40 Shades of Lent by Fr. Nicanor F. Lalog II Friday, Memorial of St. John of God, Religious, 08 March 2024 Hosea 14:2-10 ><]]]]]'> + ><]]]]]'> + ><]]]]]'> Mark 12:28-34
Photo of convolvulus sabatius from frustratedgardener.com
Your words today, dear Father, led me back to the Monday reflection of another blogger about the word "acceptance":
“Acceptance” can be seen as a passive word suggesting that we just put up with something we cannot change.
On the other hand, it can be a positive condition in our spirituality by which we prepare ourselves to hospitably receive that which we had not expected. Such positive acceptance suggests a non-judgmental, wise, and discerning heart.
Why are we so fond, O God, of doing anything except precisely what you want us to do? Why can't we just accept your words, your plans, or your instructions we always disregard, "hoping" there could be something better?
Forgive us, Father, when even in the quagmire of sin and evil, we keep resisting you, refusing to accept your suggestions; let us learn beginning this Lent when to just stop and simply accept you and your words.
Photo by author, Banaba Tree, 2020.
Thus says the Lord: Return, O Israel, to the Lord, your God; you have collapsed through your guilt. Take with you words, and return to the Lord; say to him, “Forgive all iniquity, and receive what is good, that we may render as offerings the bullocks from our stalls.”
Hosea 14:2-3
Draw us closer to you, Lord Jesus Christ and your kingdom by accepting the basic truth of our faith that the love of God is always the love of others; help us realize life is more than searching for what is the best possible condition or situation we can have but to accept our whereabouts where we can give our best selves to you through others to make this world a better one. ' Everything, O Lord, begins in finding you within each of us so we may find you in others especially the sick and the weakest like St. John of God who simply accepted everything that came to his life as coming from you; it is in our acceptance of you, O Lord, that we begin to lovingly serve you in others because that is also when we are able to relate our lives with your Church, with the world, with our callings; it is in accepting these that we become "not far from the Kingdom of God." Amen.
Photo of a convolvulus tricolor from BBC Gardeners World Magazine.
40 Shades of Lent by Fr. Nicanor F. Lalog II Thursday, Memorial of Sts. Perpetua & Felicity, Martyrs, 07 March 2024 Jeremiah 7:23-28 ><}}}}*> + ><}}}}*> + ><}}}}*> Luke 11:14-23
Your words today, O God, are too strong, that we are so bad and, that is so true, too.
Thus says the Lord: When you speak all these words to them, they will not listen to you either; when you call to them, they will not answer you. Say to them: This is a nation which does not listen to the voice of the Lord, its God, or take correction. Faithfulness has disappeared; the word itself is banished from their speech.
Jeremiah 7:27-28
Though we are so bad, you are still so good to us, Father; you continue to speak to us even if you know we do not listen nor heed your voice.
What is worst, even in the coming of your Son Jesus Christ who offered himself on the Cross, we still refused to listen and heed his calls, always asking for signs.
Some of them said, “By the power of Beelzebul, the prince of demons, he drives out demons.” Others, to test him, asked him for a sign from heaven. But he knew their thoughts and said to them, “Every kingdom divided against itself will be laid waste and house will fall against house. Whoever is not with me is against me, and whoever does not gather with me scatters.”
Luke 11:15-17, 23
Lord Jesus Christ, in your dying on the the Cross, you have expressed to us the Father's immense love for us; indeed, your Cross until now remains a sign of contradiction in the world as your calls to love and to forgive, to be humble and be kind, to give than to receive remains a foolishness and weakness for many of us; but you continue to speak to us despite our being deaf and hard-hearted because by your Cross, you have shown us too it is the greatest sign of reconciliation, reminding us of the many contradictions within and around us, of the many contradictions in the world that can be reconciled and be made one in your self-giving in love we must imitate like your martyrs Saints Perpetua and Felicity.
Reconcile us in you, dear Jesus, make us one in you on the Cross! Amen.
