Friday, April 24, 2026

Suy Niệm Thứ Bẩy tuần 3 Phục Sinh

Suy Niệm Thứ Bẩy tuần 3 Phục Sinh

Hôm nay chúng tiếp tục Mừng của Thánh Gioan hôm thứ Năm và hôm qua với câu Chúa Giêsu nó
"chính là Ta là Bánh hằng sống bởi trời xuống! Ai ăn bánh này, thì sẽ được sống đời đời. Và bánh Ta sẽ ban, ấy là thịt mình Ta vì sự sống thế gian"(Jn 06:51), . Và cũng vì những lời này mà một số môn đệ của Ngài đã bỏ Ngài ra đi vì họ thấy khó có thể chấp nhận?
Tại sao những người môn đệ này lại cảm thấy nó khó để chấp nhận những lời của Chúa Giêsu? Có lẽ rất nhiều người đã bị con mắt thế gian che dậy, cộng với cái long tự cao vì họ biết Chúa Giêsu là con của một người thợ mộc quê mùa. Và trong thâm tâm của họ, họ vẫn còn những ham muốn riêng của họ về sự vật thế gian và không nhận ra bản tính Thiên Chúa của Chúa Giêsu,  Con Thiên Chúa đã nhập thể làm người. Trong Matthew câu 22 đoạn 14, viết Chúa Giêsu nói: "Nhiều người được gọi, nhưng ít người được chọn." Nhiều người được mời đến vương quốc của Thiên Chúa, nhưng chỉ có một số ít người nhận ra Chúa Giêsu là Chúa và đấng Cứu Chúa Thế của họ, và họ là những người sẽ được chọn để vào nước Trời.\
Thế nào là để chấp nhận Chúa Giêsu? Để chấp nhận Chúa Giêsu có nghĩa là chúng ta phải biết đáp lại lời kêu gọi của Ngài, Có nghĩa là chúng ta thật sự tham gia tích cực với Ngài trong cuộc khổ nạn của Ngài trong bất cứ mọi kể giá. Sứ mệnh của chúng ta là trở thành những người tông đồ để loan truyền Lởi của Chúa cho tất cả những người vẫn chưa được nghe và biết đến Chúa,  để gieo những hạt giống và để đem ân sủng của Thiên Chúa tới với mọi người và giúp làm cho Lời của Chúa được sinh sôi và lớn lên trong trái tim của họ cho đến khi Lời Chúa được nở rộ trong họ. Nhiệm vụ của chúng ta không phải là chỉ tìm đến vương quốc của Thiên Chúa một mình, nhưng để mang lại càng nhiều linh hồn cùng đến tới Thiên Chúna với chúng ta.
        Chúng ta trung tín theo đuổi sứ mệnh của chúng ta để theo Chúa Giêsu? hay là chúng ta đang mang những linh hồn khác lánh xa Thiên Chúa và Nước Trời bằng những lời nói khích bác, bằng sự chia rẽ và bằng lối sống ích kỷ của chúng ta? Hay chúng ta đã chọn việc bỏ Chúa giống như một số các môn đệ của Chúa Giêsu đã làm trong đoạn Tin Mừng hôm nay vì chúng ta chưa sẵn sàng vác thập giá của chúng ta và theo Chúa?
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                          
Reflection Saturday 3rd week of Easter
What is it that some of the disciples find hard to accept? In John 6:51, Jesus says, "I am the living bread which has come from heaven; whoever eats of this bread will live forever. The bread I shall give is my flesh and I will give it for the life of the world."
Why did they find it hard to accept the words of Jesus? There were many who got stuck with knowing Jesus as the son of a carpenter. Their hearts were still hardened by their own desires of worldly things and didn't recognize the divine nature of Jesus, that he is the Son of God incarnate. In Matthew 22:14, Jesus said, "Many are called, but few are chosen." Many are invited to the kingdom of heaven, but only those who accept Jesus as their Lord and Savior will be chosen to enter the kingdom.
What does it mean to accept Jesus? It means that we respond to his call, that we take active participation in his passion regardless of the price. Our mission is to be apostles who will spread the word of God to all those who haven't heard it yet, to plant the seed and let God's grace grow in their hearts until it reaches full bloom. Our mission is not to go to God's kingdom alone, but to bring as many souls with us.
Have we been faithful in pursuing our mission, or have we brought souls farther away from God and from His kingdom with our worldliness, our selfishness? Or have we chosen to walk away like many of the disciples did during Jesus' time because we are not ready to take up our cross and follow him?
 
