Friday, January 30, 2026
DIVINE WHISPER with Fr. PiusRalph
Thursday, January 29, 2026
DIVINE WHISPER with Fr. PiusRalph
FRIDAY OF THE THIRD WEEK IN ORDINARY TIME OF THE YEAR (II)
Mystery of the day: Sorrowful
Celebration: Ferial
πTable of the Word
First Reading: 2 Samuel 11:1-4.5-10.13-17
Gospel: Mark 4:26-34
Theme: Face-to-Face with the shame of Sin.
Reflection
Psalm 51 remains the leading penitential prayer before the Lord. From today's table of the Word, David who first sang this song of lamentations before the Lord is seen in in the first reading caught up with the sin of lust after Uriah's wife - Bathsheba (cf. 2 Samuel 11:1-4.5-10.13-17).
The reading opens quietly:
“In the spring, when kings go out to battle… David remained in Jerusalem.” That one line explains everything. David stays back.
- Comfort replaces duty.
- Ease replaces vigilance.
- And slowly… temptation enters.
Sin rarely explodes.
- It creeps in quietly when we stop watching.
- A glance becomes desire.
- Desire becomes action.
- Action becomes tragedy.
The fall of David teaches us something sobering:
Even the strongest can fall
when the heart grows careless.
Holiness requires watchfulness.
Beloved in Christ Jesus, how many times do we allow frivolities to overcome duty. In our usual parlance, we often say: "Business before pleasure". But why then do we subject ourselves to fun which does not last beyond a moment in place of virtues which will lead us beyond time?
However, when this occurs, then there is a need to go back for cleansing as David did (cf. Psalm 51) Here He echoed: “Have mercy on me, O God.” And yet this is not a story of despair. Because when David realises his sin, he runs back to God.
Not away.
- That’s the difference between Judas and Peter.
- Between despair and salvation.
- David doesn’t pretend.
- He doesn’t justify.
He simply prays: “Create in me a clean heart.” And that prayer has echoed through centuries. Because God never refuses a repentant heart.
Never.
- Failure is not the end.
- Only act of refusal to return is the end of the discussion.
On the other hand, the Gospel pericope taken from Mark's account 4:26–34, we see Seed that grows by itself. Then Jesus speaks of seeds again.
- Quiet growth.
- Hidden transformation.
“The seed sprouts and grows, he knows not how.”
- What a comfort.
- God works in secret places.
- Even when we don’t see progress.
- Even when we feel weak.
- Even after we fall.
- Grace is still working underground.
- The Kingdom is not built by noise, but by patient faithfulness.
Even the smallest mustard seed becomes shelter for many.
God loves small beginnings. He blesses every little beginning. Recalling the fact that: little things are little things but faithfulness in it makes them great.Let us not take anything for granted, even when we derail from the right path. Let us go back to the with a contrite heart, there and then He will forgive and restore.
+ Peace be with you!
© ARCHIVE 30012026
Wednesday, January 28, 2026
DIVINE WHISPER with Fr. PiusRalph
Tuesday, January 27, 2026
DIVINE WHISPER with Fr. PiusRalph
Monday, January 26, 2026
DIVINE WHISPER with Fr. PiusRalph
Sunday, January 25, 2026
DIVINE WHISPER with Fr. PiusRalph
Friday, January 23, 2026
DIVINE WHISPER with Fr. PiusRalph
Born in (France). With apostolic zeal, St. Francis de Sales fought Calvinism. He was Bishop of . With St. Francis Fremyot de Chantal, he founded the Order of the Visitation. He wrote Introduction to the Devout Life, a classic of spiritual direction. He died in and was canonized in 1655. In 1877, Pius IX proclaimed him Doctor of the Church. Pius XI declared him as Patron Saint of Journalists and Other Writers.
Thursday, January 22, 2026
DIVINE WHISPER with Fr. PiusRalph
Wednesday, January 21, 2026
DIVINE WHISPER with Fr. PiusRalph
Tuesday, January 20, 2026
DIVINE WHISPER with Fr. PiusRalph
Monday, January 19, 2026
DIVINE WHISPER with Fr. PiusRalph
Sunday, January 18, 2026
DIVINE WHISPER with Fr. PiusRalph
Friday, January 16, 2026
DIVINE WHISPER with Fr. PiusRalph
Wednesday, January 14, 2026
DIVINE WHISPER with Fr. PiusRalph
THURSDAY OF THE FIRST WEEK IN ORDINARY TIME OF THE YEAR (II)
Mystery of the day: Luminous
Celebration: Ferial
π Table of the Word
First Reading: 1 Samuel 4:1–11
Gospel: Mark 1:40–45
Theme: Called by Name, Renewed from Within
Reflection
Today, we are being confronted with so many things regarding true worship, while some hold tenaciously to true teaching others create their own channel all in the name of worship. From today's table of the Word we have seen this replaying among the Israelites (cf.1 Samuel 4:1–11) . Here the Israel goes into battle carrying the Ark of the Covenant, convinced that God’s presence guarantees victory. Yet they are defeated. The shock is theological: holy objects cannot replace holy lives. The Ark, symbol of God’s presence, is treated like a weapon rather than a covenant reminder.
This reading confronts a subtle temptation: confusing religious symbols with true obedience. God refuses to be reduced to a charm. He desires hearts aligned with His will, not rituals emptied of faithfulness.
