Saturday, September 19, 2009

Year of Priests

YEAR OF PRIESTS : Ministerial Priesthood by Fr. George Kureethra
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The Pope has inaugurated the Year for Priests, describing it as a year of prayer by priests, with priests and for priests. The stress is on priestly ministry and spirituality. The very term ministerial priesthood implies that priests are at the service of the People of God. According to St Peter the whole Christian Community is a chosen race, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people set apart to proclaim God’s wonders (1Pet 2/9). The ministerial priesthood is at the service of this royal priesthood. I would like to highlight in this article one of the most important dimensions of ministerial priesthood that Jesus very much stressed, namely, servant hood. "As you know", Jesus said, "the so called rulers of the nations act as tyrants and their great ones oppress them. But it shall not be so among you; whoever would be great among you must be your servant, and whoever would be first among you shall make himself slave of all. Think of the Son of Man who has not come to be served, but to serve and to give his life to redeem many." (Mk 10, 42-45). Jesus confirmed this teaching by his own example when at the last Supper he washed the feet of his own disciples. "Do you understand what I have done to you?" Jesus asked. "You call me Master and Lord, and you are right, for so I am. If I then, your Lord and Master, have washed your feet, you also must wash one another’s feet." (Jn 13, 13-14). I have been fortunate to come across some very holy and humble priests during my seminary studies and early priesthood. It was in 1951 that I joined the Delhi Archdiocese as a seminarian. I was sent to the Allahabad Seminary for my formation. In those days the Allahabad Seminary was a very tiny one. We were just 37 seminarians including theologians, philosophers and minor seminarians. Not one of our professors had a doctorate. But they were very humble, holy and dedicated priests. They took great pains to prepare the classes and taught us well. They were more interested in our formation than in teaching. I was deeply impressed by them. It was enough to look at the way they spent their lives with the seminarians – in the classrooms, in the garden, in taking part in the manual work and in sports. I used to correspond with my Archbishop, Joseph Fernandes, frequently. He used to reply promptly, using always an Inland Letter Form, the cheapest form of communication. No letterheads, no printed envelops. Once I wrote to him for a permission. The reply came within a few days, and it consisted of just one word, yes. Not another word. When the time came for priestly ordination, I wrote to him saying that arrangements would have to be made for our retreat prior to the ordination. In those days candidates came straight from the retreat to the Ordination Ceremony. We were two of us, myself and Fr Thomson Panakkal. The Archbishop made arrangements for our retreat in St Xavier’s School. I wrote to him saying that we would take a taxi from the railway station to go to St Xavier’s. When we arrived at the railway station I was shocked beyond belief that the Archbishop himself was there on the platform to receive us! He warmly welcomed us and took us to St Xavier’s where he introduced us to the preacher, Fr Charles Saldhana S J, a great Jesuit. The retreat was another great experience for me. Though we were just the two of us, Fr Saldhana preached a full-scale retreat, without any shortcuts, as if he was preaching to a crowd of sixty priests. There was the morning prayer and meditation, followed my Mass. From 9.00 a.m. to 9.45 meditation. Meditation again at 11.00. In the afternoon at 3.00 there was a conference. Meditation again at 6.00, followed by adoration. At 9.00 pm. there were points for mediation, concluding with night prayers. Fr Saldhana was available throughout the retreat. I learned from him how to put my heart and soul to a job without counting how many would be the beneficiaries. It was a great learning experience. We were ordained in the cathedral on 21st December 1960. In those days concelebration was not permitted. Archbishop Joseph was the ordaining prelate, and Archbishop Angelo Fernandes was the commentator. I distinctly remember how after the post-communion prayer Archbishop Angelo declaimed in his sonorous voice the famous poem by Lacordaire, The Beautiful Hands of a Priest. Later I learnt that among the priests present was an Italian priest, Fr Favrin, who was then parish priest of Karol Bagh. He owned an old car and also an old motorcycle which he used to repair himself. As a result the grease and the dirt left some permanent stains on his hands. When Archbishop Angelo declaimed the poem The Beautiful Hands of Priest, Fr Favrin proudly displayed his hands to those around him saying, Look, look, the beautiful hands of a Priest! Later at dinner, he introduced me to the priests and alluding to my very short height, said: "Fathers, I have great pleasure in introducing to you the latest pocket edition of a priest!" For many years I was known as the pocket edition. Such hilarious mirth was a welcome relief to us new priests. Later I had the opportunity to live in the Archbishop’s house for some weeks where I again experienced the humility of Archbishop Joseph. When he came to the dining room he would be the first one to greet us, without waiting for us to greet him. Whenever the postman arrived, the Archbishop himself would go and distribute the letters to the priests. Of course, fifty years ago our diocese was a very small one, with just a handful of priests and a few thousand faithful. There was hardly any project worth talking about. Archbishop Angelo was here mainly as the Secretary General of the CBCI, which post he held for many years. I am amazed at the way the diocese has grown. We have benefited very much from the presence of a very large number of men and women religious. Today the religious priests outnumber the diocesan. More women religious are engaged in social service and other forms of apostolate than in educational activities. The laity has come to their own, making tremendous contributions to the growth of the diocese. The wise Chinese philosopher Lao-Tsu wrote: What have the river and the sea done To be the kings of the hundred valleys? They have put themselves below them And that is why they reign in the hundred valleys. The meaning is clear. Life is in the valleys. Culture and civilization flourish in the valleys. But there would be no valleys without the river and the sea. By placing themselves below the valleys, the river and the sea control life in the valleys. Lao-Tsu continues: If the saint wants to be at the top of his people,
First he has to learn how to talk with humility,
If he wants to lead his people, he should be last.
That is how the saint is at the top of his people.
And he doesn’t make them suffer.
Willingly they place him at the top.
And do not get tired of him.
Since he doesn’t compete with anybody,
Nobody can compete with him (as quoted in the Christian Community Bible) - http://www.cbcisite.com/
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Friday, September 18, 2009