Saturday of the Third Week of Easter
Jesus then said to the Twelve, “Do you also want to leave?” Simon Peter answered him, “Master, to whom shall we go? You have the words of eternal life. We have come to believe and are convinced that you are the Holy One of God.” John 6:67–69
Sometimes we are tempted to value a superficial unity over the Gospel. While this temptation is understandable, it is ultimately not acceptable. The Gospel is demanding because it presents to us the deep and transforming truths of Who God is and His invitation to share in His life. The Gospel invites us to believe everything Jesus taught us with absolute conviction, including His teachings on the Most Holy Eucharist.
After Jesus finished His discourse on the Bread of Life, we read: “Many of the disciples of Jesus who were listening said, ‘This saying is hard; who can accept it?’” (John 6:60). After Jesus acknowledged their shock at His teaching, “many of his disciples returned to their former way of life and no longer walked with him” (John 6:66).
This blatant rejection by many who came to listen to Jesus had an impact on His Apostles. Seeing their shock, Jesus addressed the Twelve by asking them: “Do you also want to leave?” Peter’s response must become our response to the demands of the Gospel: “Master, to whom shall we go? You have the words of eternal life. We have come to believe and are convinced that you are the Holy One of God.”
If we carefully read through Jesus’ numerous teachings, we will find ourselves exceptionally challenged. Jesus doesn’t preach superficial unity. He’s not a politician who speaks merely to gain support. He speaks the clear and demanding truths that we need to hear in order to become full members of His Body, the Church.
What did Jesus say that resulted in many of His disciples leaving Him and returning to their former way of life? The answer is found in the paragraph prior to today’s Gospel:
“Amen, amen, I say to you, unless you eat the flesh of the Son of Man and drink his blood, you do not have life within you. Whoever eats my flesh and drinks my blood has eternal life, and I will raise him on the last day. For my flesh is true food, and my blood is true drink. Whoever eats my flesh and drinks my blood remains in me and I in him. Just as the living Father sent me and I have life because of the Father, so also the one who feeds on me will have life because of me. This is the bread that came down from heaven. Unlike your ancestors who ate and still died, whoever eats this bread will live forever” (John 6:54–58).
Despite the shocking nature of this new teaching, those who were open to God’s voice came to believe. His teaching might not have made perfect sense to them the first time they heard it, but they knew His words were true. They couldn’t articulate why or how it was true, but the Father in Heaven planted seeds of faith in their minds and hearts, and those seeds immediately began to grow.
In addition to Jesus’ teaching on the Eucharist, His teaching of absolute forgiveness and mercy toward those who wrong us or persecute us left many in awe. His teaching that we must take up our cross and follow Him left many astonished. And His teaching that He would suffer greatly at the hands of the religious leaders, be killed, and rise on the third day left many in shock. Though Peter and the other Eleven might have experienced this astonishment, they believed, despite not fully understanding, leaving us an example to follow.
Reflect today on the absolute demands that the Gospel’s pure and holy truths place on us. If you have never been shocked by the Gospel, then it might mean you need to delve deeper into what Jesus taught. Being shaken to the core by Divine Truth is good and necessary. That experience will help us to step into our astonishment with faith and commitment, saying with Peter: “Lord, to whom shall I go? You have the words of eternal life. I have come to believe and am convinced that you are the Holy One of God. I will follow You!”
My demanding Lord, I want to know You and the many truths You want to teach me. I want to have faith and follow You no matter what You ask of me. Give me the courage I need to listen to all that You reveal so that I may be transformed by Your Truth and move beyond astonishment in my life. Jesus, I trust in You.
 
Saturday of the Third Week of Easter 2026
Opening Prayer: Lord God, you are all-powerful and know all things. You know how my life will unfold and how I will be judged. I renew my trust in you that you will guide me and bring me to safe harbor. Strength me in times of temptation and trial so that I may share in the victory of your Son.
Encountering the Word of God
1. Who was Mark the Evangelist? John Mark was the son of Mary of Jerusalem (Acts 12:12), a cousin of Barnabas (Colossians 4:10), and the author of the second Gospel. He was an early convert and accompanied Barnabas and Paul on their first missionary Journey. For some reason, Mark abandoned them on the mission and returned to Jerusalem (Acts 13:13) (see Catholic Bible Dictionary, p. 573). After the Council of Jerusalem (Acts 15:1-29), Paul and Barnabas disagreed about taking Mark with them on their second missionary journey: “Barnabas wanted to take with them also John, who was called Mark, but Paul insisted that they should not take with them someone who had deserted them at Pamphylia and who had not continued with them in their work. So sharp was their disagreement that they separated” (Acts 15:37-39). Paul would take Silas on his mission to Syria and Cilicia, and Mark continued with Barnabas on a mission to Cyprus (Acts 15:39-41). Pope Benedict XVI reflected on this episode and the dispute and disagreement among the saints: “And I find this very comforting, because we see that the saints have not ‘fallen from Heaven.’ They are people like us, who also have complicated problems. Holiness does not consist in never having erred or sinned. Holiness increases the capacity for conversion, for repentance, for willingness to start again, and, especially, for reconciliation and forgiveness” (Benedict XVI, Jesus, the Apostles, and the Early Church, p. 141). Mark later reconciled with Paul and was with him while Paul was imprisoned in Rome. Mark was also with Peter in Rome (1 Peter 5:13), and according to Papias, was the interpreter for Peter and wrote down Peter’s teaching in the Gospel according to Mark. After the death of Peter, Mark went to Alexandria in Egypt and was the first bishop there (see Catholic Bible Dictionary, p. 573).
2. Jesus as the Suffering Messiah and Son of God: The Gospel of Mark focuses on Jesus as the Messiah and demonstrates that Jesus is the Son of God (Mark 1:1). The first half culminates in the confession of Peter, who proclaims that Jesus is the Christ (Mark 8:29). The second half culminates in the confession of the Centurion, who proclaims that Jesus is the Son of God. In the first part of the Gospel of Mark, Jesus often conceals his identity as the Messiah. This was important so that the people could understand him not as a political or military Messiah, but as a servant Messiah who suffers and dies to liberate the people from the devil, sin, sickness, and death. The mystery of Jesus’ divine sonship is also hidden from the Gospel’s characters. Jesus reveals his divine sonship through displays of divine power, parables of wisdom, and riddles. “Only at the Crucifixion is the Sonship of Jesus fully recognized as he surrenders his life with love to the Father” (see Ignatius Catholic Study Bible: New Testament, p. 62).
3. Discipleship according to Mark: When we hear the Gospel of Mark, we are challenged to become one of Jesus’ disciples and conform our lives to that of the suffering Messiah and Son of God. “Just as the truth of Jesus is found only in the cross, so is the secret to discipleship. To be a follower of Jesus is to share intimately in his life and destiny” (Healy, The Gospel of Mark, p. 24). The trials, successes, and failures of Jesus’ disciples are on full display in the Gospel of Mark. The fact that the disciples abandon Jesus in his hour of need is not the final word. Though the disciples stumble, “Jesus remains true, and through his total fidelity to the Father gains forgiveness and restoration for them. Just as in the Old Testament story of Israel, God’s love is often met with infidelity and betrayal, yet is constantly renewed, so the Gospel ends with the joyous promise of an encounter with the risen Lord” (Healy, The Gospel of Mark, p. 24).
Conversing with Christ: Lord Jesus, I believe that you are the Christ and the Son of God. You have called me to be your disciple and follow you on the way that leads to the Cross. Keep me close to you so that I may learn your ways and truly be your disciple in this world.
 
