A Prayer For Those Who Love Like Christ

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The Lord Is My Chef Breakfast Recipe-Prayer
Tuesday, 06 November 2018, Week XXXI, Year II
Philippians 2:5-11//Luke 14:15-24

            Lord Jesus Christ, I praise and thank you today for your gift of kenosis, your self-emptying love for us all that even “though you were in the form of God, you did not regard equality with God something to be grasped.  Rather, you emptied yourself, coming to us as a human, humbling yourself in obedience to death on a cross.” (Phil.2:6-8)

            Today Lord Jesus, I pray for all the men and women, including the children from all walks of life who imitate you in their own little ways of self-emptying to express their deep love and concern for others.  First among them are the rescuers and relatives coming to Natonin, Mountain Province.

             When I first saw the story of how Raffy Tima and his team, along with the rescue workers and relatives of residents walked more than seven hours to the site buried by the landslide, I was moved by their great sacrifice and love to go there when it is already empty of life.  Theirs was also a kenosis, an emptying of themselves of so many things to communicate your love for people wiped out by the landslide.

               Every day Lord, there are also countless people who dare to walk despite the dangers and discomforts so we can all have a good morning like those who delivered various goods and services during the night, those who have to cut short their sleep and leave their families so we can have fresh vegetables and meat and fish, newspapers to read and newscasts to watch and listen, doctors and nurses to monitor our loved ones in the hospitals, and so many others who do many things that can never be compensated by any amount of money.

                I pray most specially Lord Jesus for those closest to us, our family and loved ones, including our helpers who never get tired of patiently walking up to us, emptying themselves even of their dignity and honor, sacrificing everything just to take care of us, to tend our wounds and sickness, to listen to our woes and endless complaints, bearing all our insensitivities.

                 Bless them, Lord Jesus, in their kenosis or self-emptying to fill many of us empty of respect and dignity within.  Bless them Jesus that they may always heed your call to come to your banquet of loving service for others by setting aside their own comforts and concerns like in your parable today.  AMEN. Fr. Nicanor F. Lalog II, Parokya ng San Juan Apostol at Ebanghelista, Gov. F. Halili Ave., Bagbaguin, Sta. Maria, Bulacan 3022. 

*Photo by Mr. Raffy Tima of GMA-7 News, early Sunday morning at Natonin, 04 November 2018.  Used with permission.

Asking Jesus

45333784_1945748215727504_3541947692357779456_nThe Lord Is My Chef Sunday Recipe, Week XXXI-B, 04 November 2018
Deuteronomy 6:2-6///Hebrews 7:23-28///Mark 12:28-34 
                          

            We have seen these past two weeks Jesus in His journey back to Jerusalem asking us – through James and John, and the blind Bartimaeus – the quintessential question, “What do you want me to do for you?”  But this Sunday, we find a reversal of roles when, One of the scribes came to Jesus and asked him, “Which is the first of all the commandments?” (Mk.12:28)

             What question would you ask Jesus if given that chance?

             Jesus had finally reached Jerusalem, frequenting the Temple area which He had cleansed upon His arrival on Palm Sunday.  Mark tells us the building up of antagonism against Him by His enemies asking Him with many questions.  First were the chief priests, scribes and elders who asked about His authority in cleansing the Temple and then the Pharisees who teamed up with the Herodians to ensnare Him with the question about the paying of taxes to the emperor.  Last to test Jesus were the Sadducees who asked about the resurrection by presenting to Him the case of a woman who had married seven brothers after dying one after the other.  Mark tells us how Jesus satisfactorily answered all their questions that people were so amazed with Him.  It was at this time when a scribe who had heard them disputing and saw how well Jesus had answered them came forward with the question we also ask up to this time, “Which is the first of all the commandments?”

