Growing In Holiness In Jesus

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The Lord Is My Chef Breakfast Recipe-Prayer
Wednesday, 14 November 2018, Week XXXII, Year II
Titus 3:1-7//Luke 17:11-19

            Lord Jesus Christ, it is the middle of the week and because of your mercy and love, I have overcome many obstacles as well as accomplished many things since Monday.  It is pure grace from you that I am still well, whole and complete physically, mentally and emotionally.

             What could possibly be my adequate response to your gifts of love and mercy, Lord Jesus?

             More than expressing my gratitude to you like that Samaritan leper you have healed in today’s gospel, help me to grow in holiness in you by going back to you, by being rooted in you.

             Growing in holiness in you Jesus is being filled with you.

             Growing in holiness in you Jesus is being led by you, my shepherd (Ps.23:1).

            Growing in holiness in you Jesus is more than avoiding sin and evil, but doing what is good and just as I walk in this valley of darkness (Ps.23:4).

             Growing in holiness in you Jesus is being “obedient and open to every good enterprise (Titus 3:1).”

             Growing in holiness in you Jesus is “slandering no one, being peaceable, considerate, exercising all graciousness toward everyone” (Titus 3:2).

             Thank you Jesus Christ in giving me with so much; I know I have given so little.  Help me to give more of myself, give more of my presence with others, and most especially to give more of you dwelling in me.  AMEN. Fr. Nicanor F. Lalog II, Parokya ng San Juan Apostol at Ebanghelista, Gov. F. Halili Ave., Bagbaguin, Sta. Maria, Bulacan 3022.

*Photo by my former student at ICSB, Arch. Philip Santiago at the Fatima Square, Portugal, September 2018.  Used with permission.

Living In the Lord

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The Lord Is My Chef Breakfast Recipe-Prayer
Tuesday, 13 November 2018, Week XXXII, Year II
Titus 2:1-8, 11-14//Luke 17:7-10

            Lord Jesus Christ, your birthday is fast approaching as the weather is getting better with chilly mornings, warm sunshine during the day tempered by cool breeze blowing to remind me of the changing of seasons, of the coming end of the year.

             What a beautiful reminder to us all of living in your presence, growing and maturing in your loving service, O Lord!

             Like Titus in the first reading, help me “to say what is consistent with sound doctrine” (Titus 2:1) based on your teachings.  Help me to live as older men and women of faith who are “temperate and reverent in behavior, dignified, self-controlled, sound in faith, love and endurance.” (Titus 2:2-3)   Help me to be “a model of good deeds in every respect, living temperately, justly, and devoutly in this age.” (Titus 2:7, 12)

              Let me take delight in you O Lord Jesus Christ, my Master, faithfully doing what I am obliged to do like the “unprofitable servants” in your parable today (Lk.17:10).  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.

“Guantanamera” Recorded by Pete Seeger (1963)

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LordMyChefSundayMusic//Week XXIX-B//21October2018
Jesus is a Radical

            This song is my earliest lesson on the universality of music:  I was in elementary when I first heard it played by my elders totally ignorant of its lyrics and meaning except that the melody is so lovely, so moving.  The music had stayed on with me since then and how glad to finally have it as our Sunday Music after mentioning Che Guevarra in my homily (https://lordmychef.wordpress.com/2018/10/20/jesus-is-a-radical/).

            “Guantanamera” as a song was first recorded and popularized in 1929 by Cuban singer Joseito Fernandez.  Its lyrics were based on the poem by Cuban poet Jose Marti that eventually became a patriotic song in Cuba.  In 1963, the late American folk singer and social activist Pete Seeger recorded it during the Cuban Missile Crisis, eventually becoming a staple in the protest and peace movements of that time into the early ‘70’s.  The song speaks well about the radical kind of love and service Jesus asks us in today’s gospel.  It is actually the heartaches of a “truthful man” in Guantanamo, Cuba who was deeply hurt at how powerful and rich countries have destroyed his lovely native land.  But despite these, he still offered peace and goodwill, a “white rose”.

