Sunday, May 17, 2026

Come and Worship: Homily for Ascension Sunday

My dear brothers and sisters in Our Lord Jesus Christ. Today we celebrate the feast of the Ascension of Our Lord to heaven. He ascended to heaven, in human form, so that He may sit at the right hand of the Father, forever interceding for us.

Contemplating the Gospel for this feast the following words attracted my attention:

              When they saw him, they worshiped, but they doubted.

This sentence captures perfectly not only the attitude that should be ours on this feast, worship; but also the sentiment that often accompanies our response to Our Lord and Saviour, doubt.

The human being has worship in his DNA. Look all around us, not just Catholics, but every single human being, from every religious denomination, including those who claim to have no religion. You will see that as a species we are driven by a desire to worship. It is for this reason homo sapiens is also known as homo adorans – the worshipping man.

This drive for worship, however, can sometimes take us down the wrong road, where rather than worship God, the maker and the creator of the universe, we begin to worship his creations, whether other persons, spirits, nature, or indeed, ourselves.

We were warned in Sinai, when we were given the Ten Commandments:

I am the Lord your God, who brought you out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of slavery. You shall have no other gods before me. (Ex 20: 2-3)

And because it may be difficult to follow a God who has no name, and whose face we cannot see, in His bountiful mercy, God the Father, provided us with His Son, who deigned to take human form, and make it easier for us to worship Him.

Praise and sacrifice, the two components of worship are, once again, universal. Every member of homo adorans has an innate sense of it. Whether by human sacrifice, or the sacrifice of things we hold most precious, or with the use of hyperbole, homo adorans recognizes that there is no gift we can give that is sufficient for the one who created us.

We Catholics know that in His goodness, recognizing that there was no gift that we could bring that was worthy, God the Father guided us through history, training the people of Israel, preparing them – through their rituals and sacrifices – to anticipate the one single and perfect sacrifice, the offering of His Son on Calvary. Through the singing of the psalms in the Divine Office, which priests are obliged to offer five times a day, we are given hymns of praise which are not only fitting for the worship of God, but also as in any perfect worship, form us to be perfect. Having prayed the Divine Office for some years now, I heartily recommend this discipline to all who are serious about deepening their faith, and improving the quality of their worship.

Even though Catholics have these wonderful resources, we are, nevertheless, like the apostles, our fathers in the faith, prone to doubt.

“Is Jesus the Only begotten Son of God, or just another prophet, a learned teacher whom we have much to learn from?”

“Do I really need to go to Mass? Isn’t it enough that I am a good person?”

“Aren’t all religions equal?”

Worse, “Is Jesus really present in the Blessed Sacrament?”

Rather than attempt to answer these questions today, since they have answers that require time to be appreciated, I will respond by recommending that we turn back to worship as a way of obtaining answers to these questions. Worship properly undertaken will offer answers even to the most critical mind.

And so, go to Mass every Sunday, if not every day. Pray the rosary, take up parts of the Divine Office, perhaps just lauds and vespers for now, spend time in adoration before the Blessed Sacrament. Genuflect before the Blessed Sacrament, kneel at Mass, receive communion on the tongue. Orthopraxis, right action, will eventually lead you towards orthodoxy, right praise. Act right and all will be revealed to you.

I leave you, as a blessing, this quote from the extract of St. Paul’s letter to the Ephesians that we read today:

May the eyes of your hearts be enlightened,
that you may know what is the hope that belongs to his call

(A series of three homilies in preparation for the Solemnity of the Ascension preached at the Parish church of N.Srª da Immaculada Conceição, Pangim, can be found here.)

(Image reference: The Calling of the Apostles, Domenico Ghirlandaio, 1481, The Sistine Chapel, Rome.)

He Made Us Whole: Homilies for the Triduum in preparation for the Solemnity of the Ascension

Homily 1

“And I, when I am lifted up from the earth, will draw all men to myself” (Jn 12: 32)

My dear brothers and sisters in Our Lord Jesus Christ; the Catechism of the Catholic Church § 662 teaches us that:

The lifting up of Jesus on the cross signifies and announces his lifting up by his Ascension into heaven and indeed begins it.

If there is one lesson that I would like to communicate to you today on this, our first day of the triduum in preparation for the great feast of the Ascension of Our Lord into heaven, it is this, that the route to heaven, as much for us, as for Our Lord, passes through the Cross. The Cross is the path to entering bodily into heaven.

