One saint, One faith, One celebration…

A multicultural thanksgiving celebration for the Canonization of San Pedro Calungsod at St Therese Parish, Kennington, Australia

A week after the canonization of San Pedro Calungsod with six other new saints by Pope Benedict XVI, the Filipino faithful in Bendigo area celebrated the thanksgiving mass in honour of this newest Filipino canonized saint.

The celebration commenced with a very multicultural celebration of the Mass at 10.30 in the morning. The mass was attended by so many Parishioners of St Therese, by our Australian friends, Sri Lankan community, Karen group, and Filipino friends from Bendigo and surrounding districts. Our Filipino friends from Pyramid Hill, Melbourne and Cranbourne (the Cebuano Association of Australia) also graced the occasion. Adding to the number Filipinos present in the celebration were the Filipinos from Mindanao who are currently studying the Australia as sponsored by the AusAid.

The Karen group sang the Karen version of the gospel ‘Seek ye first the Kingdom of God’. The Sri Lankan group was represented by the Singhalese version in one of the prayers of the faithful. The other prayers of the faithful were also prayed in Karen, in Filipino- Cebuano (Cebu) and Chavacano (Zamboanga) and in English respectively. The music in the liturgy which are mostly if not all composed by Filipino singers and writers, were sung beautifully and solemnly by The  Filipino Choir (TFC) headed by Mr Arnel Aquino. I was almost to the brink of shedding a tear when two young Filipinos sung the Responsorial Psalm ‘Ang Panginoon ang aking pastol’ or ‘The Lord is my Shepherd’ in such a melodic voice and harmony. Adding to the solemnity of the mass was the presence of some Filipino seminarians from Melbourne (thanks a lot Junray, John, Novie, Kaiser and Rey) who shared their skills generously in serving at Mass with a couple of regular altar servers (Blaise and Gerard). Thanks mates for sharing your talents and energy in the preparation as well.

The next big thing to the Eucharistic celebration was the party afterwards with Don and Tita Jo as the Emcees. The rendition of children’ ensemble trained by Mrs Liesbeth Vannemerick was an amazing part of the celebration to represent the Australian culture. The singing of Karen group and the Sri Lankan choir also added more colour into the multicultural theme of the occasion. There was also presentation of Filipino folk dances (Tinikling, Binasuan, and Sinulog) that gave some of our Australian friends a glimpse of Filipino culture. There was also modern dance, games that involved children and adults alike (organized by Adi) which had definitely made everyone more involved and had more fun.

The abundant, sumptuous and delicious food contributed by Pinoys and Aussies alike was enjoyed by everyone there present. Thanks to all who brought a plate and shared your food with us. Adding more colour to the party and to the table were the lechon (pigs on the spit) (first) courtesy of  Cebuano Association of Australia, prepared by Mr Alex Sy and (second) courtesy of the Fernandez’ family in Pyramid Hill, prepared by Tita Evelyn and Tito Victor of Kangaroo flat.

However, it wasn’t all just fun and food. Another highlight of the event was the raffle draw. The  proceeds of which is to be used to transport (via LBC) the many donation of goods by so many generous parishioners and friends in Australia, for some families in Cebu, Philippines. It’s good to see some people going home with some winnings while at the same time sharing their resources to some people in the Philippines.

The finale of the program summed it all, when children came out bearing the letters ‘W-E- A-R-E-  T-H-E- W-O-R-L-D as few select singers sung the song ‘We are the world’ while at the same time prompting everyone there to gather towards the performing area and joined in the singing, as photos were being taken.

All credits and thanks from the bottom of my heart to Fr Andrew Fewings (for making the parish available for the occasion), Arnel-Gina Aguino (for the beautiful music and singing and overall organization) & Don- Bebie Ilagan (for organizing the program and logistics), Malay Verano & Will Ross (for the substantial financial assistance), Angela Stark (for the raffle and fundraising), Liesbeth Vannemerick (for the video and photos), the many Filipinos who have shared their time, talents and treasures. Definitely with your care, help and support our celebration was meaningful, more solemn and a very successful one. Kudos and more power.

For all who have shared their time, talents and treasures with us to celebrate the Canonization of our dear Filipino friend and intercessor in heaven, San Pedro Calungsod, MANY, MANY, MANY THANKS…

May God through the intercession of San Pedro Calungsod, bless you all in all that you do and in all that you are.

 

Marriage: Willed and designed by God

 

Since tomorrow’s gospel speaks about the basic ground of human marriage- that is, it is designed and willed by God from the beginning, I am posting here as part 1 of my Sunday reflection online, a piece of my 25,000 word theological synthesis which  I did last year to complete my Academic requirements for the degree ‘Masters of Theological Studies’ in Melbourne College of Divinity. The topic on marriage is just one of the many aspects I have covered in my work. Part two of this post then would be my homily for tomorrow, 27th Sunday in Ordinary time.

