The Lord Is My Chef Daily Recipe for the Soul by Fr. Nicanor F. Lalog II Wednesday in the First Week of Advent, 06 December 2023 Isaiah 25:6-10 ><))))*> + ><))))*> + ><))))*> Matthew 15:29-37
Photo by author, St. Scholastica Retreat House, Baguio City, 23 August 2023.
God our loving Father, may we go back to you our very life; forgive us who have easily forgotten you especially after these difficult years of the pandemic; now that COVID has waned and life is back to "normal", we are back to our unholy ways.
May we always search you, Father, and dwell in you; destroy the “veil that veils all peoples, the web that is woven over all nations” (Is.25:7) that mislead and imprison us with false hopes in superficial relationships and materialistic briberies of this world.
Let us go "hungry and thirsty" to realize the most essential in life are you, dear God and the people who truly care for us and love us like our family and friends.
Like the crowd who have followed Jesus in the wilderness for three days with nothing to eat: they experienced advent, your coming, O God, when Jesus fed them after they were finally disposed to desire the longings of their soul than of their bodies; it was only then when Jesus fed them through the miraculous multiplication of the loaves of bread for the second time.
May the darkness and gloom that envelop us this season of Advent like the wars in Gaza and Ukraine and other military show of force by other nations and groups elsewhere, the barbaric terror attack last Sunday in Marawi and the frequent earthquakes we have been experiencing along with our other personal crises dispose us to desiring you alone, God our Father, so we may finally enter your heavenly banquet in the Holy Eucharist with “rich food and choice wines” (Is.25:6). Amen.
The Lord Is My Chef Daily Recipe for the Soul by Fr. Nicanor F. Lalog II Tuesday in the First Week of Advent, 05 December 2023 Isaiah 11:1-10 ><]]]]'> + ><]]]]'> + ><]]]]'> Luke 10:21-24
Praise and glory to you, God our Father for this Season of Advent!
Indeed we are so blessed in your Son Jesus Christ for "many prophets and kings desired to see what you see, but did not see it, and to hear what you hear, but did not hear it" (Luke 10:24).
How wonderful are your plans, most merciful Father, in making a shoot sprout from the stump of Jesse and from its roots a bud blossom (Isaiah 11:1), Jesus Christ.
As we await his Second Coming, help us realize, bring into reality, his most beautiful portrait saw by Isaiah: "Justice shall be the band around his waist, and faithfulness a belt upon his hips. Then the wolf shall be a guest of the lamb, and the leopard shall lie down with the kid; the calf and the young lion shall browse together, with a little child to guide them. The cow and the bear shall be neighbors, together their young shall rest; the lion shall eat hay like ox. The baby shall play by the cobras den, and the child lay his hand on the adder's lair" (vv.5-8).
Let us witness the gospel of Jesus to effect peace that until now has eluded us because we have refused to recognize Jesus, follow Jesus, be like Jesus.
Let us be like Jesus who is just, not judging by appearance nor deciding by hearsay, siding with the poor not with the rich, speaking always of his truth and justice.
We are so blessed in Jesus Christ who had come, who is come who will come again; make us responsible enough to see Jesus more clearly, to understand his vision deeply, to listen to his words acutely so he may be found in us already. Amen.
The Lord Is My Chef Daily Recipe for the Soul by Fr. Nicanor F. Lalog II Monday in the First Week of Advent, 04 December 2023 Isaiah 2:1-5 ><}}}}*> + ><}}}}*> + ><}}}}*> Matthew 8:5-11
Photo by author, Basic Education Department, Our Lady of Fatima University, Valenzuela City, 27 November 2023.
Advent is walking in your light, O Lord, when we brave life's many darkness that envelop us, when we trust more in you, O Lord, and dare to follow your will even if it goes against conventional wisdom.
