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KFC (Keeping Friendship with Christ)

23rd Sunday in Ordinary Time A

In today’s gospel, it seems that Jesus has contradicted himself. At one time he said: ‘Judge not and you will not be judged.’ And today he urges us to correct  another person who does wrong. It leaves us a question: ‘How can we correct without judgment?’ At a closer look however, Jesus is telling his disciples and us now, that though we are not to judge one’s conscience but we can actually judge one’s deeds. True, it is hard to know if a person realizes he/she is doing wrong, yet oftentimes we can see when he/she does wrong.

For many of us, giving correction is seemingly difficult if not impossible a task. But it is our duty to give as it is our duty to receive it. Undeniably it is a difficult task indeed, if we do it for our own sake, for our own glorification or for our own glory. But like the Prophet Ezekiel in our First Reading today, we are the ‘sentry’ of the house of Israel. It means that we are doing this for the sake of something else, more specifically for the sake of someone [of God] and for the sake of another person. As a ‘sentry’, Ezekiel stood on the Palestinian hills and blew his trumpet to warn of invaders. He therefore served as a watchman over the spiritual dangers that threatened God’s people.

And so are we now. We are to serve as ‘our brother’s/sister’s keeper.

We are called to be ‘lookouts’ but not to gossip over the limitations and weaknesses of others but to correct them from continuing the wrong thing they’re doing. It is hard indeed because we’re afraid of rejection or  vengeance from the wrongdoer. So how can we overcome this difficulty of fraternal correction?

I would recommend KFC (Keeping Friendship with Christ).

Jesus Christ is one who is really an expert of fraternal correction. He wasn’t afraid of vengeance or anything, rather he stood by his ground which is the truth that God loves us all and wants all of us to live in love of him and in one another. Thus, he gave correction to Peter. The Sunday before last he called Peter ‘the rock,’ but last Sunday he called him ‘the stumbling block.’ He corrected St Paul on the way to Damascus for persecuting his Church. He not only preached correction, he really practiced it. As followers of him, we are sort of ‘watchdogs’ who are to really bark if we feel or hear something fishy, but definitely not to act  as ‘temple police’. We can only do this if we keep close and intimate friendship with Christ.

Keeping friendship with Christ also empowers and strengthens us in carrying out our duties of correcting the wrongdoing we see of other people. In Jesus we see how lovingly he gave corrections. Hence, we are also called to correct another in and with love. St Paul in his letter to the Romans today speaks of this love as ‘the one thing that cannot hurt your neighbour’ and ‘the answer to every one of the commandments.’

So how can we correct another person lovingly? Jesus in the gospel explains  it. We take the person alone, private and point out his/her fault. But this is not to be done if we are angry, or in public, or out of hatred. If he/she refuses to be corrected, let’s get another one or  two (our friends, his/her friends/ confidante) to help us. If even this does not work, let’s go to the bigger community. In other words, let’s do every possible way we can to correct this person. With love we can do this. As we read further in the gospel, there is however another aspect that seems to be added on by Jesus as another way to fraternal correction: Prayer, especially praying together, maybe with friends or maybe even praying with the one who does wrong for light, for humility and for openness of heart.

Herbert Smith SJ has outlined A Dozen Guidelines for Brotherly Correction and I would like to include it here.

  1. Unless you are a model  correction taker, be slow to give it.

  2. Correct like a friend and fellow sinner, not like an enemy.

  3. Knowing how you resent unjust correction, never inflict it.

  4. Harping on past faults is not correction but condemnation.

  5. Know that love wins over better than an army of accusations.

  6. Get help to correct when it is needed.

  7. Frame the correction so it will heal and not wound further.

  8. Decide first whether the person needs correction or help.

  9. Correct infrequently, and not only the greater failings.

  10. Correction hurts, so don’t correct with a sledgehammer.

  11. Think how prayerfully Mary would correct, and imitate her.

  12. Put yourself in the culprit’s shoes and think about it. You may end up congratulating him for not being worse!

  13. (My addition) KFC (Keep Friendship with Christ). He is a great paradigm of fraternal correction, not only by preaching about it but also by giving up his very life to show it.

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Lord heal our land

There is one sure thing that we people, the world and everything around  us need to achieve: healing. Yes, we need healing. Everyday we saw on television, heard on radio, read on the papers events that really called for healing. There is a breaking up of relationship between parents and children, between brothers and sisters, between friends. There is a betrayal of trust of those people in power. There is widening gap between the rich and the poor, between the ‘haves’ and the ‘have nots’. There is a faction between countries and even between citizens in  a particular nation. All these and many more really need healing. 

