Saturday, May 27, 2006

Ascension

So then the Lord Jesus, after he spoke to them,was taken up into heaven (Mk 16:15-20).




Go into the whole world and proclaim the gospel to every creature.

This is called "missio ad gentes". The Franciscans, Dominicans, and Agustinians brought the Gospel to these islands (the modern-day Philippines). They were chaplains to the Spanish conquistadores and missionaries to the natives. Today Filipinos have become missionaries. Filipino Salesians, for example, are in Papua New Guinea, Cambodia, Thailand, Pakistan, Nigeria, and Taiwan.

Whoever believes and is baptized will be saved; whoever does not believe will be condemned.

Faith and baptism leads to heaven. Unbelief leads to hell.

But what are we to believe in? The Good News. What is the Good News? For God so loved the world that he sent his only Son so that those who believe in him may not perish but have everlasting life.

Baptism is a necessary sacrament. It is not optional. Perhaps this is why it is the easiest to administer/celebrate. You need water. Water is plentiful on earth. Anyone can administer it, even an unbeliever, provided his intention is to administer it according to the intention of the Church. The words are easy to recall: "I baptize you in the name of the Father, and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit."

These signs will accompany those who believe....

These signs are miracles. Miracles are said to be events that defy the law of nature.

Acts 20:9 reports that "a young man named Eutychus who was sitting on the window sill was sinking into a deep sleep as Paul talked on and on. Once overcome by sleep, he fell down from the third story and when he was picked up, he was dead." But St. Paul raised him to life.

St. John Bosco was a miracle worker. Among his "minor" miracles was the multiplication of sacred hosts and chestnuts.

Some people have the gift of healing. Fr. Corsie Legaspi is one of them. I heard the testimony of a young man who was a member of a boy band. Fr. Corsie healed him of cancer.

Lessons

So then the Lord Jesus, after he spoke to them, was taken up into heaven and took his seat at the right hand of God.


A priest was once giving a homily in a children's Mass. He asked the children who among them wanted to go to heaven. All raised their hands. He then asked them how you get to heaven. One answered, "By being good." The priest said: "No." Another said: "By being obedient to your parents." The priest said: "No." No one seemed to be able to give the right answer. In the end, the priest had to answer his own question. "In order to get to heaven, you must die." If you think about it, he's right.

But of course, it's not enough that you die. You have also to make sure that you are dead to sin, too. As St. Paul said: "As to his death, he (Jesus) died to sin once and for all; as to his life, he lives for God. Consequently, you too must think of yourselves as (being) dead to sin and living for God in Christ Jesus. For the wages of sin is death, but the gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord."

The solemnity of the ascension reminds us that there is heaven. But to get to heaven, we need to die to sin. That is not an easy thing to do. For it is a daily struggle. But we are not alone. In Christ Jesus, our Lord, we can do everything.

Sunday, May 21, 2006

6th Sunday of Easter (B)

Love one another as I love you. (Jn 15:9-17)



A priest shared this story of their theology days (that period prior to ordination when they studied theology). One of the subjects was moral theology (the study of Christian morality).

For their finals their professor was going to give them only one question. If they answered it correctly, they would get 100. Otherwise, they would get 0. Examination for moral theology came. They received one question: What was the command of Jesus concerning love?

The day after they received their papers. Some received 0. Others, 100. They looked at the papers marked 0. The answer was: Love one another. They looked at the papers marked 100. Their answer? Love one another as I have loved you.

TRUE STORY

Mother is always there when you need her. She helps, protects, listens, advises and nurtures phyiscally and morally. She makes sure that her family is loved 24 hours a day, seven days a week, 52 weeks a year. At least that's how I remember my mother, for the few precious years I awas blessed to have her. But no words can describe the sacrifice she made out of love for me, her young son.

I was 19 years old, and I was being taken to a concentration camp with a large group of other Jews. It was clear that we were destined to die. Suddenly my mother stepped in and traded places with me. And although it was more than 50 years ago, I will never forget her last words to me and her good-bye look.

"I have lived long enough. You have to survive because you are so young," she said.

Most kids are born only once. I was given birth twice - by the same mother.

CONCLUSION

Love one another as I have loved you. How did Jesus love us? He gave his life for us. How should we love one another? Even to the extent of being ready to give our life.

Yet the time when we might be called to sacrifice our life for the one we love may never come. But the opportunity to spend our life for the good of the ones we love will always be there.

For families, I offer two practical ways of living our lives in ways that speak of love. First, of being understanding and forgiving toward one another. And second, of being thoughtful and considerate toward one another.

