Saturday, March 26, 2011

Ten Directives for Young People



1.    Don’t let your parents down. They brought you up.
2.    Stop and think before you drink.
3.    Ditch dirty thoughts, or they will ditch you.
4.    Show-off driving is juvenile. Don’t do it; act your age.
5.    Be smart, obey. You’ll give orders someday.
6.    Choose your friends carefully. You are what they are.
7.    Choose a date fit for a mate.
8.    Don’t go steady unless you’re ready.
9.    Go to church regularly. God gives you a week; give him back an   hour.
10. Live carefully. The soul you save may be your own.

  ~ From Gems of Thought

P.S. The Parable of the Prodigal Son inspired me to post this in facebook. The inspiration was divine. Today, let us pray for our loved ones and friends who are lost. Let us pray for their healing and wellness. Let us also pray that God will give them the wisdom to know true happiness and peace. Thanks!






Friday, April 2, 2010

LENT AND FORGIVENESS

by Friar Jim Van Vurst, O.F.M.

Lent presents to us God’s infinite love for all humankind. So many teachings in the gospel emphasize the mercy of God, which is surely one of the reasons the Gospels are constantly read.

Most never tire of the Parable of the Prodigal Son, our Gospel for the fourth Sunday of Lent (Lk 15:1-32). The scene is so easy to picture in our minds. The son has taken off on his own, expecting to set the world on fire, and in the end he is the one who gets burned. He has dishonored his father in a most horrific way. By taking his share of the inheritance before his father dies, he has in so many words said to his father, “As far as I’m concerned, you’re dead now. I want out.”

Yet, Jesus described the father’s longing to see his son again, sitting by the road day after day. When the son finally came to his senses and journeyed home, the father's heart leaped for joy. He doesn’t force his prodigal to crawl to him on his knees. Rather, the father runs down the hill to reach his son without delay.

Meanwhile, the son is already practicing his apology, asking only that he be given the lowly status of a servant. The father not only welcomes him back without recrimination, but he embraces him and calls for a marvelous feast.

Many listeners were not pleased with this parable of Jesus. Likewise even today some are not happy. They say the father was too kind. Where was the justice, the penalty, the “payback"? The father left that bad son “off the hook.” That is why only Jesus could tell that parable; no one else but he would have thought that way.

God is always doing the opposite of what many think he should do. If we are wise, all of us would relish this mercy of God, illustrated in Jesus’ parable. We have all experienced God’s mercy and always will need forgiveness.

Of course this parable was spoken by Jesus because he wanted his listeners and in particular his disciples to take to heart. When it comes to sin, we are the prodigal son or daughter. When it comes to forgiveness, we are to be like the prodigal’s father (or mother).

What Forgiveness Is and Is Not

First, we need to understand what forgiveness really is. And let’s face it. Forgiving real hurt is more difficult than fasting, doing other penances or going to Church and saying our prayers.

It is extremely important to realize just where forgiveness resides. To begin with, forgiveness is not a feeling or an emotion; it is a decision we make even when our feelings are charged with anger.

Forgiveness comes from our will. We may feel like we don’t mean the forgiveness we try offer. We easily judge ourselves by our feelings rather than by the decisions we make. But if we say the words, “I forgive” and pray for that offender, we do indeed forgive. To forgive often includes an act of faith in trusting we mean what we say.

True forgiveness is not given on condition that the person apologizes. Our forgiveness may be rejected. We don’t forgive in order to get something back. It may or may not happen. It is given because it is the good and the right thing to do; it is what Jesus asked us to do: “Forgive one another."

Forgiveness is taking a risk of being hurt again. At the same time, forgiveness includes accepting an apology if and when it is given. Don’t be surprised if some feelings of hurt, even resentment, may linger after forgiveness. That struggle is part of our woundedness. Forgiveness is choosing to love another who by rights doesn’t seem to deserve it. Remember, forgiveness is about compassion rather than justice.

After saying all this, it’s no wonder that our willingness to forgive is the most perfect way of thanking God for the forgiveness we have experienced in our own love. God’s mercy is not to be hoarded by us; it is to be shared.

But Jesus Was God

Yes, Jesus was God, so we might say it was “easy” for him to forgive. The truth is that he experienced life on earth through his human nature. He gave up, as Paul tells us, “what it was like to feel like God.” On the cross, his whole body was filled with terrible pain. He felt rejected and hated. Forgiveness at that moment was as much an act of Jesus' will as it is for us. Yet, in the midst of all that, he forgave those who were murdering him.

