Sexagesima Sunday AD 2024
The traditional Gospel for Sexagesima Sunday is Jesus' parable of the Sower. Since Jesus himself explains this parable, it is not difficult for us to understand it: the seed that is sown is the word of God, and different soil is different people who either receive the word of God or not. Unfortunately, there are not many whose heart’s soil is fertile enough to bear fruit a hundredfold.
Septuagesima Sunday AD 2024
The word “Septuagesima” comes from Latin and means “seventieth”. The name of the Septuagesima Sunday marks the fact that from this Sunday there are seventy days until Easter, the greatest and most important Christian holiday.
The number seventy reminds, among other things, Moses’ statement that “the days of our years are threescore years and ten; and if by reason of strength they be fourscore years, yet is their strength labor and sorrow; for it is soon cut off, and we fly away” (Psalm 90:10).
Both pre-Lent and Lent are designed to draw our attention from temporary to timeless, from worthless to precious, from our own small, limited and sinful selves to God, who has revealed His amazing grace and love for us in His only-begotten Son, our Saviour Jesus Christ.
Third Sunday after Epiphany AD 2024
A priest recently recalled his trip to Rwanda where he spoke to people about reconciliation. Thirty years ago, from April to June 1994, an unthinkable genocide took place in Rwanda, during which, among other crimes, up to 800,000 people were killed and half a million women were raped. When that priest met and talked with people, he saw two things: on the one hand, how impossible, humanly speaking, it is to find reconciliation in situations like this, and on the other hand, how the amazing grace of God has made it possible despite everything.
Second Sunday after Epiphany AD 2024
St. Paul writes in today's Epistle about the gifts of God that He shares with us by His grace, naming prophecy, faith, ministry, teaching, exhortation and caring for one another in brotherly love. In the middle of the Epistle are the words: “Abhor that which is evil; cleave to that which is good,” and at the very end: “Mind not high things but condescend to men of low estate.”
Epiphany AD 2024
On Epiphany, according to the tradition of the Church, three events in the life of Christ are remembered: the arriving of the Magi from the Orient to worship the Christ Child, the baptism of Jesus, and Christ’s first miracle at the wedding feast in Cana.
These three moments are not just brief stops on the earthly path of Jesus, they are events of enormous importance for the redemption of mankind.