In the light of this, that the Mother Church teaches that sacraments are not magic; they require proper disposition (cf. Catechism of the Catholic Church, 1128). God’s grace works where humility and conversion are present.
It is against the backdrop of defeat and lament, that the Gospel reveals the true heart of God. A leper - a man isolated, unclean, and excluded approaches Jesus instead of withdrawing, Jesus stretches out His hand and touches him.
This gesture is revolutionary. Jesus risks ritual impurity to restore a broken life. His words are simple yet decisive: “I do will it. Be made clean.”
Here, God is no longer carried into battle; God walks toward human misery.
However, the Church sees in this act the model of Christ’s sacramental ministry especially in the Sacraments of Healing: Reconciliation and Anointing of the Sick, where Christ still touches what the world avoids.
When faith becomes presumption, God allows us to fall, not to destroying us, but to purify our trust. When defeat silences our confidence, prayer becomes more honest. When society excludes, Christ draws near and touches. God is not found in objects used without obedience, but in compassion lived with faith.
Finally, it is obvious that true victory is not winning battles, but being restored in relationship with God.
+ Peace of Christ be with you!
© ARCHIVE 15012026
Monday, January 12, 2026
DIVINE WHISPER with Fr. PiusRalph
TUESDAY OF THE FIRST WEEK IN ORDINARY TIME OF THE YEAR (II)
Mystery of the day: Sorrowful
Celebration: Ferial
π Table of the Word
First Reading: 1 Samuel 1:9–20
Gospel: Mark 1:21–28
Theme: When God Looks Beyond Appearances
Reflection
In the first reading taken from 1 Samuel 1:9–20, Hannah moves from silent suffering to bold surrender. Her prayer is so deep, so interior, that it is mistakn for drunkenness. Even the priest, Eli, misjudges her. This moment reveals a profound biblical truth: those closest to God are sometimes least understood by others.
Yet Hannah does not withdraw. She pours out her soul before the Lord. Scripture tells us that “her countenance was sad no longer”, not because the prayer was already answered, but because she entrusted her pain to God. Faith does not always remove the problem immediately; it restores peace before the miracle.
In the Gospel, Mark 1:21–28 Jesus enters the synagogue, not as a learned scribe quoting authorities, but as Authority Himself. His word unsettles both people and spirits. He confronts the unclean spirit, His command is brief yet absolute: “Be silent. Come out of him!”
This is the heart of Christ’s mission: to free humanity from whatever diminishes life. The people are astonished because His authority does not burden; it liberates. Where Jesus speaks, chaos yields to order, fear to peace.
Beloved in Christ Jesus, it is obvious that God looks beyond appearances. He knows our secret thoughts, our cravings, worries and cares just like in the case of Hannah as we heard in today's first reading.
Finally, let us in humility and trust hope in Him and Him alone.
+ Peace of Christ be with you!
© ARCHIVE 13012026
Sunday, January 11, 2026
DIVINE WHISPER with Fr. PiusRalph
MONDAY OF THE FIRST WEEK IN ORDINARY TIME OF THE YEAR (II)
Mystery of the day: Joyful
Celebration: Ferial
π Table of the Word
First Reading: 1 Samuel 1:1–8
Gospel: Mark 1:14–20
Theme: The Whisper of God in Human Pain.
Reflection
Today's liturgy opens Ordinary Time not with dramatic miracles, but with unheard tears. Hannah’s barrenness is not merely biological; it is social, emotional, and spiritual. In the context of ancient Near Eastern and Israelite, childlessness was often interpreted as divine disfavour. Yet Scripture subtly corrects this theology: “Though the Lord had closed her womb” (1 Sam 1:5), God is not absent, He is mysteriously at work. And in our context childlessness is also is yet another sad situation as the woman will be silently tortured with words and sometimes with open confrontation from the family.
In today's first reading taken from 1 Samuel 1:1–8 Hannah’s pain becomes a school of prayer. She is misunderstood even by her husband, Elkanah, who often consoled her by saying: “Am I not more to you than ten sons?” This reminds us that only God can touch the deepest ache of the human heart.
However, the Gospel pericope taken from Evangelist Mark's account presents before us the beginning of Jesus' public ministry with a proclamation and a summons: “The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God is at hand. Repent, and believe in the Gospel.” (see Mark 1:14–20)
The call of the first disciples is strikingly unprepared yet decisive. Fishermen abandon nets, boats, even family, not because they fully understand, but because the Word made flesh speaks with divine authority.
Beloved in Christ, on this first day in the first part of the Ordinary Time, a moment where Christ's saving mission is revealed; our attention has been drawn to God's supernatural power of turning around sutuations no matter how long it may be. This is the same God who heard Hannah’s tears.
As we encounter in the Gospel, He reveals that when the moment of grace arrives, delay can become disobedience. Ordinary Time is extraordinary because it is where vocations are clarified, wounds are purified, and disciples are formed, as Christ displayed in the course of His public ministry.
To buttress this, in our journey of faith when pain sets in, let us not forget that God is still handling the steering as we will see in the case of Hannnah later. On another note, the call to discipleship is demanding and needs a paradigm shift from comfort zone to where God may lead. Above all let us approach every daily challenge with hope and trust in God for with Him our hope will never be disappointed (cf. Romans 5:5).
+ Peace of Christ be with you!
© ARCHIVE 12012026