Showing posts with label inspirational. Show all posts
Showing posts with label inspirational. Show all posts

01 January 2014

Prophets of a Future Not Our Own



It helps, now and then, to step back and take a long view.

The kingdom is not only beyond our efforts, it is even beyond our vision.

We accomplish in our lifetime only a tiny fraction of the magnificent enterprise that is God's work. Nothing we do is complete, which is a way of saying that the Kingdom always lies beyond us.

No statement says all that could be said.

No prayer fully expresses our faith.

No confession brings perfection.

No pastoral visit brings wholeness.

No program accomplishes the Church's mission.

No set of goals and objectives includes everything.

This is what we are about.

We plant the seeds that one day will grow.

We water seeds already planted, knowing that they hold future promise.

We lay foundations that will need further development.

We provide yeast that produces far beyond our capabilities.

We cannot do everything, and there is a sense of liberation in realizing that.

This enables us to do something, and to do it very well.

It may be incomplete, but it is a beginning, a step along the way, an opportunity for the Lord's grace to enter and do the rest.

We may never see the end results, but that is the difference between the master builder and the worker.

We are workers, not master builders; ministers, not messiahs.

We are prophets of a future not our own.


The Archbishop Oscar Romero Prayer: A Step Along the Way


This prayer was composed by Bishop Ken Untener of Saginaw, drafted for a homily by Card. John Dearden in Nov. 1979 for a celebration of departed priests. As a reflection on the anniversary of the martyrdom of Bishop Romero, Bishop Untener included in a reflection book a passage titled "The mystery of the Romero Prayer." The mystery is that the words of the prayer are attributed to Oscar Romero, but they were never spoken by him.


08 March 2012

Dietrich Bonhoeffer: Stations on the Way to Freedom

The Lenten season onus on self-denial and dying to oneself is really an exercise in finding the path to real freedom, something that can only be found in God. When the mind recognizes this, the heart finally discovers what it pines for all this time. This is what our Christian tradition calls “metanoia”. When this happens, the world may not immediately be less fraught with hardship and danger, yet it will no longer be miserable. For once again, hope sustains and the symbols of faith regain their meaning, and every step taken is a liberation.

This short reflection is prompted when I recently (belatedly yet ever so timely) came across the German theologian and WWII martyr Dietrich Bonhoeffer’s meditation “Stations on the Way to Freedom”.



 
Self-discipline

If you set out to seek freedom, you must learn before all things mastery over sense and soul, lest your wayward desirings, lest your undisciplined members lead you not this way, now that way. Chaste be your mind and your body, and subject to you and obedient, serving solely to seek their appointed goal and objective.

Action

Do and dare what is right, not swayed by the whim of the moment. Bravely take hold of the real, not dallying now with what might be. Not in the flight of ideas but only in action is freedom. Make up your mind and come out into the tempest of living. God’s command is enough and your faith in him to sustain you. Then at last freedom will welcome your spirit amid great rejoicing.

Suffering

See what a transformation! These hands so active and powerful now are tied, and alone and fainting, you see where your work ends. Yet you are confident still, and gladly commit what is rightful into a stronger hand, and say that you are contented. You were from from a moment of bliss, then you yielded your freedom into the hand of God, that he might perfect it in glory.

Death

Come now, highest of feasts on the way to freedom eternal, death, strike off the fetters, break down the walls that oppress us, our bedazzled soul and our ephemeral body, that we may see at last the sight which here was not vouchsafed us. Freedom, we sought you long in discipline, action, suffering. Now as we die we see you and know you at last, face to face.

06 January 2012

Inspired Original Derivatives

These designs are original derivative creations from photos found all over the web, and inspired by Scripture passages. They are first posted in public either here or at the facebook page of the Diocese of Legazpi.



Inspired by 1 Jn 5,14-15:
"Beloved: We have this confidence in God,
that if we ask anything according to his will, he hears us.
And if we know that he hears us in regard to whatever we ask,
we know that what we have asked him for is ours."