             Like that man who asked Jesus what must he do to inherit eternal life (Mk.10:17), we can also identify with this scribe whose question is without guile.  Like him, we find ourselves in many occasions asking the same question due to confusions from the so many things to be followed and fulfilled to be a good person and enter heaven.  We know deep in our hearts like him how humans have stretched God’s commandments that have now exceeded more than ten that many could not even recite in order.  Like this scribe, we have seen how faith and religion have ceased to be a way of life but more of casuistry, of obeying and keeping rules that made God look like a cop watching over us, ready to apprehend us for any violations instead of being a loving Father living with us.  Like that scribe, deep in us is a longing for something higher, of something really akin with God than with our present situation when everything seems to be relative and on ground level.

             We are known by the questions we ask, not by the answers we give that are often wrong or far from truth and reality.  Asking the right question leads us to the right answer and solution to our problems.  Even if we cannot find any ready answer to our questions but for as long as we are asking the right ones, we find clues for their answers as we move on with our lives.  Here in our gospel today we find how our questions reveal who we really are, indicating our focus and distractions in life.  In preparation for His coming pasch in Jerusalem, Jesus would reveal to us today and next Sunday the more essential things with God regarding our obedience to His laws and our attitude on giving.  So, let us reflect on the reply of Jesus to the question of the scribe which is based on the “Shema Israel” prayer that every pious Jew must know by heart:  “The first is this:  ‘Hear O Israel!  The Lord our God is Lord alone!  You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul, with all your soul, and with all your strength.’  The second is this:  ‘You shall love your neighbor as yourself.’  There is no other commandment greater than these.” (Mk.12:29-31) 

           Shema Israel is a verbatim quote from Deuteronomy 6:4-5.  It is a prayer that evolved from the Jews’ experience and reflection of the Ten Commandments as a love involving their relationship with God and with others.  More than a list of laws to be followed, the Decalogue became the sign of God’s covenant with Israel, a relationship to be kept with God at its center whose face is found among everyone as brothers and sisters.  Hence, when the scribe asked Jesus which is the first of all the commandments, it was a desire to find God Himself.  And when Jesus saw how the scribe had understood His answer, He told him “You are not far from the kingdom of God.” (Mk.12:34) 

           Observe that child-like attitude of the scribe with his question.  He was looking up to Jesus, looking for God in Him.  When we ask Jesus any question, that is the only attitude required of us.  Recall the different questions asked to Jesus in the daily readings last month like those concerning inheritance or how many would be saved (Lk.12:13, 23), or if His teachings are meant for us or for everyone (Lk.12:41).  See how Jesus ignored the questions because they were the least of His concerns.  Instead, He proceeded with His teachings to emphasize the importance of storing riches in heaven, passing through the narrow gate and being a wise and faithful steward.  When a teacher of the law asked Jesus who is my neighbor, the Lord replied with the parable of the Good Samaritan so that he would realize in himself that we are all neighbors who must show love and concern for one another.  When Pilate asked Jesus during His trial, the Lord clarified his questions so as to remind him that He is more than of this world.  And speaking of the fourth gospel, it is only John who had recorded Jesus repeatedly saying His being lifted up in glory, that is, His crucifixion when He would draw everyone to Himself (Jn.12: 32).  Here we find my dear readers how that every time we ask Jesus a question, the answer would always be found on His Cross because we can only look upward to Christ crucified.  It is only on the Cross can we be led to higher things like God Himself!  Ask Jesus any question like:

        Do you love me, Lord?
        Why all the sufferings in the world?
        Where are we going?

          Try asking Jesus like a child, like that scribe and most likely, when we see His pains and sufferings on His outstretched arms and folded legs, head crowned with thorns with expressive eyes and lips filled with love, we find His answers on the Cross.  This is why Jesus is “able to save e to save those who approach God through Him (Heb.7:24-26)” because He is our High Priest who literally hanged high up on the Cross for us.  May you be blessed to find God in your questions to Jesus!  AMEN. Fr. Nicanor F. Lalog II, Parokya ni San Juan Apostol at Ebanghelista, Gov. F. Halili Ave., Bagbaguin, Sta. Maria, Bulacan 3022.  Email: lordmychef@gmail.com

*Photo by Richard Val Candelaria.  Used with permission.

