Sunday, June 14, 2026

We Got a Deal and Oil Prices Dropped

Oil futures are down because we got a deal with Iran to end the war and open the Strait of Hormuz. Cheap oil is good for life. 

Hopefully, this deal goes through clean. No more charades. 



Sunday Mass Readings and Reflection June 14th, 2026


First Reading:
 (Exodus 19:2–6a)

Responsorial Psalm: Psalm 100
"We are His people, the sheep of His flock."

Second Reading: (Romans 5:6–11)

Gospel: (Matthew 9:36–10:8)

Reflection:

One word stands out in today's Gospel at Mass at St. Martha'sParish: compassion.

Matthew tells us that when Jesus looked at the crowds, "He had compassion for them because they were harassed and helpless, like sheep without a shepherd."

Everything Jesus did flowed from compassion. He healed because of compassion. He taught because of compassion. He forgave because of compassion. Even those who opposed Him were not objects of hatred but people whom He loved as children of God.

This is an important reminder in our world today. It is easy to become frustrated with others, to judge them, or to ignore their struggles. Jesus challenges us to see people differently. He invites us to look beyond appearances and recognize the pain, confusion, loneliness, and burdens that many carry in their hearts.

The Gospel also reminds us that "the harvest is plentiful, but the laborers are few."

Jesus asks His disciples to pray for laborers to serve God's people. The Church continues to need priests, religious sisters and brothers, deacons, missionaries, and faithful laypeople willing to share the Gospel. Yet this call is not limited to those in formal ministry. Every Christian is called to be a worker in the Lord's harvest.

After naming the Twelve Apostles, Jesus sends them out with a mission: proclaim the Good News, heal the sick, cleanse the lepers, and cast out demons.

Most of us may never perform miracles as the Apostles did, but we are called to continue their mission in ordinary ways.

To heal the sick may mean visiting someone who is lonely, encouraging a friend who is suffering, or simply listening to someone who needs support.

To raise the dead may mean bringing hope to those whose spirits have been crushed by disappointment, grief, addiction, or despair.

To cleanse the lepers may mean welcoming those who feel excluded, forgotten, or marginalized.

To cast out demons may mean standing against hatred, dishonesty, injustice, and anything that separates people from God.

Jesus concludes with a powerful instruction: "You received without payment; give without payment."

God's grace is a gift. We have freely received His love, mercy, forgiveness, and blessings. Therefore, we are called to share these gifts freely with others, not seeking recognition or reward but acting out of love.

The First Reading reminds us that God chose Israel to be His treasured possession. The Second Reading reminds us that Christ died for us while we were still sinners. Together, these readings reveal a God who loves first, forgives first, and calls first.

Our response should be simple: to become instruments of His compassion.

Today, let us ask ourselves:

  • Do I look at others with compassion or judgment?

  • Am I helping to build God's Kingdom through my words and actions?

  • How can I bring hope, healing, and encouragement to someone this week?

The harvest is still plentiful. There are still many people searching for hope, kindness, and love.

May we follow the example of the Apostles and become faithful laborers in the Lord's vineyard, bringing Christ's compassion to all whom we meet.

Amen.

God bless you.

The Trouble with the Continent of Africa: Why Unity Is Impossible in Practice


For more than sixty years, African leaders have spoken passionately about African unity. From the founding of the Organization of African Unity (OAU) in 1963 to the modern African Union (AU), the dream has remained the same: a continent united politically, economically, and socially.

Yet despite countless summits, declarations, and treaties, genuine African unity remains elusive. One of the greatest obstacles is often overlooked-the continent's extraordinary linguistic fragmentation.

Africa is not merely divided by borders; it is divided by language, history, culture, religion, and colonial legacies. The language map alone reveals why unity is far more difficult in practice than in theory.

A Continent Speaking Different Worlds

Unlike Europe, where linguistic families often overlap and regional integration developed gradually, Africa's official languages reflect centuries of colonial domination.

A person from Ghana conducts government business in English. A neighboring citizen of Côte d'Ivoire uses French. Across the border in Guinea-Bissau, Portuguese is the official language. In Equatorial Guinea, Spanish joins French and Portuguese. Meanwhile, much of North Africa functions primarily in Arabic.

The result is a continent split into multiple linguistic blocs:

The English-Speaking Bloc

Countries such as:

  • Ghana
  • Nigeria
  • Kenya
  • Uganda
  • Zambia
  • Namibia
  • South Sudan
  • Sierra Leone
  • Liberia
  • Gambia

share English as an official language.

