Photo: Keith Bacongco
This might not be the typical expat blog, written by a German expat, living in the Philippines since 1999. It's different. In English and in German. Check it out! Enjoy reading! Dies mag' nun wirklich nicht der typische Auswandererblog eines Deutschen auf den Philippinen sein. Er soll etwas anders sein. In Englisch und in Deutsch! Viel Spass beim Lesen!
By Fr. Roy Cimagala *
THAT gospel story about the Archangel Gabriel visiting Mary
to tell her that she was going to be the mother of the son of God
(cfr. Lk 1,26-38) reminds us that like Mary, we too should say,
“Fiat,” (Be it done) to whatever the will of God is for us, so that
not only can we be born again in Christ but also become more and more
like Christ until we are made “another Christ” as God wants us to be.
This is the will of God for us which we should be clear
about so that we would not be confused, much less, lost, as to the
real purpose of our life here on earth. We have to realize that we
have an active role to play in this “divine project.” While God is the
main agent of this project, we too have to be his co-agent.
In a sense, we are his co-creator and co-redeemer,
understood properly in that it is only God who creates and redeems us,
but we need to cooperate and to correspond to his creative and
redemptive work on us. That’s how we have to understand these
expressions.
The secret, of course, is that we obey God’s will for us,
whatever it is and whatever it takes. We should expect some difficult
and even impossible things to tackle, since this divine project is
eminently spiritual and supernatural in nature.
But with God, we would also be given the grace so that what
we cannot do through our natural powers, given our weaknesses and
limitations, his power can do it for us as long as we go along with
him.
It is our spiritual powers of intelligence and will that
would enable us to receive the supernatural power of God’s grace.
These spiritual powers of ours have what is called as the obediential
potency to receive the supernatural grace of God.
This is what it means to be born again in Christ and to live
our life with him, in him and through him. We should always be aware
of this basic truth about ourselves and learn to act on it daily,
making use of some practices of piety, like prayer and recourse to the
sacraments, and always undertaking the ascetical struggle so that our
mind and heart would always be with God.
Let us always keep in mind that our life here on earth is
the time God uses in his eternity to create and redeem us. He is still
shaping and directing us, helping and cleaning us of our sins, mainly
through the ordinary events of our life. Yes, we have to be keenly
aware of this reality of our ordinary daily life. God is actively
intervening in our life through these events, regardless of whether
they are humanly good or bad.
We have to understand that this is the ideal way to live. We
need to be with Christ, the Way, the Truth and the Life for us, not
only from time to time, but all the time. To put it bluntly, we cannot
be in the right way, we cannot find the truth about ourselves and
everything else, we cannot have true eternal life, without him.
We need to be clear about the abiding presence and love of
Christ for us. “Remember, I am with you each and every day until the
end of the age,” he assured his apostles who can include all of us if
we choose to believe and follow him. (Mt 28,20)
* Chaplain Center for Industrial Technology and Enterprise (CITE), Talamban, Cebu City
mail: roycimagala@gmail.com
"Have You Ever Been in Love" is a song by Canadian recording artist Celine Dion, recorded first for her seventh English studio album A New Day Has Come (2002) and was later included on her eight English studio album One Heart (2003). The song is a power ballad, written by Anders Bagge, Peer Åström, Tom Nichols, Daryl Hall and Laila Bagge, while production was handled by Bagge & Peer. This song inspired me for today's column. Far from typhoons, pandemics and other bad news.
Falling in love with someone can feel exciting, even exhilarating. But over time, these feelings may settle into something that feels a little different. This love might seem mellow or calm. You might find yourself thinking “I love them” instead of “I’m in love with them.”
This transformation doesn’t necessarily mean there’s anything wrong with your relationship.
Loving someone instead of feeling “in love” with them simply illustrates how feelings of love evolve over the course of a relationship, especially a long-term relationship.
Love - a real life drama sometimes that unfolds anytime, yet no one can explain. Ask yourself how or why love happens and you might get plenty of ideas but seldom a satisfying explanation. You might get a nervous giggle or a quick chuckle, a sleepless night or a never-ending palpitation of the heart, a red face, and appetitlessness. Worldwide innumerable lyricists wrote and are still writing being inspired by this phenomenon of love. And yes, back to Celine Delon: almost every composition tells us about love.
