It is about being the first one to smile, to say sorry, or hi. It's about being the one to first extend a hand. It is stooping down, giving way, genuinely trying to learn from what the other is saying, though sometimes you know that you have something better to offer. It is what's called THE EXTRA MILE.
It is about forgiving seventy times seven times even if the possibility of the offender's conversion is a far-off reality. It is about shutting up so that others can speak out. It is about not minding that one's brighter ideas are bypassed in favor of the other's simpler ones. It is being happy with the role of arranging the plastic chairs a few good meters away from the stage and the limelight. It is what's called THE EXTRA MILE.
It is however way much different from false humility. It is not at all playing dumb or fool. For the latter is plain deceit, and the former, a subtler, more sinister form of pride. THE EXTRA MILE is about consciously, courageously, maturely and even happily downgrading one's self so that others may shine through. It is about dying to self so that others may live. It is about my "decreasing" so that others may "increase."
"Turn the other cheek" says The Boss when someone strikes you on the right side. Offer no resistance to one who is evil. Gladly tell the one who covets your tunic that he might as well have your cloak. Go flex some more muscles and walk that extra mile should someone press you for service, and give to the one who asks of you and do not turn your back to the one who wants to borrow.
It is not cowardice, nor foolishness, nor being a loser. It is neither a false and outdated sense of martyrdom. It is not playing the "underdog" nor the "victim" card. It simply is a challenging way of being like The Boss.
And each time you might happen to enter a church or a sanctuary and fix a momentary gaze on the Cross at the apse or on any of its walls, think of it as a powerful reminder, that there was someone who once walked among us men, who in his pursuit of bringing us home, has lovingly walked THE EXTRA MILE.
a trash-bag of thoughts and things that swim in the mind of a wandering fool-for-Christ, a.k.a. taong-grasa-para-kay-Kristo wannabe... "If indeed aspiring to be free and happy and deliberately poor, simple, unfit for career advancement, and just a mere human being who is fully aware of his being so is really a case for the asylum, then please count me in! This is what being a fool-for-Christ truly means! I would willingly forgo a leg and an arm to even get anywhere near being one!"
Sunday, June 15, 2014
Monday, May 26, 2014
FRANCIS OF ROME AND BARTHOLOMEW OF CONSTANTINOPLE, PETER AND ANDREW, AT THE EMPTY TOMB OF JESUS CHRIST "We need to believe that, just as the stone before the tomb was cast aside, so too every obstacle to our full communion will also be removed. This will be a grace of resurrection, of which we can have a foretaste even today." - Francis of Rome to Bartholomew of Constantinople
Sunday, May 25, 2014
The Palestinian "Wailing Wall" and Some Not-So-Preposterous Prayer For A Repeat Spectacle of Collapsing Walls
A revered, age-old ritual every pilgrim to the Holy Land performs is to pay a visit and pray before the "Kotel" (a.k.a. The Western or The Wailing Wall). The "Kotel" is all that remains of the second and last temple of Jerusalem after its destruction in 70AD. It is believed that praying before the wall and touching its boulders is the closest one could get to touching and connecting with the Lord.
All these are very eloquently and quite radically expressed in the Holy Father Pope Francis' surprising move to stop right in front of the infamous concrete partitions Israel has installed around Palestine which are reminiscent of the Berlin Wall during the pre-unification era of Germany. This he did before proceeding to the Manger Square where he is scheduled to celebrate Sunday Eucharist.
The sight of the Roman Pontiff, bowed in prayer against the Palestinian Wall, declares therefore that God is just as present in the suffering of his Palestinian children and all efforts at peace-building and search for justice, as His presence is said to permeate the boulders of the Kotel.
Midway in this pilgrimage, the Palestinian and Israeli presidents have already agreed to meet up with the pope at the Vatican in June of this year.
The phenomenon of crumbling walls is not exactly new for the "people of the bible."
May we witness once more the spectacle of collapsing walls much like that of Jericho of old.
Ut Unum Sint!
All these are very eloquently and quite radically expressed in the Holy Father Pope Francis' surprising move to stop right in front of the infamous concrete partitions Israel has installed around Palestine which are reminiscent of the Berlin Wall during the pre-unification era of Germany. This he did before proceeding to the Manger Square where he is scheduled to celebrate Sunday Eucharist.
The sight of the Roman Pontiff, bowed in prayer against the Palestinian Wall, declares therefore that God is just as present in the suffering of his Palestinian children and all efforts at peace-building and search for justice, as His presence is said to permeate the boulders of the Kotel.
Midway in this pilgrimage, the Palestinian and Israeli presidents have already agreed to meet up with the pope at the Vatican in June of this year.
The phenomenon of crumbling walls is not exactly new for the "people of the bible."
May we witness once more the spectacle of collapsing walls much like that of Jericho of old.
Ut Unum Sint!
Friday, May 16, 2014
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