The French-Speaking Bloc

Countries including:

  • Senegal
  • Mali
  • Niger
  • Burkina Faso
  • Côte d'Ivoire
  • Benin
  • Togo
  • Chad
  • Gabon
  • Democratic Republic of Congo

conduct much of their government and business in French.

The Portuguese-Speaking Bloc

  • Angola
  • Mozambique
  • Cape Verde
  • Guinea-Bissau
  • Equatorial Guinea (partly)

maintain Portuguese as an official language.

The Arabic-Speaking Bloc

  • Egypt
  • Algeria
  • Libya
  • Morocco
  • Tunisia
  • Mauritania
  • Sudan

operate largely within the Arabic-speaking world.

Indigenous Language States

Several nations maintain strong indigenous official languages:

  • Ethiopia (Amharic)
  • Somalia (Somali)
  • Rwanda (Kinyarwanda)
  • Burundi (Kirundi)
  • Tanzania (Swahili)

These countries often possess stronger national linguistic identities than many of their neighbors.

Colonial Borders Created Artificial States

Language differences are not accidental. They are the legacy of European colonialism.

The British left behind English-speaking administrations. The French imposed French institutions and legal systems. Portugal spread Portuguese throughout its colonies. Spain left a smaller but still visible linguistic footprint.

When independence arrived, African nations inherited borders that frequently ignored ethnic, cultural, and linguistic realities.

Today, many Africans communicate more easily with former colonial powers than with neighboring countries.

A Ghanaian professional may communicate effortlessly with someone from London. A Senegalese official may interact more naturally with Paris. An Angolan businessman may find it easier to conduct business with Lisbon than with a neighboring English-speaking country.

This reality complicates continental integration.

Economic Integration Becomes Difficult

Language barriers increase transaction costs.

Businesses must translate contracts, regulations, legal documents, educational materials, and government communications.

Professional qualifications often do not transfer smoothly across linguistic zones.

A nurse trained in English-speaking Ghana may struggle to work in French-speaking Senegal. A lawyer trained in the French legal tradition may face significant challenges practicing in an English common-law jurisdiction.

Even within the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA), language remains a significant barrier to cross-border commerce.

Education Systems Pull Countries in Different Directions

Language shapes education.

Students in Nigeria study largely through English.

Students in Mali study through French.

Students in Mozambique study through Portuguese.

Students in Egypt study primarily through Arabic.

As a result, textbooks, universities, professional standards, and intellectual traditions often develop separately.

African graduates frequently look outward-to Britain, France, Portugal, or the Arab world-rather than toward neighboring African countries.

The continent's future leaders are therefore educated within different intellectual ecosystems.

Religion and Culture Deepen the Divide

Language is closely tied to religion and culture.

North Africa is heavily influenced by Arabic language and Islamic civilization.

Much of Southern Africa retains strong British and Dutch colonial influences.

Francophone West Africa often maintains close cultural ties with France.

Portuguese-speaking Africa possesses its own distinct historical identity.

These differences create multiple Africas within Africa.

The continent is not one civilization but many civilizations occupying the same geographic space.

The African Union's Dilemma

The African Union attempts to bridge these divisions through multiple official working languages, including English, French, Arabic, Portuguese, Spanish, Kiswahili, and others.

While admirable, this approach demonstrates the problem itself.

Every major document requires translation.

Every summit requires armies of interpreters.

Every policy discussion must navigate linguistic complexity before substantive issues can even be addressed.

Unity becomes expensive, slow, and bureaucratic.

Why Europe Integrated More Successfully

Many Africans point to the European Union as a model.

However, Europe enjoyed advantages Africa lacks.

European states developed over centuries with relatively stable institutions and stronger transportation networks. Their economies became deeply interconnected before political integration accelerated.

Most importantly, Europe entered integration with wealth, infrastructure, and functioning states.

Africa, by contrast, attempted continental integration while simultaneously building nations, economies, and institutions from scratch after colonialism.

The challenge was far greater.

Unity as an Ideal, Not a Reality

The dream of African unity remains noble and inspiring.

Yet genuine unity requires more than political speeches.

It requires common institutions, shared educational standards, integrated infrastructure, economic interdependence, and effective communication among peoples.

Language alone does not make African unity impossible. However, it illustrates a broader truth: Africa is not a single homogeneous entity but a continent of immense diversity.