Love, the inexplicable emotion that overpowers kings and queens and turns people either into philanthropists or misanthropes. Love, the first state of passionate affairs, that told us love stories like "Romeo and Juliet", Antony and Cleopatra" or "King Edward and Mrs. Simpson".
Naranasan mo na bang umibig? The former Archbishop Fulton Sheet said a long time ago, "Love is the perfection of justice". Aristoteles, the Greek philosopher added, "Even there is justice you also need friendship". Saint Augustus remarked in those days, "Do what you like. If you love God, you'll do nothing wrong".
Well, I guess there is something more than romance, changing kisses or gilic tasks or giving a bouquet of roses. There should be something more than looking for "the best way to win a man's heart through his stomach" - and out come only the empty dishes.
Love is in between two but also in the midst of many taking responsibility for a child, for a family, for a company or for an institution, for a public task or a new planted tree.
Love can destroy agonizing bitterness which we easily develop against our enemies or people, who liked to be close to us but being disrespectful at the same time.
As frustrated and hopeful as you may feel right now, with God's love your life can be happier than you dreamed possible. The time after the coming of Jesus Christ is not a time of fear but of love. If you realize this, you'll be able to experience all kinds of love that life has in store. Hopefully, maybe one day in future, you'll be able to love even your enemy or adversary of your fellow creature who tries to squander your last respect.
Have you ever been in love - You could touch the moonlight - When your heart's shooting stars -You're holding heaven in your arms - Have you ever been so in love?
by Pao Vergara, Manila Bulletin
SIMPLENG HANDAAN The essence of Christmas is being together and celebrating new life (Rhes Victorio)
Given the times we live in, an economy in recession, a future that’s ever uncertain, a virus that’s finishing the alphabet, it might be impractical or downright insulting to even consider pursuing luxury.
“Check your privilege,” the young and woke will tell you, and rightfully, agreeably so. Even Pasig Mayor Vico Sotto, when pressed by a rival for something along the lines of “removing the Christmas spirit” for not decorating the city with the usual embellishments, simply said that there were more pressing concerns, all as residents came to his defense posting about the Noche Buena packages they had received.
And yet luxury lifestyle continues to be an aspiration. Haute jewelry, cuisine, travel, experiences, and the channels that feed that aspiration toward these thunder on despite all the uncertainty around.
Elite. Luxury. Rich. Words that were once aspirational in decades past are now seen with wariness, condescension, and even dismissal by a majority whose salaries are still stuck in 1990.
There was a time religious puritanism shunned luxury, and this was followed by the promise of industrial secularization and wealth and comfort for more, which saw the above as old-fashioned. Now, a different social consciousness is permeating—It’s critical of excess, doubtful of trickle-down economics, but led more by social scientists, bloggers, and pundits than by clergy.
Is there still space for luxury? Can your space be luxurious? Maybe luxury won’t disappear, but maybe we can rethink and redefine it.
Luxury is about more, it is about decadence, but that more, that decadence, isn’t necessarily bling, it isn’t necessarily about being crazy, filthy rich. Perhaps it’s about that effort to be extra, that effort to dazzle with what’s available, that effort to make not just a campfire but a lightshow with the kindle on-hand.
Luxury isn’t exclusively based on economic class, although, true to its nature, only a few attain it. But this this time, it’s dependent on effort, not birthright. Luxury is reached by those brave enough to be creative, to make more with what little is there.
It’s exclusive to those who, despite whatever hardships, still choose to celebrate life. Luxury is creativity. In the absence of Moet, it’s milk tea built from scratch. In the absence Cebu spring pig lechon, it’s Pinoy samgyeop put together from the palengke. It’s celebrating with who’s there while grieving for those who aren’t.
It’s going the extra mile to add flavor within one’s means. This kind of luxury can be captured in the Filipino word ginhawa, which evokes coziness, safety, a space in which to relax and enjoy oneself. You’re not just surviving, you’re thriving. Our tribal ancestors chose their leaders not based on who had the most resources, but who brought the most ginhawa to the community. As the Baguio heritage museum puts it, it was elitism, but consensual elitism.
The years 2020 and 2021 have been stressful enough for us collectively. This year looks to be a pivotal time for the nation. We may have been diligent in washing our hands and wearing masks, but too much soap causes dryness and “behind the mask,” TWICE sings, “I wonder if you’re smiling?”
Already, The New York Times has reported the rising incidence of COVID-related anxiety and depression, but we know that already. As the economy reopens and people tentatively come together, each of us is (re)discovering what it means to be among others, with all the hiccups that may entail.
