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2nd Sunday of Easter, Year B, 11 April 2021 (Under construction)

Note: Homilies & Angelus / Regina Caeli of Pope Saint John Paul II, Pope Benedict XVI & Pope Francis I had been compiled for you after the Mass Readings below. Happy Reading!

Liturgical Colour: White.

 

Mass Readings from EWTN, USCCB.

See our Mass Readings extracts with pictures in Encouragements-605. 8-)

First Reading: Acts 4:32-35,

Responsorial: Psalm 117: 2-4, 15-18, 22-24,

2nd Reading: 1 John 5:1-6 &

Gospel: John 20:19-31, CCTNtv, Gospel video.

Commentaries of the Saints: John Chapter 20 from  CATENA AUREA BY SAINT THOMAS AQUINAS.

 

Others:

John Chapter 20 (video)

Full text of Saint Faustina's "Diary" posted by The Congregation of the Sisters of Our Lady of Mercy. Daily extracts by the Divine Retreat Centre, Sydney. Many Thanks.

Saint Faustina’s Diary in a Year (Playlist)

The Chaplet of Divine Mercy in Song, Our Lord’s Promises.

上主慈悲串经-咏唱 

Novena to Divine Mercy: Day 01, 02, 03, 04, 05, 06, 07, 08, 09, Divine Mercy Sunday Mass on 11 April 2021 (meditation, message).

Free Audio Bible Dramatized By Bible Gateway. Many Thanks.

See the “Media Tweets” of @Michael65413248 (we have not endorsed on their other Retweets).  Many Thanks, Michael Lewis & Friends.

 

Breakthrough on DEFEATING Dementia! New

How to avoid Long COVID?

How to take good care of your cute elderly at home so that they are protected from COVID, remain healthy and you won’t get worried or distressed?

 

1. Do you want this kind of “pastoral care”?  Latest updates!

2. Criminal Investigation Department, Singapore Police Force harassed Law-abiding Citizen.

Latest! https://twitter.com/Michael65413248/status/1510086218851270658 (2 April 2022)

#Singapore Police Force harassing the same law abiding business owner again from 92298844, 97397514, 83487591, 96645914, 63914706, 82825465, 97378102, 90360045, 92981234! They can’t perform to contain COVID, so they bully to appear busy? Shameless? You decide!

3. See another Police case to frame against the Innocent!

Please spread the News to help them who commit no crime. Many Thanks.

Till this day, the harassment continues and there is no apology from the Rulers and no compensation paid for damages inflicted.

4.  See the Bloggers went MISSING before / after the Singapore General Election on 10 July 2020. Please pray for their safety as we search for them actively. Many Thanks.

5. Please pray for this elderly Catholic Lady who has been victimised & harassed by her sister (also a Catholic) & her sister’s husband. Thanks.

 

Homilies, Angelus / Regina Caeli of

 

A. Pope Saint John Paul II    

 

Homily, 6 April 1997

See our compilation with Pictures in Encouragements-605. 8-)

 

Regina Caeli, 6 April 1997

See our compilation with Pictures in Encouragements-605. 8-)

 

Homily, 30 April 2000

See our compilation with Pictures in Encouragements-606. 8-)

 

Regina Caeli, 30 April 2000

See our compilation with Pictures in Encouragements-606. 8-)

 

Homily, 27 April 2003

See our compilation with Pictures in Encouragements-606. 8-)

 

Regina Caeli, 27 April 2003

Extracts:

3. The risen Jesus encounters the disciples in the Upper Room and offers them the Easter gifts of peace and mercy. Meditating on today's holy Gospel, it is well to understand that true peace springs from a heart that is reconciled, and that we who have experienced the joy of forgiveness must therefore be ready to pardon. The Church, also absorbed in prayer today spiritually in the Upper Room, presents to our Lord the joys and the hopes, the sorrows and the anguish of the whole world. And he offers as an effective remedy Divine Mercy, asking his ministers to be his generous and faithful instruments.

 

4. Mary, Queen of the Apostles and of all the Saints, is spiritually present among us, together with the newly Beatified, who show us the road to follow and always put their trust in the help of the Lord. Today I invoke in particular the Mother of Divine Mercy, praying for the entire human family, knowing that only in the mercy of God can the world find peace. We entrust to Mary in a special way the Eastern Church that is celebrating the Easter Resurrection this Sunday.

Pope Saint John Paul II (Regina Caeli, 27 April 2003)

 

B. Pope Benedict XVI 

 

Regina Caeli, 23 April 2006

See our compilation with Pictures in Encouragements-606. 8-)

 

Regina Caeli, 19 April 2009

See our compilation with Pictures in Encouragements-606. 8-)

 

Regina Caeli, 15 April 2012

See our compilation with Pictures in Encouragements-607. 8-)

 

C. Pope Francis I 

 

Homily, 12 April 2015

See our compilation with Pictures in Encouragements-607. 8-)

 

Regina Caeli, 12 April 2015

See our compilation with Pictures in Encouragements-607. 8-)

 

Homily, 8 April 2018

Extracts:

How can we see him?  Like the disciples: through his wounds.  Gazing upon those wounds, the disciples understood the depth of his love.  They understood that he had forgiven them, even though some had denied him and abandoned him. To enter into Jesus’ wounds is to contemplate the boundless love flowing from his heart. This is the way. It is to realize that his heart beats for me, for you, for each one of us.  Dear brothers and sisters, we can consider ourselves Christians, call ourselves Christians and speak about the many beautiful values of faith, but, like the disciples, we need to see Jesus by touching his love.  Only thus can we go to the heart of the faith and, like the disciples, find peace and joy (cf. John 20:19-20) beyond all doubt.