Saturday, May 13, 2006

The Da Vinci Code...for the nth time

In the midst of insanity, something for those who wish for a sane discussion of the issue

FROM CNN

url is http://www.cnn.com/2006/SHOWBIZ/Movies/05/01/
decoding.davinci.ap/index.html

A line from Dan Brown's "The Da Vinci Code" tells you why it's easily the most disputed religious novel of all time: "Almost everything our fathers taught us about Christ is false."

With 46 million copies in print, "Da Vinci" has long been a headache for Christian scholars and historians, who are worried about the influence on the faith from a single source they regard as wrong-headed.

Now the controversy seems headed for a crescendo with the release of the movie version of "Da Vinci" May 17-19 around the world. Believers have released an extraordinary flood of material criticizing the story — books, tracts, lectures and Internet sites among them. The conservative Roman Catholic group Opus Dei, portrayed as villainous in the story, is among those asking Sony Corp. to issue a disclaimer with the film.

Bart Ehrman, religion chair at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, likens the phenomenon to the excitement in the 19th century when deluded masses thought Jesus would return in 1844.

The novel's impact on religious ideas in popular culture, he says, is "quite unlike anything we've experienced in our lifetimes."

To give just one example, Ben Witherington III of Asbury Theological Seminary is following up the criticisms of the novel in "The Gospel Code" with lectures in Singapore, Turkey and 30 U.S. cities. He's given 55 broadcast interviews.

Assaults on "Da Vinci" don't just come from evangelicals like Witherington, or from Roman Catholic leaders such as Chicago's Cardinal Francis George, who says Brown is waging "an attack on the Catholic Church" through preposterous historical claims.

Among more liberal thinkers, Harold Attridge, dean of Yale's Divinity School, says Brown has "wildly misinterpreted" early Christianity. Ehrman details Brown's "numerous mistakes" in "Truth and Fiction in the Da Vinci Code" and asks: "Why didn't he simply get his facts straight?"

The problem is that "Da Vinci" is billed as more than mere fiction.

Brown's opening page begins with the word "FACT" and asserts that all descriptions of documents "are accurate."

"It's a book about big ideas, you can love them or you can hate them," Brown said in a speech last week. "But we're all talking about them, and that's really the point."

Brown told National Public Radio's "Weekend Edition" during a 2003 publicity tour — he declines interviews now — that his characters and action are fictional but "the ancient history, the secret documents, the rituals, all of this is factual." Around the same time, on CNN he said that "the background is all true."

Christian scholars beg to differ. Among the key issues:

Jesus' Divinity

Brown's version in "Da Vinci": Christians viewed Jesus as a mere mortal until A.D. 325 when the Emperor Constantine "turned Jesus into a deity" by getting the Council of Nicaea to endorse divine status by "a relatively close vote."

His critics' version: Larry Hurtado of Scotland's University of Edinburgh, whose "Lord Jesus Christ" examines first century belief in Jesus' divinity, says that "on chronology, issues, developments, and all the matters asserted, Brown strikes out; he doesn't even get on base."

He and others cite the worship of Jesus in epistles that Paul wrote in the 50s A.D. One passage teaches that Jesus, "though he was in the form of God, did not count equality with God a thing to be grasped" and became a man (Philippians 2:6).

Historians also say the bishops summoned to Nicaea by Constantine never questioned the long-held belief in Jesus' divinity. Rather, they debated technicalities of how he could be both divine and human and approved a new formulation by a lopsided vote, not a close one.

The New Testament

Brown's version: "More than 80 gospels were considered for the New Testament" but Constantine chose only four. His new Bible "omitted those gospels that spoke of Christ's human traits and embellished those gospels that made him godlike. The earlier gospels were outlawed, gathered up and burned." The Dead Sea Scrolls and manuscripts from Nag Hammadi, Egypt, were "the earliest Christian records," not the four Gospels.

Critics: Historians say Christians reached consensus on the authority of the first century's four Gospels and letters of Paul during the second century. But some of the 27 New Testament books weren't universally accepted until after Constantine's day. Constantine himself had nothing to do with these decisions.

Some rejected writings are called gospels, though they lack the narrative histories that characterize the New Testament's four. Matthew, Mark, Luke and John were earlier and won wide consensus as memories and beliefs from Jesus' apostles and their successors.

The rejected books often portrayed an ethereal Jesus lacking the human qualities depicted in the New Testament Gospels — the exact opposite of Brown's scenario. Gnostic gospels purported to contain secret spiritual knowledge from Jesus as the means by which an elite could escape the material world, which they saw as corrupt. They often spurned Judaism's creator God and the Old Testament.