And for the cruel one who would tear out
This heart with which I live.
I cultivate neither thistles nor nettles
I cultivate a white rose.
Guantanamera, guajira guantanamera
Guantanamera, guajira guantanamera
I know about a fatal evil
Among the unspeakable shames:
The enslavement of human beings
Is the great shame of the world!
Guantanamera, guajira guantanamera
Guantanamera, guajira guantanamera
With the poor people of this earth,
I want to share my lot.
With the poor people of this earth,
I want to share my lot.
The little streams of the mountains
Please me more than the sea.
Guantanamera, guajira guantanamera
Guantanamera, guajira guantanamera
*Photo from Google, Pope Francis celebrating Mass in Havana during his pastoral visit there in 2015.

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.

Words, words, words.

LordMyChef “TGIF” Quote, 19 October 2018:

“We live in a world where words are cheap. Words engulf us.  In advertisements, on billboards, and traffic signs, in pamphlets, booklets and books, on blackboards, overhead projectors, flip-charts, screens, and newsrunners.  Words move, flicker, turn around, grow bigger, brighter, and fatter.  They are presented to us in all sizes and colors – but finally we say, ‘Well, they are just words.’  Increased in number, words have decreased in value.”

Henri Nouwen, “With Burning Hearts”, page 52.

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Sealed With the Holy Spirit

RaffyIceland15
The Lord Is My Chef Breakfast Recipe-Prayer
Friday//19October2018//Week XXVIII, Year II
Ephesians 1:11-14///Luke 12:1-7
 
             It’s a Friday again, God our loving Father.
             Thank you for the many blessings you have given us this week, especially for those gifts we never asked from you.  Forgive me in failing to manifest you and show your glory in my work and in my life this week.  Most of all, in failing to show the “seal of the Holy Spirit” we have all received from the redemption worked on us by your Son Jesus Christ (Eph.1:13).

             Help me O God to always remember this seal of the Holy Spirit in me, of my task to praise and worship you always as my Lord and Master.  Let me be careful with things that I say and whisper, with things I keep in secret and darkness because sooner or later, everything shall be revealed in your light for nothing escapes you (Lk.12:2-3).

              Let me be like the northern lights at this time of the year, O Lord, when every little thing like air and humidity, gases and light, including every little degree of earth’s tilting all work in a dazzling symphony of lights that liven up the cold, dark nights of winter.  AMEN. Fr. Nicanor F. Lalog II, Parokya ng San Juan Apostol at Ebanghelista, Gov. F. Halili Ave., Bagbaguin, Sta. Maria, Bulacan 3022. E-mail to lordmychef@gmail.com for free subscription.

*Photo courtesy of Mr. Raffy Tima of GMA-7 News, Iceland Northern Lights, 08 October 2018.  Used with permission.

The Heart Is Also the Hearth

MaiGermany1
The Lord Is My Chef Breakfast Recipe-Prayer
Tuesday//16October2018//Week XXVIII, Year II
Galatians 5:1-6///Luke 11:37-41

            Praised be O God, our loving Father!

            So many times, we are like the Pharisee in the gospel, always inviting Jesus your Son who readily comes to us.  Unfortunately, like that Pharisee, we are concerned only with externalities than what is inside.  We invite Jesus only into our house but never into our home, only to be beside us but never in our hearts! True hospitality is when the heart is also the hearth.

           “Oh you Pharisees!  Although you cleanse the outside of the cup and the dish, inside you are filled with plunder and evil.  You fools!  Did not the maker of the outside also make the inside?”(Lk.11:39-40)

             Help us, O Lord to have what St. Paul preached to the Galatians, “faith working through love” (Gal.5:6) when we welcome you into our hearts to fill it with your warmth of love and mercy for everyone, giving life to others in a world that has gone selfishly cold with pride.  AMEN. Fr. Nicanor F. Lalog II, Parokya ng San Juan Apostol at Ebanghelista, Gov. F. Halili Ave., Bagbaguin, Sta. Maria, Bulacan 3022. E-mail to lordmychef@gmail.com.
*Photo by Dra. Mai Dela Pena in Germany.  Used with permission.

Only God Suffices

MaiCarmelIsrael
The Lord Is My Chef Breakfast Recipe-Prayer
Monday//15October2018//Week XXVIII, Year II
Galatians 4:22-26, 24-27, 31-5:1///Luke 11:29-32

             Today, O Lord, let me take into my heart the notes in the breviary of your blessed St. Teresa of Avila whose feast we celebrate today:  “Let nothing disturb me… only God suffices.”