The continent contains dozens of major ethnic groups, hundreds of languages, multiple religions, distinct colonial legacies, and vastly different political systems.

These realities do not make cooperation impossible, but they make full political unity highly unlikely.

The future of Africa may therefore lie not in becoming a single united state, but in building practical regional partnerships that respect the continent's diversity while encouraging cooperation where mutual interests exist.

Africa's greatest strength is its diversity. Ironically, that same diversity is also one of the greatest obstacles to continental unity.

What do you think?


Saturday, June 13, 2026

Why You Should Work on Saturdays

If you're antisocial, especially at work, Saturdays are your best chance to have a great day without the usual crowds. The proof is right below.




Mass Readings and Reflection for June 13th, 2026


First Reading:
(1 Kings 19:19–21)

Responsorial Psalm: (Psalm 16)
“You are my inheritance, O Lord.”
 Gospel: (Matthew 5:33–37)

Reflection:
Radical Commitment (Elisha’s Example)
Elisha doesn’t hesitate-he lets go of everything immediately to follow God. He even destroys his old means of livelihood, symbolizing no turning back.
Reflection:
  • What is God asking me to let go of?
  • Do I delay obedience or give excuses?
In real life (especially in nursing or caregiving):
  • Showing up fully for patients
  • Letting go of distractions or burnout habits
  • Choosing compassion even when tired
God is Enough (Psalm 16)
The psalm reminds us that our stability and identity don’t come from work, control, or outcomes-but from God.
Reflection:
  • When things are stressful or uncertain, where do I anchor myself?
  • Do I rely only on my abilities-or trust God’s presence?
Application:
  • During overwhelming shifts: pause, breathe, say inwardly:
    “Lord, You are my portion.”
Integrity in Speech (Gospel)
Jesus calls for radical honesty-no exaggeration, no manipulation, no hidden meaning.
Reflection:
  • Do my words match my intentions?
  • Can people trust what I say?
God bless you 
Amen 🙏 

Friday, June 12, 2026

Wall Street Madness or Visionary Investing?


So today, Elon Musk made history once again. The man with two publicly traded companies with market value of over a trillion dollars each. 

His company, SpaceX, went public and, for the first time in history, began trading with a market capitalization exceeding $2 trillion on its very first day. The debut sent shockwaves through Wall Street and ignited a frenzy among investors eager to own a piece of the world's most celebrated space company.

The valuation is staggering. A company that launches rockets, deploys satellites, and dreams of colonizing Mars is now worth more than many nations' annual economic output.

The obvious question is: What has SpaceX contributed to humanity that warrants such an eye-popping valuation?

Supporters point to its revolutionary achievements-reusable rockets, dramatically lower launch costs, global internet connectivity through Starlink, and its role in advancing human space exploration. They argue that SpaceX is not merely a transportation company but the foundation of a future space-based economy.

Skeptics, however, see something else: another episode of Wall Street exuberance, where expectations and dreams are being valued far more than present-day earnings and cash flows.

History has shown that markets can be remarkably visionary-and remarkably irrational.

Whether this valuation proves justified or becomes another example of speculative excess remains to be seen.

We will see.

Mass Readings and Reflection for Friday, June 12, 2026 Solemnity of the Most Sacred Heart of Jesus


First Reading:
(Deuteronomy 7:6–11)

Responsorial Psalm: (Psalm 103)

“The Lord’s kindness is everlasting to those who fear Him.”

Second Reading: (1 John 4:7–16)

Gospel: (Matthew 11:25–30)

Reflection

Today's Solemnity of the Most Sacred Heart of Jesus centers on the Heart of Christ—a symbol of God's deep, personal, faithful, and unending love for humanity.

The first reading reminds us that God's love is not something we earn.

Israel was chosen not because they were strong or important, but simply because God loved them. The same truth applies to us today:

  • You are loved in your weakness, not because of your strength.

  • God's love is rooted in His faithfulness, not in your perfection.

  • His love remains constant even when you struggle.

Do I sometimes feel that I need to earn God's love through my achievements or good works?

The second reading gives us one of the most powerful statements in all of Scripture:

"God is love."

This means:

  • Every action of God flows from love.

  • Even correction, waiting, or silence can be expressions of His love.

  • To know God more deeply, we must learn to love others.

Love is not optional for Christians-it is evidence that God's life dwells within us.

For reflection:
How do I show God's love to those around me each day?