How sad, dear God, that as we reel from the effects of the recent pandemic, we begin our Christmas countdown still in the midst of a grave war right in the Holy Land; help us find ways to fulfill Isaiah's prophecy: "In the days to come, the mountain of the Lord's house shall be established as the highest mountain and raised above the hills. They shall beat their swords into plowshares and their spears into pruning hooks; one nation shall not raise the sword against another, shall they train for war again. O house of jacob, come, let us walk in the light of the Lord! (Isaiah 2:2, 4-5)
To walk in your light, O Lord, especially this Advent is to first of all admit how we have gone astray from your path, O Lord; of how we have relied more on ourselves and technologies that we have forgotten not only you O Lord but also one another; to walk in your light O Lord is to be in touch with our fellow humans, to find you present in each one of us despite our many differences like that centurion who approached you, Jesus, to heal his sick servant; this Advent season as we walk the streets with cool winds blowing and sun rays touching our skins, may we have time to go to your house, O Lord, to pray, to listen to your words, to simply be present before you and allow you to take us where you want us to be. Amen.
The Lord Is My Chef Sunday recipe for the Soul by Fr. Nicanor F. Lalog II First Sunday in the Season of Advent, Cycle B, 03 December 2023 Isaiah 63:16-17, 19; 64:2-7 ><}}}*> 1 Corinthians 1:3-9 ><}}}*> Mark 13:33-37
Photo by author, National Shrine of Our Lady of Fatima, 08 December 2022.
I was literally waiting the “advent” or coming of my doctors last Thursday as I wrote this homily for this first Sunday of Advent, the new year in our Church calendar. It was a hazy morning with some drizzle when I arrived for my doctors’ appointments.
But, it was a graceful moment too as I rediscovered the virtue of patience by being a patient myself again.
Sick people are called patients precisely because healing requires a lot of patience. Tons of patience in fact, especially if we are incapacitated or too weak to move. And the most difficult part of patience is waiting, from the simple waiting for doctors and nurses, waiting for the end of the day to waiting for our complete healing until we are well again.
Photo by author, First Sunday of Advent 2021, Basic Education Department, Our Lady of Fatima University, Valenzuela City.
The difficult part of waiting is that we are so conscious of time which we find to be flowing so slowly, making us irritable even doubtful if ever the one we are awaiting would ever come or materialize at all. That is why patience has become a virtue so rare these days.
Many people reject, even abhor patience in this age of instants when everybody wants to bear fruit but resent how it takes time to ripen. We want to have everything now na! We do not want to wait because we are no longer contented with whatever comes to us so that we advance our salaries and buy things in credit cards. Worst is this notorious practice of advancing public holidays to other dates closest to weekends to have “long weekend” celebrations. Even Christmas is not spared from our impatience! See how malls and local government buildings, homes and radio stations could not wait after the Halloween with all the lighting of Christmas trees and decors everywhere.
Unknown to us, we are robbing ourselves of very essence of the event of Christ’s coming to us when we manipulate time and its natural flow. When we lose patience, we stop waiting, then we miss the essence of life, of persons, of everything because we think waiting is being empty.
That is not true! Waiting is never empty. On the contrary, waiting is actually fullness because the very fact that we wait means we have.
Photo by author, lanterns for sale in San Fernando, Pampanga, November 2020.
When we were growing up, we loved waiting for dad’s coming home from work. We were filled with joy the moment we heard jeepneys stopping, hoping it was dad. Even if he would come home later in the evening when it was dark, we always felt so sure and excited of his arrival with pasalubong because he was always in our hearts.
That is the greatest joy of patient waiting – it is fullness of love due to our relationships. People who can’t wait, who are impatient are often loners, even complainers because they always feel empty within without any regard at all for relationships. Most likely, they have no relationships at all!
Photo by author, lanterns for sale in San Fernando, Pampanga, November 2020.
The first reading reminds us of this great beauty of patient waiting, of already having God himself within us with Isaiah calling God “our father, our redeemer” that both indicate kinship and relationships with him.
You, Lord, are our father, our redeemer you are named forever.
Isaiah 63:16
Very notable is the word “redeemer” that is go’el in the Hebrew language – the family relative who pays off debts or redeems a foreclosed property so that their family or tribe could keep it.