            So many times, Lord Jesus, I feel like the Galatians who always doubted your mercy and love for me, your gift of freedom and salvation that I always feel nothing is enough in this life.  And that is even if I have experienced so many times how you have never abandoned me, seeing for myself how true were the words of St. Teresa that “only God suffices because God never changes.”

           So many times, Lord Jesus, I feel like your contemporaries who keep on asking for signs from you not because I want to feel and experience you more but for more of my own personal needs and gains.  Grant me peace and stillness, to let nothing disturb me and let me patiently endure every darkness and desolation like St. Teresa of Avila so that eventually, God may possess me.  AMEN. Fr. Nicanor F. Lalog II, Parokya ng San Juan Apostol at Ebanghelista, Gov. F. Halili Ave., Bagbaguin, Sta. Maria, Bulacan 3022. E-mail to lordmychef@gmail.com.

*Photo by Dra. Mai Dela Pena, a rose in the Carmelite Monastery during a Holy Land Pilgrimage.  Used with permission.

Something’s Gotta Give

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The Lord Is My Chef Sunday Recipe, Week XXVIII-B, 14October2018
Wisdom 7:7-11///Hebrews 4:12-13///Mark 10:17-30

            As Jesus was setting out on a journey, a man ran up, knelt down before him, and asked him, “Good teacher, what must I do to inherit eternal life?” (Mk.10:17)

            Each one of us can readily identify with this man because we all carry in our hearts the same question he had asked Jesus.  As we have reflected last Sunday, it is one of the FAQ’s of all time to Jesus next to the Pharisees’ “is it lawful for a husband to divorce his wife?”(Mk. 10: 2)  In our reflection last week, we also said how Jesus answered both questions by bringing us back to God who is our ultimate source and end in life.  Last Sunday, Jesus explained how God planned our relationships “in the beginning” when He created man and woman while today He tells us what to do to inherit eternal life.  So, what is to go back to God?

           First, going back to God to inherit eternal life is reading and studying the Sacred Scriptures prayerfully.  We always meet God in His words found in the Bible.  In enumerating to the man some of the commandments, Jesus reminds us to always consult and fulfill the Laws handed down by Moses in the Old Testament.  Moreover, the second reading today assures us that “the word of God is living and effective, sharper than any two-edged sword, penetrating even between soul and spirit, joints and marrow, and able to discern reflections and thoughts of the heart.  No creature is concealed from him, but everything is naked and exposed to the eyes of him to whom we must render an account.” (Heb.4:12-13)   His words are living because God is living for He Himself is life, personally speaking to us in the Sacred Scriptures!

            Second, going back to God to inherit eternal life is acting on His words by forgetting one’s self in Christ, taking our cross to follow Him.  It is not enough to desire God, to read and listen to His words.  Remember how Herod also loved to listen to the words by John the Baptist and later of Jesus Christ but never had the courage heed them.  We need to have courage to go back to God because He would always direct us to places and instances we never imagined as Jesus told Peter before His ascension at Tiberias.  See how Mark presented to us today the progression of the teaching of Jesus to that man.  Before replying to his question, Jesus chided him, “Why do you call me good?  No one is good but God alone.” (Mk.10:18)  Christ must have seen something deeper with this man that right away He directed him to God through His Laws as the answer to his question.  The man was sincere with his question, unlike the Pharisees last Sunday who asked only to “test” Jesus.  The Lord must have seen him as a possible disciple being a “just man of Israel” who was molded by observance to the Laws, truly searching and waiting for the Messiah and day of salvation.  Then, in a dramatic fashion as recorded by Mark, the Lord challenged him to leave everything behind for God:  Jesus, looking at him, loved him and said to him, “You are lacking in one thing.  Go, sell what you have, and give to the poor and you will have treasure in heaven; then come follow me.” (Mk.10:21)