Saturday of the Third Week of Easter 2026
As a result of this, many of his disciples returned to their former way of life and no longer walked with him. Jesus then said to the Twelve, “Do you also want to leave?” John 6:66–67
Today’s Gospel concludes the beautiful and profound sermon on the Bread of Life (see John 6:22–71). When you read this sermon from beginning to end, it is noticeable that Jesus moves from more general statements about the Bread of Life that are easier to accept to more specific statements that are challenging. He concludes His teaching just prior to today’s Gospel by saying very directly, “Whoever eats my flesh and drinks my blood remains in me and I in him.” After Jesus said this, many who had been listening to Him left Him and no longer followed Him.
There are generally three common attitudes people have toward the Most Holy Eucharist. One attitude is that of profound faith. Another is that of indifference. And a third is what we find in today’s Gospel: disbelief. Those who walked away from Jesus in today’s Gospel did so because they said, “This saying is hard; who can accept it?” What a great statement and question to ponder.
It is true, in a certain way, that the teaching of Jesus on the Most Holy Eucharist is a hard saying. “Hard,” however, is not bad. It’s hard in the sense that belief in the Eucharist is only possible through a faith that comes from a deep interior revelation from God. In the case of those who walked away from Jesus, they heard His teaching, but their hearts were closed to the gift of faith. They remained stuck on a purely intellectual level, and, thus, the idea of eating the Flesh and Blood of the Son of God was more than they could comprehend. So who could accept such a statement? Only those who listen to our Lord as He speaks to them interiorly. It is only that interior conviction that comes from God that can be proof of the truthfulness of the Holy Eucharist.
Do you believe that when you consume that which appears to be only “bread and wine,” you are actually consuming Christ Himself? Do you understand this teaching of our Lord on the Bread of Life? It is a hard saying and a difficult teaching, which is why it must be taken very seriously. For those who do not flat out reject this teaching, there is also the temptation to be somewhat indifferent to the teaching. It can easily be misunderstood to be just symbolism in the way our Lord talks. But the symbolism is much more than just symbolism. It’s a profound, challenging, and life-changing teaching of how we share in the divine and eternal life our Lord wishes to bestow upon us.
Reflect, today, upon how deeply you believe this hard saying of Jesus. The fact that it is a “hard” saying should make you seriously examine your own faith or lack thereof. What Jesus teaches is life-changing. It’s life-giving. And when clearly understood, you will be challenged to either believe with your whole heart or turn away in disbelief. Allow yourself to believe in the Most Holy Eucharist with your whole heart and you will find that you are believing one of the most profound Mysteries of Faith.
My glorious Lord, Your teaching on the Most Holy Eucharist is beyond human comprehension. It is a mystery so deep that we will never fully understand this precious gift. Open my eyes, dear Lord, and speak to my mind so that I may listen to Your words and respond with the deepest faith. Jesus, I trust in You.
 
