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Monday in the Octave of Easter Math 28,8-15
Over the last five days, we’ve stopped at the key events of our salvation. We have witnessed events that, we can say, have changed the course of history. We saw Christ’s redemptive work. Likewise, we spent the Last Supper with him, accompanied him on the Way of the Cross, laid his body in the grave, and then witnessed his glorious resurrection. Shouldn’t the Messiah have suffered all this? (Lk 24, 26) – asked the resurrected Jesus as the disciples walked to Emmaus. He revived their memory and reminded them that all the suffering had to come. This is how Jesus personally shaped the spreaders of his glad tidings. Even when the religious women went to anoint Jesus’ dead body in the grave, God won them for his Son through a powerful experience. The angels addressed them and asked them: Why do you seek the living among the dead? There is no one here. He rose from the dead.
This is the testimony of those who met the Risen One in person. We also believed their testimony. This truth about Christ’s resurrection is the foundation of our faith. We cannot stop and end at the Good Friday events. We, as religious people, can no longer stand at the sight of death; we are already thinking about what to do next! Christ, when he rose from the dead, showed us what to do next! People who have believed in Christ already know that death does not have the last word in their lives. It’s worth living! Those beautiful feelings of fatherhood, motherhood, friendship, or love can’t end up just somewhere in a cemetery – in a grave. It must have its continuation, otherwise it wouldn’t make sense. Therefore, people who believed in the risen Son of God tried to organize their whole lives around his challenges. Because they thought, because they had hope! If something then came, some ideology that wanted to take away this hope, they had trouble leaving their faith and were the first Christians to say, ‘Sine Christum, non possumus! ‘
Many religious people thought similarly: Not property, not glory! And when they reached for the only essential thing in their lives, why was it still worth living when they came for their faith, which gave their difficult life comfort – they could no longer imagine it without Christ! We also experience something similar in our life stories. Therefore, it does not matter at all how long we live, but how we fulfill our lives. It doesn’t matter whether we avoid suffering, but whether we can accept it when it comes. It doesn’t matter when we die, but whether we are ready to meet God at any time. This awareness frees us from anxiety and fear. The words of today’s liturgy speak to us in strong and clear language! Jesus lives, was resurrected, and is present among us! Just as the disciples did, we experience a unique atmosphere of joy and perceive a special light from Christ’s resurrection.
Today, there is no way to prove to ourselves that Jesus rose from the dead and that the tomb is empty. We – here – experience in faith, the fact that God exists, is the God of life and the living, stands by his promises, is more potent than suffering, injustice, violence, and death! He has the last word, he is the Lord of life and death! Even as an objective fact, that empty grave does not mean anything in itself! This needs to be emphasized because we Christians sometimes desire to prove the resurrection of Jesus with some irrefutable evidence. Well, we have to remind you that even Mary Magdalene saw the empty tomb, and that hasn’t moved her to faith yet! Objective evidence does not induce faith! If it were possible to take photos of the empty tomb of Jesus, then it would certainly cause a sensation! But maybe they wouldn’t become the basis of faith for anyone!
To give birth to faith, a personal address is necessary! Based on the individual address of Jesus Christ, you also came today, driven by the firm belief that he is God and that he lives! And that is the way for us – believers! Let’s not look for evidence; let’s not want to see an empty grave. But let’s look for the living Lord who is here among us. His love fills us with joy and happiness right now. Therefore, the message of Easter is: I am the first and the last, alive! I was dead, but now I live forever! Every person will one day recognize that all the brilliant discoveries of humanity, everything that people have created, the extraordinary events of history, cannot be given to a person who stands at the gate of death. Here, only the death and resurrection of Christ decide the eternal destiny of man.
