Saturday, July 18, 2026

Keeping ourselves clean in a dirty world

THE parable of the good seeds and the weeds (Mt. 13:24-30) reminds us of a truth we cannot ignore. Good and evil coexist in this world. Virtue grows alongside vice. Holiness must contend with sin. That is the reality we face every day. 

 We live amid corruption, dishonesty, impurity, pride, selfishness and deception. We cannot completely avoid these realities. The challenge is not to run away from the world but to remain spiritually clean while living and working in it. Christ himself showed us how. 

 He entered a sinful world without being tainted by its sin. He embraced suffering, rejection and death while remaining perfectly united with the will of the Father. His example teaches us that we may come into contact with the world's dirt, but we should never allow it to stain our soul or weaken our fidelity to God. 

 Our concern, however, should not stop at protecting ourselves from evil. We have a mission. Every Christian is called to help cleanse the world by bringing Christ's truth, charity and hope wherever he or she may be. We are meant to be instruments of God's transforming grace in our homes, workplaces and communities. 

 This mission is impossible without a deep union with God. 

 Instead of asking to be spared from life's difficulties, we should pray for the grace to remain close to God in every circumstance. Only through him can we stay spiritually clean while courageously facing the challenges around us. His grace enables us not only to resist evil but also to overcome it with good. 

 Real holiness is never superficial. It is not about projecting a polished religious image or seeking the admiration of others. Genuine holiness bears the marks of sacrifice. It accepts inconveniences, misunderstandings and suffering out of love for God. It perseveres quietly because it knows that every cross carried with Christ has redemptive value. 

 That is why we should never neglect our spiritual life. 

 Daily prayer keeps us connected with God. Frequent reception of the sacraments strengthens the soul. Spiritual direction offers guidance, while continuing formation deepens our understanding of the faith. At the same time, we should strive to grow in the virtues and learn to fight the spiritual battles that inevitably come with following Christ. 

 Among the most effective means of spiritual growth is the daily examination of conscience. This simple but powerful practice allows us to review our day before God. We recognize where we responded generously to his grace, where we failed, and where we need to improve. Without this regular self-examination, we can slowly drift into complacency and compromise without even noticing it. 

 The examination of conscience also helps us uncover the motives behind our thoughts, words and actions. Did we act out of love or pride? Were our decisions guided by faith or by convenience? Did we seek God's will or merely our own comfort? These questions gradually sharpen our conscience and strengthen our commitment to live as authentic disciples of Christ. 

 As we become more aware of our weaknesses, we also become more grateful for God's mercy. Every sincere examination should lead us to repentance, renewed resolve and greater confidence in God's grace. Holiness is not achieved by human effort alone but by faithfully cooperating with the grace that God constantly gives us. 

 The weeds may continue to grow around us, but they should never discourage us. Christ has already overcome the world. Our task is to remain good seed—firmly rooted in him, continually purified by his grace, and actively bringing his light into places darkened by sin. 

 That is how we keep ourselves clean in a dirty world while helping cleanse it with the love, truth and grace of Christ.

Friday, July 17, 2026

Mercy over sacrifice

CHRIST said it plainly: “I will have mercy, and not sacrifice.” He made this declaration after some leading Jews accused his disciples of violating the sabbath by plucking ears of corn to satisfy their hunger. (cfr. Mt 12,1-8) 

 With those words, Christ was teaching a fundamental truth: mercy, compassion, and genuine human need must always take precedence over a rigid and legalistic observance of rules. The sabbath was instituted for man's benefit—for rest, worship, and renewal—not as an oppressive burden. 

 That lesson remains relevant today. We need a proper understanding of laws and the attitude we should have toward them. Laws are necessary and indispensable for maintaining justice, peace, and order in society. Without them, confusion and arbitrariness would prevail. 

 But beyond simple compliance, we should recognize that every law finds its fullest meaning only in the heart of Christ, where justice is always united with mercy and truth is inseparable from charity. 

 That’s why there are occasions when exceptions to human laws can rightly be made. No law, however carefully crafted, can fully capture every concrete human situation or perfectly express the boundless mercy of God. Human legislation is always limited because it is the work of finite minds. It must therefore be interpreted and applied with wisdom, compassion, and a sincere concern for the good of persons. 

 We should be especially vigilant against the danger of legalism, which values the letter of the law while neglecting its spirit. The best safeguard against this temptation is to cultivate a living union with Christ. 

 Everything—including our legal and judicial systems, as well as the drafting, interpretation, and enforcement of laws—should constantly be referred to him. 