“So Far Away” by Carole King (1971)

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LordMyChefSundayMusic//Week XXX-B//28 October 2018
Jesus Calls Us In Our Blindness

            Our LordMyChefSundayMusic is for all the Bartimaeus shouting and longing for love and attention.  Today’s gospel tells us the story of the blind Bartimaeus who was a beggar at the roadside of Jericho.  When he heard Jesus passing by, he began to cry out to Him, saying“Jesus, Son of David, have pity on me!”  And many rebuked him, telling him to be silent.  But he kept calling out all the more, “Son of David, have pity on me!”  Jesus stopped, called him and eventually healed him.  He then followed Jesus to Jerusalem.

            The story of  Bartimaeus happens daily in our lives, in our modern Jericho when we are blinded by so many things that we forget the people around us who merely want to be loved and cared for, asking for just a little attention or smile from us.  Listening closely to the sad but warm melody of Carole King’s “So Far Away” we also find the same situation of Bartimaeus:  the emotional distance between lovers, among people that is more painful than physical distance.  Like Bartimaeus, we sometimes feel to be so near yet so far from others because they refuse to “see” us as another person.

            This Sunday Jesus is assuring us that unlike most lovers or people in general, He is never far away from us for He always comes to stop by our side to comfort us with our afflictions including our many blindness that prevent us from seeing the more essential things in life like love, kindness, and simple joys of being alive.  Be a Jesus to the many Bartimaeus around, especially those nearest to us at home or the family.   

So far away
Doesn’t anybody stay in one place any more?
It would be so fine to see your face at my door
It doesn’t help to know you’re just time away
Long ago I reached for you and there you stood
Holding you again could only do me good
Oh how I wish I could but you’re so far away

*Photo from Google.

Jesus is a Radical

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The Lord Is My Chef Sunday Recipe, Week XXIX-B, 21October 2018
Isaiah 53:10-11///Hebrews 4:14-16///Mark 10:35-45

             Twenty years ago, a popular brand of clothing came with shirts printed with the iconic face of Che Guevarra.  It was the most “in” or most cool to wear among teenagers though many of them knew nothing who Che Guevarra is.  In a newspaper interview, the marketing manager of the clothing company explained the image of the Cuban rebel leader perfectly fit their fashion sense that is supposed to be “revolutionary”.  It may sound funny and superficial but that is how we often see a rebel who is both a radical and a subversive trying to destabilize the status quo, even out to destroy everything to start a new beginning in government and society.

             But that is not the essence of the word radical which came from the Latin word “radix” that means “roots”.  To be radical means to go back to the roots of a belief or a system like in government and in religion.  So often, as the radical strives to go back to the roots of a belief or system, he is also labeled as subversive because of the need to overturn or remove false images and ideas to bring out the original sense.  Last Sunday during canonization of new saints led by Pope Paul VI and Salvadoran Archbishop Oscar Romero, Pope Francis said Jesus is a radical when He told a man to sell his possessions, give to the poor its proceeds and to come follow Him.  It was a very radical step because that is the very root of eternal life which is to leave everything behind for God.  And in that sense, indeed, Jesus is a radical and a subversive too.

             Jesus summoned them and said to them, “You know that those who are recognized as rulers over the Gentiles lord it over them, and their great ones make their authority over them felt.  But it shall not be so among you.  Rather, whoever wishes to be great among you will be the slave of all.  For the Son of Man did not come to be served but to serve and to give his life as a ransom for many.” (Mk.10:43-45)

             Keep in mind that Jesus is now approaching Jerusalem and had predicted for the final third time to the Twelve His coming Passion, Death, and Resurrection.  And He is intensifying too His teachings to His disciples and to us in these remaining six Sundays before we usher in Advent Season for Christmas next month.  In no uncertain terms, He clarifies today the true meaning of discipleship when the brothers James and John requested Him that they be seated beside Him when He reigns in glory.  The two brothers have not fully grasped the full meaning of the pasch of the Lord.  They have blindly followed Him because they knew He would triumph in the end and would want to ensure that they would not miss every bit of His victory.