Our Lord chose to take up the Cross. He was not forced, either by His Father in heaven, nor by circumstances on earth. He went to the Cross entirely of His own will. Which is why the exercise of our human will is necessary if we too are to enter bodily into heaven at the end of time. In other words, we too need to take up our cross, if we are to obtain the promises of Christ that we will live with Him forever in paradise.

The sentence in the Gospel of John just prior to that with which I opened this homily with will aid us in contemplating how to take up our Cross.

Now is the judgment of this world; now the ruler of this world will be driven out. (Jn 12: 31)

My dear brothers and sisters, amidst all the legitimate concern that we are abusing the earth and the natural environment, i.e. the world, we have also fallen prey to treat the earth, this world, as a god. We need to be careful not to fall into this idolatry which is widespread.

The world has to be judged, and by this we mean the natural world, which was corrupted because of Adam’s disobedience and which was hence in servitude to the Devil. Our Lord – through His Death and Resurrection – has liberated us, and shown us the way through which we can be liberated, and He invites us to be a partner in this project of liberation of the world. We need, however, to be careful not to see the world as a perfect good, or even as the object of our veneration. If we so do, then we will not be able to be drawn to Him, and rise with Him.

One way in which many see the world as a perfect good is to see human beings – as a species – as having ruined the world, and deserving nothing better than extinction. This, my dear brothers and sisters, is not a Catholic perspective. There are human beings that are abusing the earth and natural resources, this is true. It is also true that they/we have spawned a culture of blind consumption that most of us indulge in. But this cannot be used to launch a blanket condemnation of humankind. Man has a role to play in caring for, and guiding nature, and we must return to this role. Indeed, it is through man, that the earth will be lifted up to glory.

We can do so, by embracing the Cross. This embrace requires that we adopt a culture of asceticism and self-denial. One great way to do so, within the framework of caring for the earth, is start is to avoid single use plastics, make the effort to carry water with us, avoid sweets and other snacks that come in single use plastics, be abstemious in our use of, and indeed demand for, electricity (in other words, think of using ACs less and fans more). Abstinence is part of the way of the Cross, and it is a practice that must be engaged in throughout the year, not only at Lent. Lent, and Advent, are when we intensify our practices of abstinence.

My dear brothers and sisters, Christians must always preach Christ and His Cross, through their daily lives, because it is through the Cross that the world is purified and all men may be drawn to Him, so that they may eventually follow Him who ascended into heaven.

Homily 2

Jesus said to her, “Do not hold on to me, because I have not yet ascended to the Father. But go to my brothers and say to them, ‘I am ascending to my Father and your Father, to my God and your God.’”

My dear brothers and sisters, this morning, the second day of the triduum in preparation of the feast of the Ascension I present for your consideration these famous words of Our Lord to his great disciple Mary Magdalene from the Gospel of St. John (20: 17).

Before reflecting on these words a few words of clarification are in order. We need to distinguish between ascension, and assumption. Our Lord ascended into heaven, he was not assumed into heaven. This is to say that He entered heaven of His own power. He was able to do so because as He revealed to Nicodemus (Jn 3: 13):

No one has ever gone into heaven except the one who came from heaven—the Son of Man.

Our Lord was able to ascend into heaven because He came from heaven and returned there. Only he who descends voluntarily, may ascend voluntarily.

However, this is not the whole story. He descent to the earth, to take up human form, was an act of humility. A humility which he deepened by taking up the Cross and then accompanying the human condition through suffering and eventually death. His Resurrection was by the power of God the Father, but his Ascension, He accomplished by His own powers.

This Ascension is to be distinguished from the Assumption. Our Lady, whose feast of the Assumption we celebrate, did not enter heaven bodily through Her own power, She was assumed into heaven through the power of Her Son.

The Catechism of the Catholic Church § 974 teaches us:

The Most Blessed Virgin Mary, when the course of her earthly life was completed, was taken up body and soul into the glory of heaven, where she already shares in the glory of her Son's Resurrection, anticipating the resurrection of all members of his Body.

In other words, Our Lady went before us to heaven, as a promise of things to come. Our Lady follows Her Son, who, as we heard from the Gospel of St John at the start of this homily tells Mary Magdalene:

‘I am ascending to my Father and your Father, to my God and your God.’