Austrian theologian and bishop emeritus of Innsbruck Reinhold Stecher wrote in one of his meditations: „ When I am at Christ’s tomb, I feel as if I am sitting at a large terminus. As if the tracks and paths along which human suffering, human misery, human guilt travel converge here from all corners of the world and times, from all epochs and nations, on which death and blood walk … in endless gray crowds. Everything stands in front of this grave. All sighs stop before this stone, it’s the end of everything. Behind this stone, to which everyone eventually travels, there is a different world.“
The tomb of Christ is truly the final station where everything must come to rest. And it’s empty. Because no one stops here, they transfer to a new world. That is why we Christians, when we celebrate holidays, rejoice in the glorious resurrection of Christ, and also celebrate our own new life. It is something to which we have been invited by God that has become our best legacy. Praise, honor, and thanks to God for that. May our hearts never cease to sound a celebration of the Risen One, who gives our lives meaning and purpose!
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Good Friday of the Lord’s Passin
Today, the entire Christian world has fallen silent. The bells do not ring, and we all remember the death of our Lord Jesus Christ. And yet today, we are not quiet. Through devotion, we experience again and again the events that culminate in Christ’s exclamation from his cross: „It is finished“ (Jn 19,30).
Death was destroyed on this cross of his. This is where human malice, human egoism, and man’s contempt for man, which leads to murder and genocide, stopped. Christ, who did not take offense at this cross, but accepted it out of love for the Father, rose from the dead on the third day, destroyed the power of death, and showed us a way out of the unhappy situation. He who was blameless, who did not commit any evil, like a sheep led to the slaughter, said nothing, did not open his mouth to say: look how you lie, I am innocent, I didn’t do anything wrong, why are you torturing me? The apostle Peter wanted to defend him with the sword, but Jesus said to him: Hide that sword! Don’t you believe that my Father, if He wanted to defend me, could not send angels to protect me? Please put down your sword, for he who fights with the sword will perish with the sword.
Jesus Christ allowed that our injustice, that our sin, that the sin of his generation, egoism, representatives of the politics of the time, captured him and brought him to the cross. Jesus Christ took this egoism on his body. And what happened? This Jesus, who was not saved by the Roman justice represented by Pilate, nor the Jewish piety expressed by love for the Torah, this Jesus Christ was resurrected on the third day by God and made Lord. This Jesus Christ is God; that is the way to love and die. That is love that goes to the cross. And what do we think will save our marriages, our relationships? Who will lead us out of our crises and delusions? The justice of this world, which only frees the innocent and therefore gives us a thousand righteous causes, how to kill an unborn child and not be a murderer? Or perhaps false piety, which, to keep the law, eventually leads to hypocrisy and Pharisaism and puts us in the role of judges?
I know, choosing the cross in your life – even today, as in the time of Jesus Christ – is a complete madness for many and an offense for some sincere-minded people. Pilate also placed Barabbas before the people together with Jesus Christ, and the people who loved the Torah and kept the Law asked to free Barabbas, while they asked for death for Christ. Pilate represented law, and Barabbas represented human justice, because he fought for the freedom of his nation, and at the same time, an innocent person died.
That’s why Christ says, „Take your cross“. What does that mean? If you are destroyed by the sins of your wife, or man, or colleague at work, or you cannot accept the situations set for you by this society, choose Jesus Christ and his path today. Only in this attitude of Jesus will the sin that divides us be destroyed. Only from that cross of Jesus will a new life come, restoring our relationships and giving us the strength to start anew. The righteousness of this world has already buried many marriages, destroyed friendships, and set people against each other, for this world has no power to conquer sin. Sin was destroyed only on the cross of Jesus Christ. Let us allow today through this word that the sins of others on our cross, which we want to receive together with the cross of Christ, will stop.
„O, cross venerable! You are the glory of the believers and support of the suffering, the strength of the apostles, and the protector of the righteous. You are the salvation of all saints. Moses already depicted you when he opened his hands and, with your help, overcame Amalek. All creation rejoices joyfully when it sees you exalted, because by doing so it glorifies Christ, who in his disproportionate goodness through you has gathered all the scattered.