Saturday 3rd week of Easter 2025
Opening Prayer: Lord God, every day I am faced with a decision to believe and follow you and your Son or return to my former way of life. Strengthen my resolve to follow you always. You truly give me life in your Son. I never want to be separated from you.
Encountering the Word of God
1. This Saying is Hard: At the beginning of today’s Gospel passage, we hear about the disciples who grumbled against Jesus’ teaching about himself as the Bread of Life and the need to eat his flesh and drink his blood to have eternal life. They refused Jesus’ invitation to Eucharistic conversion. Instead of embracing the newness of life and the gift of the Eucharist, many of Jesus’ disciples returned to their former way of life and no longer walked with him. “They returned to a way of life without Jesus. They chose his absence rather than his presence in their lives. Instead of accompanying him, they walked alone. Their rejection of the gift of Jesus’ word, body, and blood meant they would not walk with him. And neither could he send them on mission” (Cardinal Luis Antonio Tagle, Homily at the U.S. National Eucharistic Congress, July 24, 2024).
2. Do You Also Want to Leave? Jesus asks each one of us, “Do you also want to leave me like the others did?” We hope we can answer like Peter and remain with Jesus and abide in him. Thus, Peter’s question, “To whom shall we go?” seems to have two answers. On the one hand, we need to go to Jesus. He has the words of everlasting life. Without Jesus, we are nothing. Jesus is the Holy One sent by the Father to redeem and save us from sin and death.
3. To Whom Shall We Go? On the other hand, we need to take what we have received and go to others. “Like Peter, we should believe with conviction. Jesus does not impose himself on anyone. He appeals to our interior freedom. Faith and conviction are our gifts to Jesus, who gives himself to us. … Will you stay with Jesus? … Those who choose to stay with Jesus will be sent by Jesus. The gift of his presence and love for us will be our gift to people. We should not keep Jesus to ourselves. That is not discipleship. That is selfishness. The gift we have received, we should give as a gift. Have you experienced the tenderness of Jesus towards his tired disciples, offering them time to rest and to eat, as recounted in the gospel today? Go and share Jesus’ tender love to the weary, the hungry, and the suffering. Have you experienced Jesus’ compassion and guidance when you were like sheep without a shepherd? Go and share Jesus’ shepherds’ caress to the lost, confused, and weak. Have you experienced Jesus’ wounded heart uniting those who are separated from each other, as St. Paul states in his letter to the Ephesians? Go and share Jesus’ gift of reconciliation and peace to those who are divided” (Cardinal Luis Antonio Tagle, Homily at the U.S. National Eucharistic Congress, July 24, 2024).
Conversing with Christ: Lord Jesus, you have pronounced my name and invited me to rise with you to new life. You invite me to follow you even when others reject you and the mysteries you reveal. You can do great things in and through me, and I entrust myself to you today.
 
Saturday 3rd week of Easter 2024
Opening Prayer: Lord God, every day I am faced with a decision to believe and follow you and your Son or return to my former way of life. Strengthen my resolve to follow you always. You truly give me life in your Son. I never want to be separated from you.
Encountering the Word of God
1. Doing the Works Jesus Did: Jesus promises that those who believe in him will do the works that he accomplished (John 14:12). In today’s Gospel, Peter includes himself in the group of those who have come to believe in Jesus as the Holy One of God, and, in the First Reading, we see Peter accomplish the works of Jesus Christ. During his public ministry, Jesus restored at least three people to life: Jarius’ daughter (Matthew 9:24-25; Mark 5:40-42; Luke 8:49-56), the widow’s son (Luke 7:11-17), and his friend Lazarus (John 11:1-44). These miracles and signs are all invitations to faith. Jesus tells Jairus: “Do not be afraid; only have faith” (Mark 5:36; Luke 8:50); he tells his disciples: “Lazarus is dead; and for your sake I am glad I was not there because now you will believe" (John 11:15); and he asks Lazarus' sister Mary: "Whoever lives and believes in me will never die. Do you believe this?" (John 11:26). Jesus' miracles attest that the Father has sent him. They invite belief in him. “By freeing some individuals from the earthly evils of hunger in justice, illness, and death, Jesus performed Messianic signs” (CCC, 549). Peter has experienced Christ and seen his works and, through an act of faith, enters more deeply into communion with Jesus and with the Father. His confession today at Capernaum, “You are the Holy One of God,” parallels his confession at Caesarea Philippi, “You are the Messiah, the Son of the Living God” (Matthew 16:16).
2. Reactions to Jesus’ Bread of Life Discourse: The Gospel presents two different reactions to Jesus’ Bread of Life discourse. There were many disciples who murmured in protest. Despite the signs and miracles Jesus has done, they refuse to accept his teaching about the Eucharist: “Unless you eat the flesh of the Son of man and drink his blood, you have no life in you” (John 6:53). They refuse to believe, break away from Jesus, and will not accompany him any longer. The opposite response is that represented by Simon Peter, who says to Jesus: “Lord, you have the words of eternal life; and we have come to believe and are convinced that you of the Holy One of God” (John 6:68-69). Peter walks by faith and is confident that by following Jesus he will receive the promise of eternal life. We learn today that faith is a gift from God that we freely reject or freely accept. That is why Jesus says: “No one can come to me unless it is granted to him by the Father” (John 6:65). God’s grace moves us and assists us in making an act of faith. We freely collaborate with God’s grace; our hearts are moved and converted to God; God opens the eyes of our mind, bringing us out of our spiritual blindness, and enables us to accept and believe the truth (CCC, 153). That truth is that Jesus Christ is the Son of God, sent by the Father to redeem us and save us and bring us into the unity of his family, the Church. In Christ and through him, we are invited to become, in the Holy Spirit, God's adopted children and heirs of his blessed life (CCC, 1).
3. Peter’s Two Miracles: In the First Reading, we hear of Peter leaving Jerusalem to minister to the new people of God in Judean towns near the Mediterranean Sea. Just as he did miracles in Jerusalem, Peter works a miracle in the name of Jesus Christ in Lydda and says to the paralyzed man, named Aeneas: “Jesus Christ heals you. Get up.” Peter has received power from Jesus and exercises it in Jesus’ name. As well, he invites Aeneas to a deeper faith in Jesus, who now reigns in heaven. In a second miracle, Peter imitates the words of Jesus to the little girl. Jesus said in Aramaic: “Talitha qum,” which means, “Little girl, rise up!”. And Peter likely said in Aramaic: “Tabitha qum,” which means, “Tabitha, rise up!”. In this way, “Luke continues to show that what the apostles do and say in Acts is continuing what ‘Jesus did and taught’ in the Gospel (Acts 1:1). This occurs as they exercise great faith, confident in Jesus’ power and in their own authority to speak and act in his name under the leading of the Holy Spirit” (Kurz, Acts of the Apostles, p. 165).
Conversing with Christ: Lord Jesus, you have pronounced my name and invited me to rise with you to new life. You invite me to follow you even when others reject you and the mysteries you reveal. You can do great things in and through me and I entrust myself to you today.
 