40 Shades of Lent by Fr. Nicanor F. Lalog II Wednesday in the Third Week of Lent, 06 March 2024 Deuteronomy 4:1, 5-9 ><}}}}*> + <*{{{{>< Matthew 5:17-19
Lent is remembering especially because we are beings of forgetfulness; but, teach us Father, that to remember you is not like in remembering an equation or a formula as a task of the mind or intellect; to remember you, O God, in the spirit of Lent is to surrender ourselves to you whom we do not see but present among our brothers and sisters; to remember you, dear God, is to surrender ourselves to your Holy Will that are not mere laws and decrees but the very person of your Son Jesus Christ.
Jesus said to his disciples: “Do not think that I have come to abolish the law or the prophets. I have come not to abolish but to fulfill. Amen, I say to yo, until heaven and earth pass away, not the smallest letter or the smallest part of a letter will pass from the law, until all things have taken place.”
Matthew 5:17-18
To remember and keep your laws, dear God is to remember and keep you found in our brothers and sisters through your Son Jesus Christ; indeed, the greatness of any nation is measured to a large part in its legal system, in how it is justly implemented and observed:
Moses spoke to the people and said: “Observe them carefully for thus will you give evidence to your wisdom and intelligence to the nations, who will hear of all these statutes and say, ‘This great nation is truly wise and intelligent people.’ For what great nation is there that has gods so close to it as the Lord, our God, is to us whenever we call upon him? Or what great nation has statutes and decrees that are just as this whole law which I am setting before you today?'”
Deuteronomy 4:1, 6-8
Father, in this season of Lent, may we recover and put into practice, not just remember that your laws are fulfilled in Christ when we love; how sad that love of God and love of neighbors is your law we often forget, and find hard to remember because we keep it in our minds than in our hearts where you dwell.
Most of all, to remember means to make one a member of the present moment again: help us remember in making you present always in our love and good works. Amen.
In this season of Lent, teach us, Lord, to be consistent in our contrition; let us realize that true contrition for our sins is not only when we have cried, nor when we have beaten our breasts with mea culpa, mea culpa, mea maxima culpa, nor when we say sorry to everyone we have sinned.
Being sorry for our sins before you, God our Father, is being consistent - when our contrition leads us to change our evil ways and most of all, when we become consistent in our prayer and lives that we stop with our sins and evil ways.
Azariah stood up in the fire and prayed aloud: “For we are reduced, O Lord, beyond any other nation, brought low everywhere in the world this day because of our sins. But with contrite heart and humble spirit let us be received; as though it were burnt offerings of rams and bullocks, or thousands of fat lambs, so let our sacrifice be inn your presence today as we follow you unreservedly; for those who trust in you cannot be put to shame.
Daniel 3:25, 37, 39
Most of all, O God, to be contrite for our sins is being consistent also in being forgiving with our fellow sinners; every day, we call you God "Our Father", asking you to forgive us our sins as we forgive those who sin against us but so often, we just say these words without really acting on them, fulfilling them by forgiving our fellow sinners; to be sorry for our own sins is to see also the pure heart of another sinner asking for forgiveness of sins.
To be contrite is to be consistent in forgiving others from one's heart because a truly contrite heart sees and feels a fellow contrite heart too! Amen.
40 Shades of Lent by Fr. Nicanor F. Lalog II Sunday Recipe for the Soul, Lent III-B, 03 March 2024 Exodus 20:1-17 ><}}}*> 1 Corinthians 1:22-25 ><}}}*> John 2:13-25
Photo by author, 2019,
It has been 19 days since we started this 40-day journey of Lent as an internal pilgrimage to God our first love. Since the first Sunday of Lent, Mark guided us to Jesus as we joined him in the desert of our poverty and sinfulness to the heights of his transfiguration through the many trials and sufferings we have gone through in life.