But, a most important point: God shares his mercy and forgiveness with us that we may share it with others. In the most difficult forgiving situations, Jesus tells us: “Come to me, you who are burdened….”All our forgiveness is from the font of God’s love for us. He would never command us to forgive and not give us, if we ask in faith and trust, the grace and strength to forgive.
--
"Life is not a journey to the grave with the intent of arriving safely in a well-preserved body, but rather to skid in broadside, thoroughly used up, totally worn out, loudly proclaiming: "WOW, What a Ride

Sunday, December 20, 2009

Catholics Need to Read Their Bibles

F e a t u r e A r t i c l e

Published in This Rock Magazine, February, 2004
_______________________________________

Catholics Need to Read Their Bibles
By Dave Armstrong

The Bible-reading habits of Catholics lag far behind those of Evangelical Protestants. For their part, Evangelicals are usually ignorant of Church history, at least those nearly fifteen centuries before Martin Luther came along. It’s a sad fact of human nature that people tend to pit things against each other that don’t need to be opposed logically (or biblically). It should be both/and, not either/or. Catholics ought to do more Bible reading, and Evangelicals ought to read more Church history. We can learn from each other.

Of course, some Catholics read their Bibles, but they are sadly too few in number. It is not at bottom a "Protestant" thing to love the Bible, and the falsity of sola scriptura does not mean that Catholics ought to underemphasize Holy Scripture. Our Church officially encourages such reading and familiarity, but old habits die hard.

Lest anyone think this is my own opinion (perhaps brought along from my Protestant days), let me cite Pope Leo XIII, who in 1893 wrote in his encyclical Providentissimus Deus (On the Study of Holy Scripture):
"There are not a few Catholics, men of talent and learning, who do devote themselves with ardor to the defense of the sacred writings and making them better known and understood. . . . We cannot but earnestly exhort others also, from whose skill and piety and learning we have a right to expect good results, to give themselves to the same praiseworthy work. It is our wish and fervent desire to see an increase in the number of the approved and persevering laborers for the cause of Holy Scripture" (PD 54).

The history of Protestant divergent interpretation (where error must be present, because Protestants contradict themselves) proves that the Church is necessary for the proper interpretation of Scripture. The formal system of sola scriptura has failed abysmally. But Scripture itself is not obscure or difficult to understand, at least not in its main outlines. I have never found that to be the case in any serious Bible study I have undertaken on my own.

One should, of course, become acquainted with basic hermeneutical and exegetical principles (guidelines for how to properly interpret the Bible). And that takes a little study too, but one book on the subject would suffice: Making Senses Out of Scripture: Reading the Bible As the First Christians Did by Mark P. Shea.

When I posted my thoughts on the relative lack of Bible reading among Catholics on the Catholic section of a Protestant weblog, several Catholics criticized me, saying that it does no good to read the Bible more if one is getting the wrong message from it due to the lack of authoritative guidance from the Church. My points were:

1. It is good to read the Bible, because it is God’s inspired revelation to mankind.

2. Catholics (even solid, orthodox ones) read it far less than typical Evangelicals do, and that is a bad thing.

My critics’ points were:

1. It is good to read the Bible, but one also needs the Church’s guidance to do it properly and to get the most out of it.

2. Catholics do better than Evangelicals in this regard, because they have more guidance and hence are less prone to various false interpretations.

This second point was a different, more particular proposition. That it is a good thing to read the Bible more is indisputable, and the Catholic Church teaches this. It also teaches that one should submit one’s theology as a whole to the Church and not oppose one’s own theology to that of the apostolic Tradition of the Church.

Furthermore, my own opinion—I don’t claim to speak for the Church on this—is that it would be a better thing to read the Bible without "outside" guidance than to not read it. That endeavor is filled with dangers of false teaching taking hold, because people often distort biblical teaching to their own ends. But such is life; anything can be distorted and twisted (notably love, sex, the use of money, and patriotism). Bible interpretation is one of the many things that human beings distort and abuse.

But the "solution" of many Catholics—to not read the Bible at all so as to not be "confused" or "led astray"—is lamentable, "kindergarten Christianity" laziness. The same people who are guilty of this shortcoming usually find plenty of time to devote to the "study" of sports, politics, their latest boyfriend or girlfriend, their lawns and gardens, and so on. Yet somehow they can’t find any time to read their Bibles and soak in the words of the very Lord they worship and receive every week.