Marriage

Marriage, a fundamental and ancient of human institution, is established and founded by a marriage covenant- “the irrevocable consent that the spouses freely give to and receive from each other.”[1] And this is rightly so because God has willed this from the beginning of creation, as re-affirmed by the Second Vatican Council  in its Constitution on the Church in the Modern world, acknowledging God himself as “the author of marriage who endowed it with various benefits and with various ends in view.”[2] 

In this light then, we can also  understand that marriage is a commitment for life, an indissoluble communion of love between a man and a woman, until the death of one of the spouses.[3]

Jesus himself affirmed this when he was confronted with the issue of divorce. Re-echoing the Genesis account,  he taught that it had always been part of the divine plan of the Creator that marriage  is between a man and a woman, forming an intimate communion of life and love[4], as expressed in their three-fold action of leaving (the parents), joining (with the spouse), and uniting (as one body)[5], to be “rooted in the personal and total self-giving of the couple, and being required by the good of the children.”[6] For by its very nature, marriage is “ordered toward the good of the couple and to the generation and education of children.”[7]

Marriage is indissoluble.

Walter Kasper explains that marriage is indissoluble not only because God wills it, but also because it is inherent in the sacrament itself. He  asserts that the indissolubility of marriage is in fact “based and founded on the anthropological character of marriage as such”, and that “it is in the inner tendency towards definitiveness and exclusiveness of the act of giving and receiving of the two persons in marriage.”[8] According to him, the indissolubility of marriage is “not based exclusively on a law of the church nor is it simply a moral norm or a metaphysical principle. It is rooted in the sacramentality of marriage itself.”[9]

Bishop Peter Elliot outlines three aspects which render “the bond of marriage indissoluble”[10]: i.e. mutual consent, consummation and spousal union. 

Consent, the Bishop notes, as “expressed through those simple words of taking and accepting each other are “words of great power, words which change reality.”[11] The Bishop adds that the words of consent make up “the form of a sacrament…the effectual form of marriage.”[12] The giving of  consent is also “an act of will by which a man and a woman by an irrevocable covenant mutually give and accept one another for the purpose of establishing a marriage.”[13]

Consummation is an expression of married love.[14] Pope John Paul II writes:

This conjugal communion sinks its roots in the natural complementarity that exists between man and woman, and is nurtured through the personal willingness of the spouses to share their entire life project…for this reason such communion  is the fruit and the sign of a profoundly human need.[15]

The Pope here is not separating the consummation aspect of marriage from consent  because he understands that it is constitutive, meaning that both aspects are intimately linked. For him, consent in consummation is not only a “consent to sexual intercourse, but as consent to the total giving of self in an exclusive and absolutely binding way.”[16]

The third aspect of marriage that makes it indissoluble is spousal union. The Genesis account describes this union quite clearly, i.e. “Therefore a man leaves his father and his mother and clings to his wife, and they become one flesh.” (Gen.2:24) Jesus has taught us that these three actions are not just human initiatives  but also of God.  “It is God”, Bishop Elliot says, “who joins husband and wife in this sacred bond as they exchange their mutual consent and consummate their solemn nuptial contract by sexual union.”[17] Together with the demands of marriage,[18] spousal union also demands an oath of faithfulness and exclusivity- a “task which had to be realized personally [because] marriage is an ontological bond, [an objective bond] that was exempt from any action or interference…”[19]

St. Paul has elevated marriage, in its aspect of a spousal unity, to a higher level.  He calls this sacrament of marriage a “great mystery,” which he applies by analogy to the relationship of Christ and the Church. [Eph.5:32]. Bishop Elliot agrees with St Paul by delving further the meaning of those words of consent expressed by the couples in marriage. He remarks that the consent they have expressed is a “consent of love, infused with the Love of the archetype which is signified in this sacrament of the ‘great mystery’ of the Love of Jesus Christ for His spouse, the Church.”[20] Knowing this great dignity of marriage, Pope John Paul II realizes that marriage is indeed a part of the Divine will and plan that marriage is an indissoluble covenant for it also serves as the “fruit, a sign and a requirement of the absolutely faithful love that God has for man [& woman] and that the Lord Jesus has for the Church.”[21] Thus, it is rightly called a sacrament.

 

[1] Rite of Marriage, English translation (Sydney: E.J. Dwyer, 1984), n. 2.

[2] Vatican Council II, Gaudium et Spes, n. 8.

[3] Peter J. Elliot, What God Has Joined: The Sacramentality of Marriage (Homebush, NSW: St Paul Publications, 1990), 205-206.

[4] Catechism of the Catholic Church, n.1660.

[5] (cf Mk 10:6-9; and Mt 19: 6-8) When Jesus responded to the issue of divorce raised by the Pharisees to him, he  re-affirmed the Old Testament teaching  saying: “From the beginning of creation, “God made them male and female,” and thus, “for this reason a man shall leave his father and mother and be joined to his wife, and the two shall become one flesh. So they are no longer two but one flesh. Therefore what God has joined together, let no one separate.” [Mk 10: 6-9].

[6] John Paul II, Familiaris Consortio, Apostolic Exhortation (1982), n. 20.

[7] Catechism of the Catholic Church, n.1660.