Suy Niệm Tin Mừng thứ Sáu Tuần thứ 3 Phục Sinh

Suy Niệm Tin Mừng thứ Sáu Tuần thứ 3 Phục Sinh
Trong những ngày trước, Chúa Giêsu đã làm phép lạ hoá bánh và cá ra nhiều để nuôi sống muôn người. Người Do Thái nhận ra có một điều đặc biệt ở đây, đó là Chúa Giêsu có thể là Đấng Thiên Sai hoặc ít nhất là một tiên tri. Họ đã tò mò tiếp tục theo Chúa. Họ đã thích thú tất cả những gì mà Chúa đã truyền dậy cho họ, cho dù h vẫn chưa hiểu được một đoạn Thánh kinh hoàn toàn và chính xác, nhưng họ cũng đủ hiểu với những gì họ quen nghe, nên điều đó khiến họ không gặp những khó khăn. Họ tiếp tục đặt câu hỏi, tìm kiếm sự hiểu biết, đặc biệt là sự hiểu biết mà họ có thể thoải mái.
Những khi chúng ta gặp phải những điều khó xử  và thử thách trong cuộc sống của chúng ta, chúng ta sẽ có thái độ thế nào khi chúng ta đặt câu hỏi với Chúa? Có phải chúng ta sẽ cố tìm cách để hiểu được ý của Thiên Chúa để rỗi chúng ta sẽ tuân thủ và thực hành theo như kế hoạch của Thiên Chúa, hay chúng ta phản ứng theo sự phụ thuộc vào mức độ hiểu biết riêng của chúng ta?.
            Hôm nay, Chúa Giêsu đã nói lên những lời thực sự gây sốc cho chúng ta, Ngài muốn chúng ta ăn thịt và uống máu Ngài! Cho đến thời điểm này, hầu hết đám đông đã sẵn sàng chấp nhận Ngài như một người ban phát của ăn cho họ. Ngài cho họ ăn uống no thoả hôm qua. Có lẽ, nếu họ cố ở lại bên ngài mỗi ngày, Ngài sẽ làm phép lạ hoá bánh cho họ ăn no thoả nữa. Ý nghĩ của họ về Đấng Thiên Sai quá vật chất, họ chỉ nghĩ Chúa Giêsu là người sẽ tái lập Vương quốc của David mà tiêu diệt quân thù La Mã. Thế nhưng Chúa Giêsu lại muốn đưa họ đến với mầu nhiệm của lòng thương xót, yêu thương và quảng đại của Thiên Chúa. Giống như xưa, Thiên Chúa đã ban bánh manna cho họ ở nơi hoang dã, nay, Ngài muốn ban cho họ một cái gì đó tuyệt vời hơn nhiều. Tuyệt vời như Vương quốc David, Ngài muốn cho họ một vương quốc vĩ đại hơn. Điều này vượt xa tất cả những gì mà họ đang tìm kiếm; họ sẽ không thể hiểu được những gì Ngài đang làm và đang ban cho họ. Và điều này chỉ có thể được chấp nhận trong đức tin.
            Chúng ta có thể hiểu được nhiều thứ, thậm chí nhiều thứ thuộc về tâm linh. Trong lòng tốt của mình, Thiên Chúa đã ban cho chúng ta trí thông minh để chúng ta có thể hiểu được một số sự thật về Ngài. Nhưng những điều đơn giản thật sự hơn là Ngài không muốn tiết lộ vinh quang trọn vẹn của Thiên Chúa. Chúa Giêsu muốn ban cho nhân loại thịt mình để ăn và máu của Ngài để uống. Ngài đã nói rõ điều này với đám đông, và vì họ thiếu niềm tin, nên họ không hiểu nổi. Một số người đã chán nản bỏ đi, họ đi tìm một người khác.
Hy vọng, số người trong chúng ta đang tìm kiếm sự mặc khải về mầu nhiệm bí ẩn của Thiên Chúa. Những hồng ân to lớn nhất mà Thiên Chúa có thể ban cho chúng ta vì chúng ta không tìm cách lấp đầy cái dạ dày hay tâm trí của chúng ta. nhưng chúng ta đang tìm cách lấp đầy trái tim thương yêu của chúng ta. Đây là những hồng ân mà Chúa Giêsu dự định sẽ ban tặng cho chúng taban rất nhiều cho chúng ta.
 