Are we to shame people or, worse, ourselves for trying to add spice, color, and flavor to life?
So! Luxury. Yeah. That word. That experience. You’ve been fighting hard, and you’ve been fighting good, and you’ve been fighting the good fight.
So treat yourself. Treat those you love. Savor that Noche Buena, even if the queso de bola is improvised. You don’t just deserve it. You’ve earned it. Even Jesus turned water into wine.
by AA Patawaran, Manila Bulletin
Whatever happened to Father Christmas in England in 1647 would never happen in the Philippines, no matter how dire the circumstances get—poverty, disaster, a bank run, a civil war, or a revolution.
In 1647, right after the English Civil War and the Church of England gave way to a Presbytarian system, the English parliament passed an ordinance declaring festivities over Christmas, Easter, and Whitsun a taboo, outlawing decorations, celebrations both public and private, and even shops closing up in observance of holy days.
As a result, though all of the kingdoms of England, which at the time included Wales and Ireland, were up in arms, Father Christmas who, as the Paris Review described him, was once “rotund from indulgence,” embodying “Christmas as an open-hearted festival of feasts and frolics,” grew “skinny, mournful, and lonely, depressed by the grim fate that had befallen the most magical time of year.”
…hens and chickens were saying noisy farewells amid the rapid clatter of knives and chopping blocks and the sputtering of lard in frying pans. There was a promise of good eating in the succulent smells of stews and sweetmeats that reached out to the streets. —El Filibusterismo, Jose Rizal
Or he might have migrated to the Philippine islands, whose Christianization by their Spanish colonizers in the 1700s was well under way. Noche Buena (Nochebuena back in the day, one word, as it still is, referring to the Christmas Eve dinner, in Spain) is Spanish for “a night of goodness,” but Noche Buena traces its roots to the early mornings, shortly after midnight, when the Filipinos broke their Christmas Eve fast.
Back then, as ordered by the Spanish friars, it was customary—if not mandatory—to go on a fast the whole day on Christmas Eve. In this writer’s humble opinion, it was in honor of the struggles of the Holy Family to look for a suitable place for the Christ Child to be born in. Alas, there was no room at the inn, so Jesus was born in a manger filled with hay, a long, open trough for horses or cattle to eat from in the cold, smelly stables.
Before they could break their fast, the Filipinos under over 300 years of Spanish occupation, would end the day at the Misa de Gallo, and you can imagine how famished they must have been that even the sacramental bread must have tasted to them like manna from heaven or like cake from Marie Antoinette. But then the mass would be over, and the fast was ended, and it was time to eat at last.
Hence, the Noche Buena. And maybe this is why, just outside the church, anywhere across the Philippines, where a Catholic stone church stood, which then—as now—meant every town, the churchgoers, emerging from the midnight mass, or even the early morning masses of Simbang Gabi, and keen on satiating their day-long hunger and their enormous appetites, would expect stalls and kiosks peddling bibingka, puto bumbong, puto with tsokolate, kutsinta, biko, palitaw, and suman.
These rice cakes, although they carry traces of our foreign interactions on the trade routes of our pre-colonial past, whether in terms of techniques or transplanted ingredients, are our very own contribution to the celebration of Christmas steeped in tradition and cultural significance. All the carbs waiting on the churchyards after the night masses of Yuletide in the Philippines would have been enough to keep Father Christmas happy-plump and rosy-cheeked despite the Puritan revolution of the 17th century, not to mention less depressed because, you know, carbs boost the brain’s release of serotonin, the chemical that keeps us calm and satisfied.
But there is more to the Philippine Christmas feast than the stuffed turkey, Brussels sprouts with chestnuts and sage, and roast potatoes Father Christmas was familiar with in the United Kingdom, of which we might have had a taste in the 20 months the British occupied the Philippines from 1762 to 1764.
Ours is a hodgepodge of influences drawn from over three centuries of Spanish rule, the hold the Americans have had—still do?—over us since 1898, when Spain sold us to them for only $120 million, and, long before we were named the Philippines after Spain’s King Philip II, centuries worth of trade and cultural exchanges with the Arabs, the Chinese, the Indians, the Javanese, the Japanese, and more.
