Thursday, April 23, 2026

Mass Readings and Reflection on Thursday April 23rd, 2026


First Reading:
(Acts 8:26–40)

Responsorial Psalm: (Psalm 66)

Response: Cry out with joy to God, all the earth.

Alleluia

Alleluia, alleluia.
Everyone who believes in the Son has eternal life,
and I shall raise him on the last day, says the Lord.
Alleluia.

Gospel: (John 6:44–51)

Reflection:

Yesterday, from the Gospel text, Jesus invited and exhorted us to come to Him in order to be saved, because His Father’s will is for Him to save all those who come to Him so that none will be lost. Today, He deepens that teaching by saying: “No one can come to me unless the Father who sent me draws him” (John 6:44).

By this, Jesus means that salvation is not something we initiate on our own. It is a process initiated by God Himself, not by human willpower. On our own, we cannot truly know God. Even our desire for God is planted within us by Him. He reveals Himself so that we may know Him. He gives us the grace and the capacity to believe. That is why faith is a gift.

Therefore, our ability to know God, to believe in Jesus, and to be saved begins with God. It is a divine initiative. However, that divine initiative requires human cooperation, supported by grace.

Think of it this way: a gift may be given, but it can be rejected or neglected. God gives the gift of faith, but we must nurture it and allow it to grow. Jesus calls us to be open and docile to the Father so that His Spirit can move us and lead us to Him, the Savior.

Those who have not come to Jesus are not necessarily those whom the Father has refused to draw, but often those who have resisted, ignored, or mishandled the gift of faith. God always initiates, but we must respond.

How does God draw us?

He speaks within our hearts. That quiet voice of conscience that urges us to do good and avoid evil, that is God drawing us. That inner conviction, that sense of remorse when we do wrong, this too is God at work. When we listen to that voice, we are responding to His invitation.

But this divine initiative must be supported by human effort.

For example, God may give a child intelligence, but the child must go to school and apply effort for that gift to bear fruit. Without effort, the gift is wasted. In the same way, faith must be nurtured.

And how do we nurture it?

First, through our environment. The family we grow up in can either nurture faith or weaken it. Some homes are true nurseries of faith, while others suffocate it. The society we live in can also influence us, some environments support faith, others oppose it.

Second, through what we consume, what we read, watch, and listen to. Do we read Scripture? Do we engage with good Christian literature? Or do we spend most of our time on content that weakens our spiritual life? What we feed our minds shapes our faith.

Third, through the company we keep. Good friends can strengthen your faith; bad company can destroy it. The people around you influence your direction, either toward God or away from Him.

Many people lose their faith not because God stopped calling them, but because they stopped responding. They neglect prayer, avoid church, listen to false teachings, and disconnect from the source of life. Over time, spiritual dryness sets in.

A branch cut off from the tree withers. A human being cut off from God becomes spiritually lifeless, a moving corpse.

So, friends, Jesus reminds us today: salvation begins with God. Faith is His gift. But that gift must be received, protected, and nurtured.

We must examine our lives:

  • What environment are we living in?

  • What influences are shaping us?

  • Are we cooperating with God’s grace, or resisting it?

Let us pray for the grace to allow ourselves to be drawn by the Father to Jesus Christ. Let us nurture the seed of faith through prayer, Scripture, good company, and active participation in the life of the Church.

God is always ready to plant that seed in our hearts. The question is: will we nurture it, or allow it to wither?

God bless you 🙏 

Wednesday, April 22, 2026

Mass Readings and Reflection for Wednesday April 22, 2026


First Reading: 
(Acts 8:1–8)

Responsorial Psalm: (Psalm 66)

Response: Cry out with joy to God, all the earth.

Gospel: (John 6:35–40)

Reflection:

Today’s Gospel gives us one of the most powerful assurances from Jesus: “I am the Bread of Life… whoever comes to me I will never cast out.” This is not just a comforting statement, it is a divine promise. Jesus reveals both the heart of God and the path to salvation. At the center of this message is the truth that God desires all to be saved. He does not will that anyone be lost. He created us for life, for eternal communion with Him, not for destruction. And so Jesus says clearly, “This is the will of my Father, that I should lose nothing of all that He has given me, but raise it up on the last day.”

But even though God desires everyone to be saved, salvation is not automatic. It requires a response. Jesus makes it clear: we must come to Him. He invites, He calls, He opens the door, but He does not force us. To be saved, we must make a movement toward Christ.


First, we come to Jesus through faith. To believe in Him is the foundation of everything. We must believe that He is the Son of God, the Savior of the world, the one who gives eternal life. This belief is not just intellectual; it is personal. It means entrusting our lives to Him. Without faith, there is no real coming to Jesus.