That is exactly what Jesus came for – to redeem us, to ransom us from our debt we could not repay God which is love. By dying on the Cross, Jesus saved us, redeemed us from the clutches of death and evil to be filled with life again. And that is why he is coming again to ultimately vanish all evil and sin to bring us to new heaven and new earth.
Physically we do not see Jesus but realistically, spiritually, we are certain he is with us, within us. Therefore, our waiting for him is never empty but always full of Jesus precisely due to the relationship we have in him and with him.
Photo by author, Advent 2019 in our former parish.
Waiting for Jesus is an expression of our faith. And we wait with him, just like the apostles in the agony of the garden. Notice how Mark narrated to us this calls for being watchful by Jesus; unlike Matthew, Mark mentions the time of Christ’s coming – at night.
Jesus said to his disciples: “Be watchful! Be alert! You do not know when the time will come… whether in the evening, or at midnight, or at cockcrow, or in the morning. May he not come suddenly and find you sleeping. What I say to you, I say to all: ‘Watch!'”
Mark 13:33, 35-37
This may be a minute detail for us but not for Mark who was the first to write the gospel of Jesus which happens to be the shortest and most concise. Night time in the Bible evokes darkness when evil seems to dominate the time which we continue to think of in the present.
But, we are children of light as St. Paul reminds us in one of his letters. And this Sunday he assures us in the second reading that “God is faithful” who “called us to fellowship” in him through Jesus Christ (1 Cor. 1:9). Let us not be afraid of the dark and long waiting for Jesus because he had conquered it when he walked on water, when he stilled the storm in the sea, when he rose again on Easter. Do not forget too that Jesus was born during the darkest night of the year, a reminder and assurance to us that no matter how dark our lives may be, Jesus is near, Jesus is here. So, have no fear in him, our brother and kin who had saved us!
Photo by author, Advent 2019 in our former parish.
Watch and be on guard on Christ’s coming and presence in darkness because too often, we are the ones who miss the Lord. Keep in mind that it is at night, it is in darkness when it is best to believe in the light. Here, we again find that waiting even in darkness in never empty because that is when we are so sure there would be great light bursting forth soon as Isaiah had prophesied that was eventually fulfilled in Jesus Christ. Sometimes, we get bored even impatient or sleepy waiting for Jesus like the five wise virgins who brought extra oil waiting for the groom to arrive. The key is to remain in Jesus, only Jesus, always Jesus as we pray like John the Beloved, Maranatha, “Come, Lord Jesus!” Amen.
Lawiswis Ng Salita ni P. Nicanor F. Lalog II, Ika-01 ng Disyembre 2023
Larawan kuha ni G. Jay Javier, shooting ng pelikula sa Fort Santiago.
Madalas kong biruin mga kaibigan at kakilala lalo na sa social media na magtanong kung anoang “long weekend”? Mula kasi nang maging pari ako, nilimot ko na ang salitang weekend dahil sa mga araw nito – Sabado at Linggo – ang aming gawain at gampanin sa simbahan. Inaasahan kami ng mga tao na makakasama nila tuwing weekend kaya naman lahat ng pagtitipon sa pamilya at mga kaibigan ay tinatapat namin sa ordinaryong araw upang ako ay makadalo.
Ngunit kung tutuusin, wala naman talagang weekend dahil hindi naman natatapos o nagwawakas – end – ang sanlinggo. Kaisipang Amerikano ang weekend kaya meron silang bukambibig na TGIF, Thank God It’s Friday na kung kailan natatapos o nagwawakas (end) lahat ng trabaho at opisina upang maglibang ng Sabado at Linggo, weekend. Pagkatapos ng weekend, kayod muli mula Lunes hanggang Biyernes.
Sa kabilang dako para sa ating mga Kristiyano, ang Linggo ang unang araw ng sanlinggo at hindi ito nagwawakas ng Biyernes o Sabado. Tingnan ninyong mabuti: Linggo, Lunes, Martes, Miyerkules, Huwebes, Biyernes, Sabado, Linggo ulit!