Messianic Bible prophecy involving Jesus Christ

Messianic Bible prophecy involving Jesus Christ: "Messianic prophecies fulfilled by Jesus Christ By George Konig and Ray Konig http://www.konig.org/ ______________________ Jesus is unique among all people in history in that he is the fulfillment of centuries of Messianic prophecies, which are found in the Old Testament of the Bible, that foretold his place of birth, details of his life, his mission, his nature, his death, and his resurrection. The prophecies are sometimes called 'Messianic prophecies,' because they refer to the Messiah, which means 'anointed one' or 'chosen one.' Some scholars estimate that there are more than 300 Messianic prophecies in the Bible's Old Testament that refer to the Messiah (Jesus). You can learn more about Bible prophecy at AboutBibleProphecy.com, and we have included a sampling below. These prophecies, as well as the books of the Old Testament, were written centuries before Jesus was born. Many people think of Bible prophecies as being predictions about the future. Strictly speaking, they are not predictions, they are promises from God. Whereas a prediction can be a guess, a prophecy is more than a guess, it is a revelation from God about the future. To the extent that this article uses the word 'prediction,' the word is used synonymously with 'foretelling,' 'foretold,' or 'promised.' Jesus foretold his death and resurrection See Matthew 20:17-19, as an example. Many of the early Christians, some of whom personally knew Jesus, were willing to risk death to tell others about Jesus and his offer of salvation and eternal life"
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Wednesday, September 16, 2009

Meditation

To experience life in its wholeness:
Joy, Anguish, insecurity,
Contradictions of Living Existentially
Enjoy a few quite moments of silence
before reading the following… Let all the tension in you flow away… Read the following insights one by one;
allow each sentence to touch your inner self… Do not rationalize… Just wonder… Let your whole self be changed for the better… ===== 1) In the best of us there is the worst...”
I can will what is right but I cannot do it.
For I do not do the good I want,
but the evil that I do not want is what I do.”
(Rom 7/18-19)
2) In the worst of us there is the best...”
For the law of the Spirit of life in Christ has made me
free from the law of sin and death.” Rom 8/2
3) The masculine and the Feminine...
4) Our strength as Weakness;
Our Weakness as strength... “... Strength is made perfect in weakness...
for when I am weak then I am strong.”
5) Every opportunity is a crisis;
every crisis is an opportunity...
hence discernment...
6) Western principle of Contradiction:
Either/ Or (White or black)...
7) Eastern Principle of Contradiction:
Both/and... (White and black)
8) Contradictions are solved at higher levels:
union, convergence, love...
9) Be friendly with your weakness/shadow...
10) Without fight there is no victory...
11) Without resistance one cannot walk;
if the floor is too smooth it is difficult to walk...
12) Differences are to be accepted,
appreciated and celebrated...
13) Reality is a rainbow...
it is not monochromatic...
14) Wounded healer...
Jesus is the wounded healer...
We are called to participate in this mission...
Interir Freedom -> Passionate attachment ->
On fire -> Compassion - >
Peace... Peace...
Peace... Peace... Peace.
***************** E-Mail: vmalpan@gmail.com

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

No title - No message (?)