Mementos of our major colonial experiences with the Spanish and the Americans still find their way to our Christmas celebrations. From Spain, the Filipinos have incorporated the likes of jamon de bola, stuffings like relleno, embutido, galantina, and morcon, lechon or cochinillo, lengua, callos, chorizo, paella, and the ubiquitous queso de bola or Dutch Edam cheese, a staple on vessels sailing on world expeditions across uncharted waters, such as the Magellan flotilla and the Spanish galleon. The Americans, in turn, threw in pies, Spam, Vienna sausage, and fruitcake. The Noche Buena table on every Filipino home is a journey across the world, packed with history and the forging and cutting of ties between nations.
But there are also regional variations within the Philippines. Bibingka, for instance, has many variants, such as bibingkang Mandaue that, unique to Mandaue, Cebu, was traditionally made with tuba to give it a kick. In Cavite, it is called bibingkoy, which comes with a filling of sweetened mongo and served with langka, sago, and coconut cream. In Davao, there is durian bibingka and, in Eastern Samar, what they call salukara is bibingka in the shape of a pancake.
There are many kinds of suman too, such as black rice suman from Baler, Aurora, suman sa lihiya in Laguna, suman moron in Leyte, and suman budbud in Dumaguete. In Pangasinan, it’s called tupig and in Bulacan pinipig and, in Cebu, it is best eaten with ripe mangoes.
The Philippines is an archipelago of 7,641 islands and many regions boasting of their own unique cultures, geophysical traits, and resources. Coupled with the influx of colonial influences as well as the yields of the Filipino diaspora scattered all over the planet, all that find expression not only in Fiipinos’ day-to-day living, but especially in occasions important to us, like Christmas.
Father Christmas should have learned an important lesson in 1647. Although it had been a dismal failure, they did cancel Christmas in the UK and they can attempt to do so again, as they have in other places in the world.
In the Philippines, however, nothing can stop Christmas, not a pandemic like this one that we have been grappling with for two years, not even all the health bulletins warning against obesity and excessive eating.
Nothing at all can ever cancel Christmas in the Philippines.
By Fr. Roy Cimagala *
THE gospel of the 4th Sunday of Advent this year (Year C)
tells us of the many precious lessons we can learn from that beautiful
episode of Mary visiting her cousin Elizabeth soon after she learned
that she was going to be the mother of the Son of God and that her
aging and barren cousin was already heavy with child in her womb.
(cfr. Lk 1,39-45)
In that gospel episode, it is mentioned that Mary went “in
haste.” It is an example worth emulating by everyone, for it is
clearly what is proper to us. A truly good person, a holy one so close
and identified with God, would be quick to serve everybody else,
because that is simply the expression of love. Love is always a matter
of deeds and service, and not just sweet words and good intentions.
This eagerness to serve would really identify us with Christ
who is our “way, truth and life.” He being God became man to save us,
the greatest service anyone can do. And all throughout his earthly
life, serving was the constant rule that he followed. He was always at
the beck and call of anyone who had need of something.
Definitely, to be able to serve, one has to be humble. And
that’s what we see in our Lady, and of course, in Christ, first of
all. Pride and all its allies would always extinguish any desire to
serve others. They only are interested in serving their own selves.
We need to humble ourselves so that we can serve everyone,
and not just those whom we like. We have to serve even those whom we
don’t like and who may not like us. If we are truly humble, our spirit
of service would not make any discrimination among the people. We
would serve everyone, whether they deserve to be served or not.
A Christian and Marian spirit of service would neither give
rise in us to a certain sense of entitlement and privilege because of
whatever claim of authority or superiority we may have over others.
While it’s true that we obviously are entitled to our
rights, we should not feel entitled to privileges and favors that are
above our rights and needs. If they come and we cannot avoid them,
then let’s be thankful.
But let’s be reminded that these privileges, favors and
blessings are meant for us to strengthen our desire to serve and not
to be served. But as it is, we should try to avoid them, since they
tend only to spoil and corrupt us.
We have to be most wary when we happen to enjoy some
privileged positions or status in life because we tend to think that
we deserve more entitlements. And not only would we expect them. We
may even demand them for us.
Remember what Christ said once: “Be careful not to practice
your righteousness in front of others to be seen by them. If you do,
you will have no reward from your Father in heaven.” (Mt 6,1)
We need to acquire the mentality of a servant which is
actually the mentality of Christ himself. Let us readjust our human
standards to conform to what is actually proper to us as taught and
lived by Christ. We usually look down on the status of servants. This
has to change! We should be convinced that by becoming a servant we
would be making ourselves like Christ. Let’s say NO to entitlements.
