Wednesday, April 24, 2024

RECENTERING IN CHRIST

 

Our faith, the work of our Church, are one thing: Christ!

 

The majority of people who have gone through the “done the sacraments scene” may not know that their life is meant to be energized and motivated by the very person of Christ. The person of the Son  of God is alive and working through us. 

 

The founding event of the Church, the Pentecost, is the outpouring of the very spirit of Jesus Christ to us, that we may become the living hands and the living face of Jesus. 

 

Be patient with anyone within the Church who thinks that just being good is equivalent to  being a Christian person. There is a lot more than just being a decent human being.

 

As a faith community we are trying to be re-centered in the mystery of Christ. God has become  human in Jesus Christ. He was a working man with callouses on his hands, dirt between his finger nails and suffering under the hot sun. There are many people today who have not come to grips with the humanity of God in the skin of Jesus Christ.

 

Now, his life was  salvific. His suffering and death on the cross were a sacrifice of service and love for the redemption  of humanity. All are now brought before God in the great love and outpouring of the cross. 

 

The other side of this mystery of redemption was the resurrection which is the outpouring of the life and person of Jesus Christ to the believers. The actual person of the Son, the second person of the Trinity, is poured out into the people of the Church. Now, the believers are meant to live and incarnate Jesus Christ. 

 

Do not be surprised if your sister who identifies herself as a staunch Catholic does not know this. You may register her look of surprise when you spell out the truth about Jesus Christ.

 

This Sunday (5th Sunday of Easter) we are given the life-giving image of the vine and the branches. This Gospel selection is all about you. This teaching of Jesus indicates what you are to be in this world.  “Abide in me as I abide in you. Just as the branch cannot bear fruit by itself unless it abides in the vine, neither can you unless you abide in me.” (n. 15,4)

 

Teresa of Avila, one of the great mystics of our Christian faith gives us words to understand the mystery of Christ.

 

Christ has no body but yours,

No hands, no feet on earth but yours,

Yours are the eyes with which he looks

Compassion on this world,

Yours are the feet with which he walks to do good,

Yours are the hands, with which he blesses all the world.

Yours are the hands, yours are the feet,

Yours are the eyes, you are his body.

Christ has no body now but yours,

No hands, no feet on earth but yours,

Yours are the eyes with which he looks

compassion on this world.

Christ has no body now on earth but yours.

 

 

 



 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Wednesday, April 17, 2024

JESUS IS VERY CHALLENGIING


 

There is a wise saying from the folklore that cautions us. “Never say anything about another person until you have walked a mile in their shoes.” 

 

The older you become (if you have learnt from the blows and bruises you received while trying to maneuver through life) the clearer you understand how hard life actually is for other people. You do not know how they almost collapsed when a relationship broke up, when they had to declare bankruptcy or when the lost an adult child through a drug overdose.

 

If you live into your eighties or nineties there will be many bruises of old battles fought, scars of failures and some limping from the accidents of life that literally blindsided you. Life takes a lot of energy and determination. There is never room to lie down and just give up.

 

This is where I want to say to everyone who claims to believe in God:  my experience of Jesus has been very challenging. This is not a feel-good religion that just aims to make all of us nice people who respect one another. God is no santy-claus god to drop goodies into our lives. 

 

We begin from the very heart of our God. This is the divinity who cares deeply about us humans. To name God is to stand together with God’s dynamic concern for humanity. This God is never indifferent to what happens on this earth.

 

Jesus is the incarnation of the living God. God is personal. God is touchable. God, in the life, teachings and actions of Jesus is very tangible. So many people  have not encountered the living God. They have not been challenged by the question of Jesus: who do you say I am?

 

The real Jesus is all about God wanting to transform the human heart. The plan of God is to move human beings  from living and working only for their own self-interest to living and working for the well-being of others. Jesus wants us to stop talking about ourselves and move out to feeding the hungry and binding up lonely wounds. This is not a feel-good religion but the challenge to become involved in the well-being of your fellow human being.

 

The wonderful consequence of living an authentic Christian religion is that the closer you draw towards your God, the closer you will draw toward your fellow human being. A heart that expands in love for God, is a heart that expands in love for the poor with their many faces.

 

I do not want anyone to ever think that “he’s the priest and religion  works well for him.” 

 

No, I am a fellow pilgrim and Jesus challenges my life to move from self-centeredness to compassion for others; from fear of dealing with some of the tough issues of life to embracing courage to look to the survival of the earth, to the struggles of so many others with drug/alcohol addictions and the burdens of old age. 

 

This Jesus is very challenging and I hope I meet up to the challenge!

 

 

 

 

 

 

Tuesday, April 9, 2024

SURVIVAL OF THE EARTH IS A SPIRITUAL ISSUE


 

Last Monday, April 8, we were blest with an eclipse of the sun. I hope that the thousands of people who were out had a wonderful experience of the moon moving over the sun for three minutes and some twenty seconds. It was an experience that they will never forget.