Friday of the Third Week of Easter
What is it I Truly Seek?
On the preceding day, Jesus multiplied loaves and fishes to feed the multitude. The Jews realize there is something special here, that Jesus may be the Messiah or at least a prophet. They are curious enough to continue following him and asking him questions. They have liked everything he has said up till now. Some of it they have not understood completely or correctly, but it has been close enough to what they are used to hearing that it causes them no great difficulty. They continue to ask questions, looking for understanding, especially understanding they can be comfortable with. What is my attitude when I question Our Lord about events and challenges in my life? Am I seeking to understand so I can embrace God’s plan better, or does my response depend on how much I comprehend?
2. Opening Our Horizons: Now Jesus has said something truly shocking. He wants them to eat his flesh and drink his blood! Up to this point, most of the crowd has been willing to accept him as a bread-provider. He fed them yesterday. Maybe, if they hang around long enough, he will do it again. Their ideas about the Messiah are too materialistic, based only on the re-establishment of David’s Kingdom at the expense of the Romans. Jesus, on the other hand, wants to take them to a new level. He wants to take them into the mystery of the loving generosity of God. As good as the manna in the wilderness was, he wants to give something much better. As wonderful as David’s Kingdom was, he wants to give a greater kingdom. This is so far beyond what they are looking for; they will not be able to understand what he is offering. It will have to be accepted in faith.
3. Great Gifts Come in Small Packages: We can understand many things, even many spiritual things. In his goodness, God has given us intelligence so that we can understand some of the truths about him. But these simpler truths don’t reveal the full glory of God. They are not as fulfilling as some of the more important truths about him. Jesus wants to give his flesh to eat and his blood to drink. He reveals this to the crowds, and since they lack faith, they don’t understand. Some straggle off to find another “wonder-worker.” Others, looking for understanding, go off to look for a “teacher” who makes sense to them. Hopefully, some are looking for the revelation of the mysteries of God, the greatest gifts that God can offer. They are not looking to fill their stomachs or their minds. They are looking to fill their hearts. These are the kinds of gifts that Jesus intends to give – and in abundance.
Conversation with Christ: Dear Lord, so often I am looking for material gifts from you. Help me to realize that the greatest gifts you give may be beyond my understanding. Yet, if I am willing to accept them on faith, they will fill my heart. Perhaps with time, it will be possible for me to understand something of them as well, but the greatness of faith lies in my trust in you.
 
Friday of the Third Week of Easter 2026
“Amen, amen, I say to you, unless you eat the Flesh of the Son of Man and drink his Blood, you do not have life within you. Whoever eats my Flesh and drinks my Blood has eternal life, and I will raise him on the last day. For my Flesh is true food, and my Blood is true drink.” John 6:53–55
Human reason and free will are the most precious natural gifts God gave us. They are what separate us from every other animal. Human reason enables us to think critically, understand concepts, and arrive at conclusions. Central to our human reason is our free will, which enables us to act upon the conclusions we reach or to reject them, choosing instead to follow our disordered appetites and misguided desires. Though human reason was wounded by Original Sin, it was not completely destroyed. We must diligently strive to act rationally and in accord with common sense, adhering to the natural law that God has written on our souls. However, even though a rational approach to natural law will bring us a long way toward right living, it is not sufficient to lead us into the deeper truths of eternal salvation, promised to us in Jesus’ discourse on the Bread of Life, on which we have been reflecting.
By natural reason alone, the Eucharist makes no sense. How could that which appears to be a piece of bread be the “Flesh of the Son of Man” and a cup that appears to be wine be His Blood? Yet when we incorporate divine revelation into our reasoning, the Eucharist as the Flesh and Blood of Jesus, the Son of God, makes perfect sense: “…my Flesh is true food, and my Blood is true drink.” The Eucharist makes sense, but only when we listen with faith to the revelation Jesus gave to us. Today’s Gospel provides the clearest teaching we have ever received on this Precious Gift.
Today’s Gospel begins by relating that “The Jews quarreled among themselves, saying, ‘How can this man give us his Flesh to eat?’” (John 6:52). They were quarreling because they were not opening their human reason to the light of Jesus’ revealed truth. In this exchange, the Eternal and Incarnate Son of God was speaking a divine truth to them. Jesus spoke clearly and plainly, but their minds remained closed. They heard His words, but they closed themselves off to the Father’s Voice, which testified on Jesus’ behalf that all He said was true. It seems that some who listened began to understand and believe, prompting the quarrel among them.
When you read our Lord’s words, what do you hear? Do you hear the Father’s Voice in the depths of your conscience, confirming the truthfulness of what you read? Do you hear the Living Word of God echoing within your mind and soul? Do you allow that Word to inform your human reason so that you can conclude that the Eucharist is real, that it is the Flesh and Blood of the Son of God, offered to you so that you can share in eternal life? No amount of human study or intelligence alone will ever convince us of divine truths. God alone can convince us, but only if we listen to His Voice.
Truths of faith, such as our belief in the Eucharist, must be more certain than any other natural truth we believe. No rational person would deny the reality of the physical world we see with our eyes or touch with our hands. The noises we hear, the food we taste, and the aroma we smell are all judged as real because we believe what our five senses perceive. When our consciences perceive divine truths, those truths are more certain than all sensory knowledge. Why? Because God is the one directly communicating to us.
Reflect today on Jesus’ crystal-clear teaching on the Eucharist. We must hear and understand what He said. Our faith in the Eucharist must become certain. Allow the Father’s Voice to resonate within your mind so that you are more certain that the Eucharist is the Flesh and Blood of the Son of God than anything else you believe. Strengthen your faith, knowing that His Flesh and Blood bring you to eternal life.
My Eucharistic Lord, I believe that You gave Your life for the salvation of all and that the gift of eternal salvation is given to us through the Sacraments. I believe that the Eucharist is Your Flesh and Blood, Your Divine Essence. Please strengthen my faith so that I am more open to the abundant grace You wish to bestow through the Precious Gift. Jesus, I trust in You.
 