 Christ himself made this point unmistakably when the Pharisees questioned him about his disciples' conduct on the sabbath. He answered: “The sabbath was made for man, not man for the sabbath. That is why the Son of Man is lord even of the sabbath.” (cfr. Mk 2,23-28) With those words, he restored the proper hierarchy: laws exist to promote authentic human flourishing and ultimately to lead us to God. 

 Our human laws should therefore be grounded on the natural law, which is our participation in God's eternal law. God, our Creator, is the first and ultimate lawgiver, and every just law derives its authority from him. 

 More specifically, the natural moral law recognizes God as the source, foundation, and end of all law. It reminds us that we are created in God's image and likeness, called to become his children and to share in his divine life. Every legal system worthy of the name should respect this transcendent truth and direct the human person toward authentic freedom and moral goodness. 

 A legal system detached from this foundation is already defective from the beginning. When law rests solely on human consensus or changing public opinion, the letter inevitably prevails over the spirit. Man then assumes the role that belongs to God alone, acting as though he were the supreme lawgiver, fully capable of defining truth, justice, and even human nature according to his own preferences. 

 Yet even when our legal system explicitly acknowledges God as the source and end of all law, it still reflects the limitations of our human condition. That is why the letter of the law must always be enlivened by its proper spirit—the Spirit of God, who inspires wisdom, justice, mercy, and charity. 

 For this reason, God must remain at the center of every stage of our legal life: in making laws, interpreting them, and applying them. Only then can our laws truly serve their highest purpose—leading every person toward his ultimate destiny: communion with God, holiness of life, and everlasting happiness in him.

Thursday, July 16, 2026

Immersed in the world but not swallowed up and entrapped

CHRISTIANS are not called to flee the world. They are called to transform it. That means living fully in the midst of ordinary affairs—work, family, culture, politics, business, science, and recreation—without allowing these realities to become our masters. We are meant to be immersed in the world, but never swallowed up by it. 

 That distinction matters. 

 The world is God's creation, and therefore it is good. It reflects His wisdom, beauty, and generosity. Yet Scripture also reminds us that this world is not our permanent home. It is a pilgrimage, not the destination. It is where our fidelity is tested and our love purified. The question life constantly poses is whether we truly desire what God desires for us: to become His children, to bear His image, and to share in His divine life. 

 The danger begins when temporal realities cease to be means and become ends. Careers become identities. Wealth becomes security. Success becomes the measure of worth. Pleasure becomes the highest good. Without realizing it, we shift our center of gravity from heaven to earth. 

 That is worldliness—not the use of created things but the worship of them. 

 The Christian vision is far more balanced. We are called to love the world because God loves it. After all, "God so loved the world" that He sent His only Son. Yet loving the world does not mean adopting its values uncritically or allowing its passing attractions to dictate our choices. We are to engage the world without becoming captive to it. 

 This requires interior freedom. 

 Detachment is often misunderstood as indifference or contempt for earthly things. It is neither. Christian detachment means possessing things without letting them possess us. It means enjoying God's gifts while remembering that every gift points beyond itself to the Giver. The more detached we become, the more capable we are of loving both God and the world rightly. 

 That interior freedom does not happen by accident. It is cultivated by constantly referring everything back to God. Before making decisions, pursuing ambitions, or embracing opportunities, we should ask a simple question: Does this bring me closer to God or draw me away from Him? Such discernment keeps earthly pursuits in their proper place. 

 Faith makes this possible. Left to ourselves, we naturally evaluate life according to comfort, profit, prestige, or convenience. Faith widens the horizon. It teaches us to judge everything in the light of eternity rather than the urgency of the moment. But faith can flourish only where humility exists. A proud heart trusts only its own calculations. A humble heart allows God to reshape its vision. 

 This is why every circumstance—whether success or failure, joy or suffering—can become a path toward holiness. The believer learns to ask not merely, "What do I gain from this?" but, more importantly, "What is God asking of me through this?" That shift changes everything. Daily work becomes a vocation. Trials become occasions for growth. Relationships become opportunities for charity. Ordinary life becomes the arena of grace. 

 Christ gives us the principle that orders every other priority: "Seek first the kingdom of God and his righteousness, and all these things will be given to you as well" (Mt. 6:33). That is not an invitation to neglect earthly responsibilities. It is the surest way to fulfill them without losing our soul. 

 Every day should leave us with the quiet conviction that we are moving closer to God. That is not presumption; it is the very purpose of the Christian life. We are in the world for a reason—but we must never forget that our true home lies beyond it.