Saturday 28 April 2012

ACT AS IF YOU DO MAKE A DIFFERENCE. IT DOES - [William James]





"There are different ways of serving, but the same Lord is served. 
There are different abilities to perform service, 
but the same God gives ability to all for 
their particular service.” 
(1 Corinthians 12:6)


"I have no time to help any cause now." "I will do some volunteer work when I am retired." "There are so many more talented people around. I am just an ordinary person." These are a few of quite a number of similar comments I got from people  who knew or  met me after I decided to serve as a fulltime volunteer in India. They would express how much they always wanted to help people and how lucky I was to be able to do so...I did wonder whether I had transformed from an ordinary human being to a "superhuman" without my knowledge!  

Yet the Word of God above clearly shows that God gives ALL (not a chosen few!) the ability to serve. In fact, serving others is not something that is a separate aspect of our daily life. If as Christians, we heed our Lord's Call to have a "servant heart" like He did - "The Son of Man did not come to be served but to serve." (Matthew 20:28) - then SERVING OTHERS is not an option., it is our duty! For every Christian, it is our mission  to not just know God's Word and proclaim it to all mankind -  but to live His Word. Well, it does not mean all of us have to pack our bags and travel all over the world to preach! That is a common misunderstanding - the best way to proclaim God's Word is without words but by the way we live our lives. As Mahatma Gandhi said, "My life is  my message." 

Since I first started working, I had always supported  charitable works but it was only from a financial aspect. I was always interested in helping needy causes and usually family, colleagues, friends, the church would ask for donations - and I was happy to oblige. I thought that was enough. Not much effort except for donating money. I thought I was being a relatively good Catholic...



This "detached contentment" lasted until my 1st night in Divine on 14 February 1998 when I came for my initial retreat. Lying on the upper bunk bed, I used a torchlight to read my new Bible. It was after 11.00 p.m. and all the lights were out but it was definitely too early for me to sleep! The moment I opened my Bible, the light fell on the bible verse James 2:14 - "What good is it, my brothers and sisters, if you say you have faith but do not have good works? Can faith save you?"  This Word of God truly pierced my heart - it seemed like a thick wall of indifference shattered within me. My Catholic faith was something I took for granted. I distinctly remember asking myself, "What is my faith? What is there in my life that I can proclaim my faith?" While I was still reeling from the suddenness and intensity of these questions, my eyes fell on another verse - "Be doers of the word, and not merely hearers who deceive themselves." (James 1:22)  I knew at that moment I could no longer live the life I led before. It was a life-changing moment for me - even before I even heard one talk in the retreat I came to attend. Much later, when I read Hebrews 4:12 - "The word of God is alive and active, sharper than any double-edged sword. It cuts all  the way through, to where the soul and spirit meet, to where joints and marrow come together. It judges the desire and thoughts of man's heart." - I knew I had experienced the  truth of this Word of God.  

How can we show our faith in our works? I used to keep my Catholic faith a very private issue. It used to puzzle me when colleagues and clients from around the world would ask me if I was a Catholic. I would answer "Yes" and asked how they knew and the answer I usually got was - "You have a Catholic conscience - must be the fact you have to make a Confession if you do something wrong." This would make others laugh and I would feel a little embarrassed - as if I was caught out on something best not known. Now years later, I will be grateful to God if my Catholic identity is clear to everyone i meet unlike before. The world we live in is now a very multi-cultural and multi-religious community. Of course, we need to respect each person's faith but it should not mean we sanitize our faith to the point that we are afraid to be identified as followers of Christ. We need to love as Christ does - a radical love - one that reaches out to those who are in need to know God as well as for those who are marginalized and suffering in our community and around the world. Pope Benedict XVI in his inspiring First Encyclical, Deus Caritas Est (God is Love) wrote, "I wish in my first Encyclical to speak of the love which God lavishes upon us and which we in turn must share with others."

I know I need to stay rooted in God. In my ministry here in India, I have found my strength and the great will to make a Christian difference from my daily prayers and meditation. It is something that came into my life so quietly that I did not realize the change at first. But I know my capacity to love has increased and I am calmer - it is because of the Power of the Holy Spirit. I needed for God's Word to flourish in my heart for my life to have true meaning in learning how to serve others.   When the Holy Spirit leads and guides us, we will find it within ourselves to care for those who we do not know; to have courage to raise awareness  and help for a worthy cause; to persevere and not give up even when raising needed funds may take years and seem futile; to not just say, "When I am rich, I will help the poor; and most of all to trust in God's Providence."

What is "love"'? One main aspect of Christ's Love is to "remember those who are suffering as though you are suffering as they are." (Hebrews 13:3)

Not everyone is called to go out and to serve as a fulltime missionary or for charitable causes. However, as Christians, each of us must obey Jesus' command - "Love one another. As I have loved you, so you also should love one another. This is how all will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another." (John 13:34-35) We cannot separate serving God and others from our daily life. Our faith has to be the reason we live. 


I prepared the YouTube music video above: SERVE OTHERS - BE THE DIFFERENCE! to share some of my favourite Inspirational Quotes on Serving Others set to the music "WE ARE ONE" from Lion King.      


God has called each of us to serve others Let us make THE Difference for Christ!

Tuesday 17 April 2012

GOD'S DIVINE CALL TO US - BE MY "EASTER PEOPLE"

Yet another Holy Week with the celebration of Easter Sunday has gone by.  Holy Week has never been the same for me after some members of my family, friends and I came for a PASSOVER retreat in Divine in 1999. I remember weeping nonstop throughout the Good Friday service and finishing the tissue packs of two of my friends who were on either side of me. It was an  overwhelming personal spiritual experience - the movie "Passion of Christ" had a lesser impact than what I "saw and felt" during the Stations of the Cross - being there while Jesus was scourged, tortured, being jeered at, stoned, beaten while on His walk to Calvary and finally crucified - because of all our sins. Because of my sins!!! I did not have to think of others' sins because even if it was to save one soul for His Father - mine - Jesus would have still done it! 


