONG YOU MUST BE YOUR SERVANT, WHOSOEVER WOULD BE FIRST AMONG YOU MUST BE YOUR SLAVE.

There lies the secret. Do you aspire also to sit at Jesus’s right hand in heaven, then start serving others today? Bring yourself down like Mother Theresa who served even the poorest of the poor of society and cleaned the bodies of lepers. Become a slave to people. That is the key!

Let us Pray:
Lord Jesus, grant me the grace of true humility and courage to serve rather than be served. Amen.

God bless you. Good morning. Be Happy. Live Positive. Have Faith. It is well with you.


LENT DAY 12: PRACTICE MAKES PERFECT. (Homily for February 23, 2016. Tuesday of the Second Week of Lent)


Bible Study:  Isaiah 1, 10 and 16 to 20. Matthew 23, 1 to 12).


In our first reading this morning, the prophet Isaiah summarizes what exactly should be our goal for Lent:

-          Repentance from sin, especially the sins of the flesh which characterized Sodom and Gomorrah.

-          Love for goodness and hatred of evil.

-          The practice of mercy.

-          Providing justice to the poor, especially to victims of oppression such as orphans and widows.

Isaiah assures us that when we do these things, God would thoroughly wipe away our past record of sins, no matter the extent of sins we may have committed, we would become like new born babies again.

It is very easy to preach to others with words but not so easy to practice what we preach. Jesus, in our Gospel passage is so disappointed with the religious leaders of his time because they were simply hypocrites. Jesus said: “practice whatever they tell you, but not what they do.”

There is no point being a signboard to heaven if all you do is to point people there but never move into heaven yourself. Yes, people may respect you and you may enjoy some earthly glory but all that would not matter the moment you stop breathing. True glory lies in the actual practice of God’s word; that is how we grow into perfection.

Above all, we must never forget that without God, we are nothing! So we must never see ourselves as greater than anyone else or try to make ourselves gods before others. Whether or not people greet us according to our titles does not matter. What matters is that we are living as children of the light before God who sees everything and before whom, nothing can ever be hidden.

Let us Pray:
Lord Jesus, free me from the tendency to preach with my lips alone rather than by the very content of my life. Amen.

God bless you. Good morning. Be Happy. Live Positive. Have Faith. It is well with you.


LENT DAY 11: FOUNDED ON SOLID ROCK. (Homily for February 22, 2016. Feast of the Chair of St. Peter)


Bible Study:  1st Peter 5, 1 to 4. Matthew 16, 13 to 19).


The secret of a long-lasting building lies in its foundation. Whatever will stand strong must first begin with a solid foundation. Christ himself spoke about building on sand as against building on solid rock. (Matthew 7, 24 to 27). So when he wanted to build a church, he selected a Rock for its foundation. That rock is what we celebrate today.

“You are Peter, and upon this Rock, I will build my Church. And the powers of death shall not prevail against it.” Matthew 16, 18. Within this statement of Jesus Church lies the secret of the success of the Catholic Church. Just as it was not flesh and blood that told Peter who Jesus really is, it is not flesh and blood that sustains the Church. Kingdoms have come and gone, yet the church remains!

For those who believe that there is no power in the Catholic Church simply because we do not display signs and wonders or go on television to advertise miracles, it would interest you to meditate on the words of Jesus to Peter in today’s Gospel passage: “I give you the keys of the kingdom of heaven, and whatever you bind on earth shall be bound in heaven and whatever you loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven.” Matthew 16, 19.

Today there are a lot of church springing up here and there everywhere not founded by Christ and established for the wrong motives. Peter himself admonishes ministers in the first reading NOT to see the church as an avenue of making money or exercising control over others but instead as an avenue to serve God’s people as their shepherd. And we know a good shepherd by the very example of his life. Jesus said it plainly: “By their fruits, we shall know them.” Matthew 7, 20.

Yes, we know them by their excessive love for money, their private jets and luxurious mansions, their craze for the latest fashion and designer shoes and suits, even by their hairstyle and choice of vehicles, by their wastefulness and scandalous spending all in the name of doing God’s work! Yet Jesus said “Carry no purse, no bad, no sandals.” Luke 10, 4.

