Roberto is not his real name.
"A practical man," was how Fr. Roland described Roberto. I wanted to interview him but Fr. Roland was hesitant, "he does not even write anything for the newsletter. Try Benmar, Ariel or Pinoy. They would be more receptive to the interview." I did what was told me. I interviewed Benmar, Ariel, Pinoy plus seven other seafarers but not Roberto.
Roberto was fortyish, I think. I was told that he is married with three kids. And indeed, he was a practical man. Early morning I will see him texting. After breakfast, he would be removing the wild bounganvilla found at the Center's gate. By mid morning, he would be busy preparing lunch -- my favorite was his nilagang baka and sotanghon with mussles. After lunch, he went back removing the thorns and thistles and started to put up the beams of the new gate. Then, he went back to the kitchen to prepare dinner.
At table, he was a story teller. "In Japan, they do this..." "I was in France and they have this..." Even in the local scene, he had something to say, "Do you know that the BatangeƱos had a way of cooking fish in boiled rice?" Then, he filled in the details with gusto typical of a newscaster.
Yes, it was typical of him -- given to the facts of life but not of his life. He was detached from his feelings; he was more of a doer, a go-getter.
One time, I looked at him in the eyes. His eyes revealed weariness, tiredness. I surmise, his eyes were tired from stopping the tears to flow and weary from looking at the darkness that confronts him.
But those were just my impressions. I was not able to interview him.
One morning, I was reading the periodico and Roberto was packing his things.
"Ton, read this," Roberto asked me.
I put down what I was reading as he handed me an inch-thick of document.
"What is this?" I asked.
"Just read it and you'll see."
I browsed through the document. I was surprised that the covering letter was from a law firm in the U.S.
"You filed a case against your former employer?"
He was busy tying a knot. He paused. He looked at me and said, "Yes."
"Why? What happened?"
He put down the knot he was holding. He stood up and sat on the chair in front of me. And quizzically, he asked, "Have you seen Armaggedon?"
"Yes."
"Do you remember Bruce Willis?"
"Yup."
"That was what I was doing then. We were drilling for oil. Do you know that our kind of job was the elite's? We were the envy of most seafarers. It was difficult and challenging but it pays very well. We were the Navy Seals of the seafaring industry!"
"So, what happened?"
"I had an accident. They brought me to France. I was operated there. They placed a metal on my leg. I will be going to New Orleans to meet my lawyers. I leave this afternoon for Manila."
"I see." I handed to him the documents he gave me and said that "I will pray for you and your family."
He took the folder and sighed, "You know Ton; life is really very difficult."
"Tell me," I said.
"While I was in France recuperating from the operation, I received a message from my relatives. MY WIFE IS HAVING AN AFFAIR. It was with the brother of a former student of hers. I was really devastated. It was very painful."
"I am very sorry to hear that."
"Before going to New Orleans, I am going to Manila to file a case against her in PRC. I just wish that they will no longer allow her to teach."
"How about your children?"
"My youngest daughter is with her. She is just too young to understand these things. My eldest, he is working. He is in Laguna with my relatives. My middle child, my son, he was the brightest and the most intelligent. I do not know where to find him. He is gone. He ran away. I do not know what to do. All the things that I worked for down the drain. But I do need to move on.” A silence filled the air. Then, he said, “Thank you for listening, Ton."
After that brief talk with Roberto, he did move on. I saw him leave AOS that afternoon but that was it. I do not know what happened to him next. Fr. Roland was right. AOS-Cebu is “not about the building.” The center is a home away from home, or for Roberto’s case and for a good number of whom I chanced upon to talk with in the center, AOS is a home when there is no more home to go to.
MALOKO IS A FILIPINO WORD WHICH MEANS TO BECOME MAD OR TO BECOME INSANE. BUT I HAVE TO PUT THIS DISCLAIMER: I AM NOT BECOMING MAD NOR AM I BECOMING INSANE. PEOPLE WHO KNOW ME WOULD PUT UP THE DEFENSE THAT I WILL NEVER BECOME ONE FOR I AM ONE. INDEED, I AM A FOOL; I AM INSANE. THAT IS, I AM A FOOL FOR CHRIST. JOIN ME IN THIS ROUTINE OF MADNESS.
Friday, July 14, 2006
Thursday, July 13, 2006
On Disappointments
July 6, 2006 Thursday of the Thirteenth Week in Ordinary Time
Reading 1 Am 7:10-17 • Responsorial Psalm Ps 19:8, 9, 10, 11
After entering a boat, Jesus made the crossing, and came into his own town. And there people brought to him a paralytic lying on a stretcher. When Jesus saw their faith, he said to the paralytic, “Courage, child, your sins are forgiven.” At that, some of the scribes said to themselves, “This man is blaspheming.” Jesus knew what they were thinking, and said, “Why do you harbor evil thoughts? Which is easier, to say, ‘Your sins are forgiven,’ or to say, ‘Rise and walk’? But that you may know that the Son of Man has authority on earth to forgive sins”— he then said to the paralytic, “Rise, pick up your stretcher, and go home.” He rose and went home.
When the crowds saw this they were struck with awe and glorified God who had given such authority to men (Mt 9:1-8).
I remember being upset and disappointed.
It happened on the third day of our villa in Tali, Batangas.
I just finished taking an afternoon shower at the second room of the villa house’s uppermost section. I was drying myself, readying for a plethora of after-shower-rituals. When I opened the lavatory’s door, I found myself surprised by the stir that was happening inside the main room. I saw my things booted-out from the flat; my mat folded and pushed to the side; and, my bag yanked inside the closet.
It was really upsetting. And, I was disappointed by it.