 

What a wonderful moment to celebrate and rejoice in creation. We are here to enjoy it. 

 

Thoughtful people, who are not afraid to tackle the hard questions of human existence, are painfully aware that the earth is entering into a time of global warming. It will not happen overnight but there is caution that the atmosphere will heat up the point where human beings may not be able to grow food on large parts of the earth. The ocean levels will rise and flood coastal cities (where a significant part of the human population lives).

 

We know the problem and it is us!  

 

All of humanity is challenged. Can we come together as the human race, change our consumption of fossil fuels and move into the life and climate-sustaining future. Every human being is challenged: will we cooperate and move into a surviving future or will we all perish together? 

 

The survival of the earth is a deeply spiritual problem.  How we live and what we value arises from our spiritual values. This challenges our Christian faith. 

 

We must go back into our roots to rediscover that in the very first chapter of the Bible we have the story of creation. It is told in terms of the seven days of creation which leads tohe believer to see that the seventh day as a day of joy o nthe part of God to rest, enjoy and be blest by the entire work of creation. Each day God stands back and recognizes how good creation is. 

 

This is where every believer needs to rediscover that the first act of revelation on the part of God is found in the book of creation. Every leaf, bug, cloud and potato plant reflects and is a share in the goodness and life of God. We need to rediscover how b lest every part of creation actually is. We need to reverence, respect and rejoice in every part of creation. We need to once again rediscover wonder for all parts of creation. 

 

Pope Francis in 2015 published an encyclical (official policy for the Church) ‘Laudato Si.

It opens for all believers a new sense of compassion, cooperation and wonder for the earth, our common home. The teaching brings together our responsibility to care for the survival and thriving of ever y human being and our care for all parts of creation. This is not an either/or situation but a ‘together’ we must thrive.

 

Do not let any person who claims to believe in the divine off the hook. Ask them how they are working to preserve all of creation and helping all future generations of humanity to live, thrive and enjoy every aspect of creation. How are these people supporting and nourishing the future earth? How do they care for our common hone?

 

I hope you enjoyed the eclipse last Monday. May this event lift up your prayer in gratitude and wonder that we live in such a wonderful world.

 

 

 

Tuesday, April 2, 2024

MAY YOU BE THOMAS

 

Immediately after  Easter Sunday we are hit with Thomas (the doubting Thomas) who struggles with the reality of the risen Jesus. (Jh.  20, 19-31) This is not just one individual  but he stands for all the disciples of Jesus who struggled with the reality: they knew he was killed on the cross so how could he be alive now? As we listen and pray over this resurrection story, we know that this “is me!” I have doubts and struggles just like Thomas.

 

The power of this story is located in our own struggle to find the truth. It is not good enough for the women and disciples of the gospels to claim they have seen the risen Jesus. Now, each one of us must encounter the resurrected Jesus in our own space and time. Jesus must be risen for each one of us!

 

Wise people have taught us that you will only know a truth when you have grappled with the opposite. We have to rub against the opposite. There are people whom you find very difficult to get along with but once you know their story and some of the serious difficulties of their life you will get to appreciate them better. Just as a spark is generated when a piece of metal is struck against a flint will you get a spark to ignite your campfire. Striking opposites generates fire.

 

Thomas leaves no doubt where he stands. “Unless I see the mark of the nails in his hands, and put my finger in the mark of the nails and my hand in his side, I will not believe.” (Jn. 20,25)

 

A week later Jesus appears among the disciples. He commands Thomas: “Thomas, put your finger here and see my  hands.  Reach out your hand and put it in my side. Do not doubt but believe.” (Jn. 2027)

 

We can feel the overpowering sense as Thomas recognizes the risen Jesus: “My Lord and my God.”

 

This appearance event tells us that struggle and doubt are part of the journey of faith. We may have hesitations about living into the reality of the risen Christ. We may have heard the story that Jesus is risen but we do not know what to make of it today.  In front of other believers who believe so firmly there may be guilt feelings that we cannot jump up and affirm  our faith so strongly.

 

It is healthy to struggle with the resurrection of Jesus. In the past we did not stress our need to walk with our people, supporting them as they seek to come to a mature and deeper faith. Somehow doubt and hesitation were regarded as a negative attitude toward Jesus Christ. Today ,we can see the importance that everyone struggles like Thomas to believe and live with the risen Christ.

 

Use your imagination and put yourselves into the shoes of Thomas. What fears do you have? What courage and new insights do you receive?

 

May your journey be like the journey of Thomas. May you come to a faith that is alive and moving as was that of Thomas after his struggles.

 

 

 

RECENTERING IN CHRIST

  Our faith, the work of our Church, are one thing: Christ!   The majority of people who have gone through the “done the sacraments scene” m...