Let us Pray:
Lord Jesus, touch the hearts of our ministers that they may not be led astray by the love of the world but truly shepherd your flock to right pastures. Amen.

God bless you. Good morning. Be Happy. Live Positive. Have Faith. It is well with you. Happy new week.


THE CERTAINTY OF GLORY BENEATH THE CROSS. (Homily for February 21, 2016. Second Sunday of Lent. Year C.)


Bible Study:  Genesis 15, 2 to 12 and 17 to 19. Philippians 3, 17 to 4, 1. Luke 9, 28 to 36).


As we proceed with our Lenten observances of prayer, fasting, almsgiving, Stations of the Cross, abstinence and other forms of self-mortification, it is easy for us to become carried away by the sorrowful side of the cross that we forget what lies beneath it. Today, God is essentially saying to us: “Don’t be discouraged, it may be painful for now, but very soon, you will see the glory.”

In the transfiguration of Jesus, we hear Peter exclaim: “It is wonderful to be here.” That is essentially what we shall say when we too behold the glory.

Why was Jesus transfigured? Being that at this time, Jesus was in a human body, as a man, it was possible to give up. Jesus himself needed something to hold on to in the face of the blows, the kicks, the slaps, the whips, the spittle and mockery. The transfiguration experience gave him certainty that he was on the right track. In fact, Moses and Elijah came to Jesus to say: “THE TIME HAS COME! THIS IS WHAT THE WORLD HAS BEEN WAITING FOR, DON’T LOOK BACK, YOU WILL SURELY SUFFER, YES OH, YOU WILL DIE, BUT DON’T WORRY, WE GOT YOUR BACK!”

It is important to note that the transfiguration occurred in the course of prayer. It is possible that this was not the first time, Moses and Elijah were appearing to him. The only difference is that this was the moment when he allowed Peter, James and John to see these things. If only God can open our eyes to see what really happens during prayer, we never afford to joke with prayer or skip it any longer.

The fact that it seems as if all we get is the painful side of the cross should not make us give up in the race before us. The fact that we are yet to see Moses and Elijah does not mean we should put off our Lenten practices or abandon the narrow way. Let us never ever compare ourselves with any one or begin envy those who as St. Paul says in the second reading: “walk as enemies of the cross of Christ. Their end is destruction, their god is the belly, their glory in their shame, their minds set on earthly things.”

By the time God told Abraham that his descendants would be as many as the stars of heaven, Isaac had not yet been born. The fact that things are not working out for you right now should not make you look back. The fact that people are laughing at you should not make you drop the cross. Right now, it may be hard, it may seem as if God is not going to answer your prayer or dry your tears. Just Hold On. After the Reggae comes the Blues. After the Cross, comes the Glory. Hold on my dear, don’t throw your cross away!

Let us Pray:
Lord Jesus, may I never be discouraged. May I never become an enemy of your cross but learn to love and embrace it every day. Open my eyes to see that glory truly awaits me in heaven if only I hold on to my cross. Amen.

God bless you. Good morning. Be Happy. Live Positive. Have Faith. It is well with you. Happy Sunday.


LENT DAY 11: AIM FOR PERFECTION. (Homily for February 20, 2016. Saturday of the First Week of Lent)


Bible Study:  Deuteronomy 26, 16 to 19. Matthew 5, 43 to 48).


God does not desire that we should simply be mediocre Christians. He does not like it when we just try to be good or average Christians. God desires perfection. He wants us to strive every day to be the best we can ever be.

And he wouldn’t demand perfection from us if he know we are incapable of it. God demands perfection from us because his own DNA is in us. He knows we can because we are made in his image and likeness.

And what does it mean to be perfect? It is being able to love your enemies with the same degree of love and care as you would love your best friends. It is allowing your rain, that is, your goodness to fall on both the good and the bad alike. It is greeting everybody as well as those who would not respond when you do.

To be perfect is, as Moses tells us in the first reading, keeping the commandments of God with all our heart, all our mind, all our soul. Yes, we can! We cheat ourselves when we give excuses for not meeting up the mark.

Just as we only use a tiny fraction of our brain functions, we also happen to be using only a tiny percent of our spiritual power. Tell yourself: “I can do better. I can keep the Commandments. I am human but I am also Divine. I can be perfect because I was made by a perfect God.”