Ulit lang nang ulit ang isang linggo kada araw ng Linggo, ang Araw ng Panginoon o Dies Domini sa wikang Latin kung kailan tayo obligadong magsimba bilang alaala at pagpapaging-ganap ng Misterio Pascua ng Panginoong Jesus, ang kanyang pagpapakasakit, pagkamatay at muling pagkabuhay.
Iyan ang buhay din natin na ang kaganapan ay sa Langit na wala nang wakas kungdi buhay na walang hanggan. Ito ang dahilan mayroon tayong tinatawag na octaves of Christmas at Easter, ang walong-araw ng Kapaskuhan ng Pagsilang at ng Pagkabuhay muli ni Jesus.
Oo nga at mayroong pitong araw sa isang linggo, ngunit ipinakikita sa atin lalo ng Pasko ng Muling Pagkabuhay ni Jesus ang walang hanggang buhay sa ikawalong araw na pumapatak na Linggo palagi, ang Divine Mercy Sunday. Kung Pasko ng Pagsilang, papatak ito palagi ng Dakilang Kapistahan ni Maria, Ina ng Diyos ng Enero Primero na siyang ating ipinagdiriwang at hindi Bagong Taon kasi nga po Unang Linggo ng Adbiyento ang ating bagong taon sa Simbahan.
Tumpak din naman at may katotohanan ang awitin nina John, Paul, George at Ringo ng Beatles na “eight days a week, I lo—-ve you! Eight days a week, I lo—-ve you!
Snapshot mula sa post ni Kier Ofrasio sa Facebook, 30 Nobyembre 2023.
Kaya naman isang malaking kalokohan at kabaliwan itong naisipan noong panahon ni PGMA na ilipat mga piyesta opisyal sa Biyernes o Lunes upang magkaroon ng long weekend. Para daw sa ekonomiya. Sa madaling sabi, para sa pera.
Kuwarta. Kuwarta. At kuwarta pa rin ang usapan, hindi ba?
Nasaan na ang pagsasariwa ng diwa ng mga piyesta upisyal natin bilang isang sambayanan?
Pati ba naman kaarawan o kamatayan ng mga bayani natin na matapos maghandog ng buhay sa atin ay dadayain pa rin natin upang pagkakitaan?
Fer, fer! For real!
Bukod sa materyalismo, mayroon ding masamang implikasyon itong long weekend na ito sa ating moralidad at iyan ay ang kawalan natin ng matiyagang paghihintay – ang pagpapasensiya.
Lahat advanced sa atin. Hindi tayo makapaghintay sa araw ng suweldo. Kaya, vale dito, vale doon. Loan dito, loan doon. At hindi biro ang dami ng mga kababayan nating nasira ang buhay dahil sa pagkaubos ng kabuhayan nang malulong sa maling pag-gamit ng credit cards kung saan totoong-totoo ang kasabihang, “buy now, suffer later”. Kaya, heto ngayon, pati piyesta upisyal ina-advance natin!
Maaring nagkasiyahan tayo sa long weekend ngunit, lubos nga ba ating katuwaan at kagalakan? Napagyaman ba nito ating katauhan at mga ugnayan? O, nabaon lang tayo sa utang lalo ng kahangalan?
Larawan ng walang galawang trapik sa McArthur Highway mula sa Facebook ni Kier Ofrasio, 30 Nobyembre 2023.
Katawa-tawa tayong mga Pinoy simula nang mauso long weekend. Sa haba at tagal ng ating lockdown noong pandemya, long weekend pa rin sigaw natin?
Dapat siguro baguhin na ating taguring na Juan dela Cruz at gawing Juan Tamad.
O, Juan Tanga gaya nang naranasan noong a-trenta nang isara ng mga magagaling ang Monumento. Winalanghiya mga maralita at manggagawa na ipinaglaban ni Gat. Andres Bonifacio noong himagsikan na siyang dahilan kaya ating ipinagdiriwang kanyang kapanganakan noong ika-30 ng Nobyembre 1863.