Inspired by 1 Jn 5,5-13:
"Beloved: Who indeed is the victor over the world
but the one who believes that Jesus is the Son of God?
This is the one who came through water and Blood, Jesus Christ,
not by water alone, but by water and Blood.
The Spirit is the one who testifies, and the Spirit is truth.
So there are three that testify, the Spirit, the water, and the Blood,
and the three are of one accord.
If we accept human testimony, the testimony of God is surely greater.
Now the testimony of God is this, that he has testified on behalf of his Son.
Whoever believes in the Son of God has this testimony within himself.
Whoever does not believe God has made him a liar
by not believing the testimony God has given about his Son.
And this is the testimony: God gave us eternal life, and this life is in his Son.
Whoever possesses the Son has life;
whoever does not possess the Son of God does not have life.
I write these things to you so that you may know that you have eternal life, 
you who believe in the name of the Son of God."

 


Inspired by 1 Jn 3,16-18:
"The way we came to know love was that he laid down his life for us;
so we ought to lay down our lives for our brothers.
If someone who has worldly means sees a brother in need
and refuses him compassion, how can the love of God remain in him?  
Children, let us love not in word or speech but in deed and truth."

17 February 2011

GOMBURZA


Ang ika-17 ng Pebrero ay araw ng paggunita sa pagpaslang sa tatlong paring martir ng pamahalaang Kastila sa parehong araw noong 1872. Nasa talaan ng mga bayani ng bayan at mga martir ng Simbahan ang kanilang pangalan magpakailanman.

       Pde. Mariano Gomez
       Pde. Jose Burgos
       Pde. Jacinto Zamora

Ang ika-17 ng Pebrero ay araw ng pagtanaw ng utang na loob sa sakripisyo ng GomBurZa para sa katarungan, at kanilang pagtanghal sa kadakilaan ng kapariang Pilipino sa harap ng mga panganib at pagsubok, sa loob at labas ng kanilang mga sarili.

Ang ika-17 ng Pebrero ay araw ng pasasalamat sa inspirasyon ng kanilang kabayanihan, dahil sa GomBurZa naisulat ni Rizal ang El Filibusterismo, dahil sa kanila mas umigting ang pagnanasa ng kalayaan sa diwang Pilipino, dahil sa kanila mas yumabong ang pagkakakilala ko sa pagkatao at ministeryo ng isang paring Pilipino.

28 August 2010

Litany of Humility



















O Jesus, meek and humble of heart, hear me.

From the desire of being esteemed, deliver me, Jesus.
From the desire of being loved...
From the desire of being extolled ...
From the desire of being honored ...
From the desire of being praised ...
From the desire of being preferred to others...
From the desire of being consulted ...
From the desire of being approved ...

10 August 2009

Cory Aquino: An Icon of Freedom, Democracy, and Integrity in Public Office



HOMILY of Most Rev. Lucilo B. Quiambao, D.D., Bishop-Administrator of Legazpi
Memorial Mass for former Pres. Corazon C. Aquino
3 August 2009, 5:00 P.M., St. Gregory the Great Cathedral, Legazpi City

My brothers in the priesthood, Reverend Sisters and Brothers,
Mayor Noel Rosal, former Senator Victor Ziga,
Government officals and public servants,
My dear young people, Fellow Filipinos, Brothers and Sisters in Christ:

We come here today to celebrate a Memorial Mass for our beloved Corazon Cojuangco-Aquino. She was not only a former President of this country, she was an icon of freedom, democracy, and integrity in public office. It is but fitting to come together, be in solidarity with the rest of the Filipino people, and pray for one to whom a grateful nation owe so much.

You have probably watched the media coverage of her passing away, and have been supplied with bits of information on her life and work. For the benefit of us gathered here, especially of our young people, who may have been too young or were not yet around during those tumultuous times that saw her rise to become the first woman president of our country (and in Asia), let me recount briefly the story of our beloved Cory Aquino.

The public first came to know her as the simple housewife of Ninoy Aquino, who would graciously welcome her husband’s political allies to their home and serve them coffee. Then 1972 came, Martial Law was declared by Pres. Marcos. Ninoy Aquino, one of the most prominent critics of the Marcos administration, was incarcerated together with many opposition leaders. She became the supportive wife to a jailed husband, and journeyed with him as much as she could during those painful years that saw him going on a hunger strike, running for election while in jail, being sentenced to death, and suffering a heart ailment, among other things. When Ninoy Aquino was later allowed by the Marcoses to go to the US on exile and for medical treatment, she accompanied him, with the rest of their family.