In today’s Gospel, I can see the disappointment with which the scribes felt when they heard Jesus say, “Your sins are forgiven.” But Jesus saw the disappointment of their hearts. For Jesus heard the whispers of regret and the sighs of frustrations of the scribes, “This man is blaspheming.” Their stir might be minute but it rippled and was felt by Jesus. He was quick to quip and so he asked, “Why do you harbor evil thoughts?”
Of course, the scribes were a little bit dumbfounded and unable to reply to his inquiry for Jesus had been making miracles here and there. And, we heard it for the past few days the thread of Jesus’s miracles – actually, it is a cycle of nine miracles. I do not think that the scribes would want to make a fool of themselves in front of the people.
Hannah Arrendt paints for us an insight that would help us understand the pamimilipit of the scribes. Hannah said, “Whoever controls the channels of forgiveness of sins in a society controls that society.”
The scribes did recognize that the forgiveness of sins entails an offense against God. That it is a divine activity not proper for ordinary mortals – “this man is blaspheming,” and that they know and were grippingly convinced of. But it is more than that. For the scribes, the stakes are just too high. They could not afford to lose their grip, their power, their control over the very people who congregate to Jesus for healing and forgiveness of sins. They could not just stomach the words of John the Baptist, “He must increase; I must decrease.”
And that I surmise, why they were upset and disappointed.
This might sound comical but I think there is another one who might have felt upset and disappointed too.
It is the paralytic himself. Picture this. A man who has been so used to being carried, cared for, cleaned by others – what could be more comforting than that? If the paralytic was sane enough, I do think he would have realized what he would be giving up for in exchange for two walking legs! Most probably, when Christ ordered him to pick up his mat, he was making some bickers and wrangles.
The truth is this, we are easily disappointed, I do, when things do not go our way. We are easily shaken when our private, comfortable zones are being impinged upon.
But I think there is something bigger than our issues, our incapacities. I think there is something bigger than our own comfort zones.
I have been a Jesuit for the past four years. One of the things that I realized is this – it is far easier to remain on my mat, on my comfort zone. Nothing can be more soothing than being guarded and protected even by my own hurts and pains. At times, I can reason to myself, "he did me wrong… so I will no longer reach out to him." Or, "I was offended with what she did to me… I will make her feel that she does not exist." It is easier for me to remain on my mat, in the comfort of my own pain. It is just hard to forgive the wrong things others did to us. But if there is one grace that I would beg for, it is the deep realization of God's forgiveness.
When Jesus saw their faith, he said to the paralytic, "Your sins are forgiven." I think what made it easier for the paralytic to rise and walk is the assurance from Christ that his sins were forgiven.
How many times have I not forgiven others? How many times have I not forgiven myself?
Probably, I can look at Christ like that of the paralytic's and hear the Lord say to me, say to us, "Your sins are forgiven."
Truly, I was disappointed. I was upset. I felt that my privacy was impinged upon. But I realized that there is something bigger than my own privacy, my own comfort zone. I saw it that very same evening when on that same place, we broke the body and shared the blood of that very person who said, “Hey! Pick up your mat. Your sins are forgiven”
Reading 1 Am 7:10-17 • Responsorial Psalm Ps 19:8, 9, 10, 11
After entering a boat, Jesus made the crossing, and came into his own town. And there people brought to him a paralytic lying on a stretcher. When Jesus saw their faith, he said to the paralytic, “Courage, child, your sins are forgiven.” At that, some of the scribes said to themselves, “This man is blaspheming.” Jesus knew what they were thinking, and said, “Why do you harbor evil thoughts? Which is easier, to say, ‘Your sins are forgiven,’ or to say, ‘Rise and walk’? But that you may know that the Son of Man has authority on earth to forgive sins”— he then said to the paralytic, “Rise, pick up your stretcher, and go home.” He rose and went home.
When the crowds saw this they were struck with awe and glorified God who had given such authority to men (Mt 9:1-8).
I remember being upset and disappointed.
It happened on the third day of our villa in Tali, Batangas.
I just finished taking an afternoon shower at the second room of the villa house’s uppermost section. I was drying myself, readying for a plethora of after-shower-rituals. When I opened the lavatory’s door, I found myself surprised by the stir that was happening inside the main room. I saw my things booted-out from the flat; my mat folded and pushed to the side; and, my bag yanked inside the closet.
It was really upsetting. And, I was disappointed by it.
In today’s Gospel, I can see the disappointment with which the scribes felt when they heard Jesus say, “Your sins are forgiven.” But Jesus saw the disappointment of their hearts. For Jesus heard the whispers of regret and the sighs of frustrations of the scribes, “This man is blaspheming.” Their stir might be minute but it rippled and was felt by Jesus. He was quick to quip and so he asked, “Why do you harbor evil thoughts?”
Of course, the scribes were a little bit dumbfounded and unable to reply to his inquiry for Jesus had been making miracles here and there. And, we heard it for the past few days the thread of Jesus’s miracles – actually, it is a cycle of nine miracles. I do not think that the scribes would want to make a fool of themselves in front of the people.
Hannah Arrendt paints for us an insight that would help us understand the pamimilipit of the scribes. Hannah said, “Whoever controls the channels of forgiveness of sins in a society controls that society.”
The scribes did recognize that the forgiveness of sins entails an offense against God. That it is a divine activity not proper for ordinary mortals – “this man is blaspheming,” and that they know and were grippingly convinced of. But it is more than that. For the scribes, the stakes are just too high. They could not afford to lose their grip, their power, their control over the very people who congregate to Jesus for healing and forgiveness of sins. They could not just stomach the words of John the Baptist, “He must increase; I must decrease.”
And that I surmise, why they were upset and disappointed.
This might sound comical but I think there is another one who might have felt upset and disappointed too.