Kung baga sa Inggles, iyon ang “the short of long weekend, an exercise in futility. And stupidity.” Sana magwakas na gawaing ito na dati naman ay wala sa ating kamalayan. Salamuch po!
The Lord Is My Chef Daily Recipe for the Soul by Fr. Nicanor F. Lalog II Friday in the Thirty-fourth Week of Ordinary Time, Year I, 01 December 2023 Daniel 7:2-14 ><]]]]'> + ><]]]]'> + ><]]]]'> Luke 21:29-33
God our loving Father, open our eyes to see beyond this world, to have vision not just sights; like Daniel your Prophet and Jesus your Son, enable us to see beyond material things that are superficial in nature.
Let us see not the future but see the deeper realities of life and of this world, to identify and recognize the beasts among us and within us that enslave us to sin; let us have the vision of your grand plans for us in heaven as we aspire to build a more humane society here on earth by seeing and sharing in the vision of Jesus Christ of life's fulness found only in you, O God; let us see your vision of timeless values taught and and exemplified to us by Jesus on the Cross.
May we remain focused on Jesus Christ and his Second Coming while in this world that is passing even in the midst of dryness and emptiness of life. Amen.
The Lord Is My Chef Daily Recipe for the Soul by Fr. Nicanor F. Lalog II
Thursday, Feast of St. Andrew, Apostle, 30 November 2023
Romans 10:9-18 <*(((>< + ><)))*> + <*(((>< + ><)))*> Matthew 4:18-22
Photo by author, Lake of Galilee, Israel, May 2019.
I have always wondered, Lord Jesus,
what was there in your lodging
to which Andrew "came and saw"
that he followed you right away?
What was there, or not there,
in the vast Lake of Galilee that
Andrew along with his brother Peter
that "Immediately they left their boat
and their father and followed you",
Jesus (Matthew 4:22)?
It seems to me, dear Jesus,
it was not the thing outside
that Andrew saw and did not see
that he promptly followed you;
his promptness in following you
was a result of something he both
found inside and did not find
within himself - that is YOU!
Teach me to be prompt in responding
to your call, dear Jesus, by admitting
the emptiness within me only YOU can
fill and make complete;
many times, I keep on looking for something
and somebody else in life when it is YOU
whom I should first search within me;
many times, I keep on coming and seeing
somewhere else when it is always YOU, Jesus,
who come first to me to see
and experience in the most ordinary,
even routinary circumstances of
daily life.
Dear Jesus,
teach me to be like St. Andrew
to keep that desire within to never
be contented, to constantly seek and
promptly follow you so
that I may proclaim you
more boldly.
Amen.
The Lord Is My Chef Daily Recipe for the Soul by Fr. Nicanor F. Lalog II
Wednesday in the Thirty-fourth Week of Ordinary Time, Year I, 29 November 2023
Daniel 5:1-6, 13-14, 16-17, 23-28 <'[[[[>< + ><]]]]'> Luke 21:12-19
Photo by author, St. Scholastica Retreat House, Baguio City, 23 August 2023.
God our merciful Father,
help us to stand always
for what is true and good,
just and proper;
give us the courage to
give testimony in Jesus Christ
especially in moments of trials
when the lures of the world
like power and fame
are so strong.
Teach us to be like your
servant Daniel:
Daniel answered the king: “You may keep your gifts, or give your present to someone else; but the writing I will read for you, O king, and tell you what it means. You have rebelled against the Lord of heaven. But the God in whose hand is your life breath and the whole course of your life, you did not glorify.
Daniel 5:17, 23
So many times, O God,
especially us your priests
and servants are so afraid,
others too numb, shamelessly
choosing and preferring
comforts than difficulties,
oblivious to your call for sacrifices
have given in to the temptations
of the world, embracing more
the rich and powerful,
gracing all their affairs and parties
unmindful of the needs of the poor.