 

Thomas, after seeing the Lord’s wounds, cried out: “My Lord and my God!” (v. 28).  I would like to reflect on the adjective that Thomas repeats:  my.  It is a possessive adjective.  When we think about it, it might seem inappropriate to use it of God.  How can God be mine?  How can I make the Almighty mine?  The truth is, by saying my, we do not profane God, but honour his mercy.  Because God wished to “become ours”.  As in a love story, we tell him: “You became man for me, you died and rose for me and thus you are not only God; you are my God, you are my life.  In you I have found the love that I was looking for, and much more than I could ever have imagined”.

 

God takes no offence at being “ours”, because love demands confidence, mercy demands trust.  At the very beginning of the Ten Commandments, God said: “I am the Lord your God” (Exodus 20:2), and reaffirmed: “I, the Lord your God am a jealous God” (v. 5).  Here we see how God presents himself as a jealous lover who calls himself your God.  From the depths of Thomas’s heart comes the reply: “My Lord and my God!”  As today we enter, through Christ’s wounds, into the mystery of God, we come to realize that mercy is not simply one of his qualities among others, but the very beating of his heart.  Then, like Thomas, we no longer live as disciples, uncertain, devout but wavering.  We too fall in love with the Lord!  We must not be afraid of these words: to fall in love with the Lord.

 

How can we savour this love?  How can we touch today with our hand the mercy of Jesus?  Again, the Gospel offers a clue, when it stresses that the very evening of Easter (cf. v. 19), soon after rising from the dead, Jesus begins by granting the Spirit for the forgiveness of sins.  To experience love, we need to begin there: to let ourselves be forgiven.  To let ourselves be forgiven.  I ask myself, and each one of you: do I allow myself to be forgiven?  To experience that love, we need to begin there.  Do I allow myself to be forgiven?  “But, Father, going to confession may seem difficult…”.  Before God we are tempted to do what the disciples did in the Gospel: to barricade ourselves behind closed doors.  They did it out of fear, yet we too can be afraid, ashamed to open our hearts and confess our sins.  May the Lord grant us the grace to understand shame, to see it not as a closed door, but as the first step towards an encounter.  When we feel ashamed, we should be grateful: this means that we do not accept evil, and that is good.  Shame is a secret invitation of the soul that needs the Lord to overcome evil.  The tragedy is when we are no longer ashamed of anything.  Let us not be afraid to experience shame!  Let us pass from shame to forgiveness!  Do not be afraid to be ashamed!  Do not be afraid.

 

But there is still one door that remains closed before the Lord’s forgiveness, the door of resignation.  Resignation is always a closed door.  The disciples experienced it at Easter, when they recognized with disappointment how everything appeared to go back to what it had been before.  They were still in Jerusalem, disheartened; the “Jesus chapter” of their lives seemed finished, and after having spent so much time with him, nothing had changed, they were resigned.  We too might think: “I’ve been a Christian for all this time, but nothing has changed in me; I keep committing the same sins”.  Then, in discouragement, we give up on mercy.  But the Lord challenges us: “Don’t you believe that my mercy is greater than your misery?  Are you a backslider?  Then be a backslider in asking for mercy, and we will see who comes out on top”.  In any event, – and anyone who is familiar with the sacrament of Reconciliation knows this – it isn’t true that everything remains the way it was.  Every time we are forgiven, we are reassured and encouraged, because each time we experience more love, and more embraced by the Father.  And when we fall again, precisely because we are loved, we experience even greater sorrow – a beneficial sorrow that slowly detaches us from sin. Then we discover that the power of life is to receive God’s forgiveness and to go forward from forgiveness to forgiveness.  This is how life goes:  from shame to shame, from forgiveness to forgiveness.  This is the Christian life.

 

After the shame and resignation, there is another closed door.  Sometimes it is even ironclad: our sin, the same sin.  When I commit a grave sin, if I, in all honesty, do not want to forgive myself, why should God forgive me?  This door, however, is only closed on one side, our own; but for God, no door is ever completely closed.  As the Gospel tells us, he loves to enter precisely, as we heard, “through closed doors”, when every entrance seems barred.  There God works his wonders.  He never chooses to abandon us; we are the ones who keep him out.  But when we make our confession, something unheard-of happens: we discover that the very sin that kept us apart from the Lord becomes the place where we encounter him.  There the God who is wounded by love comes to meet our wounds.  He makes our wretched wounds like his own glorious wounds.  There is a transformation: my wretched wounds resemble his glorious wounds.  Because he is mercy and works wonders in our wretchedness.  Let us today, like Thomas, implore the grace to acknowledge our God: to find in his forgiveness our joy, and to find in his mercy our hope.

Pope Francis I (Homily, 8 April 2018)

 

Regina Caeli, 8 April 2018

 

Important Note:

We have found these News record (non-exhaustive) (starting from 19 April 2023), we are overwhelmed by these massive records... We prayed to God for direction on what to do next, we were instructed to stop updating the Homilies, Regina Caeli/ Angelus and the General Audiences from the Vatican (until the matters are resolved) as we lay persons are unable to discern quickly what is beneficial/detrimental to our souls and yours, and this work is supposed to be a Thanksgiving to Him who loves us and has blessed us. Thanks for following us.

 

Daily Blessings to You from Emmanuel Goh & Friends

 

 

Note: This webpage has many hyperlinks to the Vatican Webpage. The above extracts were compiled for your easy reading.

This Publication is aimed to encourage all of Goodwill around the World. It is not for business or profit purposes but it is our way to thank our Creator for His continuous blessings!

 

Compiled on 28 March 2021, 17:14 SGT

Last updated : 11 April 2021, 8:38 SGT

 

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