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Thứ Năm, 8 tháng 1, 2026

JANUARY 9, 2026: FRIDAY AFTER EPIPHANY

 January 9, 2026

Friday after Epiphany

Lectionary: 216

 


Reading I

1 John 5:5-13

Beloved:
Who indeed is the victor over the world
but the one who believes that Jesus is the Son of God?

This is the one who came through water and Blood, Jesus Christ,
not by water alone, but by water and Blood. 
The Spirit is the one who testifies,
and the Spirit is truth. 
So there are three who testify,
the Spirit, the water, and the Blood, 
and the three are of one accord. 
If we accept human testimony,
the testimony of God is surely greater. 
Now the testimony of God is this,
that he has testified on behalf of his Son. 
Whoever believes in the Son of God
has this testimony within himself.
Whoever does not believe God has made him a liar
by not believing the testimony God has given about his Son. 
And this is the testimony:
God gave us eternal life,
and this life is in his Son. 
Whoever possesses the Son has life;
whoever does not possess the Son of God does not have life.

I write these things to you so that you may know
that you have eternal life,
you who believe in the name of the Son of God.

 

Responsorial Psalm

Psalm 147:12-13, 14-15, 19-20

R.        (12a)  Praise the Lord, Jerusalem.
or:
R.        Alleluia.
Glorify the LORD, O Jerusalem;
            praise your God, O Zion.
For he has strengthened the bars of your gates;
            he has blessed your children within you.
R.        Praise the Lord, Jerusalem.
or:
R.        Alleluia.
He has granted peace in your borders;
            with the best of wheat he fills you.
He sends forth his command to the earth;
            swiftly runs his word!
R.        Praise the Lord, Jerusalem.
or:
R.        Alleluia.
He has proclaimed his word to Jacob,
            his statutes and his ordinances to Israel.
He has not done thus for any other nation;
            his ordinances he has not made known to them. Alleluia.
R.        Praise the Lord, Jerusalem.
or:
R.        Alleluia.

 

Alleluia

See Matthew 4:23

R. Alleluia, alleluia.
Jesus proclaimed the Gospel of the Kingdom
and cured every disease among the people.
R. Alleluia, alleluia.

 

Gospel

Luke 5:12-16

It happened that there was a man full of leprosy in one of the towns where Jesus was;
and when he saw Jesus,
he fell prostrate, pleaded with him, and said,
“Lord, if you wish, you can make me clean.” 
Jesus stretched out his hand, touched him, and said,
“I do will it.  Be made clean.” 
And the leprosy left him immediately. 
Then he ordered him not to tell anyone, but
“Go, show yourself to the priest and offer for your cleansing
what Moses prescribed; that will be proof for them.” 
The report about him spread all the more,
and great crowds assembled to listen to him
and to be cured of their ailments,
but he would withdraw to deserted places to pray.

 

https://bible.usccb.org/bible/readings/010926.cfm

 

 


Commentary on 1 John 5:5-13

Today’s reading is taken from the Third Part of the Letter—about the source of love and faith. To understand this reading we also need to know that John is speaking in the context of Gnostic teachings which said that the Spirit of God entered into Jesus only at his baptism and left him before his death on the cross. John begins today’s passage by asking:

Who is it who conquers the world but the one who believes that Jesus is the Son of God?

He means this not in any triumphalist or dominating way about the world in general, but rather using ‘world’ in the sense of asking who is the one who has the ability to overcome the evil tendencies with which our lives are surrounded. The implication is that it is someone who directly came to grips with the world, not an outsider.

The answer is that it is the one who has total faith in Jesus as the Son of God. Faith in Jesus who not only came through the water of his baptism, but “with the water and the blood”, where ‘blood’ signifies Jesus’ death on the cross. All of this is testified to by the Spirit who, with the testimony of the water and blood which symbolically flowed from the breast of the dead Jesus, form one single witness to the identity and the work of Jesus.