* Chaplain Center for Industrial Technology and Enterprise (CITE), Talamban, Cebu City
Email: roycimagala@gmail.com
(Photo from PAGASA / MANILA BULLETIN)
Published December 16, 2021, 3:01 AM
by Dhel Nazario, Manila Bulletin
Typhoon ‘Odette’ has maintained its strength and is headed for the waters off to the east of Caraga region, the Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration (PAGASA) said on Thursday, Dec. 16.
As of 1:00 a.m. PAGASA said that the center of typhoon Odette was last seen 410 kilometers (km) East of Surigao City, Surigao del Norte. It is expected to make landfall in the vicinity of Dinagat Islands, Siargao-Bucas Grande Islands, or the northern portion of Surigao del Sur on Thursday afternoon.
Odette maintained its strength packing maximum sustained winds of 140 kph near the center and gustiness of up to 170 kph. Signal No. 3 was raised in the areas of Southern Leyte, Dinagat Islands, Surigao del Norte, the northern portion of Agusan del Norte, and the northern portion of Surigao del Sur.
Areas under Signal No. 2 include the southern portion of Masbate, the central and southern portions of Eastern Samar, the central and southern portions of Samar, Biliran, Leyte, Cebu, Bohol, Negros Oriental, Siquijor, Negros Occidental, Guimaras, Iloilo, Capiz, and the southern portion of Antique, the rest of Surigao del Sur, the rest of Agusan del Norte, Agusan del Sur, the northern portion of Bukidnon, Misamis Oriental, Camiguin, the extreme northern portion of Misamis Occidental, and the extreme northern portion of Zamboanga del Norte.
Meanwhile, the areas placed under Signal No. 1 were Catanduanes, Camarines Sur, Albay, Sorsogon, the rest of Masbate including Ticao and Burias Islands, Marinduque, Romblon, the southern portion of Quezon, the southern portion of Batangas, Oriental Mindoro, Occidental Mindoro, and the northern and central portions of Palawan including Calamian, Cagayancillo and Cuyo Islands, Northern Samar, the rest of Eastern Samar, the rest of Samar, Aklan, Antique, Capiz, and the rest of Iloilo, the northern portion of Davao Oriental, the northern portion of Davao de Oro, the northern portion of Davao del Norte, the rest of Misamis Occidental, the central portion of Bukidnon, the northern portion of Lanao del Norte, the northern portion of Lanao del Sur, the northern portion of Zamboanga del Norte, and the northern portion of Zamboanga del Sur.
Areas under Signal No. 3 are expected to experience “destructive typhoon-force winds” within 18 hours while “damaging gale-to storm-force” winds in areas under Signal No. 2 are expected within 24 hours and strong winds are likely to prevail within 36 hours in areas under Signal No. 1.
Heavy rains expected
Starting Thursday evening, (Dec. 16) heavy to intense with at times torrential rains may be experienced over Caraga, Misamis Oriental, Camiguin, Southern Leyte, and Bohol. Moderate to heavy with at times intense rains over Leyte, the southern portion of Eastern Samar, Leyte, Cebu, Siquijor, Negros Oriental, Zamboanga del Norte, Lanao del Sur, and the rest of Northern Mindanao.
Light to moderate with at times heavy rains over Bicol Region, Davao Oriental, Davao de Oro, Davao del Norte, and the rest of Visayas, Zamboanga Peninsula, and mainland Bangsamoro.
From Thursday evening (Dec. 16) through Friday evening (Dec. 17) heavy to intense with at times torrential rains may prevail over Central Visayas, Western Visayas, and Palawan including Calamian Islands, Cuyo, and Cagayancillo Islands.
Moderate to heavy with at times intense rains over Bicol Region, Zamboanga Peninsula, Occidental Mindoro, Oriental Mindoro, Romblon, Lanao del Norte, Lanao del Sur, and the rest of Visayas. Light to moderate with at times heavy rains over Caraga, Quezon, the southern portion of Aurora, and the rest of Northern Mindanao and MIMAROPA.
Beginning Friday evening (Dec. 17) through Saturday evening (Dec. 18), heavy to intense with at times torrential rains over the central portion of Palawan including Kalayaan Islands is possible. Moderate to heavy rains over Aurora, Quezon, and the rest of Palawan may also be experienced, said PAGASA.