It is the paralytic himself. Picture this. A man who has been so used to being carried, cared for, cleaned by others – what could be more comforting than that? If the paralytic was sane enough, I do think he would have realized what he would be giving up for in exchange for two walking legs! Most probably, when Christ ordered him to pick up his mat, he was making some bickers and wrangles.
The truth is this, we are easily disappointed, I do, when things do not go our way. We are easily shaken when our private, comfortable zones are being impinged upon.
But I think there is something bigger than our issues, our incapacities. I think there is something bigger than our own comfort zones.
I have been a Jesuit for the past four years. One of the things that I realized is this – it is far easier to remain on my mat, on my comfort zone. Nothing can be more soothing than being guarded and protected even by my own hurts and pains. At times, I can reason to myself, "he did me wrong… so I will no longer reach out to him." Or, "I was offended with what she did to me… I will make her feel that she does not exist." It is easier for me to remain on my mat, in the comfort of my own pain. It is just hard to forgive the wrong things others did to us. But if there is one grace that I would beg for, it is the deep realization of God's forgiveness.
When Jesus saw their faith, he said to the paralytic, "Your sins are forgiven." I think what made it easier for the paralytic to rise and walk is the assurance from Christ that his sins were forgiven.
How many times have I not forgiven others? How many times have I not forgiven myself?
Probably, I can look at Christ like that of the paralytic's and hear the Lord say to me, say to us, "Your sins are forgiven."
Truly, I was disappointed. I was upset. I felt that my privacy was impinged upon. But I realized that there is something bigger than my own privacy, my own comfort zone. I saw it that very same evening when on that same place, we broke the body and shared the blood of that very person who said, “Hey! Pick up your mat. Your sins are forgiven”
Courage: Absence of Fear or Grace Under Pressure?
I first encountered the works of Fr. Walter Burghardt when I was in the novitiate. I found his reflections engaging, substantial. He just celebrated his 75th anniversary as a Jesuit. A prolific writer, he is. His earlier works focused on "the ancient Christian writers. Then followed more than four decades as editor of Theological Studies. At age 78, Fr. Burghardt recognized the need for greater emphasis on biblical justice, which has become the heart of most of his work in recent years."
The article below is NCR's cover story essay for this week. I find it interesting because, during breakfast Fr. Nilo, Jordan and I were discussing about ageing in grace in the Society. And this article, something that I found by accident, speaks a lot about the courage that we need to face a facet of the reality of our lives -- our finitude.
Courage: Absence of fear or grace under pressure?
By WALTER J. BURGHARDT, S.J.
A century ago my father John Burghardt at age 19 left the small village of Padew in Austria-Hungary and sailed across the Atlantic from Hamburg on the Graf Waldersee never to see his parents again. A year later my mother, Marya Krupp, then 22 and a single woman from that same region of Austria-Hungary, traveled alone to Bremen where she boarded the Seydlitz and sailed to New York, only to be detained at Ellis Island. The concern? How would a single woman support herself in a foreign land? No doubt each of my parents needed courage. But why, some could ask, does a Jesuit priest need courage while living in a community where his basic needs of food and shelter are being met? I am not alone or trying to find a job or homeless or in danger of being called up to fight in Iraq. Yet I, like you -- clergy or laity -- need courage.
Several years ago I learned that I am afflicted with wet macular degeneration -- a case a Washington retina expert diagnosed as among the worst he had ever seen. Within 18 months I had no vision at all in my right eye, and the disease was progressing in my left eye. As I write, my “good” eye has 20/400 vision and with that only “good” eye I see through a haze that is increasing slowly but surely. I continue to read books and articles, but only with the aid of an uncommonly large, electronic magnifier -- a slow and sometimes torturous process. Add to this the probability that before long my “good” eye will enjoy only peripheral vision -- no reading ability whatsoever. On the face of it, a dim prospect for one whose professional and priestly life has been spent for half a century in theological research, in lecturing and preaching on real-life issues of justice, publishing 24 books and more than 325 articles. At 92 my mind is still clear, even as memory all too often plays me false on facts and faces. But a clear mind without eyes to see? And hearing loss to boot?
A dim prospect? Only if I cling immovably to the gifts that molded my past; only if my days are consumed in constant carping over a paradise lost. My personal example can be multiplied. Each man, each woman, each child experiences situations wherein today is torture and tomorrow is at best unclear.
With this as background and context, I should like to dwell on three questions that are highly important for courageous living: What demands courage? What important aspect of spirituality can help us grow in courage? How apply this aspect of spirituality to our day-to-day living?
* * *
As the years move on, we take for granted our senses, our minds, and our love for others. Take our sense life. Am I afraid that although the sun will surely rise again tomorrow, I myself will never again be able to see it rise? Do you continue to marvel when your ears recapture a motet of Mozart, yet fear ending up deaf like Beethoven but without his genius to continue creating music; or perhaps, even more fearful, do you wonder how you will take care of a baby if you cannot hear the little one cry out for your help? Are you afraid your sense of smell is so age-worn that you can no longer savor the fragrance of a rose -- even scarier, does fear flame up in you at the thought of your house igniting while you sleep and your not smelling the smoke in time to flee to safety?
Move now from sense experience to human intelligence. A set of similar questions. Does my fear of controversy keep me from speaking out to make a difference even as an individual about the concerns of those in Southeast Asia ripped apart by tsunamis to those in the Southeastern United States not so long ago buried under surge waters of Hurricane Katrina? Do I have the courage to take an unpopular stand publicly against the controversial proposal to build a wall between the United States and Mexico? Do I have the courage to carry simply but prominently a placard to bear witness to corruption in government, in business, in church, in school, in the environment?
