Sunday, August 29, 2010

SHARING COMMON HUMANITY IN TIMES OF TRAGEDY

The aftermath of last Monday’s tragic hostage crisis has greatly altered the lives of those who were involved or has taken part in this hapless incident. The innocent victims and their families; the authorities and law enforces; the media people and us who have witnessed in horror whether from the actual site or from our television or radio, we each have been unwilling participants to this incident. Nobody among us wanted such incident to happen and how we wished it was resolved peacefully without anyone, including the hostage-taker, being killed. None of us condones such violent means to demand justice. Yet we may occasionally experience socio-political upheaval or endure geographical, ethnical or cultural divide, it has been shown from our history that we advocate peaceful resolution to every conflict. Moreover, we believe in the rule of law and adhere to the highest ideals of democracy. We never had anything in our culture that espouses intolerance or may indicate prejudice of people from other demography even when we were often the victims of such bigotry.



There is no doubt about the pain being experienced by the families of each victim and the outburst of sympathy being shared by every Hong Kong citizen. We are one in their grief. We mourn the lost of the lives of the people who had visited our island and had become our friends. How we wish they could return and share with us moments of fun and relaxation once again. But their tragic visit shall haunt us. We can only hope that our peoples can look beyond the hurt and move-on. Let us look not to each other as to our race, citizenship, gender or creed rather to our common humanity. We can celebrate life again. Together we can revel as we discover the unfolding of the beauty of our respective lands and cultures. We shall wait for the storm in our relations today to pave way to a brighter tomorrow with greater understanding and mutual trust.

For now, we honor the grieving and the memory of the innocent victims. We offer our sympathies and learn from whatever lesson this tragedy has taught us.

May Almighty God have mercy on us all and in His divine grace may we find consolation, enlightenment and peace of heart.

Tuesday, August 17, 2010

LIFE'S MOST



We oftentimes hear the word “extreme” nowadays. We hear or experience extreme sports, extreme adventure or living to the extreme. Today’s generation demands so much from life. Nothing can contain us but the best, the biggest, the most. These are the modern reality that clamors for the ultimate quest in life.

The ultimate quest in life is to live it to the fullest. There is an instinctual need for us to be the best or to get the most out of what this world could offer. With all the ‘superlatives’ that are within our reach we wonder why we had to gain everything and in the end lose everything.

You may work to get to the summit of success in your career; prove to be the greatest and biggest among the lot and strive to have the largest of anything or the most expensive. You may reach the pinnacle of fame and fortune yet feel like an empty bottomless-glass waiting to be filled to the brim but never does.

It is commendable to labor for fame and fortune. Afterall, it is what makes our world go round. Whatever good they serve however will not suffice for anyone to claim a full life. These alone shall not give the meaning we seek in the process of achieving and succeeding.

I am sharing the following piece as a reminder to what constitute a full life. I lost the source or who wrote it but its’ not important. Whoever wrote this discovered the most essential ‘superlatives’ in life. I’ve been too redundant for words here but I hope you got the message.

THE GREATEST

The greatest handicapped: FEAR
The best day: TODAY
The best therapy: HUMOR
The easiest thing to do: FIND A FAULT
The most useless asset: PRIDE
The greatest mistake: GIVING UP
The greatest stumbling block: EGOTISM
The greatest comfort: WORK WELL DONE
The most disagreeable person: THE COMPLAINER
The worst bankruptcy: LOSS OF INTHUSIASM
The worst disease: ENVY
The greatest need: COMMON SENSE
The meanest feeling: REGRET AT ANOTHER’S SUCCESS
The best gift: FORGIVENESS
The greatest moment: DEATH
The greatest personal asset: CHOICE
The greatest knowledge: GOD
The greatest thing in the world: LOVE
The answer to everything: FAITH

Sunday, August 8, 2010

SAINT DOMINIC DE GUZMAN: DEFENDER OF THE FAITH AND PARAGON OF CHARITY



Today is the 8th of August, the feast day of St. Dominic de Guzman. He is one of my favorite saints because of his close affinity with the Blessed Virgin Mary and the Holy Rosary.

Dominic (Domingo in Spanish) was born in Spain, in the town of Caleruega, in 1170, to Juana de Aza and Felix Guzman. At the age of seven, he was trained by a priest, who is also his uncle, in the clerical studies and the service of the altar. At fourteen, he was sent to the University of Palencia, the center of learning for the Kingdom of Leon. Moved with compassion, he sold his precious books for the relief of war refugees who were homeless and without resources. He said, “How can I study from dead skins when living men are starving?”