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Holy Thursday of the Lord’s Supper, Joh 13,1-15
In monasteries where monks or religious people live, it is a good custom for all monastery members to take turns doing official work, such as preparing food, washing dishes, or taking care of the cleanliness of the premises. Young and old, ordinary and introduced. Years ago, I was a young priest in Frankfurt, Germany. They accommodated us in a dormitory near the college run by the Jesuits. It went without saying that we sat at the same table with different people during breakfast or lunch, often with older professors who sometimes served us. There used to be many of us in the seminary for future priests; we ate in the standard dining room, but the superiors and professors did not sit with us.
On Mandy Thursday, we read from the Gospel of John every year about the last supper that Jesus celebrated with his disciples. He sat at the table with his disciples and performed a service before dinner, which was reserved for male and female servants: he washed his friends’ feet. In some larger churches today, foot washing is part of the St. Mass. People whose feet are to be washed are washed in advance, and their best clothes are worn. The ritual is lovely, but it’s more about the game than the service. Jesus washed his dirty feet.
We should notice the connection between this service and what we call the Sacrament of the Altar, St. Mass, St. Reception. In the Middle Ages, all European people were Christians, but society was divided into privileged and subject, rich and poor. The church was split into clerics, lay people, priests, and ordinary believers. At St. communion was only attended by priests, the others only exceptionally, they even had to give it to them by order, at least on Easter. At that time, respect for the St. altar in the form of obeisance. St. Host was worn on the pole as a banner during the procession. However, almost no one received the sacrament. The understanding of what it is about has been lost. The awareness of the connection between Jesus’ actions and the church’s actions has been lost.
It is right to bow before the St. altar, the holy host, but we cannot see it as sacred. St. guests is part of the holy event, the holy event. What is that sacred event? The central prayer we read at Mass, he expresses it with the words: „He, before voluntarily going to death, took the bread and gave thanks, broke it and gave it to his disciples.“ Jesus’ holy event was his inner setting to live for God’s kingdom, serve the world’s salvation, and give everything, including his own life, for these goals. That is why Jesus told the disciples that he gives them bread and wine, his body and blood. Finally, he said to them: Do it in memory of me!
What does it mean to do something in memory of Jesus? Maybe we have to read St. Mass, wash our feet, or even go to death? Yes, we should read St. Mass, but we cannot celebrate it without a genuine willingness to serve each other and give our lives for ourselves. Dining together, creating closeness, mutual service, and a desire to give life for each other were inseparable attitudes and activities for Jesus. However, for some Christians, including those attending church, these are separate activities. Although we have been together for some time, we have not become our own. We are together as people who, for example, get on the bus. Such people have common goals in something, a common direction of travel. However, they do not feel co-responsible for driving or for fellow passengers. The driver or the transport company is responsible for driving the bus. It is a great responsibility and service that does not transform anyone. People get in and out and don’t care more about themselves.
The St. Mass, the memory of Jesus’ dinner, receiving God’s word, and the St. bread are actions with much higher goals than a safe bus ride. If we profess Jesus, it is not enough to greet him, it is not enough to just bow before his image and the sacrament – a sign of his holy presence. If we profess Jesus, we want to understand and be transformed by him to act in his memory. Then our ceremonies, prayers, and speeches will not be just a nice game like washing and scented feet. Pope Francis is not in the habit of washing the feet of twelve venerable men when celebrating the memory of Jesus’ last supper. Today he went to a prison for women. Some Christians with weaker judgment say, What’s the point? They’re evil women, and a number of them aren’t believers… The Pope isn’t going there to praise them for the sins (for which they are in prison). It goes to show that we Christians care about other people and that we don’t think that we are better. He wants to show that we should serve and share what we have received well in life, and try to touch the human heart so that at least a small gap opens up in it, through which God’s grace will enter.
How are we together today? How do we start celebrating the Easter holidays? Are we together on a bus or as close people, transformed by Jesus into brothers and sisters, even with sinners? Let’s pray for ourselves that we become truly the family of Jesus, although different yet equal, mutually serving and once fully sacrificing ourselves in Jesus’ memory!