Are we afraid to love? To love as Jesus loved -- unselfishly -- to love even when love is not returned? Dare we take chances to love the unlovable -- the crook, the crafty, the corporate criminal? Do we fear those of other colors or creeds? Are we afraid not only of the AIDS patient we refuse to believe is not contagious but also do we fear dear friends with cancer who may soon die and leave us with dreams unfulfilled?
These and myriad other problems confront humans from day to day and often compel us to yearn for tomorrow.
* * *
What outlook on life, what aspect of spirituality may help us grow in courage even amid predicaments unforeseen and uncontrollable? A three-word precept: Live this day. As a well-known Sanskrit poem, “Salutation of the Dawn,” put it, “Yesterday is but a dream and tomorrow is only a vision.” Oh yes, the dream is important, for the past is inescapably part and parcel of our lives; and the vision is fortunately our hope for the future. And still it remains true, today is the only day any of us can actually live. Only today, only at this moment, are we living.
Today we love and pray for others. A tough, all but impossible attitude for a mother mourning a ravished child, a man whose wife is losing mobility to multiple sclerosis, a woman whose spouse is paralyzed in a diving accident. Living this day is rarely simple; it is often an elusive goal.
In some situations such an outlook is frequently beyond our human powers. My own struggle to live this day with incurable macular degeneration has led me to St. Paul’s advice: “Even now I find my joy in the suffering I endure for you. In my own flesh I fill up what is lacking in the sufferings of Christ for the sake of his body, the church” (Col 1:24). Sheer suffering, whether my own vision loss or St. Paul’s affliction, is not something to be enjoyed; but it can and should be offered for those children of God in need of divine compassion. The pain may remain, but we are likely to experience a peace God alone can provide.
In fact, St. Paul’s “solution” might well apply to many another, if less physical, agony: disappointment in love, lack of response in a counseling session, a dry spell in communion with God, a bruising criticism justified or not, an editor’s rejection of a cherished article. Not easily glossed over, not dismissed with a “Win one, lose one” shrug. We hurt, we cringe, we may even rage with anger. These moments we are most in need of being open to gifts of God over and above the purely natural -- what Christians call gifts of “grace,” some of the gifts St. Paul calls “the fruit of the Spirit,” specifically “love, joy … patient endurance, kindness, generosity, faith” (Gal 5:22-23). To adapt a phrase from Ernest Hemingway, “Courage is grace under pressure.”
* * *
How apply this aspect of spirituality to our day-to-day living? There is no felicitous formula, no single solution to cover all cases. “Live this day” is not a blueprint for endurance, for stolid passivity no matter how agonizing the pressure. It is not the questionable “Pour it on, Lord!” Some persons are generously gifted by nature to cope with adversity; others have to work harder and pray more steadfastly in the quest to live this day.
How am I myself adjusting to the real in my own life: to today’s low vision and tomorrow’s peripheral vision? Four years ago I began using the electronic magnifier. Now I continue my research with ZoomText, a magnifying and screen reading software program that both enlarges and reads aloud everything on the computer screen. Also aiding my typing is a keyboard with large keys arranged in an alphabetical rather than the traditional QWERTY layout (for white-haired Jesuits who never learned to touch-type). Yes, I typed this article myself several months after my 91st birthday.
Sooner or later, my eyesight will change yet again. I know not when; I know not precisely how. Clad in uncertainty, how live I this spirituality? Fortunately I live each day in an era of changing technologies that are producing devices to help me adapt to a growing world even as my eyesight is shrinking. Keenly I am aware that although I am losing my eyesight, I am not losing my vision. That distinction strengthens my spirituality, increases my insights, and redoubles my resolve to live this day.
Some ask how I live with these life-altering changes in my vision and in my hearing. Yes, these seemed “bad” enough until cancer invaded my colon, melanoma nestled itself in my left shoulder, and basal cell carcinoma found the right side of my nose a comfortable cushion. I try to follow my own advice “Live this day,” albeit the only thing harder than commanding a physician to heal herself is persuading a preacher to heed the counsel of his own homilies!
There must be times, will be times, when you, too, are afraid -- afraid to love, afraid to give or forgive, afraid to cry out against injustice, afraid to face an incurable illness. Recognize a basic reality: Courage is not the absence of fear. It is feeling afraid to do something but finding the strength to do it. For courage, reach. Reach into your deepest self and dare to discover the surprise found by a woman living with cancer: “The more courage I used to get through the day, the more courage I had. The more I embraced life -- relationships, nature and the joys of every day -- the richer my life became.”
The article below is NCR's cover story essay for this week. I find it interesting because, during breakfast Fr. Nilo, Jordan and I were discussing about ageing in grace in the Society. And this article, something that I found by accident, speaks a lot about the courage that we need to face a facet of the reality of our lives -- our finitude.
Courage: Absence of fear or grace under pressure?
By WALTER J. BURGHARDT, S.J.
A century ago my father John Burghardt at age 19 left the small village of Padew in Austria-Hungary and sailed across the Atlantic from Hamburg on the Graf Waldersee never to see his parents again. A year later my mother, Marya Krupp, then 22 and a single woman from that same region of Austria-Hungary, traveled alone to Bremen where she boarded the Seydlitz and sailed to New York, only to be detained at Ellis Island. The concern? How would a single woman support herself in a foreign land? No doubt each of my parents needed courage. But why, some could ask, does a Jesuit priest need courage while living in a community where his basic needs of food and shelter are being met? I am not alone or trying to find a job or homeless or in danger of being called up to fight in Iraq. Yet I, like you -- clergy or laity -- need courage.