Why? This practice is not in accordance with Catholic teaching. Catholics have the Church to guide them, but that doesn’t mean that they should sit and let the Church do everything for them with regard to biblical learning and literacy.

My guess is that many Catholics simply don’t want to do the work. They are content to let Mother Church spoon-feed them. (They want to remain "babes in Christ" who drink "milk," as Paul says.) That is not Catholicism in essence. Catholics are to work and strive to understand their faith just as much as any Evangelical Protestant does, and that includes Bible reading. The fact that they often don’t do so is an indictment of Catholic catechesis in the last generation, but not of the Church’s teaching itself—because that is not what is taught.

The fathers of the Second Vatican Council urged Catholics to read Scripture with greater frequency: "The sacred synod forcefully and specifically exhorts all the Christian faithful, especially those who live the religious life, to learn ‘the surpassing knowledge of Jesus Christ’ (Phil. 3:8) by frequent reading of divine Scripture. . . . Therefore, let them go gladly to the sacred text itself, whether in the sacred liturgy, which is full of the divine words, or in devout reading, or in such suitable exercises and various other helps that, with the approval and guidance of the pastors of the Church, are happily spreading everywhere in our day" (Dei Verbum 25).

The Catechism of the Catholic Church, Vatican II, and any papal encyclical on a theological topic are all filled with scriptural references. Even the homilies at every Mass are supposed to be (if they aren’t always in practice) based on the biblical text just read. I hear more Scripture at every Mass—in the readings, the liturgy, and the homily—than I ever did at the various Protestant services I attended for the thirteen years prior to my conversion. But we Catholics need to read our own Bibles as well. If we don’t, then we don’t love God as much as we think, because love demands that we want to know more and more about the one we love, all the time. The Bible is God’s very inspired words. How then can any Christian not be passionately interested in it?

Even the principle of sola scriptura ("Scripture alone"), according to the sharpest Protestant scholars, means that the Bible is the ultimate authority—above councils and popes and any tradition—but not that no commentary or tradition may be cited or utilized. That argument is more properly attributed to an extreme Bible-only position, more characteristic of a low-church, Fundamentalist, Anabaptist type, almost completely anti-institutional and ahistorical in mindset.

Catholics believe that the same Holy Spirit who protects the Bible from error protects our Church from error, so that we can trust that it teaches us true theology. It is not a trust in men; it is a trust in God, a trust that he has the power to preserve his truths in a human institution, by the guidance of the Holy Spirit, despite human sins and shortcomings (just as he preserved his word in Scripture by using sinners like David, Paul, and Peter to write the inspired words).

Protestants often find it difficult to reconcile Catholics’ lack of Bible reading with our claims to possess the fullness of Christian truth. Any viewpoint that is self-confident and healthy needs to engage criticism openly and honestly, no matter what the forum is. Protestants do that all the time. They write whole books about problems in their ranks. It is a sign of health and vigor.

Protestants often think that it is official Catholic teaching to not read Scripture lest one be led astray, and that we are not urged to read Scripture (or even worse urged to not read it) for fear that it would convince Catholics of the errors of their Church. It is important to make this observation, because it is a significant problem in dealing with Protestants. One must emphasize that the Catholic system does not condone this viewpoint. I readily admit as an apologist that Catholics fall short in practice on any matter that could be mentioned, just as all Christians do.

For non-Catholics to respect us, they have to see us criticizing ourselves and not closing ranks and pretending that we are above all the errors with which everyone else struggles. This truth is obvious, and outsiders see it already, so we have to deal with it frankly. I’m not advocating a neglect of anything else in the Catholic spiritual or liturgical life. I’m maintaining only that too many Catholics neglect or try to minimize or de-emphasize the Bible.

If a Catholic truly does know Scripture, he also needs to demonstrate that in conversation: "Walk the walk," don’t just "talk the talk." The more we show that Bible and Catholicism are not contradictory terms, the more we appeal to Protestants with the truth of our overall message. A Catholic who is properly prepared can easily go head-to-head with a Protestant exegete.

We can show how it is possible to break out of the stereotype by example, and by demonstrating in argument that the Catholic Church is far more the truly "biblical" Church than any form of Protestantism. We take all of Scripture into account, not just our favorite verses and proof texts. We laboriously preserved Scripture all those hundreds of years before Protestantism ever saw the light of day; we canonized it; we developed all the major branches of theology based upon it before Luther and Calvin even existed. The Catholic need not yield an inch in this regard to the Protestant.