Friday of the Third Week of Easter 2026
Opening Prayer: Lord God, you have generously bestowed the beginning of eternal life upon me. I did nothing to merit this grace and initial share in your life. Help me to collaborate with your grace so that I may attain the consummation of heavenly glory.
Encountering the Word of God
1. The Incorporation of Saul into the Body of Christ: Saul was called to form part of the Body of Christ. Saul was passionate by temperament, learned in Sacred Scripture, and a man of conviction. God wanted all these talents to be placed at the service of the Gospel. Saul was an instrument chosen by God and will be the one to carry the name of the Lord to the Gentiles and the children of Israel. Saul will “open the eyes of the people so that they may turn from darkness to light and from the power of Satan to God, so that they may obtain forgiveness of sins and an inheritance among those who have been consecrated by faith” (Acts 26:18). Saul was baptized by Ananias. This was his incorporation into the suffering, death, and resurrection of Christ. Saul will suffer for the name of Jesus: he was stoned, beaten, and imprisoned on account of the Gospel. He will ultimately give his life for Christ through martyrdom. He encountered the risen Christ and now shares in Christ’s resurrection. 
2. Saul’s Conversion: As a Pharisee, Saul believed that the covenant in Deuteronomy had been violated by Israel, and this is why Israel was experiencing the curses of that covenant, especially the curse of oppression by the Gentiles (Deuteronomy 28). Saul “feared that deviation from the Deuteronomic Law would bring further divine punishment and sought strict observance of the Law in order to repair the covenant. Only when Israel had become holy through the observance of the Law would God send the Messiah to restore the Kingdom” (Pimentel, Witnesses of the Messiah, 89). All of this changed for Saul with his encounter with the risen Jesus. He understood that Jesus was the Messiah and that he needed to spread that message. A few days after his baptism, Saul began at once to proclaim Jesus in the synagogues that Jesus was the Son of God. This manifested the grace of Christ at work. 
3. Building Up the Body of Christ: Saul used to go from synagogue to synagogue, persecuting the Body of Christ; now he goes from synagogue to synagogue, building up the Body of Christ. “Saul lost no time in fulfilling his new mission to witness to Jesus. During the period in which he remained with the disciples in Damascus, he began at once to preach and proclaim the Jesus whose followers he had previously persecuted. He directly confronted the Jews, his former allies, in the synagogues, announcing that Jesus is the Son of God” (Kurz, Acts of the Apostles, 157). It would take centuries for the Church to unpack more fully the mystery of Jesus’ divine sonship. Here, Paul preaches that Jesus is the royal messiah, who, as the Son of David, is an adopted son of God (Psalm 2:7). Saul “grew all the stronger” as he preached in Damascus and proved, through Scripture, that Jesus was the Messiah. As a Pharisee, Saul “had been convinced that Jesus could not be the Messiah because he had died the death of crucifixion and was under its curse (Deut 21:23). By seeing Jesus alive, he was compelled to accept that Jesus is indeed the Messiah who has freely taken our curse upon himself (Gal 3:13)” (Kurz, Acts of the Apostles, 157).
Conversing with Christ: Lord Jesus, I am a member of your Body. Help me to know my place and my role in that Body. Help me to work to build up the Church and spread the seed of the Kingdom of God throughout the world so that it may grow in justice, peace, and charity.
 