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The word of a priest.
Sometimes, people with power give in to public pressure. They won’t do anything but hurt someone. A typical example is the Roman governor Pilate.

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Whoever has more power also has more responsibility before God and before people. Most people in the country follow public life. Although not as detailed as the politicians think, he is watching. Who would know about those endless political rants, press conferences, tweets, and statuses?
Only connoisseurs and those who follow the opinions of public figures in the scope of work: analysts, journalists, image makers, and, naturally, politicians themselves.
Politics is the art of the possible, but every public citizen should follow some rules of conscience. It shouldn’t be how I once read it in one aphorism: „He only had one principle. Have no policies.“
Every person has an opinion on things they know or are concerned about. A simple person’s perspective doesn’t change much, but if at least hundreds, if not thousands, of people listen to you and you directly influence them, you can do a lot by subscribing to an attitude.
Telling public opinion is not always easy. Even important people are either afraid or calculating. Fear is natural and can be an explanation for silence. Calculation is worse because it smacks of calculation. I will say nothing or little and vaguely to avoid losing some advantage I have agreed on or am still planning to decide on.
If I have a critical attitude towards public affairs and know that I would probably be the target of massive hate or mockery after it is published, I will think carefully about what I will do.
Sometimes, people with power give in to public pressure. They won’t do anything and hurt someone. A typical example is the Roman governor Pontius Pilate.
The Gospel narrative of Jesus’ crucifixion on Palm Sunday is part of the liturgy commemorating his solemn entry into Jerusalem. Crowds called him to glory and threw green branches under his feet. It was a triumphant arrival, but in just a few hours, it turned into a struggle for a bare life.
When the Jewish council decided to hand Jesus over to the occupiers to be disposed of for good in the spirit of the thesis that one person should die for the people than for the whole nation to suffer; Jesus quickly found himself in a carousel of accusations and suffering that led him to Golgotha, where the crucified man died. Before this happened, he, as accused of sedition, appeared before a representative of the Romans.
The Romans, who had an empire then, were extremely sensitive to disloyalty and severely suppressed any revolts. Pilate listened to Jesus and considered him a person with interesting philosophical attitudes but a harmless dreamer, so he saw no reason to punish him with death.
In the end, he pragmatically preferred his good, his career, and supposed peace with the Jewish establishment at the expense of a popular, but still wandering teacher with strange opinions, against whom the leading men of his community stood out.
Part of Pilate’s attitude will forever remain when he symbolically washes his hands and grins, adding that he has nothing to do with this bloodthirsty charade.
Pilate didn’t think of just one thing. He did not directly say that Jesus was guilty, but allowed fanatical members of the council and the manipulated crowd to treat him that way. He did not stand up for the truth and thus gave space to the lie that led to the death of Jesus.
Alibis are not just harmless squints at inconveniences. They can be motivated by fear and can be understood to some extent.
But Pilate was a powerful man. The Jews might have caused him some difficulties in Rome, but with his abilities and connections, he would have ended up playing it. His alibi was motivated by the sheer calculation of being handsome in front of everyone.
But it can’t. Anyone who has power in any area of life must always be aware that not everyone will agree with them, and their opinions can cause adverse reactions.
One of the basic characteristics of a mature personality is inner truthfulness and the effort to transform it into public attitudes. It is not always entirely possible, and a lot depends on the chosen way of expression and the setting of the listeners. However, it is an evangelical necessity: to bear witness to the truth.
However, it would be a big misunderstanding and distortion if we understood only religious truths by this necessity and treated other spheres of life in a style that we do not have enough information.
No one has all the information, but everyone can have enough to act according to their conscience. And if he doesn’t have it, he should look it up. Look, for example, at the choice of party or movement during parliamentary elections. Whoever has power will find it at any time.