Beginning this third Sunday in Lent until the fifth Sunday, all our gospel readings are taken from John as we come closer with God who dwells right in our hearts, his temple within us. Keep in mind that our Lenten itinerary is actually symbolic and theological in nature than an actual road map to follow; hence, our shift to the fourth gospel that is so rich in its narration of the events leading to the Holy Week.
Since the Passover of the Jews was near, Jesus went up to Jerusalem. He found in the temple area those who sold oxen, sheep, and doves, as well the moneychangers seated there. He made a whip out of cords and drove them all out of the temple area, with the sheep and oxen, and spilled the coins of the moneychangers and overturned their tables, and to those who sold doves he said, “Take these out of here, and stop making my Father’s house a marketplace.” His disciples recalled the words of the Scripture, Zeal for your house will consume me.
John 2:13-17
Photo by author, Jerusalem, 2017.
In the Bible, the Temple is the sign of God’s presence. That is how central is the Temple of Jerusalem for the Jews even until now. And John deepens this sign of the Temple for us with his most unique narration of its cleansing by Jesus in preparation for its new meaning found in Christ when he died on the Cross.
Only John noted how the disciples recalled after Easter this episode of Jesus cleansing the Temple, linking it with that line from the Passion Psalm, “His disciples recalled the words of the Scripture, ‘Zeal for your house will consume me'”. Matthew, Mark, and Luke in their accounts identically quoted Jesus citing Isaiah 56:7 when he said, “My house shall be called a house of prayer but you have made it into a den of thieves” (Mt. 21:13; Mk. 11:17; Lk.19:46).
Here, John is reminding us – like when the Apostles remembered after Easter – that Jesus is the “just man”, the promised Messiah who not only prayed but embodied this psalm that led him to his Passion and Death on Good Friday.
Save me, God, for the waters have reached my neck. For your sake I bear insult, shame covers my face. Because zeal for your house consumes me, I am scorned by those who scorn you.
Psalm 69:2, 8, 10
Photo by author, Jerusalem, 2017.
That “zeal” of Jesus for the Temple and everything it stood for that consumed him was the zeal of his self-giving love on the Cross that we find in the following conversation he had with the Jews.
At this the Jews answered and said to him, “What sign can you show us for doing this?” Jesus answered and said to them, “Destroy this temple and in three days I will raise it up.” The Jews said, “This temple has been under construction for forty-six years, and you will raise it up in three days?” But he was speaking about the temple of his body. Therefore, when he was raised from the dead, his disciples remembered that he had said this, and they came to believe the Scripture and the word Jesus had spoken.
John 2:18-22
So beautiful! Everything now becomes so clear that Jesus is the new Temple; his cleansing of the temple in Jerusalem was a declaration of his “vision-mission” right at the start of his ministry in John’s gospel (experts say John’s narration of events in Christ’s life was more of theology than chronology).
At his Crucifixion, Jesus Christ had replaced the Temple worship with “worship in Spirit and truth” (Jn.4:23) as he had told the Samaritan woman at Jacob’s well (Third Sunday Lent-A). The synoptic gospels attest to this same view of John in their accounts that upon Christ’s death, “the veil of the sanctuary was torn from top to bottom” (Mt.27:51; Mk.15:38; Lk.23:45) that signaled the end of temple worship in Jesus Christ as the new Temple of God.
Therefore, this “zeal” of Jesus for the Temple symbolizing the Father is the same zeal every disciple must have for God, for others and his Church. It is the very same zeal laid out by God to Moses at Sinai in the Ten Commandments calling on everyone to be fair and just with each other regardless of age, color, sex, and belief. The first three commandments call us for a zeal in loving God above all expressed in the same zeal we must have in the remaining commandments for our neighbors.
Photo by author, temple of Jerusalem, 2017.
After the success of the movie The Ten Commandments in 1956, reporters asked its director Cecil B. DeMilled which of the Ten Commandments of God we often violate or disobey? DeMille said it is the first commandment because every time we commit a sin, that is when we have other gods besides our one, true God.
Very true!