But Our Lord did not ascend to heaven unchanged from His experience on earth. He passed through death and entered heaven with a glorified body, but this body, and the nature that accompanied was our human body and nature. Human body and nature purified, no doubt, but nevertheless, a human body purged of the ills of this world.

In his first letter St. John has words of wisdom to guide us in our love for the Father:

Do not love the world or the things in the world. The love of the Father is not in those who love the world; for all that is in the world—the desire of the flesh, the desire of the eyes, the pride in riches—comes not from the Father but from the world. And the world and its desire are passing away, but those who do the will of God live forever. (1 Jn 2: 15-17)

In other words, dear brothers and sisters, we are back where we were yesterday. The Ascension of the Lord, a prelude to our own resurrection and life in heaven, passes not just through the Cross, but with a disdain for the things for the world which it represents.

May Our Lord, and Our Lady give us the graces to disdain the things of this world.

Homily 3

I came from the Father and have come into the world;
now I am leaving the world and going back to the Father.

My dear brothers and sisters in Christ, today, on this last day of our triduum in preparation for the Solemnity of the Ascension of Our Lord the words above from the Gospel acclamation which tells us the essentials that we need to know about this feast.

the Only Begotten Son of God,
born of the Father before all ages

Was always with the Father, and in obedience to the will of the Father, who loved the world so much, came down to Earth and took on human form and shared in our nature.

Sharing in our nature, and having shown us that temptation can be challenged, and sin is not a necessity but an unfortunate option, He returned to the Father, carrying with Him our perfected nature and body into heaven.

The same body that had been expelled from paradise, having now resisted temptation, and conquered sin, was now back in the embrace of the Father.

And what does He do up there in heaven? To answer this question, we can turn to the immortal words of St. Paul in his letter to the Hebrews (9: 25-26):

For Christ has entered, not into holy places made with hands,

which are copies of the true things, but into heaven itself,

now to appear in the presence of God on our behalf.

Nor was it to offer himself repeatedly,

as the high priest enters the holy places every year with blood not his own,

for then he would have had to suffer repeatedly since the foundation of the world.

But as it is, he has appeared once for all at the end of the ages

to put away sin by the sacrifice of himself.

He enters heaven on our behalf, to intercede for us before the Father. And so that we may present the Father sacrifice of thanksgiving for the good we have received, and reparation for the sins we commit, He has left behind for us the memorial of His sacrifice, so that it can be presented again, and again, and again. This is to say, the Mass is the re-presentation of the sacrifice of Calvary. Every Mass has the same value, the same merit as if it were the first time Our Lord died on the Cross; except, that Our Lord does not have to die and suffer repeatedly. Having conquered death, He is now master of space and time, and it is possible for Him to permit that His words “This is my body, this is my blood” take effect, so that they may be offered as a perfect sacrifice.

Since then we have a great high priest who has passed through the heavens,

Jesus, the Son of God, let us hold fast our confession.
For we do not have a high priest who is unable to sympathize with our weaknesses,

but one who in every respect has been tempted as we are, yet without sin. 

Let us then with confidence draw near to the throne of grace,

that we may receive mercy and find grace to help in time of need.

(A version of these homilies were first preached to the faithful at the parish Church of N.Srª da Immaculada Conceição, Pangim on the 14th, 15th, and 16th of May 2026.)

Wednesday, May 13, 2026

Reparation and Penance: the tools of Catholic politics

 

There is a way in which Catholics could do politics different from others. A Catholic politics would be premised on the recognition of not just the natural, but the supernatural as well. It would recognize the presence not just of time and limited lifetimes, but the existence of eternity. Finally, it would recognize the existence of God, and His saints, living in eternity, and God presiding over all time as the just judge who does, and who will, call all things to account.

Such a response is particularly necessary after the recent insults directed at St. Francis Xavier by a hired influencer. The response to these insults hurled against Goa’s patron saint have ranged from the popular – the howl of protests against the disrespect to the informal sovereign of Goa; the legal – the police complaints and the subsequent judicial process; the social – the heartwarming reassurance that St. Francis Xavier is dear to the hearts of not just Catholics in Goa, but Hindus, Muslims and others too. Surprisingly, it was a religious, a properly Catholic, response that was lacking amidst all the din.

But there is a response waiting to be articulated! First, a Catholic response will begin from the assertion that St. Francis Xavier is not dead but alive, and in heaven. In fact, it is because he is alive in heaven that we could have the miracle of his incorrupt remains in the first place. The freshness of his body, even months, years, and decades after death, was – and must be – understood as testament to the fact that Francis Xavier (as he was then) was most certainly a saint in heaven.