If someone said today that Pilate sent Jesus to his death because the poor man did not have enough information, it would be funny. He had them. If he didn’t, he could ask. In the end, he decided to be an alibi himself. Immerse yourself in a lie and introduce others to it.
Maybe he didn’t have the worst intention, he just wanted to improve his situation. He may have had higher ambitions than just being a viceroy in some backcountry, and he didn’t want to have stains of complaints on his curriculum vitae in front of his boss.
He didn’t think of just one thing. Furthermore, he did not directly say that Jesus was guilty, but allowed fanatical members of the council and the manipulated crowd to treat him that way. He did not stand up for the truth and thus gave space to the lie that led to the death of Jesus.
Therefore, let’s not be alibis. Let’s stand up for the truth, with respect and humility to her and to the people to whom we want to say it. Let’s not look for excuses, even at the cost of losing the human possibilities and favor of the audience. All the more so if we have responsibility and can mislead even one person. Otherwise, we will end up like Pilate.
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God called me as his servant.
The prophecy of Isaiah that we have heard is about the Messiah, the Redeemer. Still, it is also a prophecy about the people of Israel, about God’s people: we can say that it is a prophecy about every one of us. The prophecy emphasizes that the Lord chose his servant from the womb: he says it twice. His servant was selected from the very beginning, from birth or even before birth. God’s people and each of us were chosen before birth. Not one of us has come into the world by chance or accident. Everyone has some purpose, some free lot, much election by God. I was born with the lot of being a child of God and a servant of God, with the task of serving and building. And that from the womb.
Yahweh’s servant Jesus served until death: it seemed a defeat, but it was a way of serving. And this highlights the way of service we must embrace in our lives. To serve is to give of yourself, to give yourself to others. To serve is not to demand benefits for each of us who do not serve. To serve is glory; and the glory of Christ is to serve to the point of giving up oneself, to the point of death, death on the cross. Jesus is a servant of Israel. God’s people are servants, and when they have moved away from this attitude of service, they are apostate people: they move away from the vocation that God has given them. And when each of us moves away from this vocation to serve, we move away from God’s love. And we build our lives on other loves, often idolatrously.
He chose us from our mother’s womb. There are lows in life: each of us is a sinner and can fall and has fallen. The only exceptions are the Virgin Mary and Jesus: we have all fallen and sinned. What is essential, however, is the attitude before God, who chose me, who anointed me a servant; it is the attitude of a sinner who can ask for forgiveness, just like Peter, who at first swears: “No, Lord, I will never deny you, no way!” – but after the cock crows, he cries. Regrets. That is the way of the servant: when he slips, when he falls, he asks for forgiveness.
On the contrary, when the servant cannot understand that he has fallen, when passion takes hold of him to such an extent that it leads him to idolatry, opens his heart to Satan, enters into the night, and this is what happened to Judas. Let us think today of Jesus, the Servant of the faithful in ministry. His vocation is to serve, even to the point of death, namely death on the cross. Let us think of each of us, a part of the people of God: we are servants, our vocation is to serve, not to benefit from our place in the Church.
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Behold, my servant, I will win him; my chosen one, I am well pleased with him › Is 42, 1.
Servants mostly obey orders, are subjects, and are often oppressed. They must be perfect in everything and fulfill all the wishes of their master… However, God thinks differently about his servants. He doesn’t want us to serve Him in one piece. He wants to win us over.
Furthermore, he doesn’t want us to be His slaves. First, she wants to snuggle us up, like a mother wants her child. He longs to hold us in his arms, to bandage our wounds, because he chose us and has a crush on us.
However, we often confuse Him with some strict policeman who watches our every move. We think he only wants performance from us, good deeds, and 100% perfection, and then maybe he will notice and help us. We don’t know… Or we’re afraid to accept His love – just like that. We often want to deserve it and do everything to please Him and prove that we are not that bad. However… We don’t have to. He loves us after all.
