Homily: January 24, 2026, Saturday of the Second Week In Ordinary Time (God is never Enough )

 “When his relatives heard of this, they set out to seize him, for they said, ‘He is out of his mind.’”

In simpler words, they were saying, “He is crazy.”

Imagine hearing that said about Jesus, by His own relatives. At this point in the Gospel, Jesus has been away from home, constantly preaching, healing, and teaching. He is not living a quiet, predictable life. He is not protecting His comfort. He is not trying to appear “normal.” He is completely consumed by one thing: the will of His Father.

To fulfill the Father’s will is the center of Jesus’ life, His food, His breath, His mission. And from the outside, it can look extreme. It can look unreasonable. It can look like madness.

After Pentecost, something similar happens to the disciples. Filled with the Holy Spirit, they preach with boldness and joy, and people mock them: “They have had too much new wine.”

When someone is truly filled with God, the world often does not understand.

Think of the saints. Francis of Assisi, Padre Pio, Teresa of Avila, and so many others were sometimes considered strange, excessive, even “out of their minds” by the standards of the world. 

We all know people like that. I remember a neighbor back home who always invited us children to pray with him. We would run away from him! 

Why? Because we want to be seen as normal. We want to appear reasonable, composed, and in control. We prefer a faith that is comfortable, faith that stays within our limits, faith that we can manage.

But then we miss something precious: the freedom of the Gospel, the joy of surrender, the love that comes from giving God our whole heart. Deep inside every human soul there is a longing for God. And the more we taste Jesus, the more we realize: it is never enough. 

So today, let us not be afraid to look a little “different” for Christ. 

Step by step, let us grow in holiness. Step by step, let us give Jesus more space. And may the Holy Spirit make our hearts brave enough to belong completely to God. Amen.


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