On August 21, 1983, Ninoy returned to the Philippines and was promptly assassinated while alighting from the plane. The image of his lifeless body sprawled on the tarmac of the airport will forever be etched in the memory of our people. In the eyes of the public, Cory assumed the role of a hero’s widow.

In 1985, pressured from many sides, Pres. Marcos called for a snap election. Cory emerged as an unlikely and, at first, reluctant challenger from the ranks of the united opposition. But support for her spread like wildfire and animated a nation ready to break free from dictatorship. The election was marred by widespread violence and massive cheating. In fact, 30 COMELEC computer technicians walked-out of their work alleging election-rigging in favor of Marcos. Though the election was roundly condemned by the United States and by the Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippines, the Batasang Pambansa declared Marcos the winner. In a rally in Luneta, attended by hundreds of thousands, Cory called for civil disobedience, a general strike and a boycott of business enterprises controlled by Marcos allies.

On February 22, 1986, Defense Minister Juan Ponce Enrile and Armed Forces Vice-Chief of Staff Fidel Ramos called on Marcos to resign and proceeded to two military camps in Quezon City. When Cardinal Sin called on people over the radio to gather at EDSA in order to protect the small band of defectors, and the people responded, People Power Revolution broke out. Cory Aquino, who was staying in Cebu City at the Carmelite Monastery that time, returned to Manila immediately. On February 25, 1986, at the Club Filipino in San Juan, she took the presidential oath of office administered by Supreme Court Associate Justice Claudio Teehankee. Marcos himself was sworn into office at Malacañang Palace on that same day, but fled into exile to Hawaii later that night.

One month after assuming the presidency, she issued Proclamation No. 3, which proclaimed her government as a revolutionary government. She suspended the martial law era 1973 Constitution, and promulgated a provisional “Freedom Constitution”. She closed the Batasang Pambansa and reorganized the Supreme Court. She appointed a Constitutional Commission to draft a new Constitution. The 1987 Constitution was approved in a national plebiscite in February 1987.

Several landmark laws were enacted during her term: the Family Code of 1987, which reformed the civil law on family relations; the Administrative Code of 1987, which reorganized the structure of the executive branch of government; the Local Government Code, partly authored by Sen. Aquilino Pimentel, which further empowered local government units; and the controversial Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Law.

When her term was about to end, many people actively sought to convince her to ran for re-election, since she was not covered by the constitutional provision barring a president from serving more than one six-year term. She refused the offers and stood by her belief that the glory of democracy is the peaceful transfer of power. When she rode away from the inauguration of Pres. Ramos, her successor, she chose to go in a simple white Toyota Corona she had purchased (rather than the government-issue Mercedes Benz), to make the point that she was once again an ordinary citizen.

Today we do not just remember the passing away of Cory Aquino. We celebrate her life. We thank her for taking up the challenge, like Moses in the Old Testament, to restore freedom to her people. She is our icon of democracy. Most especially, she was a shining witness to her Catholic faith, expressed in her unquestionable integrity while serving in public office and beyond it.

To get a glimpse of the remarkable faith of Cory, I would like to quote an excerpt from her now famous “Prayer for a Happy Death”, which she composed in 2004.

“Remind me each day, most loving Father
To be the best that I can be. To be humble, to be kind,
To be patient, to be true. To embrace what is good,
To reject what is evil, To adore only You.

When the final moment does come
Let not my loved ones grieve for long.
Let them comfort each other.
And let them know how much happiness they brought into my life.
Let them pray for me, as I will continue to pray for them,
Hoping that they will always pray for each other.

Let them know that they made possible whatever good I offered to our world...”

To these lines, I would like to add a rephrasing of a poem by one Bessie A. Stanley, entitled “Success”, which is often erroneously attributed to Ralph Waldo Emerson, and which, I think describes so much the person of Cory Aquino:

“She has achieved success
who has lived well, laughed often, and loved much;
who has enjoyed the trust of pure women,
the respect of intelligent men
and the love of little children;
who has filled her niche
and accomplished her task;
who has left the world better than she found it,
whether in an improved garden,
a perfect poem, or a rescued soul;
who has always looked for the best in others
and given them the best she had;
whose life was an inspiration;
whose memory a benediction.”