On the question of mass burning of texts deemed heretical, Ehrman of North Carolina says there's little evidence to support that claim. Rejected books simply disappeared because people stopped using them, and nobody bothered to make new copies in an age long before the printing press.

The Dead Sea Scrolls? These were Jewish documents, not Christian ones. The Nag Hammadi manuscripts? With one possible exception, these came considerably later than the New Testament Gospels.

Jesus as Married

Brown's version: Jesus must have wed because Jewish decorum would "virtually forbid" an unmarried man. His spouse was Mary Magdalene and their daughter inaugurated a royal bloodline in France.

Critics: First century Jewish historian Josephus said most Jews married but Essene holy men did not. The Magdalene myth only emerged in medieval times.

Brown cites the Nag Hammadi "Gospel of Philip" as evidence of a marriage, but words are missing from a critical passage in the tattered manuscript: "Mary Magdalene (missing) her more than (missing) the disciples (missing) kiss her (missing) on her (missing)."

Did Jesus kiss Mary on the lips, or cheek or forehead? Whatever, Gnostics would have seen the relationship as platonic and spiritual, scholars say.

James M. Robinson of Claremont (Calif.) Graduate School, a leading specialist, thinks the current popularity of Mary Magdalene "says more about the sex life (or lack of same) of those who participate in this fantasy than it does about Mary Magdalene or Jesus."

The whole "Da Vinci" hubbub, Witherington says, shows "we are a Jesus-haunted culture that's biblically illiterate" and harbors general "disaffection from traditional answers."

But he and others also see a chance to inform people about the beliefs of Christianity through the "Da Vinci" controversy.

"If people are intrigued by the historical questions, there are plenty of materials out there," Yale's Attridge says.

British Justice Peter Smith, who recently backed Brown against plagiarism charges, perhaps best summed up the situation in his decision:

"Merely because an author describes matters as being factually correct does not mean that they are factually correct. It is a way of blending fact and fiction together to create that well known model 'faction.' The lure of apparent genuineness makes the books and the films more receptive to the readers/audiences. The danger of course is that the faction is all that large parts of the audience read, and they accept it as truth."

Fifth Sunday of Easter (B)

I am the vine, you are the branches. (Jn 15:1-8)


In the Old Testament, Israel was referred to as a vine. But it did not bear fruit and for this reason, according to Jesus, it was uprooted and replaced by a new one. The new vine is Jesus and his disciples are the branches.

BRANCHES THAT DO NOT BEAR FRUIT

Yet Christians can be found who do not bear fruit. We can identify two kinds.

The first are are those who are Christians in name only. It just so happened that they were born Christians. It doesn't really matter to them whether they are Christians or not.

The second kind are those who have given themselves already to a life of sin. St. Paul describes them this way: "They are filled with every form of wickedness, evil, greed, and malice; full of envy, murder, rivalry, treachery, and spite. They are gossips and scandalmongers and they hate God. They are insolent, haughty, boastful, ingenious in their wickedness, and rebellious toward their parents. They are senseless, faithless, heartless, ruthless (Rom 1: 30-31)."

What happens to them? God leaves them alone. They grow in their wicked ways. St. Paul says: "And since they did not see fit to acknowledge God, God handed them over to their undiscerning mind to do what is improper (Rom 1:28-29)." Using the symbol of the vine, Jesus says: "He takes away every branch in me that does not bear fruit."

BRANCHES THAT DO BEAR FRUIT

Those Christians who bear fruit are described as: compassionate, kind-hearted, humble, good, patient. They seek forgiveness and they are ready to forgive. They are truthful. They do not let the sun go down on their anger. They are helpful. They give a helping hand. They know how to give thanks. They do not engage idle talk. They are peaceful. They are loving. They do everything in the name of the Lord.

CONCLUSION

Christians form the branches that is Christ. There are two kinds of Christians. Those who bear fruit and those that do not. Which are we?

Sunday, May 07, 2006

Fourth Sunday of Easter (B)

Good Shepherd Sunday (Jn 10:11-18)




In Palestine sheep are raised for their wool and not for their meat. Hence, the sheep lives with the shepherd for years. And they develop strong affections for one another. For this reason, the shepherd truly loves his sheep and the sheep know him and love him. The shepherd protects the sheep from wild animals. He is armed with a slingshot and club.

Jesus presents himself as the Good Shepherd. He paid the price of our redemption.

What makes the love of Christ heroic (according to St. Paul) was that while we were still enemies, he died for us (Rom 5:7-8).