Yet, no matter how profound Easter 1999 was for me, and I realized Jesus dying for me so that I could gain Eternal Life in Heaven, the radical changes I needed to make in how I lived my life did not happen on a permanent basis then. There were definitely changes - I wanted to live for Christ but somehow it was more of thinking-level in my mind than from deep within my heart. Why? Because I had yet to really know God's Word to us - the Bible.

It is only since Holy Week 2007, the whole Passion of Our Lord, created a huge internal upheaval in my heart. I was home with my dad who was then in his last few months of his life. My father was too ill to go for the Good Friday service. In fact, the day before, he had for the very first time requested to have the Last Rites by our priest to be given to him.  I had been ensuring he received the Anointing of the Sick every six months since 2000. It was Maundy Thursday and I was in Singapore getting some needed medical supplies for my dad and was rushing to get back to my hometown. When I got my Mum's call, I realized without a doubt - this was my last Easter with my father who I loved with all my heart. He had sacrificed everything in his life for our family. Three priests came to anoint my father upon his request!

On Good Friday, I stayed back with my dad at home while my youngest sister (who had also flown back) took my Mum and eldest sister and  nephew to church for the Stations of the Cross. As I sat by my dad's bed, I asked him if he wanted me to pray the Stations of the Cross. He immediately answered softly and weakly, "Yes!" because despite his frail condition, he had wanted to go to church and was very disappointed when we explained it was too long a service on such a hot and humid afternoon. As we prayed, where he slowly repeated the prayers with me, I was weeping in my heart because the Way of the Cross of Jesus suddenly seemed like these last few months of my father's life - one of suffering and pain - and yet I could not  personally take any of my father's pain away. I imagined God seeing His only Son, Jesus, being tortured beyond human limits and letting it happen - so my father will have Eternal Life as would you and me!  Good Friday became so tangibly real when I could not bear to see my once healthy and active father now being in pain and suffering silently. Yet, my dad never showed any anger or frustration. As I prayed with him, I realized that all this while, Jesus  still seemed separated from me unlike my dad who was so real - so I felt his pain and suffering so much. 

It was indeed my last Easter with my father - in fact Easter Sunday 2007 was also on 08 April like this year. We had to rush my dad to hospital by ambulance on Easter Sunday night when he developed breathing difficulties but he pulled through. Thus, this Holy Week brought back many memories for me because of so many changes in my life since then...of my dad's great love for me AND of Jesus' GREATEST LOVE for me! It was through my daily meditation of the Bible that God has since led me into a closer and deeper relationship with Him. God was no longer an abstract entity!



It is in losing my father's physical presence in my life that made me realize how much Jesus' Love brought me Comfort and Peace in knowing my father had run his best in his race of faith on earth. His prize is surely a place in Heaven with Our Lord! I guess as children, we never outgrow in that confidence of our parents' love no matter how old we are! Our parents are pillars of great support, encouragement and love...a "constant" we somehow expect to have our entire lifetime. 

Yet only Jesus can give us that unfailing assurance as per his Promise upon His Resurrection - "And behold,  I am with you always, until the end of the age." (Matthew 28:20)  How amazing is the depth of our Eternal Father's Love for us - of asking His only Son, Jesus, to shed EVERY drop of His Blood  for me, for you, and for the entire world to save us. What is also difficult is trying to comprehend the complete humility in Jesus to ONLY do His Father's Will and not His Own even if we still do not care or deeply experience how incredible His sacrifice was! How many Easters have come and gone where I have tried to be conscious to be a "good Christian" just during Lenten Season and then reverting to my normal way of life. There was no deep permanent change in me. Talk about compartmentalizing my life - doing good for about 40-odd days out of the 365 days of each year until 2008! 

This Easter as our Director, Fr. Augustine Vallooran V.C., was preaching the Easter Vigil homily, I began to ponder on Fr. Augustine's call for us to be an "EASTER PEOPLE". Suddenly the thought came to me - What does it mean to be an "EASTER PEOPLE?" After the Vigil Mass and Easter fellowship, I went back to my office and sat in silence reading the 4 Gospels of when Jesus appeared to Mary Magdala and His disciples and it finally became crystal clear to me how we live as "EASTER PEOPLE" based on Jesus' own words. It is  Jesus' Mission to each one of us...  


"Peace be with you." - (Matthew 28:9)  - Jesus first words' to Mary Madgala upon His Resurrection.

"Peace be with you" (John 20:19,21) - Jesus first words to the disciples upon His Resurrection.

It is then Jesus gave His GREAT COMMISSION to the disciples and to every one of us who are Christians:

"Go throughout  the whole world and preach the gospel to all mankind." (Mark 16:15) 

Each of the gospels make it very clear what is every Christian's mission - so that we live as God's EASTER PEOPLE. How ignorant I have been to the real message of Easter all these years!

In a very personal way, this Easter Sunday (08 April), Jesus gave me clarity of His Call for me when I least expected it - a day I will now remember with heartfelt gratitude to God instead of just poignant memories of these past 5 years...of my last week with my dad before I returned to India.  

Below is a YouTube pictorial video  - MEMORIES OF HOLY WEEK 2011 IN DIVINE - one of the most special retreat week, PASSOVER RETREAT, in Divine Retreat Centre, set to the hymn "NOTHING BUT YOUR BLOOD" by Matt Redman. My hope is that each of you will one day come and share a memorable Holy Week with us here in Divine!