Several years ago I learned that I am afflicted with wet macular degeneration -- a case a Washington retina expert diagnosed as among the worst he had ever seen. Within 18 months I had no vision at all in my right eye, and the disease was progressing in my left eye. As I write, my “good” eye has 20/400 vision and with that only “good” eye I see through a haze that is increasing slowly but surely. I continue to read books and articles, but only with the aid of an uncommonly large, electronic magnifier -- a slow and sometimes torturous process. Add to this the probability that before long my “good” eye will enjoy only peripheral vision -- no reading ability whatsoever. On the face of it, a dim prospect for one whose professional and priestly life has been spent for half a century in theological research, in lecturing and preaching on real-life issues of justice, publishing 24 books and more than 325 articles. At 92 my mind is still clear, even as memory all too often plays me false on facts and faces. But a clear mind without eyes to see? And hearing loss to boot?
A dim prospect? Only if I cling immovably to the gifts that molded my past; only if my days are consumed in constant carping over a paradise lost. My personal example can be multiplied. Each man, each woman, each child experiences situations wherein today is torture and tomorrow is at best unclear.
With this as background and context, I should like to dwell on three questions that are highly important for courageous living: What demands courage? What important aspect of spirituality can help us grow in courage? How apply this aspect of spirituality to our day-to-day living?
* * *
As the years move on, we take for granted our senses, our minds, and our love for others. Take our sense life. Am I afraid that although the sun will surely rise again tomorrow, I myself will never again be able to see it rise? Do you continue to marvel when your ears recapture a motet of Mozart, yet fear ending up deaf like Beethoven but without his genius to continue creating music; or perhaps, even more fearful, do you wonder how you will take care of a baby if you cannot hear the little one cry out for your help? Are you afraid your sense of smell is so age-worn that you can no longer savor the fragrance of a rose -- even scarier, does fear flame up in you at the thought of your house igniting while you sleep and your not smelling the smoke in time to flee to safety?
Move now from sense experience to human intelligence. A set of similar questions. Does my fear of controversy keep me from speaking out to make a difference even as an individual about the concerns of those in Southeast Asia ripped apart by tsunamis to those in the Southeastern United States not so long ago buried under surge waters of Hurricane Katrina? Do I have the courage to take an unpopular stand publicly against the controversial proposal to build a wall between the United States and Mexico? Do I have the courage to carry simply but prominently a placard to bear witness to corruption in government, in business, in church, in school, in the environment?
Are we afraid to love? To love as Jesus loved -- unselfishly -- to love even when love is not returned? Dare we take chances to love the unlovable -- the crook, the crafty, the corporate criminal? Do we fear those of other colors or creeds? Are we afraid not only of the AIDS patient we refuse to believe is not contagious but also do we fear dear friends with cancer who may soon die and leave us with dreams unfulfilled?
These and myriad other problems confront humans from day to day and often compel us to yearn for tomorrow.
* * *
What outlook on life, what aspect of spirituality may help us grow in courage even amid predicaments unforeseen and uncontrollable? A three-word precept: Live this day. As a well-known Sanskrit poem, “Salutation of the Dawn,” put it, “Yesterday is but a dream and tomorrow is only a vision.” Oh yes, the dream is important, for the past is inescapably part and parcel of our lives; and the vision is fortunately our hope for the future. And still it remains true, today is the only day any of us can actually live. Only today, only at this moment, are we living.
Today we love and pray for others. A tough, all but impossible attitude for a mother mourning a ravished child, a man whose wife is losing mobility to multiple sclerosis, a woman whose spouse is paralyzed in a diving accident. Living this day is rarely simple; it is often an elusive goal.
In some situations such an outlook is frequently beyond our human powers. My own struggle to live this day with incurable macular degeneration has led me to St. Paul’s advice: “Even now I find my joy in the suffering I endure for you. In my own flesh I fill up what is lacking in the sufferings of Christ for the sake of his body, the church” (Col 1:24). Sheer suffering, whether my own vision loss or St. Paul’s affliction, is not something to be enjoyed; but it can and should be offered for those children of God in need of divine compassion. The pain may remain, but we are likely to experience a peace God alone can provide.
In fact, St. Paul’s “solution” might well apply to many another, if less physical, agony: disappointment in love, lack of response in a counseling session, a dry spell in communion with God, a bruising criticism justified or not, an editor’s rejection of a cherished article. Not easily glossed over, not dismissed with a “Win one, lose one” shrug. We hurt, we cringe, we may even rage with anger. These moments we are most in need of being open to gifts of God over and above the purely natural -- what Christians call gifts of “grace,” some of the gifts St. Paul calls “the fruit of the Spirit,” specifically “love, joy … patient endurance, kindness, generosity, faith” (Gal 5:22-23). To adapt a phrase from Ernest Hemingway, “Courage is grace under pressure.”
* * *
How apply this aspect of spirituality to our day-to-day living? There is no felicitous formula, no single solution to cover all cases. “Live this day” is not a blueprint for endurance, for stolid passivity no matter how agonizing the pressure. It is not the questionable “Pour it on, Lord!” Some persons are generously gifted by nature to cope with adversity; others have to work harder and pray more steadfastly in the quest to live this day.
How am I myself adjusting to the real in my own life: to today’s low vision and tomorrow’s peripheral vision? Four years ago I began using the electronic magnifier. Now I continue my research with ZoomText, a magnifying and screen reading software program that both enlarges and reads aloud everything on the computer screen. Also aiding my typing is a keyboard with large keys arranged in an alphabetical rather than the traditional QWERTY layout (for white-haired Jesuits who never learned to touch-type). Yes, I typed this article myself several months after my 91st birthday.