Second, we come to Him through the Eucharist. Jesus is not only to be believed; He is to be received. He tells us that unless we eat His body and drink His blood, we have no life in us. The Eucharist is not optional, it is essential. When we receive Him in the Eucharist, we are united with Him, nourished by Him, and strengthened for eternal life.

Third, we come to Jesus through His Word. He speaks to us, and we must listen. When we read and meditate on Scripture, we come to know His will. His Word guides us, corrects us, and protects us from error. Without the Word of God, we become spiritually weak and easily misled. But with it, we walk in truth.

Fourth, we come to Jesus through repentance. We cannot cling to sin and at the same time walk toward Christ. Repentance is necessary. It is not a punishment but a turning back, a realignment of our lives with God. Jesus says He will never reject anyone who comes to Him. The tragedy is not that Jesus rejects people, but that people refuse to come. No one in hell will be able to say that they went to Jesus and were turned away. Rather, it will be that they chose not to go. Through the sacrament of confession, we return to Him, and every time we do, He receives us with mercy.

Finally, we come to Jesus through prayer. Prayer is how we build a relationship with Him. It is how we speak to Him, listen to Him, and walk with Him daily. Through prayer, He gives us the grace to overcome temptation and to remain faithful.

My friends, Jesus assures us today: “I will not cast out anyone who comes to me.” That means no matter your past, no matter your sins, no matter how far you may have gone, you are not beyond His mercy. His arms are open. The only question is whether you will come.

So the message today is simple and urgent: let's go to Jesus, go to Him with faith. Receive Him in the Eucharist. Go to through His Word. To Him in repentance, in prayer. And if we truly come to Him, He gives us a promise that no one else can give, eternal life. And on the last day, He Himself will raise us up.

Amen.

Tuesday, April 21, 2026

TACO Monday 🌮

 


Tuesday Mass Readings and Reflection April 21st 2026


First Reading:
(Acts 7:51–8:1)

Responsorial Psalm: (Psalm 31)

Response: Into your hands, O Lord, I commend my spirit.

Gospel: (John 6:30–35)

Reflection: 

Today’s Gospel passage draws a clear distinction between manna and Jesus Christ. Manna was the bread the Israelites ate in the desert. It sustained them, giving them strength as they journeyed toward the promised land. It was given by God, yet it was not the true bread of life.

When Jesus spoke of the bread of life, the minds of the Jews immediately turned to that manna. But Jesus makes a deeper revelation: those who ate that manna still died. It sustained only physical life. It could not give eternal life.

Jesus now offers a new kind of manna, the true Bread of Life, which is Himself. Those who eat this bread will live forever. Manna, therefore, symbolizes all earthly food and desires that temporarily satisfy. But there is a deeper hunger within us, an eternal hunger, that earthly things can never fill.

This hunger is our longing for God and for heaven. That is why, no matter how much we possess, wealth, success, pleasure, there remains a void, an emptiness. Earthly things cannot satisfy the soul. Only Jesus Christ can.

This reveals the difference between the Old Testament manna and the New Testament fulfillment:

  • The old manna gave physical life.

  • Jesus, the new manna, gives eternal life.

My friends, outside of Jesus, we will continue to hunger. People chase money, yet remain unsatisfied. They pursue pleasure, yet remain empty. Why? Because these cannot fulfill our deepest desire, to be with God.

No matter how much we acquire, there will always be a void that only Jesus can fill.

Therefore, we must desire this true Bread. Earthly pleasures will pass away, but Jesus remains. He alone satisfies. That is why He says: “Whoever comes to me shall never hunger.”

Now the question is: Do we eat this Bread of Life?
Do we truly desire Jesus?

We are called to receive Him in the Eucharist, but not casually. We must receive Him worthily. It is not enough to simply go for Communion. We must examine our hearts.

If we are not in a worthy state, we must go to confession and cleanse our souls. Then, when we receive Jesus worthily, He satisfies every hunger, every longing, every desire.

A poor person who has Jesus is more fulfilled than a rich person who lacks Him. Because Jesus is everything, the true Bread from heaven.

So, we must come to Jesus and be satisfied. Seek Him, receive Him, desire Him.

Alleluia 👏 

God bless you 🙏 

Monday, April 20, 2026

Mass Readings and Reflection on April 20th 2026


First Reading:
(Acts 6:8–15)

Responsorial Psalm: (Psalm 119)

Response: Your decrees are my delight, O Lord.

Gospel Acclamation

Alleluia, Alleluia.
No one lives on bread alone, but on every word that comes from the mouth of God.
Alleluia.

Gospel: (John 6:22–29)

The Gospel of the Lord.

Praise to you, Lord Jesus Christ.

Reflection:

The readings present a powerful contrast between earthly pursuit and eternal truth.

In the First Reading, Stephen stands as a witness filled not with his own strength, but with divine grace. Even under accusation and hostility, his countenance reflects heaven itself, his face like that of an angel. Truth does not need force; it radiates.