             The same thing is true with us when sometimes we are like James and John, willing to suffer and bear all hardships in exchange of something so precious, of something that would greatly benefit us after all the sacrifices.  As we would say in Filipino, “hindi na bale, basta…” wherein there is always the overarching sense of rewards in every suffering.  No wonder, many politicians are willing to forego of any little sanity and dignity left in them, sacrifice everything and everyone including family and honor just to be elected into office because of the rewards.  The late Jesuit Fr. Thomas Green used to call this in his books as “humility with a hook” when people would “humbly” bear everything in exchange of a great personal favor.  In that case, there is no real suffering nor service or love at all!

             Jesus is asking us today to be radical in our being Christian, for us to go back to the very root of His mission, that is, save the world by dying on the cross.  And that means we cannot be His disciples and have access to salvation without sharing in His death in order to have a part in His resurrection.  This is the radical idea too of Isaiah’s oracle in the first reading when God said how through the suffering of His servant – the coming Christ – “shall justify many, and their guilt he shall bear.” (Is. 53:11)  Jesus on the cross is the supreme manifestation of the Father’s love for us all and the ultimate reason for all our hopes in life.  Therefore, like Christ, it is into the Father’s hands that we must entrust the future without expecting anything in return!  And this we can achieve if we go back again to our roots, to being like a child confidently trusting our parents that everything would be perfectly well in life.  Like a child, we must learn to believe and to love simply without thinking of how things would eventually turn out.  Like a child, let us simply love and just do it for love.  Period.

             To radically follow Jesus means we also have to subvert, that is, overturn all our ideas about Him and one another.  When Jesus spoke of His “baptism” and “cup of drink” to James and John, He was asking them and us today to cast away and forget all our human standards and conventions of discipleship as if we are entitled to anything at all.  That God blesses only people with comfortable and affluent life, that God loves only those who are good… these are not true!  If wealth and health are the true measures of the goodness of God, then He is not good at all because there are more people suffering financially, emotionally, physically and spiritually.  In fact, in my own experience and among many people, I would dare and radically claim that when we go through many sufferings, it means God trusts us so much that we can handle and bear such trials in life like His Son Jesus Christ on the Cross.  Rejoice when you are going through difficulties because God loves you and believes in you!  Remember that our relationship with Jesus and with one another is always based on a life of service, of servanthood wherein we try our best to make the world more humane as possible, enabling the kingdom of God to come.  It is so unlike the world where relationships are based on power and domination that many of our politicians have turned politics into a family business by creating political dynasties that ironically isolate them from others and from God.

              It is always difficult to live radically as a disciple of Christ but let us be consoled by the words of the author of the Letter to the Hebrews who said we have in Jesus a high priest who “has similarly been tested in every way” (Heb.14:15) like us so that when discipleship becomes so difficult for us, “let us confidently approach the throne of grace to receive mercy and to find grace for timely help.” (Heb.4:16)  This Sunday, let us not be afraid to go back to our roots in God through Jesus Christ who abandoned everything into the Father’s hands to be a servant of everyone.  Let us be radical in our love and service for one another.  A blessed Sunday to everyone!  AMEN. Fr. Nicanor F. Lalog II, Parokya ni San Juan Apostol at Ebanghelista, Gov. F. Halili Ave., Bagbaguin, Sta. Maria, Bulacan 3022.  Email:  lordmychef@gmail.com

*Photo by my former student at ICSB-Malolos, Arch. Philip Santiago at the Basilica della Santissima Trinita, Fatima, Portugal, October 2018.  Used with permission.

Praying With Courage Like Jesus

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The Lord Is My Chef Breakfast Recipe-Prayer
Wednesday//10October2018//Week XXVII, Year II
Galatians 2:1-2, 7-14///Luke 11:1-4

             What a wonderful grace for your apostles to have witnessed you prayed, O Lord!  It must have been a great sight to behold, seeing you deep in prayer that they asked you to teach them how to pray.