This is the grace of this third Sunday in Lent as we continue this internal pilgrimage to God: that we also cleanse our hearts by examining our zeal for God and for others. The other word for “zeal” is “enthusiasm” which literally means in Greek as “to be filled with God” (from en theos). To be filled with God, to be with his zeal means to be empty of ourselves first by becoming like Jesus Christ. But, how can we proclaim Christ crucified as St. Paul asserted in the second reading when we are more concerned with money and trade, fame and prestige, especially in the Church? How can we proclaim Christ crucified when we avoid his Cross, always seeking shortcuts and instants in everything? How can we be more loving like Christ crucified when we do not have the zeal for others?
Let us pray.
Lord Jesus, "overturn" our many excuses and alibis of being so concerned with things of the world pretending we do them in the name of God and of our family and loved ones; "overturn" our many justifications for not going to Mass, for not receiving the Sacraments, for not making time with our family and loved ones; set us free, Jesus, from our many addictions that have cut off our ties and relationships with You and real persons like our family and friends. Fill us, Jesus, with your zeal for the Father through the Church and everyone we meet. Amen.
40 Shades of Lent by Fr. Nicanor F. Lalog II Friday in Second Week of Lent, 01 March 2024 Genesis 37:3-4, 12-13, 17-28 ><)))*> + <*(((>< Matthew 21:33-43, 45-46
Thank you, dear God, for this first day and Friday of March; teach us to learn anew this blessed season of Lent the virtue of respect from two Latin words, re + specere that literally mean "to look again"; many times, we fail or choose not to respect others because we refuse to look at them again, and again, that they are our kin, a brother and a sister in Jesus Christ; many times we see them but do not recognize them as one of us that we look at them with suspicions, jealousies, and mistrust.
So Joseph went after his brothers and caught up with them in Dothan. They noticed him from a distance, and before he came up to them, they plotted to kill him. They said to one another: “Here comes that master dreamer! Come on, let us kill him and throw him into one of the cisterns here; we could say that a wild beast devoured him. We shall then see what comes of his dreams.”
Genesis 37:17-20
Father, instill in our minds and hearts through Jesus your Son, that we own nothing in this world, that we are your stewards, your tenants of the vineyard; how sad and tragic when we lay claim to everything in this world even our very own life and those of others as ours alone, a private matter we alone can decide on who is to live and die; or, too much stress on privacy that this is my body that I alone can decide what to do with my body.
Finally, he sent his son to them, thinking, ‘They will respect my son.’ But when the tenants saw the son, they said to one another, ‘This is the heir. Come let us kill him and acquire his inheritance.’ They seized him, threw him out of the vineyard, and killed him.
Matthew 21:37-39
Forgive us, O Lord Jesus! So many times we have acted like those evil tenants who lacked any respect for you and others when from afar, even if we knew, we are mere stewards, we insist and poison others into thinking we can claim ownership of everything including this most precious life.
Forgive us, Lord Jesus, for our lack of respect to you and to one another; how sad that in our rampant disrespect, unknown to us, we have lost respect to our very selves too. Help us regain respect this Lent. Amen.
Lawiswis ng Salita ni P. Nicanor F. Lalog II, Ika-28 ng Pebrero 2024
Larawan kuha ni G. Red Santiago ng kanyang anak, Enero 2020, Bagbaguin, Sta. Maria, Bulacan.
Pangunahing hiling ng mga tao sa aming mga pari ay panalangin, na sila ay ipagdasal sa kanilang iba’t-ibang mga pangangailangan. Ito ay dahil inaasahan – at dapat lamang – na kaming mga pari ay palaging nananalangin.
Kaugnay nito ay madalas din silang magtanong paanong magdasal at marami pang iba’t-ibang bagay ukol sa pananalangin. Kaya sa diwa ng panahon ng Kuwaresma kung kailan tayo hinihikayat linangin ating pananalangin, narito ilang mga pagmumuni-muni ko tungkol sa pagdarasal na aking napagtanto at natutunan mula nang pumasok ako ng seminaryo noong 1991 hanggang sa maging pari ng 1998 hanggang sa ngayon.