Sooner or later, my eyesight will change yet again. I know not when; I know not precisely how. Clad in uncertainty, how live I this spirituality? Fortunately I live each day in an era of changing technologies that are producing devices to help me adapt to a growing world even as my eyesight is shrinking. Keenly I am aware that although I am losing my eyesight, I am not losing my vision. That distinction strengthens my spirituality, increases my insights, and redoubles my resolve to live this day.
Some ask how I live with these life-altering changes in my vision and in my hearing. Yes, these seemed “bad” enough until cancer invaded my colon, melanoma nestled itself in my left shoulder, and basal cell carcinoma found the right side of my nose a comfortable cushion. I try to follow my own advice “Live this day,” albeit the only thing harder than commanding a physician to heal herself is persuading a preacher to heed the counsel of his own homilies!
There must be times, will be times, when you, too, are afraid -- afraid to love, afraid to give or forgive, afraid to cry out against injustice, afraid to face an incurable illness. Recognize a basic reality: Courage is not the absence of fear. It is feeling afraid to do something but finding the strength to do it. For courage, reach. Reach into your deepest self and dare to discover the surprise found by a woman living with cancer: “The more courage I used to get through the day, the more courage I had. The more I embraced life -- relationships, nature and the joys of every day -- the richer my life became.”
Tuesday, July 11, 2006
God Remains Always with Us
Week One No. 2
Grace:
My Lord Jesus I beg for the grace to be able to acknowledge the Divine Presence, the Emmanuel and the Spirit of Life in me
Scriptural Passages:
Psalm 139 God, my Creator, present throughout my life;
Jn 3:1-21 God so loved the world that he sent the Son;
Lk. 24:36-43 In risen human flesh, Jesus eats with friends.
While they were still speaking about this, he stood in their midst and said to them, "Peace be with you." But they were startled and terrified and thought that they were seeing a ghost. Then he said to them, "Why are you troubled? And why do questions arise in your hearts? Look at my hands and my feet, that it is I myself. Touch me and see, because a ghost does not have flesh and bones as you can see I have." And as he said this, he showed them his hands and his feet. While they were still incredulous for joy and were amazed, he asked them, "Have you anything here to eat?" They gave him a piece of baked fish; he took it and ate it in front of them (Lk. 24:36-43).
Points for Reflection:
You can say that you believe in God, sincerely, and yet act like someone who does not believe. You would then be a “practical atheist,” which means that you live from one end of the week to the next without so much as thinking about God. Consider whether you may not have lost two qualities of the believer: a sense of awe and wonder and reverence before God, the Creator and Lord, and before God’s creation; and a steady choice to do the next good thing because God is with you.
For a number of reasons, such as the spread of technology and of ideological movements, you might feel that God remains far away from the world, like the maker of a watch that finishes with it and lets it go on its own. Your faith teaches you something very different. God wishes the People to be so close to him that he would seem to be wearing them like a skin-tight garment (Jer. 13:11). Jesus Christ promised that he would be “with you always, yes, to the end of time” (Mt. 28:20).
When the humankind drove the Son of God out of our flesh and killed him, he rose again and returned among us. Now God remains eternally united to humanity by a bond that can never be broken: Jesus Christ who is both God and human. You receive him into yourself in Communion.
God the Spirit of Life sustains everything in existence, even giving energy to your thinking and moving. Through the Divine Wisdom, the Spirit keeps acting in might “from one end of the earth to the other, ordering all things for good” (Wis. 7:15-8:1). As the Psalm says, God the almighty goes before you and behind you, always.
PRAYER: Lord of wisdom, Lord of might, when I think of you, I seem to feel you gazing on me. I am a little afraid that anyone can know me through and through and at every moment. But I feel your gaze as a gentle regard. And in my heart I know that you see me and you are delighted. I am amazed and full of thanks. Amen.
Source: Joseph Tetlow, S.J. (1989). Choosing Christ in the World. Saint Louis: Institute of Jesuit Sources.
Grace:
My Lord Jesus I beg for the grace to be able to acknowledge the Divine Presence, the Emmanuel and the Spirit of Life in me
Scriptural Passages:
Psalm 139 God, my Creator, present throughout my life;
Jn 3:1-21 God so loved the world that he sent the Son;
Lk. 24:36-43 In risen human flesh, Jesus eats with friends.
While they were still speaking about this, he stood in their midst and said to them, "Peace be with you." But they were startled and terrified and thought that they were seeing a ghost. Then he said to them, "Why are you troubled? And why do questions arise in your hearts? Look at my hands and my feet, that it is I myself. Touch me and see, because a ghost does not have flesh and bones as you can see I have." And as he said this, he showed them his hands and his feet. While they were still incredulous for joy and were amazed, he asked them, "Have you anything here to eat?" They gave him a piece of baked fish; he took it and ate it in front of them (Lk. 24:36-43).
Points for Reflection:
You can say that you believe in God, sincerely, and yet act like someone who does not believe. You would then be a “practical atheist,” which means that you live from one end of the week to the next without so much as thinking about God. Consider whether you may not have lost two qualities of the believer: a sense of awe and wonder and reverence before God, the Creator and Lord, and before God’s creation; and a steady choice to do the next good thing because God is with you.
For a number of reasons, such as the spread of technology and of ideological movements, you might feel that God remains far away from the world, like the maker of a watch that finishes with it and lets it go on its own. Your faith teaches you something very different. God wishes the People to be so close to him that he would seem to be wearing them like a skin-tight garment (Jer. 13:11). Jesus Christ promised that he would be “with you always, yes, to the end of time” (Mt. 28:20).
When the humankind drove the Son of God out of our flesh and killed him, he rose again and returned among us. Now God remains eternally united to humanity by a bond that can never be broken: Jesus Christ who is both God and human. You receive him into yourself in Communion.