[8] Kasper, Theology of Christian Marriage, trans. P. Smith (London: Burns & Oates, 1980), 45.

[9] Kasper, Theology of Christian Marriage, 49.

[10] Elliot, What God Has Joined, 162.

[11] Elliot, What God Has Joined, 119.

[12] Elliot, What God Has Joined, 119.

[13] The Code of Canon Law, English translation, (1983), Can. 1057, § 2.

[14] (cf Gaudium et spes, 49) Consummation is another aspect of marriage that renders it indissoluble. Gaudium et Spes carefully puts this aspect in the context of married love. It teaches, “Married love is an eminently human love because it is an affection between two persons…and it embraces the good of the whole person. It can enrich the sentiments of the spirit and their physical expression with a unique dignity…” The Council also tells us that “married love is uniquely expressed and perfected by the exercise of the acts proper to marriage…[and] the truly human performance of these acts  fosters the self-giving they signify and enriches the spouses in joy and gratitude.”

[15]John Paul II, Familiaris Consortio, n.19.

[16] Elliot, What God Has Joined, 138.

[17] Elliot, What God Has Joined, 143.

[18] Vatican Council II, Gaudium et Spes, n.50.

[19] Edward Schillebeeckx, Marriage: Human Reality and Saving Mystery, trans. D. Smith (London: Sheed & Ward, 1976), 141.

[20] Elliot, What God Has Joined, 120.

[21] John Paul II, Familiaris Consortio, Apostolic Exhortation (1982), n. 20.

 

Meditation on the Seven Last Words of Jesus

Seven last words of Jesus on the Cross

 1.”Father, forgive them; for they do not know what they are doing.”  Lk. 23: 34.

Pater, dimitte illis, quia nesciunt, quid faciunt.

- Even on the cross, Jesus thinks of others. Not only that, he justifies those who crucified him saying to his Father ‘they do not know what they are doing’.

-We need forgiveness, and Jesus forgives us. Likewise he wills that we do forgive as well.

2.   “Truly I tell you, today you will be with me in Paradise.” Lk.23:43

Hodie mecum eris in Paradiso.

-         What a wonderful promise of his company forever. Like the thief, today we are all invited, in fact expected that we humble ourselves, acknowledge our sinfulness and weaknesses before the Lord,  expressing our faith in him, and growing in hope that there is something greater reserved for us beyond our crosses in life.

3.   “Woman, here is your son; Here is your mother.” Jn. 19: 26-27

Mulier, ecce filius tuus.

-         He doesn’t want to leave us on our own. He left us his mother to whom we can go to if we distance ourselves to him. She is full of grace, and the meeting point between the Divine God and the human face of God in Jesus Christ. In Mary we found a mother, a great mother who always looks after us even if others seem not to care…

4.  “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?” Mk. 15:34; Mt 27:46

Deus meus, Deus meus, utquid dereliquisti me?

Eloi, Eloi, lema sabachthani?’

-         A cry of absolute abandonment, yet it doesn’t mean God has gone away. In the sufferings of Jesus, God has identified himself so completely to his sufferings and angst. Yes God loved us so much, that he took upon himself the death penalty that we deserved due to our sins. He willed to die for us to live. How great a love is that.

5.   “I am thirsty.”  Jn. 19:28

Sitio.

-         A cry pleading for care and concern from those people around him. This words has become the motivation of Mother Teresa, that really changes her life forever by not only listening to this pleading but really trying her best to satisfy God’s thirst in the situations of our needy sisters and brothers around us. How do we respond to this call of Jesus even up to now? When we drive around town today, do we care to wind down our car window and hand in some change to those people who volunteered their time today on the streets to raise funds for the benefit of many children? How about our Project Compassion boxes? Are we willingly putting some amount there to ease the thirst (moral and physical) of many people in the world today?

6. “It is finished.”   Jn 19:30

Consummatum est.

-         A statement of absolute surrender yet not giving up, since it is the fulfilment of his mission here to save us from all sins and eternal damnation. Yes, Lord, you paid the ultimate price of our sinfulness by dying for us on the cross. You accomplished your mission by laying your very life for us, thank you Lord.

7.   “Father, into your hands I commend my spirit.” Lk 23: 46

In manus tuas, Domine, commendo  spiritum meum.

-         Even if there seems to be an experience of being abandoned completely, Jesus didn’t despair.  He didn’t lose grip of God, even to the very end of his earthly life. In fact, he offered the last of his breath to his Father, thus he was glorified, because he offered his all to God, no matter what the odds are. So as we continue our reflection on this Day until Easter Sunday Let’s thank God for everything he has done for us. Let’s celebrate these days with joy of the knowledge that God has saved us from eternal death and that he reserved a place for us, in his company forever, so long as we continue walking in his path.

So as we continue our reflection on Easter triduum, let’s thank God for his great love for us that is shown by his dying on the cross for us. Let’s also express this experience of being saved in our faces. There’s no other cause for rejoicing here but our salvation in Christ. It is worth rejoicing and worth celebrating indeed.