All of us have the obligation to contribute for the healing of our world. We  can do it in our own little way, in our own capacity, starting in our own little community. Let’s help bridge the gap between persons. Let’s help build bridges instead of walls. Let’s help create a community where God is the sole ruler, sole manager and the only standard. But this must not lead us to think we don’t have to do anything else. While here on earth, let’s promote the values of God: justice, solidarity with all of humanity, love,  peace, generosity, respecting each other, upholding the dignity of each human person. And we must not forget also that only God can ultimately heal all these wounds in the world today. But we need to do two things: let’s be humble because without God we can do nothing; and let’s pray to Him that he would really heal our world.

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The Cost of Discipleship

22nd Sunday in Ordinary time

Year 1941,  in Auschwitz concentration camp, a prisoner had escaped. The commandant announced that 10 men would die. This was to serve as a warning for those who were planning to escape. The commandant picked his choice randomly. He ordered: ‘This one, that one’ as they were being marched away to the starvation bunkers. Number 16670 dared to step from the line. “I would like to take that man’s place. He has a wife and children.” “Who are you?”asked the commandant. “A priest”, he answered. The commandant, dumbfounded, kicked Sergeant Francis Gajowniczek out of line and ordered Father Kolbe to go with the nine. These ten people were slowly starved to death. By the eve of the Assumption four were left alive. The jailer came to finish Kolbe off as he sat in a corner praying. He even lifted his fleshless arm to receive the bite of the hypodermic needle. It was filled with carbolic acid. They burned his body with all the others.

Friends St Maximilian Kolbe was just like us human beings. He was unknown before he offered his very life to save the life of that family man. But because of what he had done, of laying down his life for the other person to live, he is now well-known and remembered forever as one of the greatest saints in the 20th century.  For as our gospel today tells us: ‘Anyone who loses his life for my sake will find it.’

Losing our life for God and for others is really the cost of discipleship. This is the cost we have to bear if we follow Jesus. It is even said that if we have not experienced the hardship, the difficulties, the trials, the risk and the challenges in following Jesus, it is worth checking if we have followed the real Jesus. This does not mean however that we are to look for troubles, or to pray that problems will come to us or that we will be tested. We don’t have to, because if we are serious in our Christian discipleship, these things are inevitable and would certainly come.

But what it means to follow Jesus? What it means to be a disciple now?

One: According to Blessed John Paul II, this means ‘becoming conformed to him (Christ) who became a servant even giving himself on the Cross’ (VS 21). It also involves ‘holding fast to the very person of Jesus, partaking of his life and his destiny, sharing in his free and loving obedience to the will of the Father’ (VS 19).

Two: John Paul II continues: ‘Jesus calls us to follow him and to imitate him along the path of love, a love which gives itself completely to the brethren out of love for God.’ (VS 21)

Concretely it means that to follow Jesus  is to love our brothers and sisters with the kind of love that Jesus has for them, that is a ‘love willing to die for the beloved.’

Jesus is the concrete example and a prototype of this kind of love. Therefore, as his disciples or followers we must also love this way. This kind of love is the real love and must therefore be our main force or source of power in everything we do. Without this kind of love, we  could not imagine what kind of world we would have. Fr. Patrick O’Sullivan writes in his homily one day that without love everything would lose its real meaning and significance. He said:

Justice without love is legalism.

Faith without love is ideology.

Hope without love is fanaticism.

Forgiveness without love is false humility.

Courage without love is recklessness.

Generosity without love is extravagance.

Care without love is cold duty.

Fidelity without love is servitude.

Three: To express boldly and courageously (in our time) that we are followers of Jesus Christ, wherever we are, whoever we are. Each one of us has our own unique way of discipleship as God called us. We don’t have to do exactly what St Maximilian Kolbe had done. The Prophet Jeremiah in our First Reading offers us one way to really be a disciple of God, i.e. to live out and share with courage and love the Word of God continually despite of insult, derision or even if we become a laughing-stock for others. St Paul in our Second Reading today has also offered us another way to be a disciple of Christ, i.e. to live out our Christian faith in our daily lives and in our dealing with people and society. To do  this, St Paul clearly gives us an advice: ‘Not to model ourselves on the behaviour of the world around us (which is contrary to the will of God) but rather to have Christ as the standard, the ultimate norm of our Christian living.