             How sad, though, that we have taken for granted the only prayer you have taught us to pray, the Our Father.  It has become so ordinary, even mechanical for us.  Sometimes, we really do not pray your prayer but merely recite it, lacking courage and vibrancy to inspire others to pray.

            Give us courage, O Lord, a lot of courage to pray your prayer with more conviction by making “God’s kingdom come and His will be done” as we pray it. Give us courage to pray it not only begging for forgiveness to our sins but most of all to forgive those who have sinned against us.

            Like St. Paul in the first reading, give us the courage to boldly profess to everyone, even to our peers, the truth of your gospel.  Make us truthful in praying the “Our Father” so that when others see and hear us, they may ask us too to teach them to pray like the Twelve. AMEN. Fr. Nicanor F. Lalog II, Parokya ng San Juan Apostol at Ebanghelista, Gov. F. Halili Ave., Bagbaguin, Sta. Maria, Bulacan 3022. Send e-mail to < lordmychef@gmail.com>.

Photo by Fr. Nick F. Lalog II, the Church of the Our Father, Holy Land Pilgrimage, 19 April 2017.

Get Back To Whom We All Belong, God

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The Lord Is My Chef Sunday Recipe, Week XXVII-B, 07 October 2018
Genesis 2:18-24///Hebrews 2:9-11///Mark 10:2-14

             Lately I have been having some strange feelings that I think probably comes with age as well as with the reality of my mortality.  Don’t get me wrong.  It is not about being morbid or depressed or whatever.  It is just a kind of feeling wishing every day is a “throwback Thursday” when I want to listen to old songs, see old friends and visit old places I have been to.  It is like singing the Beatles’ “Get Back” over and over again because that is the actual direction we all take eventually in life:  we get back to ourselves, back to our roots, back to everything and everyone, and most of all, back to God.

             Jesus Himself in our gospel these past weeks has been going to the same direction.  From Caesarea Philippi, He took a U-turn to go back to Jerusalem to fulfill His mission which is to get back the people to God.  After identifying Himself as the Messiah, Jesus held special lessons about discipleship with the Twelve until they reached Capernaum the other Sunday where they stayed in a “house”.  Today and next Sunday, Mark tells us how Jesus entertained some questions from the crowd that are very relevant even to our own time, divorce and how to gain eternal life.  In both instances, Jesus would bring us all back to God the Father for the answers.

             The Pharisees approached Jesus and asked, “Is it lawful for a husband to divorce his wife?”  They were testing him.  He said to them in reply, “What did Moses command you?”  They replied, Moses permitted a husband to write a bill of divorce and dismiss her.”  But Jesus told them, “Because of the hardness of your hearts he wrote you this commandment.  But from the beginning of creation, God made them male and female.  For this reason a man shall leave his father and mother and be joined to his wife, and the two shall become one flesh.  So they are no longer two but one flesh.  Therefore what God has joined together, no human being must separate.” (Mk.10:2-9)

             There we have it from the Lord Himself, loud and clear.  Jesus wants us to go back to the very roots and cause of our relationships, God.  More than the fidelity of husband and wife to each other, our gospel is reminding us to always see God as the foundation of the ties that bind us together as persons and communities.  More than the law and human situation, Jesus went back farther to God as the ultimate root and origin of everything in this life in explaining divorce to the Pharisees.  This explains why our first reading is taken from Genesis where it is shown how the sages of Old Testament reflected on the realities of life:  that everything happened because God the Creator willed it so “in the beginning.”  We came into being because of God, “male and female he created them.”  Most of all, it is very clear that it is not man who caused God to create woman for she has always been a part of His plan because “it is not good for man to be alone.  I will make a suitable partner for him.” (Gen. 2:18)  It is also God who is the reason why we get attracted and desire to enter into communion with others most especially in getting married.  Our relationships in general and marriage in particular are a part of the grand design of God; we come together because of God.  And we can only recover our original unity in God through man and woman, “that is why a man leaves his father and mother and clings to his wife, and the two of them become one flesh.” (Gen.2:24)  Human relationships must be governed by God and not by humans.  We also find in these short passages the beautiful vision of marriage and sexuality that drives man and woman toward union, not the impulse of a carnal and uncontrollable blind instinct.