In the Gospel, the crowd seeks Jesus, but for the wrong reason. They pursue Him for bread that satisfies temporarily, not for the truth that gives eternal life. Christ redirects them: do not labor for what perishes, but for what endures.

This “food that endures” is ultimately Christ Himself, given in the Eucharist, sustained through the life of the Church, and entrusted in a particular way to those called to serve.

The connection is clear:

  • Stephen gives witness to truth despite persecution.

  • The Apostles carry forward Christ’s mission.

  • The Church continues to be nourished through sacrificial service.

The call is not limited to a few. Every believer is invited to live in Christ. Yet there is a distinct calling, to serve, to shepherd, to nourish others spiritually.

The message is simple but demanding:

  • Seek not what satisfies temporarily.

  • Desire what transforms eternally.

  • Believe in the One who is sent.

Faith is not merely understanding, it is alignment of life with Christ.

And so the question remains:
Are we seeking Christ for comfort, or for conversion?

Sunday, April 19, 2026

Presidential or What?


 

Sunday Mass Readings for April 19th 2026


First Reading:
(Acts 2:14, 22–33)

Responsorial Psalm: (Psalm 16:1–2, 5, 7–11)

"Lord, you will show us the path of life "

Second Reading: (1 Peter 1:17–21)

Gospel: (Luke 24:13–35)

Saturday, April 18, 2026

Saturday Mass Readings and Reflection April 18th 2026


First Reading:
(Acts 6:1–6)

Responsorial Psalm: (Psalm 33)

Gospel: (John 6:16–21)

Reflection:

A man once purchased his first boat and eagerly took it out onto a calm lake. Suddenly, a storm arose, wind howled, waves surged, and fear overtook him. In desperation, he cried out, “Lord, save me, and I will go to church every Sunday.”

Immediately, the storm ceased. The lake grew calm. The man then looked upward and said, “Never mind, Lord, I think I’ve got it under control.”

This simple story reveals a truth about human nature:
In times of crisis, we turn to God; in times of calm, we often forget Him.

1. The Storm Within the Community (Acts 6:1–6)

The early Church, though growing, faced internal tension. Widows were being overlooked, an injustice that could have fractured the community.

The apostles responded with wisdom and humility:

  • They acknowledged the problem

  • They involved the community

  • They established a ministry of service

This moment marked the origin of the diaconate, rooted in service to the vulnerable.

Result:
When the Church serves rightly, it grows in unity and mission.

2. The Storm on the Sea (John 6:16–21)

The disciples faced darkness, wind, and fear. Even experienced fishermen were overwhelmed.

Then Christ appears:

  • Walking upon the waters

  • Approaching them in the storm

  • Speaking: “It is I. Do not be afraid.”

When they receive Him, they reach their destination.

Spiritual Insight

These readings reveal two essential movements of faith:

Faith Calls Us to Serve (Acts 6:1–6)

  • Respond to injustice with charity

  • Ensure no one is forgotten

  • Build unity through service

Faith Calls Us to Trust (John 6:16–21)

  • We cannot control every storm

  • But we can recognize Christ within it

Application to Daily Life

Life presents many storms:

  • Family struggles

  • Health concerns

  • Financial burdens

  • Workplace tensions

  • Interior uncertainty

Often, we attempt to manage everything alone. Yet the Gospel teaches:

Christ does not always remove the storm, He enters into it.

When Christ is welcomed:

  • Fear diminishes

  • Clarity increases

  • Direction stabilizes

Central Question: Easter proclaims not the absence of suffering, but the presence of the Risen Christ within it.

When Christ comes to us in the storm, will we recognize Him?
And will we welcome Him into our lives?

When Christ is at the center:

  • The storm may remain

  • But the heart is steadied

  • Hope is renewed

  • The path becomes clear

As in the early Church:

Where Christ leads, growth follows; where He is welcomed, peace endures.


Amen 

God bless with Daily TVM 


Friday, April 17, 2026

Daily Mass Readings and Reflection for Friday, April 17, 2026


First Reading:
(Acts 5:34–42)

Responsorial Psalm: (Psalm 27)

“The Lord is my light and my salvation; whom should I fear?”

Alleluia: (Matthew 4:4)

“One does not live on bread alone, but on every word that comes forth from the mouth of God.”

Gospel: (John 6:1–15)

Jesus feeds the five thousand:

  • A crowd follows Him

  • Five loaves and two fish are offered

  • Jesus multiplies them until all are satisfied, with leftovers

This miracle reveals:

  • Christ as provider.

  • A foreshadowing of the Eucharist.

  • God’s abundance surpassing human limitation.