John is reacting to the heretics of his day (especially Cerinthus) who said that Jesus was born only a man and remained so until his baptism. At that time, the Gnostics maintained, the Christ (the Son of God) descended on the human Jesus, but left him before his suffering on the cross—so that it was only the man Jesus who died. According to the New International Version Study Bible:

“Throughout this letter, John has been insisting that Jesus Christ is God as well as man (1:1-4; 4:2; 5:5). He now asserts that it was this God-man Jesus Christ who came into our world, was baptised and died. Jesus was the Son of God not only at his baptism, but also at his death (v 6). This truth is extremely important, because, if Jesus died only as a man, his sacrificial atonement (2:2; 4:10) would not have been sufficient to take away the guilt of man’s sin.”

John, in his Gospel, tells us that when the dead Jesus’ side was pierced:

…at once blood and water came out. (John 19:34)

It is interesting that he then adds a parenthetical which makes more sense in the Gnostic context:

He who saw this has testified so that you also may believe. His testimony is true, and he knows that he tells the truth, so that you also may continue to believe. (John 19:35)

In other words, the Person who died was the God-made-man, something denied by the Gnostics.

Today’s passage continues:

There are three that testify: the Spirit and the water and the blood, and these three agree.

The Spirit pervades the life and death of Jesus. He was born in the Spirit, baptised in the Spirit and died in the Spirit—the Spirit of God.

The blood and water were the ‘evidence’ for the original eyewitnesses, but they are also the witness for all Christians as the type of the baptism and the sacrificial death of Jesus which are operative in our own lives. For us, it is essential to our understanding of Jesus that it was the incarnate Son of God who died on the cross; otherwise his death would not have had its redemptive and atoning effect.

To believe in Jesus as the Son of God is to accept this testimony as that of God himself. Not to believe in the witness that Jesus has given by his life and death is to make a liar of God. For:

God gave us eternal life, and this life is in his Son.

And so:

Whoever has the Son has life; whoever does not have the Son of God does not have life.

This is not merely a statement to be accepted; it is a reality that can be experienced and should be experienced. And it is in the experience that we know its truth.

In the Gospel, Jesus tells us again and again that he has come to give life to the world, and we know from experience that all those who commit themselves to Jesus and his Gospel experience this life. That life is open to every one of us provided we, in a spirit of total trust and faith, surrender ourselves to Jesus as Lord. But it is not given willy-nilly, nor is it forced on us. We have to open our hearts and allow God’s love and life to flow in.

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Commentary on Luke 5:12-16

Leprosy was one of the most feared diseases of the ancient world. It was known to be contagious, which made the leper a very dangerous person. As a result, the leper was a social outcast, feared and rejected by all. The leper had always to warn people around of his or her presence and had to keep a clear distance away from others. What was particularly tragic is that sometimes the person might not have been suffering from leprosy at all, but from some other skin disease which was, in fact, not contagious.

In today’s Gospel we find a leper approaching Jesus, falling prostrate before him. His request is full of faith and trust in the power of Jesus:

Lord, if you are willing, you can make me clean.

Obviously he had heard stories of Jesus’ many healings, some of which are recounted by Luke in this part of his Gospel. Jesus responds immediately, reaching out and touching the man, saying:

I am willing. Be made clean.

The man was healed immediately.

The touching is very significant. No ordinary person would dare to touch a leper. But think of the inner healing that must have resulted from the touch, that moment of physical contact. Touch is something we all need and are so often deprived of. We, too, are in need of healing, including the healing that comes from touch. Let us put our trust in Jesus that he can also bring us healing.

Jesus then gives him two commands. First, he is not to go around telling people about what happened to him. This story follows Mark’s version very closely. In Mark, Jesus often demands the concealing of his true identity. At this stage, he does not want people to identify him with the Messiah because of the preconceived ideas which most people had—ideas very different from the kind of Messiah that Jesus is. This will not become fully clear until his passion, death and resurrection.

Second, the healed leper is told to go to the priests and make the prescribed offering of thanksgiving for his healing. This was also, one presumes, a time for him to be officially declared as free of the disease. He could now freely re-enter society. The healing of someone like a leper went far beyond the mere physical healing. It was a total re-integration of his life, a real re-making of the whole person.

We should well ask, who are the lepers in our own day? Of course, there are still many parts of the world where leprosy has not been eradicated. But in every society there are people who are treated as lepers, people that no one wants to mix with, and people who are ostracised or marginalised for one reason or another. There are the victims of contagious diseases (especially those sexually transmitted) with whom people are afraid to have contact. There are the homeless people we walk past in the street every day and try not to notice. There are the victims of addictions—to drugs legal and illegal and alcohol. There are people who are excluded on the basis of race or religion, or because they have mental or physical disabilities. We might also look at those who are effectively treated as lepers in our own family, our place of work or our social gatherings.