Cory Aquino said during her last SONA: “I hope that history will judge me as favorably as my people still perceived me.” Our beloved Cory, we do not only judge you favorably, we would like to express our profoundest gratitude for the gift of your person to the Filipino nation.

You also said: “None of the good that we do is ever lost”. We hold on to that statement of hope, even as we also hold on to your promise to pray for us, too, so that many more of us will be inspired to give more of ourselves in the service of the people so we may finally fulfill our common aspiration of lasting peace and genuine progress for this country.

Requiescat in pace, Cory Aquino. Amen. Amen.

13 May 2009

postscipt from the learning visit

3-7 May 2009

parol from pampanga................. P800.00
ticket to manila ocean park........ P500.00 (with promos)
sampaguita from child vendor...... P 10.00
green inspirations from marikina... priceless
lesson in politics from pampanga.. priceless
rousing words from mayor oca..... priceless
conspiracy with noel cabangon.... priceless
serendipity bus ride................... priceless ;)

much thanks to bcdi-bugs for organizing the trip,
and for galing pook for sponsoring the visit
to 3 top performing lgus:
marikina, pampanga, san fernando.

with prayers for building not just pockets or islands,
but an archipelago of good governance...

29 April 2009

The Proactive Prayer

Lord, bless my dreams
for they are big and mostly selfless.
Guard me from the corruption of
little minds and my bigger ego.

God, grant me the clarity
to recognize the things that cannot wait,
the discipline to accomplish them, and
the indifference to trust You
in everything no matter what happens.

Amen.

On Celibacy

advice to a friend on facebook:

some priests & religious are celibates by nature.
the majority, i believe, are not,
but they still choose the life
because through it they find
the fullest, greatest, most fruitful
expression of themselves.
this for me is what a "calling" means.

add to this the celibate advantage
of being more for more people,
thus, exposing love for what it really is,
a process of self-emptying, so one will
have more space for persons and grace to come in;
of becoming a sign of contradiction,
proclaiming the values of eternity
to a world that puts more premium
on seizing mostly, only, the here and now.
this for me is what our sacred tradition says
"celibacy for the sake of the Kingdom".

12 April 2009

What I Learned from My Batchmates

Rev. Fr. Francis D. Alvarez, SJ's Valedictory Speech
Commencement Exercises
Loyola School of Theology, AdMU
March 18, 2009


......
I am thrilled just knowing the many more homilies, retreats and reflections Francis will be giving as a priest. LST, the Society, and the Church in general, are "not any less blessed".

Congrats batch 2009!

Thanks to Weng Bava, SJ, for posting on LST's facebook group.

......


The fear of rigor, the fear of ugliness, the fear of change: At the beginning of the school year, during the Mass of the Holy Spirit, our then newly-installed Vice-Chancellor, Fr. Jojo Magadia, warned us of these three fears. At the end of the school year, as I graduate from Loyola School of Theology, I fear I have to add to his list of three.

What will happen when I am neck-deep in ministry? When my arms are weary as I try to juggle parish financial statements? When my chest is heavy as I listen to the pastoral council bicker yet again? When my legs buckle as I run from baptism to wedding to funeral, from labor meeting to sick call to children’s catechism, from evaluation seminar to beauty pageant to charity event? When, where once I tread with bright-eyed expectation, I find myself trudge with broken-hearted frustration, where will I be? What if I start cutting corners? We have been trained how to browse through the books in the library to nuance a complex article of the faith. This we need to do in order to come up with what Dr. Yap has always insisted on—accountable speech—even for just a Sunday homily. But what if instead of doing this, I just type words into Google? And what if Google fails me? What if I fall back on my class notes from my days in LST and realize that I had not paid enough attention in class? What if I misinterpret a precept of canon law and give the wrong advice? What if I blurt out the wrong thing while giving penance and a penitent who has not gone to confession for five years decides this is why he will not go again for five more?