Reflection:

There’s a sharp contrast in today’s readings:

1. Human logic vs. Divine power

Gamaliel speaks with reason: “If it is of God, you cannot destroy it.”
This is more than advice, it is a spiritual principle.

Too often, people resist what they don’t understand. But truth has a property:
It endures.
It survives opposition.
It grows under persecution.

2. Suffering as honor, not defeat

The apostles are beaten, and they rejoice.

This is not natural. It is supernatural.

They understand something many today miss:

  • Suffering for Christ is not loss

  • It is participation in His victory

3. From scarcity to abundance

In the Gospel, the disciples see:

  • “Five loaves… two fish… not enough”

Jesus sees:

  • More than enough

This is the transformation of faith:

  • Fear says: “There isn’t enough.”

  • Faith says: “Place it in Christ’s hands.”

Where in our lives are we?

  • Resisting what God may be doing?

  • Interpreting hardship as failure instead of formation?

  • Focusing on scarcity instead of divine abundance?

Christ does not ask for what you don’t have.
He asks for what you do have, and then multiplies it.

Thursday, April 16, 2026

JD Vance Chose Trump Over Pope Leo: Of Course He Did

 


Let us dispense with the surprise.

Vice President JD Vance siding with Donald Trump over the Pope is not a scandal. It is not even a deviation. It is the most predictable outcome imaginable in a political order where power, not principle, governs allegiance.

A Manufactured “Peace”

The backdrop to this moment is a conveniently timed announcement: a so-called ceasefire between Israel and Lebanon.

Not peace, pause.

A 10-day arrangement, reportedly negotiated without meaningful participation from Hezbollah, the very force that exercises real deterrence on the ground. The Lebanese state, represented by Joseph Aoun and Nawaf Salam, appears, at least to its critics, peripheral, if not entirely symbolic, in the actual balance of power.

This is not diplomacy in the classical sense. It is choreography.

A temporary arrangement designed to achieve optics, not resolution, positioning Washington for the next round of negotiations, likely tied to Iran, energy routes, and the fragile equilibrium surrounding the Strait of Hormuz.

Reality Beneath the Optics

No serious actor in the region is under illusion.

Iran understands the pattern.
Hezbollah operates within it.
Israel acts despite it.

Ceasefires, in this context, are not endpoints; they are intermissions.

Meanwhile, Washington must balance contradictions:

  • Confrontation with Iran

  • Economic dependence on global energy flows

  • Strategic engagement with Xi Jinping

This is not strategy, it is containment of consequences.

Vance: The Instrument, Not the Architect

Into this enters Vance.

Reports, fair or not, paint a picture of a man outmatched at the table: reliant on calls, lacking technical command, overshadowed by negotiators who arrived prepared to conclude rather than perform.

Whether exaggerated or not, the perception matters.

Because in politics, perception is often more decisive than reality.

And the perception is this:
Vance was not leading, he was being deployed like a parachute over troubled lands. 

Then Comes the Vatican

The geopolitical strain bleeds into the theological.

Trump clashes with Pope Leo XIV, an American pontiff portrayed here as critical of war and Western militarism. The symbolism is potent:

  • A political leader asserting dominance

  • A religious authority invoking moral restraint

And between them stands Vance, a Catholic convert with a public identity tied, in part, to faith.

The question becomes unavoidable:

When power and doctrine collide, where does loyalty settle?

The Decision

He chose Trump.

Of course he did.

Because in the hierarchy of modern political life:

  • Faith is professed

  • Power is obeyed

To side with the Pope would be to risk political isolation.
To side with Trump is to preserve relevance within the machinery that sustains his position.

This is not hypocrisy. It is alignment with incentives.

The Cost of That Choice

But such alignment is never neutral.

It signals:

  • That religious identity, however sincerely held, is subordinate to political necessity

  • That moral authority carries weight only when it does not obstruct power

  • That even a public conversion to Catholicism does not immunize one from the gravitational pull of political allegiance

For Vance, the immediate cost may be minimal.

The longer-term cost is less visible, but more profound:
a quiet erosion of credibility, particularly among those who believed his faith was more than ornamental.

A Familiar Pattern

This moment is not unique.

It is part of a broader pattern in which:

  • Institutions weaken

  • Allegiances harden

  • Complexity is reduced to loyalty tests

The individual, whether politician, citizen, or believer, is forced into increasingly narrow choices.

Not between right and wrong, but between power and consequence.

Final Observation.

Vance choosing Trump over the Pope is not shocking.

What would have been shocking is the alternative.

Because the modern political order does not reward defiance of power, it absorbs it, disciplines it, or eliminates it.

And so the choice was made.

Quietly. Predictably. Inevitably.

Not as a rupture, but as a confirmation:

In our time, the decisive authority is not moral, nor theological, but political.

And those who operate within that system understand this long before the public does.

In short, the man is byproduct of some political machinations and the end would tell the truth.