The Sixth Sunday in 
Ordinary Time
                                                                                    February 11, 2024
                                                                                                     
Fr. José Maria de 
Sousa Alvim Calado Cortes, F.S.C.B.
 Index
            
Sunday Reading 
Meditations
 
In today's gospel, Jesus heals a leper. Leprosy used to be considered both a physical and spiritual disease. Isolated from the community, lepers were
seemingly abandoned by God and men. Today's first reading says: "He shall dwell apart, making his abode outside the camp" (Lv 13-46).
According to 
rabbinical teaching, only God could cure leprosy.  For Jesus to heal a 
leper was a feat comparable to raising someone from the dead, a 
sign that the Messiah had come.  As today's alleluia refrain says, "A great 
prophet has arisen in our midst.  God has visited his people."
"A leper came to 
Jesus and kneeling down begged him and said, "If you wish, you can make me 
clean"  In the leper's petition, we hear all mankind
 pleading to Jesus for healing.
"Moved with pity, 
he stretched out his hand, touched him".  In this gesture of mercy toward 
the leper, we see God's infinite love toward us.  As Saint
 John says, "God so loved the world that he gave his Only Begotten Son, so 
that all who believe in him may not perish, but may have eternal life"
By healing the 
leper, Christ shows us that he forgives our sins and gives us new lie.  As 
the psalm says, "Then I acknowledged my sin to you, my guilt I
covered not.  I said, 'I confess my faults to the LORD,' and you took away 
the guilt of my sin." (Ps 32.5).
Encountering 
Christ is life-changing.  We are renewed and transformed.  We perceive 
people and things in a new way.  We are fashioned by God's
grace.  Jesus heals us from sin and fills our hearts with pure gladness.  
As today's psalm says, "Be glad in the LORD and rejoice, you just; exult, all 
you 
upright of heart" (Ps 32:11).  The psalm refrain says: "I turn to you, 
Lord, in time of trouble,  and you fill me with the joy of salvation."
Encountering 
Christ conquers loneliness and isolation.  During the current pandemic, we 
are experiencing how hard it is to be separated from the
sacraments, family and friends.  Jesus tells the leper to show himself to 
the priest and do what Moses prescribed, thereby reinstating him into the 
community.  In Christ, we are united with God and others.  
Encountering Christ is an experience of communion.
The new light 
from above impels us to glorify God.  In today's second reading, Saint Paul 
says: "Whether you eat or drink, or whatever you do, do 
everything for the glory of God" (1 Cor 10:31).
Encountering 
Christ opens our hearts to the needs of others.  We are no longer the 
center of everything.  Instead of thinking only about our personal 
interests, others' interests come first.  As Saint Paul says, "I try to 
please everyone in every way, not seeking my own benefit but that of the many" 
(1 Cor 
10:33).  We prioritize not our own benefit but that of others.
May the grace of 
our personal encounter with Christ be renewed.  May the Lord purify our 
sins and give us his life in abundance.  May we experience 
the passage from isolation to communion with God and all things.  May the 
Lord help us to do everything for his glory.  Amen.