It’s good to reject sola scriptura and submit to the mind of the Church, but it is also good to show forth a positive love for Scripture. That comes only by reading it and becoming better acquainted with its contents. If the Mass alone were sufficient for that end, then Catholics would already know their Bibles better than Protestants. But they obviously don’t. So I regard it as a self-evident truth that Catholics need to do more study apart from the liturgy, prayer books, and rosaries. We need to read the Bible itself, frequently and often. Merely reading a Bible doesn’t prove love of God, but a person who truly loves God will long to read the words of his beloved.

________________________________________

Dave Armstrong, webmaster of Biblical Evidence for Catholicism (www.biblicalcatholic.com), is the author of A Biblical Defense of Catholicism (Sophia Institute Press, 2003). He writes from Detroit, Michigan, where he lives with his wife, Judy, and their four children.

Sunday, October 11, 2009

Is there another life after death?


Abelardo N. Navarro

The best proof of another life after this one is Jesus Christ. One thing and one thing only can explain it: His disciples had encountered the real, solid, bodily-resurrected Jesus Christ. Not a hallucination. Not mass hypnosis. Not looking in the wrong tomb or any other silly excuse. If this miracle was just made up, it would have been unmasked quickly. Christianity would not have grown so rapidly in the first century. His disciples would not have given up their lives for a lie. That is simply not human nature.

Christ’s hand-picked disciples were humiliated, beaten, crucified, sawn in half, fed to wild animals and suffered numerous atrocities because of their belief in the resurrection. The flesh and blood risen Christ was also seen and touched by more than 500 people. (1 Corinthians 15, 6). That's why the resurrection story could not be silenced. That's why Christianity continues to grow today.

Nature also gives us ample evidence of another life after this one. A seed dies and becomes a tree. A larva dies and becomes a beautiful butterfly. Metamorphosis is defined as a transformation, a marked change in appearance, character, condition, or function. Isn’t that how the second life is described in the Bible?

Please pause for a moment and reflect on how you can live a more courageous life. Courage in its purest form means making a stand for love -- love of God, neighbor and self. Don't miss out on the last one.

"Let nothing disturb you, nothing affright you. All things are passing; God never changes. Patient endurance attains to all things. Nothing is wanting to him who possesses God. Alone God suffices."

St. Teresa of Avila

Making Sense of Suffering and Evil


Abelardo N. Navarro

Evil and suffering is not a disproof of God, but a constant reminder of our need for the perfect God of the Bible (2 Corinthians 1:8-9).

God did not create a perfect world. The more perfect exists alongside the imperfect. Nature has both constructive and destructive forces. Physical good will always be mixed with physical evil until creation reaches perfection. God created the world in a state of journeying so that we could be his co-creators in perfecting our world.

Suffering is a call to love one another. It is also our ticket to heaven. Much of the evil and suffering in our world is due to our failure to heed the commandment to love one another. Our love not only heals and nourishes those who suffer but also redeems us. Suffering then is a necessary part of life because without it we would be like spoiled children not truly loving God out of our own free will.

“We also rejoice in our sufferings, because we know that suffering produces perseverance; perseverance, character; and character, hope.” – Romans 5, 3-4

That is why God does not seem to interfere in our lives. He has a plan to get us to heaven and he does not want to make changes in that plan unless something goes wrong. But we certainly can (and should) pray that this plan includes the special favors that we ask of Him. His plan takes into account all of the free-will choices that we make, including how much we pray and how diligently we try to follow His commands. By all means talk to God all the time about a happier life here on earth.

The late President Corazon C. Aquino was a good model of this type of faith. She often said, “Gawain mo lahat ang makakaya mo at kung kulang iyon hayaan mo na ang Dios na magpuno noon.” (Do your best and let God take care of the rest.)

For more information about this subject, please go to this link and read paragraph 272 and following.
http://www.usccb.org/catechism/text/pt1sect2chpt1art1p3.shtml

Has Science Discovered God?


Abelardo N. Navarro

A Reflection

In my cyberspace ministry, I am often asked questions like: Can God create a rock so big He cannot lift it? How come your God can not restore an amputated limb? Why does your God demand the death of so many people in the Bible? And other similar questions which made me think.