Una, walang maituturing na dalubhasa o eksperto sa pagdarasal. Tunay nga sinabi ni San Pablo, “tinutulungan tayo ng Espiritu sa ating kahinaan. Hindi tayo marunong manalangin nang wasto, kaya’t ang Espiritu ang lumuluhog para sa atin, sa paraang di magagawa ng pananalita” (Rom. 8:26).
Larawan kuha ng may-akda, Our Lady of Fatima University, Valenzuela, Nobyembre 13, 2023.
Kaya naman totoo kasabihang sa oras na ikaw ay nanalangin, sinagot na rin ng Diyos iyong mga dasal kasi ikaw ay nagdarasal. Kapag tayo nagdasal, tumugon tayo sa Diyos tawag niyang makaisa Siya. Noong kami ay high school sa seminaryo, iyon unang tinuro sa amin ni Fr. Danny Delos Reyes, aming Rektor: “Prayer is talking to God who has always been speaking to man.” Kaya sa oras na tayo ay nagdasal, purihin ang Panginoon dahil tumalima tayo sa Kanya!
Higit itong totoo kapag ating binabasa at pinagninilayan ang Kanyang mga salita sa Banal na Kasulatan. Sa Banal na Kasulatan, personal nakikipag-usap sa atin ang Diyos gamit ang salita ng tao. Kaya sino mang ibig na tunay lumalim sa buhay panalanign at buhay espiritwal, kinakailangang magkaroon ng personal na bibliya at daily bible guide upang masundan mga pagbasa. Sabi ni San Geronimo, ang kamangmangan sa Banal na Kasulatan ay kamangmangan kay Kristo.”
Ikalawang katotohanang nabatid ko sa pagdarasal ay kaugnay nito: hindi tayo ang susukat at susuri ng ating pananalangin kungdi Diyos. Madalas kasi maranasan natin lalo na sa mga nagsisimula pa lamang manalangin na ikumpara ating mga pagdarasal sa bawat araw kapag ating sinasabi “bakit dati madali at magaan pakiramdam ko”, “bakit ngayon parang hirap ako magdasal” o “parang walang saysay aking pananalangin”.
Hindi madaraan sa damdamin o feelings ang pagdarasal.
Malaking pagkakamali na akalain nating mga oras na tayo ay tuwang-tuwang o masarap ang pakiramdam sa pagdarasal ay tama at wasto ang pananalangin na samakatwid ay kinasihan ng Diyos ating pagdarasal. Hindi po totoo iyan.
Magugulat pa tayo na ang katotohanan ay kabaligtaran niyan dahil kung kailan tayo hirap magdasal, mas malamang naroong tunay ang Diyos! Sabi ng aking Heswitang Spiritual Director noon sa Cebu si Fr. Shea, The most difficult prayer period is actually the most meritorious. Kapag tayo ay dumaranas ng hirap sa pagdarasal na kung tawagin ay “spiritual dryness” na parang hindi tayo pansin ng Diyos o kaya hirap lumapit sa kanya, ito ay palatandaan ng paglalim sa pananalangin. At maaring tanda ng pagkilos ng Diyos na tayo ay inaakay sa mas matalik na ugnayan sa Kanya sa larangan ng pagdarasal.
Larawan kuha ng may-akda, Oktubre 2022.
Ikatlo, ang pananalangin ay pakikipag-isa sa Diyos o communion. Kaya hindi naman mahalaga masabi natin lahat ng ibig natin sa Diyos kungdi higit na mahalaga ay ating mapakinggan sinasabi sa atin ng Diyos.
Kaya tayo nagdarasal hindi upang humingi ng humingi sa Diyos ng kung anu-ano kungdi upang Siya ay makaisa, malaman kanyang kalooban para sa atin. Kung tutuusin, hindi na nating kailangan pang humingi sa Diyos ng kung anu-ano dahil alam na niya pangangailangan natin.