Let us Pray:
Lord Jesus, help me to grow daily in spirit and walk in your light. Amen.

God bless you. Good morning. Be Happy. Live Positive. Have Faith. It is well with you. Happy weekend.


LENT DAY 10: WHAT KIND OF SACRIFICE IS MOST PLEASING TO GOD? (Homily for February 19, 2016. Friday of the First Week of Lent)


Bible Study:  Ezekiel 18, 21 to 28. Matthew 5, 20 to 26).


A few days ago, we read about Jesus teaching us to pray with special emphasis on forgiveness as a conditio-sin-qua-non for effective prayer. Today, Jesus is raising the bar, he is taking a further step in that same direction. This time around, he says we should NOT EVEN GET ANGRY WITH ANYONE at all at all, talk less of INSULTING a fellow human being and if we are on our way to offer gifts and sacrifices on the altar, and remember that someone has SOMETHING AGAINST US, we must go and be reconciled before doing our offering.

The meaning of this is that our gifts are WORTHLESS in the sight of God if anger, hatred, enmity, strife and dissension exist in our hearts. Some people have hot quarrels with their neighbours in the house, they keep malice, fight with others and then still come to Church to start dancing and singing as if they are the holiest creatures on earth and then they still come out to do offering. What a contradiction?

You see, sometimes we even think that by giving large sums of money as donation in church, we would even get God to fight and destroy our enemies for us. Whereas, that same God says if we dare get angry with someone, we would be liable to judgement. Hmmmmmmm. In fact, hear what God says to us in today’s first reading: “Have I any pleasure in the death of the wicked, and not rather that he should turn from his way and live?” We assume that justice is served with our enemies die, yet God is saying, he is most unhappy to see bad people die! Aren’t we even offending God when we begin to pray “Holy Ghost Fire burn, burn, burn, or we pray Die, Die, Die, Die, on the heads of our enemies?”

It is not easy to forgive or be reconciled with your enemies as well as those who have made themselves your enemies for no fault of yours. Yet this is the kind of sacrifice that is most pleasing to God. It is more precious to offer the forgiveness of your neighbour to God than to part with your money, your goats, your yams or plantain and so on. After all, God does not need your money to go to market and he is not going to come down literally to eat yam or drink goat pepper soup but there is GREAT REJOICING in heaven over one sinner who repents because of your efforts to seek reconciliation.

Let us Pray:
Lord Jesus, help me to have a mind like you to reach out for the lost sinner rather than try to use you to fight my enemies. Amen.


God bless you. Good morning. Be Happy. Live Positive. Have Faith. It is well with you. 

LENT DAY 9: PRAYER IS AN ACT OF LOVE. (Homily for February 18, 2016. Thursday of the First Week of Lent)


Bible Study:  Esther 14, 1 to 14. Matthew 7, 7 to 12).


Jesus says to us in today’s Gospel passage, “If you who are evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will your Father who is in heaven give good things to those who ask him.” God is OUR FATHER and the most essential property of a father is love for his children.

Knowing we are praying to a Father who LOVES us should give us confidence to ask, to seek and knock. Esther knew this and that was why she called to God prostrating herself on the ground from morning till night. She asked for God to grant her favour in the presence of the king against man who was making plans to destroy her entire nation. And we all know how God answered her prayer.

There is a difference between asking and complaining. While asking is done with a disposition of love towards God, complaining is telling God how unjust he is for allowing so and so happen. To complain is to express bitterness about one’s situation hoping that things would remain the same or even go from bad to worse. To complain is to be out rightly pessimistic.

The moment we stop believing that God is capable of solving our problems, we become bitter like the people of Israel who despite seeing the mighty hand of God in the plagues, despite seeing how he divided the red sea in two could still complain against Moses in the desert because of food. That bitterness towards God is dangerous and deadly.

Asking, knocking and finding demands CONFIDENCE in God as a loving father who is more than capable of giving us something better than what we are asking for.

Let us Pray:
Lord Jesus, give me the grace to always have a positive disposition whenever I come before you in prayers remembering always that you love me. Amen.


God bless you. Good morning. Be Happy. Live Positive. Have Faith. It is well with you.