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Lord My Chef Daily Recipe for the Soul by Fr. Nicanor F. Lalog II
Thursday, Second Week in Ordinary Time, Year II, 22 January 2026
1 Samuel 18:6-9; 19:1-7 <*{{{{>< + ><}}}}*> Mark 3:7-12
Your words today, O Lord, are very disturbing, even baffling but very revealing: in the first reading we heard the beginning of Saul's jealousy of David while in the gospel of how "unclean spirits" recognized Jesus as the Son of God.
Lord, give us the courage to confront every jealousy that seeps into us, from the most simple ones to more greater ones that really get us destabilized like that of Saul when he heard people praised David for killing ten thousand compared to his thousands; jealousy can be a terrible thing because it is difficult to see others better than us; most of all, most difficult of all is to see people turning away their attention from us for others.
Saul was very angry and resentful of the song… And from that day on, Saul was jealous of David (1 Samuel 18:8, 9).
Teach us Jesus to accept fully our strengths and weaknesses, to not measure our success as persons by what we can do or what others say; teach us to imitate St. John the Baptist who declared "Christ must increase, but I must decrease" (John 3:30).
Teach us, Lord Jesus to be honest and sincere like you, so contented in yourself: you silenced the unclean spirits from making you known; how intriguing that so often, it is our dark, sinful side where we truly find the hard truths of life; if we could just be like you, we would never be taken over by jealousy because the moment we experience jealousy, then we realize the truth of somebody better than us in some aspects; jealousy is an unclean spirit within us that speak of the truth not to set us free but to enslave us by driving us into the opposite direction of self- aggrandizement.
Teach us, Jesus, that all that matters is for us to give glory to God and that the work of your Kingdom is always done, by us and by others. Amen.