Worst, many of us
have turned away from the
Cross of Jesus Christ,
refusing to give testimony
to him and his teachings,
sorely lacking in any
perseverance at all.
Have mercy on us, Father;
may we live each day
as our last day
here on earth,
each day a Parousia
of your Son Jesus,
so that like Daniel,
we serve you alone,
our God and Master
lest we too find
your words and writings
on the wall - MENE, TEKEL, PERES
warning of our downfall.
Amen.
Lawiswis ng Salita ni P. Nicanor F. Lalog II, Ika-28 ng Nobyembre 2023
Habang naghahanda para sa Dakilang Kapistahan ng Kristong Hari ng Sanlibutan noong Linggo (26 Nobyembre 2023), pabalik-balik sa aking gunita at alaala ang unang taon ng COVID-19 pandemic kasi noong mga panahong iyon, tunay na tunay nga si Jesus ang Hari nating lahat.
Marahil dahil sa takot at kawalan ng katiyakan noong mga panahon iyon na kay daming namamatay sa COVID at wala pang gamot na lunas maging mga bakuna, sadyang sa Diyos lamang kumakapit ang karamihan.
Hindi ko malimutan mga larawang ito noon sa dati kong parokya na mga tao ay lumuluhod sa kalsada sa pagdaraan ng paglilibot namin ng Santisimo Sakramento noong Dakilang Kapistahan ng Kristong Hari noog Nobyembre ng 2020.
Marubdob ang mga eksena noon at damang dama talaga pagpipitagan ng mga tao sa Santisimo Sakramento.
Sinimulan namin ito noong unang Linggo ng lockdown, ika-22 ng Marso 2020 na ikalimang linggo ng Kuwaresma. Tandang tanda ko iyon kasi birthday ko rin ang araw ng Linggong iyon.
At dahil walang nakapagsimba sa pagsasara ng mga simbahan noon, minabuti kong ilibot ang Santisimo Sakramento ng hapong iyon upang masilayan man lamang ng mga tao si Jesus, madama nilang buhay ang Panginoon at kaisa sila sa pagtitiis sa gitna ng pandemic.
Hiniram ko ang F-150 truck ng aming kapit-bahay. Hindi ko pinalagyan ng gayak ang truck maliban sa puting mantel sa bubong nito kung saan aking pinatong ang malaki naming monstrance. Nagsuot ako ng kapa at numeral veil habang mga kasama ko naman ay dala ang munting mga bell para magpaalala sa pagdaraan ng Santisimo.
Pinayagan kami ng aming Barangay chairman si Kuya Rejie Ramos sa paglilibot ng Santisimo at pinasama ang kanilang patrol kung saan sumakay ang aming mga social communications volunteer na Bb. Ria De Vera at Bb. Anne Ramos na silang may kuha ng lahat ng larawan noon hanggang sa aking pag-alis at paglipat ng assignment noong Pebrero 2021.
Nakakaiyak makita noon mga tao, bata at matanda, lumuluhod sa kalsada. Ang iba ay may sindi pang kandila at talagang inabangan paglilibot namin na aming inanunsiyo sa Facebook page ng parokya noong umaga sa aming online Mass.
Pati mga nakasakay sa mga sasakyan nagpupugay noon sa Santisimo Sakramento.
Nang maglaon, marami sa mga tahanan ang naglagay na ng mga munting altar sa harap ng bahay tuwing araw ng Linggo sa paglilibot namin ng Santisimo Sakramento.
Napakasarap balikan mga araw na iyon na bagama’t parang wakas na ng panahon o Parousia dahil sa takot sa salot ng COVID-19, buhay ang pananampalataya ng mga tao dahil nadama ng lahat kapanatilihan ng Diyos kay Jesu-Kristong Panginoon natin.
Katunayan, noong unang Linggo ng aming paglilibot ng Santisimo Sakramento, umulan ng kaunti nang kami ay papunta na sa huling sitio ng aming munting parokya. Nagtanong aking mga kasamahan, sina Pipoy na driver at Oliver na aking alalay kung itutuloy pa namin ang paglilibot. Sabi ko ay “oo”.