            So many things happen that mar and destroy our relationships.  People change, even those in our family, in our circle of friends, and most especially with spouses.  Without being simplistic about it, Jesus tells us that one reason for this is “the hardness of our hearts” when we are filled with ego, when we refuse to love.  That imagery by the Lord of hardened hearts is timely as we venerate tomorrow the relic of the incorrupt heart of St. Padre Pio at UST.  I am not surprised that St. Padre Pio’s heart has remained incorrupt with the holiness he had shown especially with the sick and the sinners that his heart must be so filled with love of God.  A heart without love is a dead heart, a heart of stone that is hard and selfish.  And this is why I am not also surprised at all when arrogant creatures like politicians caught on camera shamelessly demeaning people later complained of chest pains after going viral in social media.  They are like the Pharisees with hardened hearts.

 A good friend recently wrote in his blog a beautiful reflection about the South African term “Ubuntu” that is very appropriate for us today as we experience divisions due to politics (https://relativejoyforyou.wordpress.com/2018/10/05/ubuntu/).  Ubuntu is the belief that we are defined by our compassion and kindness towards others.  According to my friend, there can be many other ways of defining or describing “Ubuntu” which I believe also rests on God being the very root and foundation of our relationships.  I recalled his blog as I prayed on our gospel this Sunday, especially that part when “in the house the disciples questioned Jesus about this.” (Mk.10:10)  I wish to direct your attention more to that going back in the house where they were staying which is for me an imagery of Jesus bringing back the Twelve into the very heart of God to explain the evils men do to destroy our wonderful ties and relationships.  And for the second time in three weeks, Jesus again would call children to tell the Twelve that “the kingdom of God belongs to such as these.  Amen, I say to you, whoever does not accept the kingdom of God like a child will not enter it.” (Mk.10:14-15)

                 Ubuntu is also a call to go back to our being children.  Two Sundays ago we reflected that the way we relate with children and women reflects our true relationship with God.  After explaining the nature of our relationships being rooted in God, Jesus “inside the house” again showed that the children embody the reality of our communion because only they can show true kindness and compassion, love and trust with one another.  Children have that unique gift of being “aware” of our single origin and unity in God.  By embracing children, Jesus is again inviting us to go back to the pristine image of holiness, of oneness with God and with others when we regard everyone as “brothers and sisters” in Christ. (Heb.2:11)  AMEN. Fr. Nicanor F. Lalog II, Parokya ni San Juan Apostol at Ebanghelista, Gov. F. Halili Ave., Bagbaguin, Sta. Maria, Bulacan 3022

Photo by Fr. Nick f. Lalog II, Wailing Wall of Jerusalem, April 2017.

True Greatness Comes From Being Little and Small

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The Lord Is My Chef Breakfast Recipe-Prayer
Tuesday//02October2018//Memorial of the Guardian Angels
Exodus 23:20-23///Matthew 18:1-5, 10

            Dearest God our Father, today you give us this special memorial of the Guardian Angels to remind us anew that the way to true greatness is in our becoming like little children.  How we as children long ago loved praying, delighting in the rhythm of “Angel of God my guardian dear, to whom His love commits me here; Ever this day be at my side to light and guard, to rule and guide.  Amen.”

             Back then when we were so young, we trusted you so much, God that we tried hard to be good boys and girls so as not to sadden our guardian angels when we sin.  But as we grew up, feeling matured enough, we have disregarded you and our guardian angels because we have come to believe more, rely more, and trust more on ourselves.  We felt so independent and so strong, not needing any guidance from you or from angels you send us.  We thought that to be the greatest, we must be “free” from you and your holy will by asserting our “adulthood”.