            Oh how we are very much like that man again, when our faces would fall as we walk away sad from the loving face of Jesus because we could not give up so many possessions we value more than God!  Going back to God means “something’s gotta give” – are we willing to let go of ourselves and of our possessions to inherit eternal life?  In 2003, Jack Nicholson and Dianne Keaton starred in a movie called “Something’s Gotta Give” that is about giving up one’s self, offering some sacrifices to experience real love, real peace and real joy.  All the more are these true if we want to inherit eternal life when we choose God more than anything!  This was the reflection of the author of the Book of Wisdom in the first reading:  he had realized while in a progressive and affluent society of the Greek world at that time that everything in life fades and passes away except Wisdom which is the personification of God:  “Yet all good things together came to me in her company, and countless riches at her hands.” (Wis.7:11)

            Last Tuesday, there were two massive gatherings of people in the country:  one at the Manila Cathedral where the relic of the incorrupt heart of St. Padre Pio was venerated and the other were at the various lotto outlets scattered throughout our archipelago.  The sights have reminded me of Charles Dickens’ A Tale of Two Cities that perfectly describe them:  “It was the best of times, the worst of times, it was the age of wisdom, the age of foolishness, it was the epoch of belief, it was the epoch of incredulity… we had everything before us, we had nothing before us, we were all going direct to Heaven, we were all going direct the other way.”  What I just want to share here is the contrast of the scenes:  the people more concerned with life here on earth, of instantly becoming rich by hitting the one billion peso prize despite the odds of one in 40 million and those wishing for miracles who braved the sun and the rains for six hours just to get near the relic of the incorrupt heart of St. Pedro Pio.  There is nothing really wrong with betting in lotto and in venerating a relic; problem is when people see them as an end in itself, giving rise to “gambling mentality” and “spiritualization”.  The former is the attitude of some people wishing to get rich without working hard while the latter is a simplistic view on leap of faith.  Something’s gotta give if we want to be rich and be blessed!  But if we are wise, we would rather be working to inherit eternal life because it is something Christ has assured us already when He offered Himself on the Cross.“All things are possible for God” in the sense that He does everything to get us back with Him in heaven that is for everyone unlike winning the lotto that is so exclusive to just one or two winners.  How unwise that many of us would rather still do whatever is needed to win that elusive jackpot than have that assured salvation in Christ!

           When we come to consider everything, we realize that what we must really do to inherit eternal life is to be like children.  Twice in these past four weeks that Jesus had taught the need to be like children.  When we examine His life and teachings from His birth to His death and resurrection, everything in Jesus was being like a child, of abandoning His self completely to the Father like a child because “the kingdom of God belongs to children… whoever does not accept the kingdom of God like a child will not enter it.” (Mk.10:14-15)  Children teach us many lessons about giving up everything for the most valuable thing they can have.  This is the attitude Christ demands from us if we wish to join Him in His journey back to Jerusalem, back to God.  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 from Google.

 

The Works of the Lord

RaffyIceland6
The Lord Is My Chef Breakfast Recipe-Prayer
Friday//12October2018//Week XXVII, Year II
Galatians 3:7-14///Luke 11:15-26

            On this weekend, I join the psalmist in giving thanks to you, O Lord, for “great are your works, exquisite in all their delights.” (Ps. 111:2)  As I prepare myself for the welcome break of Saturday and Sunday, I look back with joy for all the wondrous things you have done to me this week.

           I am contented with my life, O Lord; there is no need for me to join those long lines to super lotto betting stations.  Your majesty and glory are enough to delight me of the beauty of life while your justice assures me of eternal rewards.  Most of all, you have always provided me with everything I need as you always remember your covenant forever (Ps. 111:3-6).

            Forgive me O Lord for the many times I doubt your fidelity, when I am like the Galatians who feel your works are not enough as if our works could amount to something at all.  Give me that strong faith, like Abraham’s, to believe in you and your promise.  Cast away my doubts, O Lord, so I may not be like the Jews of your time who thought you have the power of Beelzebul or asked you for signs to prove your divine omnipotence.  Make me whole in faith, hope and love in you, never be divided lest I fall prey to evil and sins. AMEN. Fr. Nicanor F. Lalog II, Parokya ng San Juan Apostol at Ebanghelista, Gov. F. Halili Ave., Bagbaguin, Sta. Maria, Bulacan 3022. E-mail to lordmychef@gmail.com.

*Photo by Mr. Raffy Tima of GMA-7 News, Iceland Northern Lights, October 2018.  Used with permission.