In 1193, Dominic was ordained priest. Aware of the dangers posed by the Albigensian heresy he founded the Order of Preachers (popularly known as the Dominicans) the purpose of which is preaching for the salvation of souls. He envisioned a group of apostolic men who live in common, profess the evangelical counsels (poverty, obedience and chastity), fervently celebrate the Holy Eucharist, study assiduously, persevere in regular observances, and preach the Good News of Salvation.

Consumed by his ardent love for God and neighbor, Dominic died in Bologna on the 6th of August, in the year of our Lord 1221 at the age of 51. He was elevated to the altars of the church in 1234 when he was canonized by Pope Gregory IX.




Legend has it that the Holy Rosary was given and taught to Dominic by the Blessed Virgin Mary herself in an apparition. This belief may have inspired the Dominicans throughout the ages to propagate the Rosary as the most popular Catholic devotional practice next only to the Holy Mass.

Saint Dominic, Pray for us!

Wednesday, August 4, 2010

NO TIME TO PRAY




I knelt to pray but not for long,
I had too much to do…
I had to hurry and get to work
For bills wound soon be due…

So I knelt and said a hurried prayer
And jumped up off my knees…
My Christian duty now was done
My soul could be at ease…

All day long I had no time
To spend a word of cheer…
No time to speak of Christ to friends
They’d laugh at me I feared…

No time, no time, too much to do,
That was my constant cry.
No time to give to sols in need
But at last it was time,
The time to die…

I went before the Lord,
I came and stood
With downcast eyes…
For in His hands God held a book;
It was the book of life…

God looked into His book
And said, “Your name I cannot find…
I once was going to write it down…
But never found the time.”

- Adapted –

Prayer is the most essential practice of our faith. It is the act foremost to connect with the Almighty God. Anyone professing his belief in God but does not pray betrays the faith.

Prayer is an act of the will. It is not a matter of finding the time to pray but whether do you want to pray. To find ourselves too busy to pray stems from our limited notion that prayer has to take too much time and effort. We may find ourselves in quandary thinking about the seemingly sophisticated ways of praying taught to us by the church. Yet we miss the whole idea that God hears even the simplest prayer, prayed in earnest. Thus, time is not the essence of prayer, it is faith.

We who are consumed in the bonfires of the vanities see time as a tyrant. We constantly watch time ticking-away. We count the minutes, hours, days, months and years as we strive towards an unending quest for what this world can offer. We are deceived by the belief that the wisest investments are those in stocks, bank notes and real estate that grow overtime. Yet because of these ambitions, we are constantly frightened by the fact that we have so little control over our own lives. Lest it too late, we shall find ourselves possessed by those we possess.

For God however time is but a tiny drop of vapor that appears in an instant and then gone. The true and lasting investments are those invested in times of prayer and contemplation. And the real wealth is in our faith. The times of prayer are treasured opportunity to experience the unique and rich relationship that anyone shares with God. Prayer brings in enlightenment in times of confusion and wisdom that carries us through the most difficult moments.

When we do our obligation to pray, we do so out of faith and love for God. It is when we feel uninspired; when we find it too tiring or when we are loosing faith that we should pray even more. These are the perfect time to tell God what’s in our heart. Oftentimes, we don’t even need to voice out our prayers especially when we are lost for words. It is in these time when we let our spirit soar to meet the Divine and express the yearnings of our heart.

There is nothing complicated about prayer only if we acknowledge that it is the most natural thing to do; an act necessary to our temporal existence and essential to our passage to eternal life.

Hence, even in the midst of our busy life, anytime should be prayer time. It has to be integrated in our lifestyle. God gave us time, we should offer it back to Him.

Friday, July 30, 2010

IN GOD WE TRUST



As a new administration assumes office of the Philippine government, new set of promises are made to better the life of every citizen of this land. Yet, these promises sound the same as the previous promises done in the past twenty four years; promises that never realized. Thus, the hopes and dreams of national prosperity remain elusive.

Broken promises made are perhaps one of the hardest to accept. One feels rejected, abandoned or betrayed. The scar left by such experience are deep that oftentimes results to hopelessness and distrust for those who broke their promises.