In today's Gospel, Jesus reveals His Heart directly.

He describes Himself as:

  • Gentle

  • Humble

  • Compassionate

  • Welcoming

Jesus does not say, "Fix yourself first and then come to Me."

Instead, He simply says:

"Come to me."

Notice that Jesus does not promise to remove every burden immediately. Rather, He promises to walk with us and help carry it.

True rest is not escaping life's challenges-it is trusting Christ while facing them.

For reflection:
Do I bring my burdens to Jesus, or do I try to carry them alone?

The Sacred Heart of Jesus invites us to:

  • Bring Him our worries, fears, and burdens.

  • Stay close to Him through prayer, Scripture, and the Eucharist.

  • Trust His loving Heart even when life feels heavy.

The Heart of Jesus remains open to all who seek Him. No burden is too great, no sin too large, and no person too far away from His mercy.

Today, let us place our hearts within His Sacred Heart and find the peace that only He can give.

Amen.

God bless you. 🙏❤️

Thursday, June 11, 2026

Hempstead Village: Somewhere On the Island 🏝

 





SPIDER Driver EDU-DRIVING


The SPIDER method to:

Scan ahead and around you


Predict what may happen


Identify the hazards


Decide what the correct action is


Execute your correct decision, and


Reflect on what just happened.


Brought to you by improv..........

Mass Readings and Reflection for Thursday, June 11th, 2026


First Reading:
(Acts 11:21–26; 13:1–3)

Responsorial Psalm – Psalm 98

Response: The Lord has revealed to the nations his saving power.

Gospel Acclamation

Alleluia, Alleluia.

Go and teach all nations, says the Lord; I am with you always, until the end of the age.

Alleluia.

Gospel: (Matthew 10:7–13)

Today the Church celebrates the Memorial of Saint Barnabas, one of the great missionaries of the early Church. Although not one of the original Twelve Apostles, Barnabas played a crucial role in spreading the Gospel and strengthening the Christian community.

His original name was Joseph, but the apostles gave him the name Barnabas, which means "Son of Encouragement." That title perfectly describes his mission. Barnabas had a remarkable ability to recognize God's work in others and to encourage people to follow where God was leading them.

In the first reading, we see the Church in Antioch experiencing something new. The Gospel was spreading beyond traditional Jewish communities to Gentiles. This was a significant development, and naturally there were questions and concerns. The apostles sent Barnabas to investigate.

When Barnabas arrived, he could have focused on differences, problems, or uncertainties. Instead, he recognized the grace of God at work. Scripture tells us that he rejoiced and encouraged the believers to remain faithful to the Lord.

This is an important lesson for us. A truly spiritual person is not someone who simply points out faults. A spiritual person recognizes God's presence and encourages goodness wherever it is found.

Barnabas also saw potential in another person whom many were hesitant to trust—Saul, who would later become Saint Paul. After Saul's dramatic conversion, many Christians remained suspicious of him because of his past persecution of the Church. Barnabas believed in God's transforming power. He sought out Saul, brought him into the community, and became one of his strongest supporters.

Imagine how different Christian history might have been if Barnabas had not welcomed Paul. Sometimes one word of encouragement can change the course of a person's life.

The Gospel shows Jesus sending out the apostles to proclaim the Kingdom of God. They were to heal the sick, bring peace, and freely share what they had freely received. Their mission was not about personal gain or prestige. It was about making God's love known.

Saint Barnabas embodied this mission perfectly. He gave generously of his time, energy, and gifts. He sought neither recognition nor power. Instead, he dedicated his life to helping others encounter Christ.

Our world today desperately needs more people like Barnabas. Many people carry burdens of discouragement, loneliness, failure, and uncertainty. A kind word, a listening ear, a gesture of support, or an expression of faith can become a channel of God's grace.

We may not preach to nations as Barnabas did, but we are all called to encourage others in faith. Parents encourage children. Friends encourage friends. Parishioners encourage one another. Every Christian is called to build up rather than tear down.

Saint Barnabas reminds us that evangelization begins with seeing God's grace at work and helping others recognize it too. The Holy Spirit who guided Barnabas continues to guide the Church today, calling us to be witnesses of hope, faith, and encouragement.

As we celebrate this memorial, let us ask Saint Barnabas to intercede for us, that we may become people who strengthen others in faith, recognize God's work in unexpected places, and proclaim the Gospel not only with our words but also with our lives/deeds.

Amen.