If he is alive, and in heaven, then it makes sense that the first response ought to have been an apology to him, and to the God whom he so faithfully served. Now, since one can hardly expect the unrepentant perpetrator of the foul language to apologize, it stands to reason that this apology should be extended by someone else.

Catholicism is rich in its response to sin and recognizes that reparation for sin can be offered by one for another. As such, when the perpetrator is unwilling to make reparation for offence given, the same reparation can be made by others on his behalf. This reparation is best done by pilgrims through a penitential pilgrimage to the space where St. Francis Xavier – the sovereign of Goa – rests.

A couple of years ago, at the time of the exposition of 2024-25, I made the acquaintance of a non-Goan, non-Christian, family that was hawking medicinal herbs and camping on the side of the road for the period. In one of our conversations, the matriarch of the family indicated that she wished to pass the New Year in Old Goa, in “the durbar of the saint.”

I was struck by the Sufi imagery she drew upon. One normally refers to the tomb, or dargah, of the Sufi holy men as their darbars. It is from this throne that they preside as Nizams, or governors, of Allah. In his important work, The Sufis of Bijapur, 1300–1700: Social Roles of Sufis in Medieval India, first published way back in 1978, the famous historian Richard Eaton pointed out that the Sultans of Bijapur claimed sovereignty over their territory, not through the exertion of military power alone, but by offering homage to various Sufi pirs. Each pir was understood to exercise sovereignty over a particular territory, and in offering service to this pir, the Sultan claimed political sovereignty over this spiritual jurisdiction. One could be struck by the similarity between this Sufi logic and that of the Portuguese Estado da India, but then, we should not be surprised; the Estado did not exist in a vacuum; it was very much a South Asian institution.

Using this lady’s imagery, it is to the Basilica of Bom Jesus, the court of Saint Francis Xavier that this penitential pilgrimage ought to travel, and reaching there prostrate before the saint to formally make apology to him for the besmirching his fair name and the staining of his honour.

This pilgrimage would consist of, and indeed be open to, not just of Catholics, but all those Goan, and non-Goan, Catholic and non-Catholic, devotees of Saint Francis who have been offended by the remarks against him. Of course, the pluralism contained in such a pluri-creedal pilgrimage would only underscore the fact that the word catholic, literally means "universal" or "all-inclusive"!

Such a pilgrimage would necessarily conclude with a Mass of reparation. The Mass, as we know, is a re-presentation of the sacrifice of Calvary, where the Son offered Himself as reparation for the sins of mankind. What we need to remember is that the offense given to St. Francis Xavier was not given to him alone, but to the God who has made him one of His holy ones and permitted St. Xavier’s body to defy the laws of nature for a time. As such, it is finally to Him that reparation must be made and apology given. The Mass is the perfect prayer, and this is what we must offer God who has so crudely been offended.

The organization of such a pilgrimage would underscore to Saint Francis Xavier, and the God whom he serves, that his people (Goan, non-Goan, Catholic, non-Catholic) continue to hold him in high regard. More importantly, they would underscore before all the sovereigns and princes of this world, that it is at his shrine alone, a place where heaven and earth meet, where this contentious matter will truly be resolved.

If Catholics, and other devotees of the saint, can understand these logics, then they would know that they are able to do Catholic politics, and not simply the politics of the secular liberalism. To engage in Catholic politics is not to displace the secular liberal State. This entity has a crucial role to play in dispensing secular justice, and it must play its role. However, the religious person knows that if the fullness of justice is to be realized, the justice of the world must also be supplemented by divine justice. It is to this end that Catholic politics is eventually directed, supplementing the natural, with the supernatural to give completeness to our actions.

There are many in Goa, Catholic and non-Catholic, who are concerned that the uniqueness of our territory, where all lived in harmony, and more importantly love, is under threat. We must bear in mind that this bonhomie is the result of the blessings of St. Francis Xavier, and we need to turn to him, for in this time of assault, he is our sure defense.

St. Francis Xavier, pray for us!

(A version of this text was first published in the O Heraldo on 13 May 2026.)

(Image reference: "The Corpus Christi Procession" Arcadi Mas i Fondevila, 1887, Museu Maricel de Sitges.)