Pagkasagot ko noon ay isang bahag-hari ang tumambad sa amin kaya’t kami’y kinilabutan at naiyak sa eksena. Noon ko naramdaman ang Panginoon tinitiyak sa akin bilang kura noon na hindi niya kami pababayaan.
At tunay nga, hindi niya kami – tayong lahat- pinabayaan.
Kaya noong Biyernes, ika-24 ng Nobyembre 2023, napagnilayan ko sa mga pagbasa kung paanong itinalaga muli ni Judas Macabeo ang templo ng Jerusalem matapos nilang matalo at mapalayas ang mananakop na si Hariong Antiochos Epiphanes habang ang ebanghelyo noon ay ang tungkol sa paglilinis ni Jesus ng templo.
Nakalulungkot isipin na matapos dinggin ng Diyos ating mga panalangin noong kasagsagan ng pandemya, tila nakalimutan na natin Siya. Kakaunti pa rin nagsisimba sa mga parokya at nahirati ang marami sa online Mass.
Walang pagdiriwang ni kapistahan ang Simbahan sa pagbabalik sa “normal” na buhay buhat nang mawala o manghina ang virus ng COVID.
At ang pinamakamasaklap sa lahat, hindi na yata si Jesus ang naghahari sa ating buhay ngayon.
Balik sa dating gawi ang maraming mga tao.
At nakakahiyang sabihin, hindi na nalampasan ng mga tao at pati ilang mga pari katamaran noong pandemic.
Nakakahiyang aminin na pagkaraan ng araw-araw na panawagan sa Facebook noong isang linggo na lumuhod at magbigay-galang kay Kristong Hari na nasa Banal na Sakramento mga tao, maraming mga pari noong Linggo ang kinatamaran magsuot na nararapat na damit tulad ng kapa at numeral veil. At pagkatapos, sasabihin, isisigaw, Mabuhay ang Kristong Hari?
Hindi pa lubusang tapos ang COVID, pero, ibang-iba na katayuan natin ngayon. Malayang muli nakakagalaw, walang face mask maliban sa ilang piling lugar tulad ng pagamutan. Ang tanong ngayong huling linggo ng ating kalendaryo sa Simbahan ay, si Jesus pa rin ba ang haring ating kinikilala, sinusunod at pinararangalan sa ating buhay, maging sa salita at mga gawa?
Nasasalamin ba natin si Kristong Hari sa ating mga sarili, lalo na kaming mga pari Niya?
The Lord Is My Chef Daily Recipe for Soul by Fr. Nicanor F. Lalog II
Monday in the Thirty-fourth Week of Ordinary Time, Year I, 27 November 2023
Daniel 1:1-6, 8-20 ><}}}}*> + ><}}}}*> + ><}}}}*> Luke 21:1-4
Photo by Dra. Mylene A. Santos, MD in Tagalag, Valenzuela City, 17 November 2023.
Praise and glory to you,
our loving Father!
Thank you
in bringing us closer to you
in Jesus everyday
especially in this final stretch
of our church calendar
as we come to prepare for Christmas soon.
But, rather than focusing
on the outside appearances
and material inclinations
of our Christmas feelings,
teach us to empty ourselves
to be filled by you in Jesus Christ!
Let us be poor, O God!
Let us embrace poverty
and simplicity
to experience you,
your coming,
your presence
in Jesus,
our Emmanuel!
Let us treasure poverty
for it is our true wealth
in this life
like that “poor old widow”
who gave everything she had
into the temple collection box;
let us realize that it is in poverty
that we find true wisdom
and strength
like what Daniel and his companions
have taught the chief chamberlain
of King Nebuchadnezzar
(Daniel 1:11-20).
Let us be poor, O God,
like Jesus Christ to find
power and strength in weakness,
glory and honor in humility,
and life in death.
Amen.