Sapagkat alam na ng inyong Ama ang inyong kinakailangan bago pa ninyo hingin sa kanya. Ganito kayo manalangin: “Ama naming nasa langit…”
Mateo 6:8-9
Samakatwid, ang pananalangin ay upang higit nating makamit ang Diyos mismo! Siya ang dapat nating hangarin palagi sa pagdarasal, hindi mga bagay.
Kapag mahal mo sino mang tao, palagi mo siyang kinakausap, sinasamahan upang makapiling. Siya ang ibig mo, hindi gamit o pera o kayamanan niya. Ganoon din sa pananalangin – kung mahal nating tunay ang Diyos, mananalangin tayo palagi sa kanya upang sa tuwina Siya ay makapiling.
Larawan kuha ni Bb. JJ Jimeno sa Holy Sacrifice Parish, UP Diliman, QC, Mayo 2019.
Ikaapat, ang mga bumabagabag sa ating pagdarasal ay hindi tukso mula sa demonyo kungdi mas malamang, mga tulong at gabay ng Espiritu Santo tungo sa higit na mabungang pagdarasal.
Napansin ko iyan noong dati na kapag ako ay bagabag o aligaga sa pagdarasal, kung anu-anong pumapasok sa aking isipan, kadalasan ang mga iyon ay isyu sa aking sarili na pilit ko iniiwasan o binabale-wala; sa pagdarasal, lumalantad mga iyon na tila baga sinasabi ng Diyos sa atin, harapin mga isyu natin sa sarili bago Siya matatagpuan.
Hindi istorbo ang pagsagi ng sino mang kaaway sa iyong pagdarasal kungdi paanyaya na ayusin inyong di pagkakaunawaan. Kung palaging laman ng iyong isipan ay kahalayan o karangayaan o ano pa man, ang mga iyan ay isyu na dapat mong pagdasalan upang maharap at malunasan.
Hindi nating mararanasan ang Diyos nang lubusan sa pagdarasal habang tayo ay puno ng maraming bara sa espiritu at kaluluwa tulad ng mga tao na mayroon tayong problema, mga nararamdamang poot at galit, kahalayan at iba pang mga pagnanasa. Alisin muna mga bara sa ating espritu at kaluluwa, maginhawang dadaloy biyaya ng Espiritu Santo sa ating sarili at buhay.
At ikalima, ang pananalangin ay disiplina. Dahil ang pagdarasal ay pagpapahayag ng ating ugnayan at relasyon sa Diyos, kailangan nating maging tapat sa pakikipagtagpo sa Kanya.
Tulad ng mga magsing-ibig, magkaroon ng regularidad na pakikipagtagpo sa Diyos sa panalangin. Huwag humanap ng panahon bagkus gumawa ng panahon gaya ng ating gawi sa mahal natin sa buhay. Iyon ang nawika ng lobo sa Little Prince na kung regular silang magtatagpo tuwing alas-4:00 ng hapon, alas-3:30 pa lamang ng hapon aniya ay mananabik na siya!
Nasa ating sarili kung anong oras tayo makapagdarasal. Ang mahalaga ay kaya nating pangatawanan ano mang oras ating itakda para sa Panginoon.
Pati ang lunan din ay mainam na regular. Napansin ko ito nang maging pari ako, ilang ulit ako bumalik sa Jesuit Retreat House sa Cebu kung saan kami nag-30 day retreat noong 1995 bago magthird year sa theology. Pinilit kong magdasal sa ibang bahagi ng retreat house na hinangad kong pagdasalan noon pero hindi ako napalagay. Ngunit nang manalangin ako sa dating mga lugar na kung saan ako nagdasal noong 1995, sadya namang “mabunga” ika nga sa ilang ulit na balik ko doon noong 2002, 2003 at 2004. Ganoon din karanasan ko nang lumipat ako sa Sacred Heart Novitiate sa Novaliches para sa taunang personal retreat ko mula 2015.