He loves you because you ARE and not because of WHAT you do. Let Him. Let Him love you and run away from Him, even if you have messed up many things and failed. He always looks at you the same way. You are no failure for Him… You no longer have to compete with anyone. To compare yourself with no one. You are precious in His eyes, so be good to yourself and don’t underestimate yourself anymore. HE loves you. You are His beloved child. Don’t forget it!
Prayer: Lord, You are in love with us. You love us endlessly. We ask You for grace so that we seek love only from You and do not wander around this empty world. Amen.
Questions to ponder: Do I allow God to love me? How could I avoid worrying about what I messed up and failed at? I believe God longs for me because I AM, not because of WHAT I do for this world.
Activity: Try to come before the Lord today. Find a quiet place, take a pen and paper, and write a Letter of Forgiveness in your own words – to yourself. Give the Lord all your failures. He forgives them and looks at you with love. He only wants one thing – that you, too, forgive yourself and accept yourself as you are, even with your weaknesses.
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Cast away all your sins from yourselves, says the Lord, and renew your heart and your spirit’ Ez 18:31.
As we approach the feast of Easter, we strive for a greater connection with God, through prayer, repentance, contrition, and an end to sin. There can be a temptation here: when progress is made, and we rid ourselves of grievous sins in confession, we cease our efforts. We stop struggling with the little sins, not realizing that they, too, may be the reason for our unfruitfulness. But the challenge is clear: “Cast away from yourselves all your sins, says the Lord” (Eze 18:31).
One successful farmer started by buying land, mostly just pasture. Turning them into fertile arable land was very difficult. It was no problem to remove the boulders that were on the land. There was no problem with the larger rocks either. The problem only arose after the first sloughing. When he looked at the plowed area, he could see that the ground was covered with small stones everywhere. But he didn’t give up. He and his wife set about picking. For days, they collected small rocks. Then he sowed for the first time. The following year, when sloughing, many tiny stones appeared again. They picked them all again. And so on for years to come. Today, this particular plot of land is one of the most fertile. Removing the little sins, weaknesses, and habits can seem never-ending. But the result is always a beautiful and holy soul that yields much spiritual harvest.
Cast away from you all your sins, says the Lord, and renew your heart and spirit (Eze 18:31) . Now is the time to meditate on Christ’s suffering, his love for us, when he conquered death and sin to redeem us. Let us renew our hearts and spirits to enjoy the gift of Christ’s redemption.
Prayer: Lord Jesus, give me strength today to fight even the more minor things that cause separation from You. Help me maintain inner peace and discernment in everything I do. May today be, once again, an opportunity for me to renew my heart and spirit. I pray that I may keep only good things in my heart. Amen.
Questions for reflection. Which are the small stones that I still need to pick up? What “new” way of renewing my heart will I still choose before Easter?
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Jeremiah’s suffering.
The prophet Jeremiah lived in the 6th century BC, when idolatry flourished. He predicted God’s punishment and therefore had many enemies. They humiliated him. They cut to his statements so they could trip him up. Furthermore, they also relied on the work of whistleblowers. Even those who lived in friendship with him took care of his fall. The prophet’s situation is described by the statement: Horror from all sides! In this situation, Jeremiah confidently surrenders himself to God, who has remained a powerful support. To him, he entrusts the solution to his dispute. God will thwart the plots of the enemies. They wanted to vilify the prophet, but shame will overtake them. The prophet’s trust is so strong that he calls for the glorification of God for delivering the poor man from the hands of criminals. Plots against Jesus › Jn 10, 31-42. The prophet Jeremiah is a type of Jesus. His enemies also plotted against him. When he confirmed his unity with God, referring to his deeds, they wanted to catch him and stone him. Jesus got out of their hands, because his hour had not yet come. We can experience suffering in the same way. We do not observe pitfalls, humiliation, slander, or name-calling around us. Let us entrust it to God, who is a righteous Judge. Let’s trust and entrust ourselves to God’s protection. The prophet Jeremiah teaches us to glorify God in situations of suffering. To thank him for setting us free. We will receive even greater gifts if we do this with great confidence.
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