“Under these conditions, scattered to widespread flooding (including flash floods) and rain-induced landslides are expected especially in areas that are highly or very highly susceptible to these hazard as identified in hazard maps, and in localities with significant antecedent rainfall,” it added.
A moderate to high risk of storm surge of up to 3.0 meters in height which may cause flooding in the low-lying coastal localities of Central Visayas, Iloilo, Guimaras, Negros Occidental, Eastern Samar, Southern Leyte, Dinagat Islands, Surigao del Norte, Surigao del Sur, and several localities in the northern portion of Palawan including Calamian, Cuyo and Cagayancillo Islands, Antique, Camiguin, Leyte, Agusan del Norte, and Davao Oriental is possible.
Typhoon Odette is likely to move generally westward after its expected landfall and cross several provinces in Central and Western Visayas regions before emerging over the Sulu Sea on Friday morning (Dec 17).
After passing near or in the vicinity of either Cuyo or Cagayancillo archipelago, this tropical cyclone is likely to cross the northern or central portion of Palawann Friday afternoon or evening (Dec.17) before emerging over the West Philippine Sea.
PAGASA said that further intensification is expected from Thursday (Dec. 16) typhoon crosses the Philippine Sea and may reach a peak intensity of 155 kph prior to its landfall.
Odette may slightly weekean, according to PAGASA as it crosses northeastern Mindanao, Visayas, and Palawan, but it is likely to remain within the typhoon category. Re-intensification is likely once it emerges over the West Philippine Sea. However, weakening may ensue beginning Sunday (Dec. 19) as the typhoon becomes exposed to increasing vertical wind shear and the surge of the northeast monsoon.
By Engr. Carlos V. Cornejo *
Herbert Prochnow said, “There is a time when we must firmly choose the course which we must follow, or the relentless drift of events will make the decision for us.” I totally agree. Life is full of decision-making processes. By the time we wake up options are already made available to us. In fact, the very time we get up from bed is in itself a decision we have to make. We can choose to get up from bed by the time the alarm clock rings or decide to sleep some more.
The drift of events Herbert Prochnow mentioned can refer to circumstances in life or persons around us that could decide things for us. Usually, we make certain goals in life such as to finish college, to work abroad, to start our own business, etc. as our guide in making everyday decisions. We normally ask ourselves before making a decision, “Is this activity going to bring me closer to my goals or not?” If we don’t have a firm resolve to stick to our goals, instead of spending time studying for an exam for example we could easily make excuses such as “going out with my barkada won’t be a big deal, I only do it once in a while anyway”. But before you know it you’ve already been hooked to the group.
We ought to follow Kenneth Blanchard’s advice: “There is a difference between interest and commitment. When you’re interested in doing something, you only do it when it is convenient. When you’re committed to something, you accept no excuses, only results.” The word commitment means you are going to fulfill your promise such as fulfilling your commitment to marriage, or your commitment to your boss in the office. If we have made a commitment to get good grades for example so as to land a good job later, deciding whether to have a night out with our friends or go study for an exam will be not be a tough decision to make.
Often times the dilemma in decision making especially for managers is not to make a decision until all data is available. Waiting for additional information or data before making a final decision is a prudent thing to do especially if an important data is crucial to the decision we have to make. But if you are racing with time and any delay could make the situation worse, then you’ll have to decide as best as you can. US President Harry Truman once said, “Some questions cannot be answered, but they can be decided.” Even when we do not have all the facts available, we usually have all the facts needed to make a decision.
Of all matters, we have to be decisive with spiritual ones. If we are neutral in spiritual matters, we’ll eventually find ourselves operating against heaven. The Bible says to let the peace of God rule in our hearts (Colossians 3:15). It tells us how to decide on things, especially the important things in life with the peace of Christ as an umpire in our hearts. His peace can literally say “out” to that relationship and say “safe” to that business idea. Consulting our decisions with God through prayer is a very wise and prudent thing to do.
* Former Chairman of the Electronics Engineering Department of Mary Our Help Technical Institute, a Don Bosco Engineering School for Women in Minglanilla, Cebu. Teaches subjects on engineering, business, values and Catholic doctrine. Has Masters in Business Administration from University of San Carlos and Masters in Telecommunications Engineering from University of Melbourne.
By Fr. Roy Cimagala *
WE, of course, are meant to be ‘another Christ.’ That is our
radical identity, since we have been created in God’s image and
likeness. And since Christ as the Son of God is that perfect image God
has of himself, we can say that we are patterned after him, and as Son
of God who became man, Christ is the savior of our damaged humanity.