God the Spirit of Life sustains everything in existence, even giving energy to your thinking and moving. Through the Divine Wisdom, the Spirit keeps acting in might “from one end of the earth to the other, ordering all things for good” (Wis. 7:15-8:1). As the Psalm says, God the almighty goes before you and behind you, always.
PRAYER: Lord of wisdom, Lord of might, when I think of you, I seem to feel you gazing on me. I am a little afraid that anyone can know me through and through and at every moment. But I feel your gaze as a gentle regard. And in my heart I know that you see me and you are delighted. I am amazed and full of thanks. Amen.
Source: Joseph Tetlow, S.J. (1989). Choosing Christ in the World. Saint Louis: Institute of Jesuit Sources.
Saturday, July 08, 2006
Wednesday, July 05, 2006
SEDL: God is Always Giving Gifts
Week One, Number 1
Grace:
My Lord Jesus I beg for the grace to appreciate the world, my life, and my self for what they all are: outright gifts from God my Creator and my Lord.
Scriptural Passages:
Ezek. 11:17-21 You will be my people and I will be your God;
Lk. 1:26-38 God gives Mary the gift of Motherhood;
Eph. 1:3-14 God gives grace and Christ-life.
Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has blessed us in Christ with every spiritual blessing in the heavens, as he chose us in him, before the foundation of the world, to be holy and without blemish before him. In love he destined us for adoption to himself through Jesus Christ, in accord with the favor of his will, for the praise of the glory of his grace that he granted us in the beloved. In him we have redemption by his blood, the forgiveness of transgressions, in accord with the riches of his grace that he lavished upon us. In all wisdom and insight, he has made known to us the mystery of his will in accord with his favor that he set forth in him as a plan for the fullness of times, to sum up all things in Christ, in heaven and on earth. In him we were also chosen, destined in accord with the purpose of the one who accomplishes all things according to the intention of his will, so that we might exist for the praise of his glory, we who first hoped in Christ. In him you also, who have heard the word of truth, the gospel of your salvation, and have believed in him, were sealed with the promised holy Spirit, which is the first instalment of our inheritance toward redemption as God's possession, to the praise of his glory (Eph. 1:3-14).
Points for Reflection:
Jesus commonly began his prayer to God by saying, “I thank you.” Before raising Lazarus, he said, “Father, I thank you for hearing my prayer” (Jn. 11:41). Jesus prayed thanks because he lived thanks. Taught by the great tradition of the People of God, Jesus took the faith-stance that everything is a gift from God.
This is how Jesus looked on the world, his own history, and everything that came into his life: as given Him by God. He said to God the Father, “All you have given me comes indeed from you” (Jn. 17:7). He meant all, too – his family, his history, vocation, work and even his passion. He saw everything as gift because his eyes were full of faith.
Some people just take the world as it is: What is, IS. They are like a color-blind eye that sees things clearly but only in shades of grey. You are called to take the world for granted, which literally means as given to you by One who is greater: What is IS GIFT from God.
You were chosen by God to have Christ’s eyes for the rainbow of gifts God grants: the earth, the heavens, science, music, your own life and talents, those whom you love. God has given you a special place among the chosen people, the saints. Could God tell Mary through the angel what to call her son? Well, God has called you from your mother’s womb by your own name.
Standing in gratitude, you recognize that you cannot of yourself demand an hour of life or an inch of height. You cannot guarantee anything for yourself or those whom you love. But because you have chosen to “set your heart on the kingdom of God,” you know that “all these other things will be given you as well” (Mt. 6:34). This faith and this trust are themselves gifts, not accepted by many in our life world.
PRAYER: Lord, mighty God, You are the Creator of heaven and earth, of all that is seen and of all the unseen tiny atoms, vast forces, my own life world, my own life, each of my days. Nothing in me could demand of you that you create me. Everything that is you demanded of you that you create me, for you are Love and you wish to share with those who will love you. I praise you, I thank you for all that I am and all that all of us are and have. Amen.
Source: Joseph Tetlow, S.J. (1989). Choosing Christ in the World. Saint Louis: Institute of Jesuit Sources.
Grace:
My Lord Jesus I beg for the grace to appreciate the world, my life, and my self for what they all are: outright gifts from God my Creator and my Lord.
Scriptural Passages:
Ezek. 11:17-21 You will be my people and I will be your God;
Lk. 1:26-38 God gives Mary the gift of Motherhood;
Eph. 1:3-14 God gives grace and Christ-life.
Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has blessed us in Christ with every spiritual blessing in the heavens, as he chose us in him, before the foundation of the world, to be holy and without blemish before him. In love he destined us for adoption to himself through Jesus Christ, in accord with the favor of his will, for the praise of the glory of his grace that he granted us in the beloved. In him we have redemption by his blood, the forgiveness of transgressions, in accord with the riches of his grace that he lavished upon us. In all wisdom and insight, he has made known to us the mystery of his will in accord with his favor that he set forth in him as a plan for the fullness of times, to sum up all things in Christ, in heaven and on earth. In him we were also chosen, destined in accord with the purpose of the one who accomplishes all things according to the intention of his will, so that we might exist for the praise of his glory, we who first hoped in Christ. In him you also, who have heard the word of truth, the gospel of your salvation, and have believed in him, were sealed with the promised holy Spirit, which is the first instalment of our inheritance toward redemption as God's possession, to the praise of his glory (Eph. 1:3-14).
Points for Reflection:
Jesus commonly began his prayer to God by saying, “I thank you.” Before raising Lazarus, he said, “Father, I thank you for hearing my prayer” (Jn. 11:41). Jesus prayed thanks because he lived thanks. Taught by the great tradition of the People of God, Jesus took the faith-stance that everything is a gift from God.