             But, experience has taught us that real growth and maturity that lead to true greatness can only happen “unless we turn and become like little children.” (Mt.18:2)  What a paradox, O God, that the highest maturity possible for us all is in becoming like little children for that is when we also allow your angels in heaven to always look upon your face to direct our words and actions to your holy will. AMEN. Fr. Nicanor F. Lalog II, Parokya ng San Juan Apostol at Ebanghelista, Gov. F. Halili Ave., Bagbaguin, Sta. Maria, Bulacan 3022.

*Photo from Google:  “Christ Among Children” by German Expressionist Emil Nolde painted in 1910 now at the Museum of Modern Art in New York. See  https://hamonlibraryblog.org/2015/01/15/emil-nolde-christ-among-the-children/

 

Discipleship, Not Membership

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The Lord Is My Chef Sunday Recipe, Week XXVI-B, 30 September 2018
Numbers 11:25-29///James 5:1-6///Mark 9:38-48

            Due to the increasing prices of most goods like vegetables and meat products, lately I have been buying most of our groceries at a membership club that offers sales and discounts.  But I have also noticed something so strange, really odd with the people going to these Costco copycats that have become an “R&R” destination like a park or a mall, literally a “pasyalan”.  See how people – not really shoppers – take “groufies” or “selfies” on alleys stacked with imported goods while their grocery cart only have a handful of products readily available in a sari-sari store.  I have asked some of the staff there who told me how some people go to their exclusive, membership-only shop simply for bragging rights in social media like Facebook.

            And there lies the big problem even in our Christian way of life:  we are so concerned with our membership forgetting the more essential which is discipleship.

            At that time, John said to Jesus, “Teacher, we saw someone driving out demons in your name, and we tried to prevent him because he does not follow us.”  Jesus replied, “Do not prevent him… For whoever is not against us is for us.  Whoever causes one of these little ones who believe in me to sin, it would be better for him if a great millstone were put around his neck and he were thrown into the sea.” (Mk.9:38-39, 40, 42)

            Today our gospel is reminding us that there can be no compromises with our Lord Jesus Christ who can be meek and stern, open-minded and demanding.  For Him, the sky is the limit in everything that is good, regardless of affiliations; however, when it comes with evil, the Lord is very clear too that there are no excuses.  What is wrong is always wrong.  Hence, we find in the following verses His famous teachings that “if your hand causes you to sin, cut it off.  It is better for you to enter into life maimed than with two hands to go into Gehennna, into the unquenchable fire.  And if your foot causes you to sin, cut it off.  It is better for you to enter heaven crippled than with two feet to be thrown into Gehenna.  And if your eye causes you to sin, pluck it out.  Better for you to enter into the kingdom of God with one eye than with two eyes to be thrown into Gehenna.”(Mk.9:43-48)  Of course, these teachings are not to be taken literally for Jesus was just using a literary device to stress His point on the need to be good by getting into the very core or root of our sinfulness.  One of the important things I have learned during our 30-day retreat came from our 93-year old Jesuit director, Fr. Arthur Shea who told me that once we understand our sins, then we sin less often.  That is also the point of Jesus:  understand why we commit sin, then we learn how to avoid committing that sin again.