Pictures are themselves message-bearers.
Shall we listen? +++++++++++

Monday, September 14, 2009

Peace-Building

Peacebuilding is the construction of new environments and new cultures which transform deficient structures and capabilities which unite the strengths of emerging innovations in all pathways of our local-global planetary life. Peacebuilding creates and maintains beneficial conditions for sustainable (life-enhancing) social, economic, political and spiritual development of all peoples. - (Adapted from speech given at UN by PTP and "An Agenda for Peace", a UN Report of the Secretary-General, 1992)
Unlike peace-making and peace-keeping, which are related to warfare and settlement of conflicts, "...the concept of peace-building (is) the construction of a new environment --- the transformation of deficient national structures and capabilities, and --- the strengthening of new democratic institutions." - (Excerpted from "An Agenda for Peace", a UN Report of the Secretary-General in January 1992, which globally and officially recognized the emerging field of peacebuilding.)
"We need to build not only geographical but spiritual bridges between people and strengthen the intellectual, cultural and communication linkages between our societies. (Let us) stand ready to participate in the effort to promote social integration and create a culture of peace." - (From UNESCO PRESS Report at World Summit for Social Development by Director-General UNESCO, Frederico Mayor)
"Where there is peace, there is culture; where there is culture, there is peace." - Nicholas Roerich "Positive creativeness is the fundamental quality of the human spirit. Let us welcome all those who, surmounting personal difficulties, --- propel their spirits to the task of peaceBuilding, thus ensuring a radiant future." - Nicholas Roerich - https://mail.google.com/mail/?ui=2&view=bsp&ver=1qygpcgurkovy
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Sunday, September 13, 2009

HOMILY : A Tortured Relationship by Peter Clarke O.P. (Twenty-Fourth Sunday of the Year Readings: Isaiah 50:5-9 / James 2:14-18 / Mark 8:27-35) 'If anyone wants to be a follower of mine….' To me this is one of the most crucial statements in the whole of the Gospels. It forces me to ask myself how much it means to me to be a follower of Jesus. Am I prepared to give what it takes? We have read of Jesus asking his disciples, 'You, who do you say I am?' Peter's replied, 'You are the Christ!' with the title 'Christ' being loaded with all the understandings and expectations of a people that had being nourished on the Prophetic Word of God. Jesus then told his disciples that the Son of Man was destined to suffer grievously and even to be put to death. Not for a moment did Peter think that Jesus was playing with words. He started to rebuke Jesus. Far from telling Peter to calm down and not be so literal, Jesus rebuked him savagely, 'Get behind me, Satan! You are thinking not as God thinks, but as human beings do.' Jesus clearly wanted only those to be his followers whowould accept him as the Rejected One…and then, later, as the one who surmounted this rejection by his rising from the dead.And what is more, such a disciple would have to be one who was prepared to be rejected even as Jesus would be. Jesus warned them that in loyalty to him there would be renunciations for them to make and crosses for them carry. They would need to have the courage of their conviction, and in so doing they would transcend all the hostility that might be thrown at them.As Jesus laid down these ground-rules for discipleship he must have been thinking of himself. Knowing that he was the Christ, the Suffering Servant of the Lord, he had to come to terms with what this would mean for him. In Gethsemane, he would pray, 'My soul is sorrowful to the point of death …Abba, Father! For you everything is possible. Take this cup away from me. But let it be as you, not I, would have it' (Mark 14.34). What courage in his convictions! This is Jesus in an intensely loving relationship with his Heavenly Father, and yet a tortured relationship - not with the torture of resentment but the torture of extreme apprehension of the pain that loving obedience imposed.At this very moment some of you may be living out your Christianity in fear for your lives. Yet others, in an increasingly secular society, may be cornered by legislation that deeply offends your consciences. You may have a heavy career-price to pay if your convictions prevent you from following your leaders. Others of you may be subjected to victimization and vilification for no other reason than that you choose to wear in public the accepted Christian symbol - the Cross.Many of you, young and old, insist on living according to certain values. Day in, day out, you meet with jeers for being idealistic - out of touch reality which is practical, efficient, and capable of generating a measure of wealth, comfort, pleasure and success. You who would be ashamed to be part of this cynicism oblige yourselves to make renunciations and to carry the crosses of hardship and privation. I wish to affirm you in your courageously living up to your deep convictions!What distinguishes us from the brute beasts is that we humans can identify and espouse ideals and insist on living by them, in the full knowledge that this will involve much personal sacrifice. By contrast, animals pursue gratification and survival by all means possible without any qualms of conscience.And what distinguishes us as Christians is that our idealism is drawn from Jesus, the Christ, who for us is the Way, the Truth and the Life. As his followers we live in a loving relationship with Christ. It is a relationship that is far from comfortable, far from cozy. In fact, it is in many ways a tortured relationship, grounded on our resolve to remain his disciples, no matter what the cost to ourselves. - http://torch.op.org