Despite our distrust of politicians, in God we trust. The Filipinos had remained steadfast hoping and dreaming for true change that someday shall usher in a more just and healthy society. Our faith comforts us that “God is not a man, that he should lie; neither the son of man, that he should repent: hath he said, and shall he not do it? Or hath he spoken, and shall he not make it good?” (Numbers 23:19)

In God we trust as we hang on to his promises for our beloved country, “For I know the thoughts that I think toward you, said the Lord, thoughts of peace, and not of evil, to give you an expected end.” (Jeremiah 29:11)

It is unfortunate however that at sudden moments of crisis, we tend to almost lose faith in the Words of God. We oftentimes do not see the hands of the Almighty working in our lives because we base our assumptions of His faithfulness on prevailing circumstances alone. We have delimited His power as if we can use at our own disposal. Yet He said, “For my thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are your ways my ways, said the Lord. For as the heaven is higher than the earth, so are my ways higher than your ways, and my thoughts than your thoughts. For as the rain comes down, and the snow from heaven, and returns not here, but water the earth, and make it bring forth and bud, that it may give seed to the sower, and bread to the eater. So shall my word be that go forth out of my mouth: it shall not return unto me void, but it shall accomplish that which I please, and it shall prosper in the thing whereto I sent it.” (Isaiah 55:8-11)

Furthermore, we tend to expect God to work on our own time. Yet we have to realize that “There is a time for everything, and a season for every activity under heaven" (Ecclesiastes 3:1)

“Therefore say unto them, thus said the Lord God; There shall none of my words be prolonged anymore, but the word which I have spoken shall be done.” (Ezekiel 12:28)

“For the vision is yet for an appointed time, but at the end it shall speak, and not lie: though it tarry, wait for it; because it will surely come, it will not tarry.” (Habakkuk 2:3).

“To whom the word of the Lord came in the days of Josiah the son of Amon king of Judah, in the thirteenth year of his reign.” (Jeremiah 1:2).

“The grass wither, the flower fades: but the word of our God shall stand for ever.” (Isaiah 40:8).

“He hath remembered his covenant for ever, the word which he commanded to a thousand generations.” (Psalm 105:8).

“Blessed be the Lord, that hath given rest unto his people Israel, according to all that he promised: there hath not failed one word of all his good promise, whish he promised by the hand of Moses his servant.” (I Kings 8:56).

It took 40 years until the Lord’s promise to the Israelites came true when they finally had the land of their own. For most of us, it is a long time. But God has to prepare His people for the life they will lead in the “promise land”. Those who doubted, questioned or became impatient of the Lord weren’t able to enter the land that included Moses to whom God entrusted the leadership of His people.

Thus, despite the broken promises of politicians and government authorities who failed us and betrayed our confidence, there is a God who will never fail us. We keep on trusting Him in the midst of uncertainty, anxiety and seeming hopelessness as we hang on to His Words knowing He is faithful to every promise He makes to us. Therefore, “Let us hold fast the profession of our faith without wavering; for he is faithful that promised.” (Hebrews 10:23) If we do, truly in God we trust!

Let us pray,

O God Almighty,
You are the Lord of our land and King of our people.
Reign in the hearts of our leaders that they may be
Your instruments of change for a better country.

Give us the grace to trust You more and more
especially in times of great crisis.
Shield the fragility of our spirits in time of
natural calamities and disasters due to our faults.

Teach us to work together for national unity
and progress; that each citizen may fulfill every
lawful responsibility to bring about a just and
moral society.

And that peace may reign upon our land where in
Your hands we entrust our destiny.

With full trust and confidence, we humbly pray
through the Name of Jesus, Our Lord together with
the Holy Spirit. Amen.

Our Lady of Guadalupe, Pray for peace in the Philippines.

San Lorenzo Ruiz de Manila, Pray for the Filipino people.

Blessed Mother Ignacia del Espiritu Santo, Pray for the Filipino people.

Blessed Pedro Calungsod, Pray for the Filipino people.

Monday, July 19, 2010

THE GREATEST BLESSING LIFE CAN BRING



THE GREATEST BLESSING LIFE CAN BRING
By Amanda Bradley

Father, let me always
have the special kind of faith
that will guide me day by day
and year by year.

Let me know the peace of mind
that comes from trusting You,
that shelters me from doubt
and want and fear.

Let me live a thoughtful life
that’s pleasing in Your sight,
a balanced life of work and play
and rest.

Let me use Your gifts to me
to always do what’s right
and help me grow to be my very best.

Father, let me turn to You
for guidance, strength and love,
and let me see the good in everything.

Please help me to remember
that as long as I have You,
I have the greatest blessing life
can bring.

Wednesday, July 14, 2010

GUIDE ME, OH LORD



Guide me, Oh Lord
That I may learn to fold
The wings of pride so bold
That I may learn to unfold
The wings of humility, Oh Lord.

Guide me, Oh Lord
That I may be accord
In thought, in deed, in word
All and everything on record
In Thy Kingdom and in Thy Court.

Guide me, Oh Lord
That when my time is ruled
And I am being called
I may enter Thy Court
Holding on to Thy Word.