We have to understand though that for us to be truly
‘another Christ’ would require the supernatural power of God. We
cannot achieve that status by our powers alone, although we have to
put ourselves in the proper condition to be elevated to that dignity.
It is Christ who will do it for us, but, of course, with our free
cooperation.
This is where the duty for us to be Christ’s disciples comes
in. To be ‘another Christ’ we need to constantly look for him, find
him, follow him, love him and do the things he wants us to do. That,
in a nutshell, is what Christian discipleship is all about. We have to
find ways of how we can turn this theoretical definition of Christian
discipleship into a living reality, spanning our whole life.
We are reminded of this truth of faith about ourselves in
that gospel episode where John the Baptist sent two of his disciples
to see Christ and ask him if Christ was really the one they were
expecting or whether they should still look for another one. (Lk
7,18-23) Let’s hope that the need for us to be Christ’s disciples is
sharply and abidingly felt by us.
At the moment we can examine ourselves if we have the proper
understanding of the ultimate purpose of our life, the ultimate status
and dignity that is meant for us, that is, we are supposed to be
‘alter Christus.’ We also need to ask ourselves whether we realize
that we need to be a true disciple of Christ to put ourselves to
become ‘alter Christus’ ourselves, as God wants us to be.
To be a true disciple of Christ requires us first of all to
look for him and find him. Encountering Christ should not be a
problem, since Christ is always with us. It’s rather us who have to
learn to acknowledge his presence and to start dealing with him. We
should have the same interest in Christ as those who first met Christ
had.
From the gospel of St. Matthew (8,18-22), we have this
interesting episode of a scribe who approached Christ and said,
“Teacher, I will follow you wherever you go.” He must have felt such a
serious admiration for Christ that he had to say this intention and
his willingness to follow Christ wherever he would go.
To which Christ responded by telling him what to expect.
“Foxes have dens and birds of the sky have nests, but the Son of Man
has nowhere to rest his head.” In other words, to be Christ’s disciple
is no joke. It will entail extreme difficulties and inconveniences.
We can get an idea of the kind of difficulties we can expect
as a disciple of Christ when someone told him, “Lord, let me go first
and bury my father.” But Christ answered him saying, “Follow me, and
let the dead bury their dead.” This can only mean that we have to be
willing to leave everything behind, even those who are dear to us,
just to follow Christ.
We have to understand then that to be a true disciple of
Christ we have to learn how to be properly detached from everything in
our life.
* Chaplain Center for Industrial Technology and Enterprise (CITE), Talamban, Cebu City
Email: roycimagala@gmail.com
What counts: Faith? Hope? Charity? Very often I ask myself: What's the sense of doing like and like that? What's the real meaning of life?
Nearly every morning, we get up and hurry to work. We see so many remorseful faces of people as if there are full of problems that a smile to them is like a sunbeam trapped behind the black clouds. Yes, sure, in these pandemic times, many of us might have already forgotten to smile.
Whether in good or bad times, our day at the workplace or in the home office goes on with our colleagues, employees or employers. And leisure time is there, no matter how great or small our zest for life is.
So, we live our life in a logical sequence: day by day, week by week, month by month, year by year. Every day is a cycle of life: every morning is like a birth and every night like a death.
But how do we live our life? Often we can notice people living an easy-go-lucky way of life. Others feel good and satisfied when they can make someone else's life hell. Others have to escape with their bare life while still others experience life-and-death-struggle.
What counts for us? Success? Power? Or money? Is it contentment? Peace on earth and in our souls? Really zest for life?
If I observe people who really choose to be unhappy even without any reason at all, I feel sad. Being unhappy makes life miserable. Whatever happens around me, I don't like to be unhappy. For me, the meaning of happiness is to try to manage life even with problems and difficulties. Easier said than done! I know, I know.
The Bible states that love is greater than both faith and hope. We couldn't live our lives without faith or hope: without faith, we cannot know the God of love; without hope, we would not endure in our faith until we meet him face to face. Thus, love is the virtue upon which all Christian faith and hope now stand.
Dinah Maria Mulock Craik (20 April 1826 – 12 October 1887) was an English novelist and poet. Allow me to quote her, "When faith and hope fail, as they do sometimes, we must try charity, which is love in action".
Ano ang mahalaga? Paniniwala? Pag-asa? O kaya pagbibigayan at pagtutulungan?