It seems to me, many people have acquired wrong concepts of God and how He works in our lives. Much evil in the world, especially physical evil, results from the limited kind of universe we live. God did not create a perfect world although he could have done that. Instead, God chose to create a world in a state of journeying so that we could be co-creators in "perfecting" our world.

We suffer, get sick, meet an accident simply because God cannot change the biological and physical laws He created. For example, if God restored an amputee’s limb how will He answer the prayer of a prosthetics doctor for patients? If I ask God to give me clear weather tomorrow because my grandson will have a birthday party, how will God respond to the farmer praying for rain on the other side of the mountain? If a coconut is about to hit me, God will not change the laws of gravity so that I will not be hit by that nut. If He did, we would have a worldwide catastrophe.

God is also not a cosmic bellboy at our beck and call. He is also not a babysitter because God does not want us to be spoiled children. He has given us everything so that we can live in peace and be happy. If we have problems they are largely of our own making. Like a good Father, God wants us to solve our problems, but we certainly can (and should) pray for guidance and a happier life.

Still, atheists insist: “your God’s contradictory characteristics make it impossible for Him to exist.” Albert Einstein, the greatest mind the world has ever known, wrote in his book "The World As I See It" that the harmony of natural law "reveals an intelligence of such superiority that, compared with it, all the systematic thinking and acting of human beings is an utterly insignificant reflection." He went on to write, "Everyone who is seriously involved in the pursuit of science becomes convinced that a spirit is manifest in the laws of the Universe--a spirit vastly superior to that of man, and one in the face of which we with our modest powers must feel humble."

A very persuasuve statement, indeed. Why did Einstein say that? Simply because our universe could not have been created by chance. The force behind the Big Bang, something physicists call "the Dark Energy Term" had to be accurate to one part in ten with 120 zeros. If you wrote this as a decimal, the number would look like this:
0.000000000000000000000000000000
00000000000000000000000000000000
00000000000000000000000000000000
0000000000000000000000000000001

But the best proof God exists is Jesus Christ himself, the Word of God who became flesh, and the revealer of God. God the Father sent Jesus not only to redeem man. He was also sent so that we have no excuse for disbelieving. What human can:

Silence a typhoon?
Walk on water?
Multiply a few loaves of bread and fish in order to feed a multitude of 5,000?
Bring dead people back to life?
Give sight to people born blind?
Change water into wine?
Rise from the dead?

These miracles demonstrate Christ's power over life and death and the forces of nature. Only a God can have such powers. And if these miracles were just made up, Christianity would not have grown rapidly in the first century. His disciples would not have risked their lives for a bunch of lies. That simply is not human nature. One thing and one thing only can explain it: These men had encountered the real, solid, bodily-resurrected Jesus Christ. Not a hallucination. Not mass hypnosis. Not looking in the wrong tomb or any other silly excuse. The flesh and blood risen Christ was seen and touched by more than 500 people. (1 Corinthians 15,6). That's why the resurrection story could not be silenced.

After his conversion from atheism St. Augustine said “our hearts are restless until they rest in Thee.” God wants to show how much He loves and cares for you. Humbly seek God and you too will find Him.

"Let nothing disturb you, nothing affright you. All things are passing; God never changes. Patient endurance attains to all things. Nothing is wanting to him who possesses God. Alone God suffices." ~ St. Teresa of Avila


References:
CosmicFootprints.com
New American Study Bible
Posted by Abel at 1:20 PM
Labels: Atheism, Scientific proof of God, Understanding Suffering and Evil
4 comments:
Eufrocino Mania, Jr. said...
Nice going, Abel!

October 2, 2009 3:08 PM
Abel said...
Thanks Jun, appreciate it!

October 3, 2009 4:29 AM
Jerryd said...
I share most of your views. I differ perhaps slightly in my belief that God created a perfect world ("He saw that it was good"), a position that is much harder to defend in view of suffering. I believe that man's view is so narrow and limited such that we will only appreciate God's perfection to the fullest once we see Him "face to face".

October 4, 2009 4:37 AM
Abel said...
Jerry, In my other blog, "Making Sense of Suffering and Evil," I said the destructive and constructive forces of nature are still with us; therefore, the world God created is not perfect. The world we live in will become perfect when the prophecy in the book of Revelation comes to pass. "Then I saw a new heaven and a new earth.." Also, the word 'good' does not necessarily mean perfect. Jerry, I am so glad to hear from you again. God bless!

October 4, 2009 4:56 AM