            When we consider the other teachings by Jesus these past two Sundays, we go back to that crucial point in Caesarea Philippi where He asked us all, “who do you say that I am?”  It is not enough to simply know in our minds who Jesus is, to belong to His group, to be “in” with Him though that is the first step.  In fact, Jesus came so that we may all be gathered into one again under God our Father.  That was also the point of Moses to Joshua in the first reading when he declared how God would want to “bestow his spirit” to everyone even those not present in the meeting because we all belong to God.  In John, Jesus mentioned how He cares for the other sheep not in His fold to show that indeed He is the Good Shepherd (Jn.10:16) who gathers His flock. It is clear that we all belong to the Father through Christ in the Holy Spirit.  But that is just the starting point:  more essential than membership to Jesus is discipleship.
              Discipleship means professing Jesus is the Christ like Peter in Caesarea Philippi not once but every day in our life by denying ourselves, taking up our cross and following the Lord daily.  Discipleship means recognizing Jesus among the children and women, among the poor and suffering, preferring nothing for the love of Christ.  Discipleship means taking a U-turn from our sinfulness to truly follow Jesus Christ by being kind and just with the poor as St. James stressed in the second reading today.  This Sunday through the Eucharist, let us not simply renew our membership in Christ in Holy Communion but most of all reaffirm our discipleship in Him by going forth after the Mass to proclaim His gospel in words and in deeds.  A blessed week to everyone! AMEN. Fr. Nicanor F. Lalog II, Parokya ni San Juan Apostol at Ebanghelista, Gov. F. Halili Ave., Bagbaguin, Sta. Maria, Bulacan 3022
*Photo by Mr. Raffy Tima of GMA-7 News, Batanes after Typhoon Ompong, 17 September 2018.  Used with permission.

Prayer To Always Profess Who Jesus Is

sanlorenzoruiz
The Lord Is My Chef Breakfast Recipe-Prayer
Friday//28September2018//Week XXV//Year II
Ecclesiastes 3:1-11///Luke 9:18-22

             Today we remember and celebrate, O God, San Lorenzo Ruiz and his Dominican companions martyred in Nagasaki.  Most of all, we recall the strange circumstances behind his wonderful story, of how in your mercy and grace San Lorenzo Ruiz ended up victorious and glorious as the first Filipino saint when he shed blood for his great faith in you, O God.  Truly, “There is an appointed time for everything, and a time for every affair under the heavens.” (Eccl.3:1)

             Bless us, O God, like San Lorenzo Ruiz to recognize every time, every moment of our lives as an occasion to answer the question of Jesus, “who do you say that I am?” (Lk.9:20).  Give us the courage to cooperate with your grace always present in us like with St. Peter and with all the other saints to profess who Jesus Christ is.

             You, O God, “has made everything appropriate to its time, and has put the timeless into their hearts, without man’s ever discovering, from beginning to end, the work which God has done.”(Eccl.3:11)  Let us seize always every appropriate time you have made for us to be faithful to you in Jesus Christ like San Lorenzo Ruiz who professed to his executioners that “if I had a thousand lives, I would gladly offer them all to God.” AMEN. Fr. Nicanor F. Lalog II, Parokya ng San Juan Apostol at Ebanghelista, Gov. F. Halili Ave., Bagbaguin, Sta. Maria, Bulacan 3022.

Photo from Google.

A Lamp of Jesus

person standing on shoreline beside gray tubular lantern
Photo by Alan Cabello on Pexels.com
The Lord Is My Chef Breakfast Recipe-Prayer
Monday//24September2018//Week XXV//Year II
Proverbs 3:27-34///Luke 8:16-18

            God our Father, it is again a Monday.  Thank you for the gift of life, the gift of work, the gift of responsibilities, the gift of one another.  Give us the grace to always do whatever is good and remain humble before you through others (Prov.3:35).

            Open our eyes to see more of the many things we can learn instead of seeing the many faults and failures of others as well as shortcomings in many situations we find ourselves in.  The world is one vast classroom with so many wonderful things to enjoy and cherish!
             Make me a lamp of the light of your Son Jesus Christ to dispel the darkness not only in the world but most especially within each one of us.  Make me a lamp that would reveal the truth of our being your beloved children, sanctified and forgiven in Christ Jesus.  Let us all gain more of your love and mercy, more of your justice and peace, more of you in the power of the Holy Spirit.  AMEN.Fr. Nicanor F. Lalog II, Parokya ng San Juan Apostol at Ebanghelista, Gov. F. Halili Ave., Bagbaguin, Sta. Maria, Bulacan 3022.