Alalaong-baga, mayroon tayong isang “Bethel” tulad ni Jacob kung saan nagpakilala sa kanya ang Diyos nang tumatakas siya noon sa kanyang kapatid na si Esau (Gen. 28:10-22) at naiman na manatali doon hanggat hindi tayo inaaya ng Panginoon sa ibang lugar.
Hangga’t maari tungkol sa lunan ng pananalangin, piliin yaong tahimik at angkop sa pagdarasal tulad ng simbahan o adoration chapel kung saan maaring magdasal sa harapan ng Santisimo Sakramento.
Bilang pangwakas, alalahaning palagi na personal nakikipag-ugnayan sa atin ang Diyos kaya personal din tayo tumugon sa Kanyang paanyayang makipag-ugnayan tulad ng ginagawa natin sa sino mang kapwa natin.
Sa lahat ng ugnayan mayroon tayo, bukod tanging ang sa Diyos ang pinakamabuti sa lahat dahil kailanman hindi Niya tayo iiwanan at tatalikuran. Diyos lang tanging nagmamahal sa atin ng tunay kaya binigay Niya sa Atin bugtong Niyang Anak na si Jesus na naglapit sa atin sa Kanya sa pamamagitan ng Espiritu Santo. Sana nakatulong mga ito sa inyong pagdarasal. Kung hindi naman, ay huwag nang pansinin. Sumulat kayo sa akin dito o sa aking email para sa karagdagang mga katanungan o paliwanag (lordmychef@gmail.com).
Patuloy manalangin at yumabong sa Panginoon natin! Amen.
40 Shades of Lent by Fr. Nicanor F. Lalog II Wednesday in the Second Week of Lent, 28 February 2024 Jeremiah 18:18-20 <*[[[[>< + + + ><]]]]*> Matthew 20:17-28
Photo by author, Dominus Flevit Church in Jerusalem, 2017.
Lord God our Father, your words today are too heavy, so difficult to grasp as they seem to be totally unrelated with each other until they showed me a frightening reality - that Lent is facing rejection, of hearing our enemies speak strongly against us.
The people of Judah and the citizens of Jerusalem said, “Come, let us contrive a plot against Jeremiah. It will not mean the loss of instruction from the priests nor of counsel from the wise nor of messages from the prophets. And so, let us destroy him by his own tongue; let us carefully note his every word.”
Jeremiah 18:18
Photo by author, near the Dead Sea, May 2017.
Like Jeremiah, so many times we have cried to you his very same words, "Must good be repaid with evil that they should dig a pit to take my life?" (Jeremiah 18:20).
In the gospel today, the other ten disciples heard the mother of James and John asking Jesus to sit her sons on his right and his left in his kingdom, making them "indignant" of their fellow disciples baring their selfish plans before their faces to supersede them, to outsmart them.
Photo by author, Benguet, 12 July 2023.
Many times, O Lord, it happens to us, when before us those we consider as friends, as colleagues have motives of getting ahead of us, of dominating us, of ruling over us.
It is painful and sickening of how people are preoccupied with themselves like the enemies of Jeremiah and the brothers James and John!
Remind us, Jesus, that we only share in your grace of being saved, of being redeemed as beloved children of the Father; when we hear harsh, nasty words against us; when people are so hard against us for whatever reasons; when people compete with us if there is no competition at all; when we are face-to-face with rejections, let us hold on more to you, Lord; in your kindness, save us!
Photo by Ms. Jo Villafuerte in Atok, Benguet, 01 September 2019.
Help me, Jesus, to be your faithful servant, called to serve not to be served; called to ministry not to me-nistry of popularity; most of all, let me be anchored in your Cross, of being like you, obedient to the Father for his glory. Amen.
40 Shades of Lent by Fr. Nicanor F. Lalog II Monday in the Second Week of Lent, 26 February 2024 Daniel 9:4-10 <*((((>< + + + ><))))*> Luke 6:36-38
Thank you, Lord, "great and awesome God" (Daniel 9:4) for another month about to end as we entered the second week in Lent; by this time, let us feel more your mercy and forgiveness, your immense love despite our repeated sins that have actually habitual to many of us.