Friday of the Third Week of Easter
“Amen, amen, I say to you, unless you eat the Flesh of the Son of Man and drink his Blood, you do not have life within you. Whoever eats my Flesh and drinks my Blood has eternal life, and I will raise him on the last day. For my Flesh is true food, and my Blood is true drink. John 6:53–55
On a philosophical level, it’s useful to consider various things that appear to be “competing forces.” Good appears to be the opposite of evil. Light the opposite of dark. Heat the opposite of cold. And life the opposite of death. But are they truly opposites in the sense of being competing forces? When considered carefully, it is clear that good and evil, light and dark, heat and cold, and life and death are not actually “competing forces;” rather, evil is simply the absence of good, darkness the absence of light, cold the absence of heat, and death the loss of life. And though this philosophical distinction may not seem that interesting to some, and confusing to others, it is a helpful truth to ponder in light of today’s Gospel.
Today’s Gospel tells us that failure to “eat the Flesh of the Son of Man and drink his Blood” results in death. Death is the loss of life, and the Eucharist is the source of life. Jesus says that if you fail to eat His Flesh and drink His Blood, “you do not have life within you.”
This bold teaching of Jesus should cause us to stop and examine our approach to the Most Holy Eucharist. Sometimes we can fall into the trap of thinking that going to Mass and receiving Communion is something we do as a “favor” to our Lord. But in truth, it’s God’s most profound favor to us, because the Eucharist is the gateway to eternal life. And without it, we have no life within us. Our spirits die because we lose the presence of God.
Looking at the negative effect of not receiving the Most Holy Eucharist can be very useful. Sometimes we need to consider the consequences of our actions as a way of motivating us to greater fidelity. For that reason, considering the fact that failure to eat the Flesh of the Son of God results in death should be very motivating. It should fill us with a holy fear of the loss of the life-giving presence of God within us. This “holy fear” is a true gift from God and is, in fact, one of the Seven Gifts of the Holy Spirit.
Reflect, today, upon your interior attitude toward the Most Holy Eucharist. Do you see your participation in the Holy Mass more as a favor you offer to our Lord? Or do you see it as it is: the life-giving source of eternal life? Reflect upon how important this precious gift truly is and recommit yourself to a faithful and devout participation in this most holy Gift.
My Eucharistic Lord, Your Flesh and Blood are truly the source of eternal life for all who receive You in faith. I thank You, dear Lord, for this most precious Gift of the Most Holy Eucharist, and I pray that I will be filled with a deep hunger and thirst for You always. Jesus, I trust in You.
 
3rd Friday of Easter: 2025
Opening Prayer: Lord God, you have generously bestowed the beginning of eternal life upon me. I did nothing to merit this grace and initial share in your life. Help me to collaborate with your grace so that I may attain the consummation of heavenly glory.
Encountering the Word of God
1. How Can This Man Give Us His Flesh to Eat? It is understandable that many of the Judeans who heard Jesus preach in the synagogue at Capernaum about the need to eat his flesh and drink his blood did not fully understand or grasp what Jesus was saying. Naturally, they quarreled and fought one another about the meaning of Jesus’ words. In response to their question, “How can this man give us his flesh to eat?,” Jesus repeats three times that they need to eat his flesh and drink his blood. The first time, he says that those who do not do this will not have life. The second time, he promises the gift of eternal life and resurrection to those who eat his flesh and drink his blood. The third time, he says that this will cause a mutual indwelling: “Whoever eats my flesh and drinks my blood, remains in me and I in him” (John 6:56). 
2. Eating the Flesh of the Son of Man: There is a nuance in the Greek text of John’s Gospel that we can miss in our English translation. When the Judeans ask how this man can give us his flesh to eat, they use the verb “phagein,” which refers to eating in general. And Jesus uses the same verb the first time he says: “Unless you eat (phagete) the Flesh of the Son of Man … you do not have life within you.” But the second and third time Jesus refers to this action, he uses the verb “trogon,” which was much more graphic and meant something more like “to gnaw, crunch, or chew.” Greek literature used the verb to describe the feeding of animals and, in some cases, for human eating. By doing this, Jesus doesn’t want the crowds to think he was just using a metaphor comparing welcoming his message in faith to eating bread. “The change in vocabulary marks a change of focus and emphasis, from the necessity of faith to the consumption of the Eucharist. The graphic and almost crude connotation of this verb thus adds greater force to the repetition of his words: he demands we express our faith by eating, in a real and physical way, his life-giving flesh in the sacrament” (Ignatius Catholic Study Bible: Old and New Testament, 1901).
3. Drinking the Blood of the Son of Man: Just as Jesus’ command to eat his flesh was scandalous to some of the Judeans, Jesus’ command to drink his blood was also a possible cause of scandal. The Old Law prohibited the drinking of animal blood and explained that life was in the blood (Leviticus 17:13-14). This law symbolized how human beings were not made to share more deeply in animal life, but were made for something else, namely, to share in divine life. Thus, when Jesus commands that we drink his blood, he is bringing the Old Law of Moses to fulfillment. We share in Jesus’ divine life by drinking from the chalice of his blood, the Blood of the New and Eternal Covenant, the blood that was shed for us, for the remission of sins.
Conversing with Christ: Lord Jesus, I am a member of your Body. Help me to know my place and my role in that Body. Help me to work to build up the Church and spread the seed of the Kingdom of God throughout the world so that it may grow in justice, peace, and charity.