There is no place in our society, still less in our church, for lepers of any kind. The world of Jesus is a totally inclusive one.

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https://livingspace.sacredspace.ie/c0111g/

 

 


Friday, January 9, 2026

Christmas Time

Opening Prayer

All-powerful Father, you have made known the birth of the Savior by the light of a star. May he continue to guide us with the light, for he lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.

Gospel Reading - Luke 5: 12-16

Now it happened that Jesus was in one of the towns when suddenly a man appeared, covered with a skin-disease. Seeing Jesus he fell on his face and implored him saying, “Sir, if you are willing you can cleanse me.”

He stretched out his hand, and touched him saying, “I am willing. Be cleansed.' At once the skin-disease left him. He ordered him to tell no one, 'But go and show yourself to the priest and make the offering for your cleansing just as

Moses prescribed, as evidence to them.”

But the news of him kept spreading, and large crowds would gather to hear him and to have their illnesses cured, but he would go off to some deserted place and pray.

Reflection

           A leper came close to Jesus. He had to live far away from others, because whoever touched him remained impure! But that leper had great courage. He transgressed or broke the norms of religion so as to be able to get close to Jesus. He said: Lord, if you want, you can heal me! That is: “It is not necessary for you to touch me. It is sufficient for the Lord to want it, and he cured him!” The sentence shows two evils: 

           a) the evil of leprosy which renders him impure;

           b) the evil of solitude to which he was condemned by society and by religion. 

           This also reveals the man’s great faith in the power of Jesus. And Jesus profoundly moved, heals him from both evils! In the first place, to cure the solitude, he touches the leper. It is as if he would say: “For me you are not excluded. I accept you as a brother!” And then he cures the leper saying: I want it, be cured!

           The leper, in order to be able to enter in contact with Jesus, had transgressed the norms of the law. Jesus also, in order to be able to help that excluded man and reveal to him a new face of God, transgresses the norms of his religion and touches the leper. At that time, whoever touched a leper became impure according to the religious authority and by the law of the time.

           Jesus, not only cures, but also wants the cured person to be able to live with others. He once again inserts the person in society so that he can live together with others. At that time for a leper to be accepted again in the community, he needed a certificate from a priest, that he had been cured. It is the same today. The sick person leaves the hospital having a document signed by the doctor of the section. Jesus obliges the person to go and look for the document, so that he can live normally with the others. He obliges the authority to recognize that this man has been cured.

           Jesus forbids the leper to speak about the healing. The Gospel of Mark informs us that this prohibition was not effective, did not serve. The leper, went away,

but then started freely proclaiming and telling the story everywhere, so that Jesus could no longer go openly into any town, but stayed outside in deserted places (Mk 1: 45) Why? Because Jesus had touched a leper. For this reason, according to the opinion of the religion of the time, now he himself was impure and should be far away from everybody. He could no longer enter into the cities. And Mark says that the people did not care at all about these official norms, in fact, people came to him from all parts (Mk 1: 45). Total Subversion!

           The two-fold message which Luke and Mark give the community of their time and to all of us is the following: a) to announce the Good News means to give witness of the concrete experience that one has of Jesus. What does the leper announce? He tells the others the good that Jesus has done to him. That is all! All this! And this is the witness which impels the others to accept the Good News of God, those brought by Jesus. b) In order to take the Good News to people, it is not necessary to be afraid to transgress the religious norms which are contrary to God’s project, and which render communication, dialogue and the lived experience of love, difficult. Even if this implies difficulty for the people, as it happened with Jesus.

Personal Questions

In order to help the neighbor, Jesus transgresses the law of purity. In the Church today, are there any laws which render difficult or prevent the practice of love toward neighbor? In order to be cured, the leper had the courage to challenge the public opinion of his time. And I?

Concluding Prayer

Praise Yahweh, Jerusalem, Zion, praise your God. For he gives strength to the bars of your gates, he blesses your children within you. (Ps 147: 12-13)

www.ocarm.org

 

 

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