This is how to truly be a disciple of Christ: to proclaim the love of Christ and to show it in our lives and what we are doing. If we love one another according to that love which Jesus has shown us, then like St Maximilian Kolbe, we can also with confidence, offer our life in order for the others to live, because we know that if we lose our life for the sake of Jesus, then we’ll find it again and even enjoy it in eternity.

Our prayer today therefore is: That the Spirit of Jesus enables and empowers us to love the way he does, so that we may become worthy to be called his real disciple.

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Lord, I am not worthy

21st Sunday in Ordinary time

Earlier this week, I made my profession of faith, my promise of fidelity to God and to the Church as I approach the Sacred Ordination to the Priesthood. I realized how really big a promise it is that I felt so small and unworthy  in making those promises. As I made those promises I prayed that God would really help me to be faithful to my promise because I know I am a frail human person. I am weak. I often ask God: ‘Who am I Lord? I am not worthy of this calling.’ However, I realized that it is not an issue of  being worthy or not for only God knows whether I am. What made me confident in making those promises is that  I know and firmly believe that Jesus invited me to follow him more closely, intimately and in a more special way by becoming a priest, because of his great love for me.

St Peter in our gospel today would have also the same feeling of unworthiness when Jesus made him the ‘rock’ upon whom he would build his Church. Peter could have said: ‘Lord, I am not worthy, you know me inside and out!’ I can imagine him saying to Jesus: ‘Remember, you called me ‘satan’, a stumbling block one time for not understanding well of your mission? You also called me ‘man of little faith’ when I turned my gaze away from you and got distracted by the wind as I walked on the water to you. You have seen as well that I got carried away by my emotions at times. I proposed tents would be pitched at Mt Tabor because I don’t want my transfiguration experience to end. Out of anger, I drew my sword and cut one of the soldier’s ears in Gethsemane. More so I denied knowing you three times because I was scared. No Lord, I am not worthy of this work, give it to someone else.’

In a glance, we can really see that Peter is ‘unworthy’ of the title ‘rock’ or foundation of the Church of Christ. Yet, Jesus still made him so because Peter also knows him in a more personal way by professing his faith that Jesus is the Messiah, the Son of the Living God. For Jesus this is what he needs for the leader of his Church- a personal, real and intimate knowledge of him. Jesus knows Peter’s confession was sincere and real, so he made him ‘the rock’ the strong foundation that would last till the end of time. Jesus could have said to Peter: ‘Remember Peter, I chose you not because of what you’ve done before, but because I can trust you that you really know me more deeply and personally than anyone else. I love you.’

Yes, the love of Jesus draws Peter and us now into a deeper and personal relationship with him. It is his love that motivates him to reach out and call us his friends. He calls us in love to love. Sometimes in our lives we feel  unworthy of receiving his love more so to love others. We feel so miserable and so unlovable that we lose hope and faith in what Jesus has promised to us. But our gospel today reminds us that despite our human limitations and weaknesses, Jesus still loves us and trusts us to do something greater for his kingdom. And like Peter we are to confess our deep and personal knowledge of him, which is possible only if we have a deeper and a personal relationship with him.

So how can we grow into a deeper and a more personal relationship with Jesus?

Like Peter, let us be ourselves before him. We must not pretend to be perfect. A full cup is impossible to fill in. In our prayer let’s express ourselves freely to God, open up all our thoughts and our feelings to him for he knows us inside and out. Reading the scriptures especially the gospels or the whole New Testament is also another way of knowing Jesus, which then leads us to friendship with him. Another way is by looking at our brothers and sisters through the eyes that Jesus has for them, the eyes of love and compassion. And last but not the least, let’s develop a healthy friendship with a ‘human friend’ whom we can also express ourselves freely and confidently. Having  good human friend is really important in our lives, since as John Dunne would say: ‘No man is an island.’ Moreover, having a ‘human friend’ or friends, I mean real, true and best friends, can make us realize how valuable it is to have someone whom we can  rely on, someone who loves us no matter what happens, and no matter who we are. This personal friendship can also open up for us the beauty of friendship that Jesus has offered to us.

So our challenge today: Let’s welcome Jesus into our inner circle of friends. Let’s make him the centre of our lives and our human friendship. We may feel unworthy at times but by doing so, we can trust that we have a friend who loves us, who continually calls us, gives us authority, trusts us, welcomes us to his company and even selflessly gives everything he has for us his friends.