St. Hector's Catholic Prayer Group Welcomes You With The Peace of Christ

Sunday 25 September 2016

HOMILY FOR TWENTY-SIXTH SUNDAY (YEAR C), SEPTEMBER 25, 2016

THEME: OUR PRAYER LIFE AND SOLIDARITY WITH THE POOR
Lazarus outside the rich man's house being licked by dogs


Last Sunday, we saw how Christ presented us with a teaching that indicates that the dawn of God's reign is a reversal of the suffering of the poor and needy. This reversal is given its ultimate significance today; at the end of time, God's judgment will show that the fruitfulness of our Christian devotions would be seen in our commitment to a just, equitable distribution of the world's goods. This is never too much to ask for; it is the beginning of a Christian brotherhood that would come to its fullness in heaven.

Friday 23 September 2016

WEEKEND PRAYER


Lord God, we thank you for the gift of yet another Weekend. We come to you today to ask for your blessings. Sustain us Lord as we begin this new weekend and protect us all in Jesus Name. Amen
Lord Jesus protect all those who shall be travelling to spend this weekend with their loved ones and for other purposes, may the evil ones not see them. May you shield them with your blood, and repel every attack of the evil ones against them Amen.
King of Heaven and Earth, grant us also the grace to spend this Weekend properly and do that which pleases you through Christ our Lord. Amen
Mother Mary, Our Lady of Perpetual Help, continue to help us and pray for us. Amen

Tuesday 20 September 2016

Two Catholic Priests Found Dead After Being Kidnapped in Mexico

Two priests were found dead Monday, hours after they were abducted in Mexico’s Gulf coast state of Veracruz.
Rev Frs. Alejo Nabor Jimenez Juarez and Jose Alfredo Juarez de la Cruz
The Veracruz State prosecutors’ office said the two men were kidnapped Sunday in the northern Veracruz city of Poza Rica. Their bodies were found dumped in a field by a roadside Monday.

The Joy of God’s Mercy and the Sacrament of Confession

HOMILY FOR TWENTY-FOURTH SUNDAY (YEAR C), SEPTEMBER 11, 2016
By Rev. Fr. Thomas Oyode

The readings of today’s liturgy direct our minds to the truth of God’s boundless mercy even for the most hardened of sinners. They leave us with the assurance of forgiveness and the invitation to go out as true disciples, seeking the lost through our own actions of forgiveness. Above all, the gift of forgiveness has been given to the Church as a Sacrament to be celebrated and to foster communion.
In the first reading (Ex. 32:7-11. 13-14), the people of Israel abandon God to create for themselves a molten calf for worship. Consequently, God’s anger is provoked but He forgives them. This is one of the many instances in Scriptures that portray God as forever faithful to us, his unfaithful creatures. This is what St. Paul attests to in his own personal life by acknowledging that we are saved and sustained only by the mercy of God, not by merit (1 Tim. 1:12-17). It is important for us to reflect deeply on these two readings and see how impatience, rebellion, self-will, pride and stubborness play out in the characters of the Israelites and even of St. Paul himself yet they were saved by God’s cheer mercy. Do we not find elements of these in our relationship with God and our fellowmen? Do these not summarise what we could refer to as Sin?
Our gospel reading of today (Lk. 15:1-32) gives us insight into what sin is, the overriding effects of sin and the means and joy of gaining forgiveness, healing.
What sin is: the life of the prodigal son shows that the gifts of God can be used for sinful ends; he asked for what is good and is his due but he put it to wrong use and mere self-satisfaction. Sin can be seen as the abuse or misuse of that which God’s mercy has freely given us or the misuse of something good. For instance, the eye is good but when it is used for covetousness, envy and lust it becomes a sin. Sexuality is an objective good but not when it becomes an instrument to be used to satisfy our subjective urge for pleasure outside marriage. Sleep/rest is good but a person would not sleep/rest as to neglect his duties.
On the effects of sin, all three parables show that when we sin we lose something. The coin is a stamp of identity. We can lose our baptismal stamp(the mark of God’s Spirit in us) to sin. We can stray away due to ignorance of the power of God’s mercy and forgiveness like foolish sheep or like the prodigal son, we can become alienated from communion with God our Father or with our fellowmen including the Church community. We tend to hide from God and from others. In all three parables there is a sense of being lost, being stranded, being forgotten.
Providentially, the world today remembers a historic loss of fifteen years ago. The bombing of the US Twin Tower and the World Trade Centre took place on this. In Nigeria, the Bring Back Our Girls movement is still trending because the kidnapped Chibok girls are still missing. Many of us have lost our dear ones to death. We know what it means to lose our possessions, our identity/reputation, our family members and dear friends; the physical and psychological trauma these leave us with.
If we have really experienced loss, then we can know the joy of gaining healing, the joy of finding what is lost, the celebration that reunion with missiing loved ones brings.
The means by which we may gain reconciliation with God and our fellowmen is the Sacrament of confession/reconciliation. We must never allow our sins to take us so far away from God as to believe that we are out of the reach of his mercy. We must not so condemn ourselves by our sins as to think that God’s mercy is not powerful enough to restore us to grace. When we do this, we lose sight of the value of’ confession and see it as a punishment instead of a celebration. The ultimate sign is that we hardly remember the last time we went to confession. Like the prodigal son, each time we remain far away from God for fear that our sins are grave, we tend to become slaves. We must seek to experience the joy and dignity of God’s children through reconciliation.
The effect of God’s forgivenes and reconciliation is the joy of reunion and reconciliation. It should strike a cord that these three parables are set in the context of a meal, a celebration. A setting in which sinners were actively present. Jesus would not comment on the sinners’ behaviour as to become judgemental yet he would correct them with his teachings (cf. Lk. 7:36-50). The Church also does not condemn or judge the sinner at the confessional; the priest only counsels and guides the penitent along the path of renewal and firm resolve to avoid occasions of sin in future. The joy and clebration of forgiveness culminates in the Christians life of holy communion, the Eucharistic celebration and the inner assurance of God’s peace. We all know the weight and burden of a guilty conscience.
Finally, the message for today: God is steadfast in his mercy, always reaching out for us. We have the mark of Christ which He is not ready to allow to be lost. Even the foolish/ignorant (sheep) who have strayed are dear to God so we must be open to their return and reach out to them. Lastly, confession and reconciliation restore us to the dignity of God’s children and a share in the joy of God’s mercy.
BE ASSURED OF GOD’S MERCY THIS WEEK AND BEYOND.

Saturday 3 September 2016

REFLECTION: WHAT BRAND IS OUR GOSPEL FAITH

HOMILY FOR TWENTY-THIRD SUNDAY (YEAR C), SEPT. 4, 2016
"WHAT BRAND IS OUR GOSPEL FAITH? 
 Rev Fr. Thomas Owhome Oyode​. 



A look at our gospel reading today and the imagery of cost that Jesus uses to drive home his message not only reminds me of an article written by Emmarex Okhakhu which he titled, "What Brand is Your Church?", but also stirs in me a thought that the gospel truth shares certain principles with the secular dynamics of business and marketing albeit the former bears inherently superior principles above the secular.