This is how Jesus looked on the world, his own history, and everything that came into his life: as given Him by God. He said to God the Father, “All you have given me comes indeed from you” (Jn. 17:7). He meant all, too – his family, his history, vocation, work and even his passion. He saw everything as gift because his eyes were full of faith.
Some people just take the world as it is: What is, IS. They are like a color-blind eye that sees things clearly but only in shades of grey. You are called to take the world for granted, which literally means as given to you by One who is greater: What is IS GIFT from God.
You were chosen by God to have Christ’s eyes for the rainbow of gifts God grants: the earth, the heavens, science, music, your own life and talents, those whom you love. God has given you a special place among the chosen people, the saints. Could God tell Mary through the angel what to call her son? Well, God has called you from your mother’s womb by your own name.
Standing in gratitude, you recognize that you cannot of yourself demand an hour of life or an inch of height. You cannot guarantee anything for yourself or those whom you love. But because you have chosen to “set your heart on the kingdom of God,” you know that “all these other things will be given you as well” (Mt. 6:34). This faith and this trust are themselves gifts, not accepted by many in our life world.
PRAYER: Lord, mighty God, You are the Creator of heaven and earth, of all that is seen and of all the unseen tiny atoms, vast forces, my own life world, my own life, each of my days. Nothing in me could demand of you that you create me. Everything that is you demanded of you that you create me, for you are Love and you wish to share with those who will love you. I praise you, I thank you for all that I am and all that all of us are and have. Amen.
Source: Joseph Tetlow, S.J. (1989). Choosing Christ in the World. Saint Louis: Institute of Jesuit Sources.
Sunday, July 02, 2006
POTESTAS: DBCS, 1st Year Class of 1994
We were thirty five high school graduates who entered Don Bosco College Seminary in Canlubang, Laguna in 1994. Two continued with the Salesians: Kim, two years short from ordination, took his perpetual profession last April 30 (this note was relayed to me by his mom, Tita Mic, a few weeks ago) and Carmelo who is a Lay Brother. Carmelo is currently assigned as one of the Formators in the seminary in Canlubang. And, the rest made their way through the thickets of the forrest. I met some of them last Summer in Cebu, a lot has changed but a lot remained the same.
Roy teaches in Don Bosco Labangon. But daghan ang kanyang raket -- a guest host in ABS-CBN Cebu's Saturday prime time show, Sabado na Gyud; a leader in a Catholic charismatic community in Cebu; and, a lead actor in a short film that would be presented in the Portugal Film Fest.
Chad took his oath a year ago and is practicing law in Cebu. His uyab is Ethel, from Pagadian, a classmate of Chad in law school and who took her oath last month.
Butch continues to do what he is very passionate about, writing. He maintains a blog, He used to work with a local daily but is currently connected with a company that manages an on-line poker game. He married, two months ago, Joyce. They had a beautiful sunset wedding in a beach resort in Mactan.
Anearth works with the IT unit of the Department of Agriculture. He is married to Liezel and has a son. He is expecting his second child soon, (but I think by the time that I would be able to post this he/she would have been delivered already). He continues to play basketball and badminton. He gave me a copy of the National Geo's the Gospel of Judas -- I would still have to sit down and watch it.
Joubert heads a business solutions company in Mactan. He was in Hong Kong but because of his mother's dwindling health he needed to be "repatriated" to Mactan. His mom died three years ago. He is married to Connie and they are residing at Joubert's old place in Lawaan.
After five years of teaching in CIE, Law now works for a freight company. He still lives in his folk's place in Consolacion but now he is with Hazel, his wife.
Jason works for the Salesian's Provincial Economer and Hyman does land operations for Cebu Pacific. Racals teaches and is very much involved with football. He is managing a water distribution facility in Labangon.
I do not know when our roads will cross again but it was a wonderful opportunity to realize that I am getting old. And, taking stock of memories with old pals and friends would, it seems, be part of my life's routine.
Thanks be to God for the gift of memory!!!
Roy teaches in Don Bosco Labangon. But daghan ang kanyang raket -- a guest host in ABS-CBN Cebu's Saturday prime time show, Sabado na Gyud; a leader in a Catholic charismatic community in Cebu; and, a lead actor in a short film that would be presented in the Portugal Film Fest.
Chad took his oath a year ago and is practicing law in Cebu. His uyab is Ethel, from Pagadian, a classmate of Chad in law school and who took her oath last month.
Butch continues to do what he is very passionate about, writing. He maintains a blog, He used to work with a local daily but is currently connected with a company that manages an on-line poker game. He married, two months ago, Joyce. They had a beautiful sunset wedding in a beach resort in Mactan.
Anearth works with the IT unit of the Department of Agriculture. He is married to Liezel and has a son. He is expecting his second child soon, (but I think by the time that I would be able to post this he/she would have been delivered already). He continues to play basketball and badminton. He gave me a copy of the National Geo's the Gospel of Judas -- I would still have to sit down and watch it.
Joubert heads a business solutions company in Mactan. He was in Hong Kong but because of his mother's dwindling health he needed to be "repatriated" to Mactan. His mom died three years ago. He is married to Connie and they are residing at Joubert's old place in Lawaan.
After five years of teaching in CIE, Law now works for a freight company. He still lives in his folk's place in Consolacion but now he is with Hazel, his wife.
Jason works for the Salesian's Provincial Economer and Hyman does land operations for Cebu Pacific. Racals teaches and is very much involved with football. He is managing a water distribution facility in Labangon.
I do not know when our roads will cross again but it was a wonderful opportunity to realize that I am getting old. And, taking stock of memories with old pals and friends would, it seems, be part of my life's routine.
Thanks be to God for the gift of memory!!!
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