Like Daniel your prophet, make us "shamefaced" before you instead of being shameless.
Justice, O Lord, is on your side; we are shamefaced even to this day: we, the men of Judah, the residents of Jerusalem, and all Israel, near and far, in all the countries to which you have scattered them because of their treachery toward you. O Lord, we are shamefaced, like our kings, our princes, and our fathers, for having sinned against you.
Daniel 9:7-8
Before we can be merciful as you are merciful dear Father according to Jesus Christ, let us be shamefaced first of all for our sinfulness; many of us have lost that sense of sinfulness, becoming shameless and so thick-faced that saying it in Tagalog is best, "makapal ang mukha".
This Lent, teach us to be ashamed of our sins and iniquities; teach us to let go of our many excuses and alibis that only make our face grow thicker like the soles of our feet; make us realize the more shame we put on our selves when we feel so self-righteous that we have no room to be kind and understanding, even caring and forgiving of others.
This Lent, let us start being shamefaced, of having a healthy mistrust of our selves so that we begin to trust you more, O Lord, and become like you, loving and merciful, and eventually a vessel of your blessings for others. Amen.
The Lord Is My Chef Sunday Music by Fr. Nicanor F. Lalog II, 25 February 2024
Photo from petalrepublic.com.
It is the last Sunday in February, the second in the Season of Lent and most likely, everybody is feeling like “suddenly” the month is over with everything happening so fast just like in the song Yesterday by the Beatles.
Released in 1965 from their album Help!, Yesterday was actually written by Paul McCartney after a dream while staying with his former girlfriend, Jane Asher. It is a sad love song that speaks, as usual, of break-up.
The lyrics and music are simple that McCartney had to research for sometime if he had copied its melody from an existing music at that time. But, its simplicity and eloquence caught so many generations then and now as the song speaks so well of everyone’s experience. Yesterday one of the most covered songs of all time, being interpreted by almost every artist in all continents over 2000 times since its release!
What I wish to share with you this lovely Sunday is my realization that aside from old music getting better with age as it takes on a life of its own, there is also a simultaneous change and maturity among us listeners and fans of our favorite artists and bands of their music.
I practically grew up listening to the music of the Beatles, being born in 1965, the same year Yesterday was released. I have never understood all their songs but growing up at that time surrounded by their music, I have also fallen in love with the sound of Beatles like most of my generation.
And now, I just felt everything so “suddenly” too, of how fast time flies that indeed, “I’m not half the man I used to be”!
Yesterday all my trouble seemed so far away Now it looks as though they're here to stay Oh I believe in yesterday
Suddenly I'm not half the man I used to be There's a shadow hanging over me Oh yesterday came suddenly
It was that line that actually moved me to link Yesterday with the transfiguration of Jesus, “Suddenly I’m not half the man I used to be.”
The lesson is very simple but many times, it could take us a lifetime learning or realizing. Most of all, accepting and owning.
Like the road to Easter, our lives are always marked with so many light and darkness, failures and triumphs, tears and laughter, even little deaths. Jesus tells us in his transfiguration that the scandal of the Cross cannot be removed from the glory of his Resurrection. There can be no Easter Sunday without Good Friday.
The good news is that in every passages in life we go through, every difficulty we hurdle, every pain and sufferings we endure, we always emerge a different person after – not half the man I used to be.
Of course, it still depends on us if we become better or bitter with every pain we go through. But, like the song Yesterday that went through a long process of ups and downs even before being recorded and released, it had emerged a very great music, a classic in our own time.
How consoling to think that great men and women, like McCartney and all the other artists we look up to went through a lot of troubles in life and have emerged better and wiser as persons.
And that’s because Jesus Christ was there first to suffer and die for us so that when he rose again from the dead, we too shall rise with him. Have a blessed week ahead, folks!