As these fears ran amok in my head, what mercifully calmed them down was when I remembered how we prepared for the ad audiendas, that “board exam” future priests have to pass to receive faculties for confession. I remembered how at first we forgot to address serious sins. We forgot to give penance. We even forgot the formula of absolution. But slowly we learned. And soon, we were not just doing confession-by-the-numbers. Soon, we were giving sound pastoral advice, untangling the most convoluted cases Frs. Richie Genilo, Cel Reyes, and Rex Mananzan tried to ensnare us in. Many times, I found myself nodding—not off to sleep—but in agreement and in wonder. And I dreamt about the kind of wise, gentle, and understanding priests you, my batchmates, will surely be.

You, my co-learners, have taught me a lot. In the comprehensive exams, I had the opportunity to show what I learned from our professors. This morning, as we say goodbye to each other and to LST, I hope you allow me to share what I learned from you, my co-seminarians and co-religious here in LST.

In a famous homily, I never actually heard—only heard about (that’s how good it was)—Bro. Irvin Morastil, OMI supposedly struck a refrain that resonated not only with Fr. Manny Flores but with the rest of the Advanced Pastoral Methods class: “God is NOT good. He is very good.”

I spent the better part of the last Christmas vacation working on our graduation pictures for our yearbook. I was digitally reducing eye bags while also trying to recover from the sleep deprivation of Simbang Gabi. With Adobe Photoshop, I magically erased acne scars, deleted visible strands of nasal hair, and gave free electronic face lifts Vicky Belo would charge thousands for. I fiddled with hues, saturation, and luminosity to give each portrait a soft tone of angelic purity. Needless to say, I was proud of my handiwork, and as I showed you your pictures, I could tell that you all were impressed—except for Bro. Jonald Panganiban, OCD.

I handed him the hard copy of his grad. pic., and he asked, “Phinotoshop mo? (Did you Photoshop this?)” I puffed up my chest and declared, “Yes.” He scratched his head and suggested, “Baka pwede mong bawasan. (Maybe you can lessen what you did?)” I was aghast! Why? Who would want their pockmarks and their pimples and their warts seen?

But later that night, I realized that the blemishes and flaws I hid under pixels were so much a part of us, as much us as our dimples and clefts and other outstanding characteristics. Who would want to see these pockmarks, pimples, and warts? Well, God. The God who called us in spite of, maybe even because of, our imperfections. The God who has made use of and will continue to make use of our shortcomings and weaknesses for his greater glory. The God whom Bro. Irvin described so eloquently: The God who is not just good, but very good.

I remember serving at the diaconate ordination of Bros. Chris, Stanley, Rey, and Mark, CP. The joke, during our practice for the rite, was: With Stanley’s big tummy, would he be able to lie face-down during the litany? Would we have to alter the rubrics and allow him to lie on his side so that he will also be allowed to breathe?

During the ordination, I caught myself sneaking a peek at Stanley, and there he was, big tummy and all, yes—back slightly hunched, but head on folded arms, lying prostrate on the ground, asking God for mercy. And my thoughts went back to my own ordination. My stomach might not have been as big as Stanley’s, but my head was perhaps bigger. But overstuffed ego and all, I, too, was able to lie prostrate on the ground and beg God to accept my humble offering. Why? Because God is not good. He is very good.

I attended the diaconate ordination of Bros. Francis Ledesma and Topher Tejido. But before they even lay prostrate before God, Bishop Soc Villegas reminded us: We may wax lyrical about this great sacrifice that we make, but before God, we really have nothing to give. Yet when he accepts what we have to offer, we will have nothing more to ask. Why? We go back to the wise words of Bro. Irvin: Because God is not just good. He is very good.

Let me tell you about one other diaconate ordination. The first in our batch, actually: Seminarian Jayvee Zuñiga’s. On the day when Jayvee was entrusted with the Book of the Gospels, we were all excited, but I could not really decide whether “Congratulations!” was the appropriate greeting. Many of us knew why Jayvee was getting ordained ahead of schedule, earlier than the rest. His mother was dying of cancer. As Jayvee took his place behind the altar, I wanted to jump up and down, but I couldn’t. A few steps away in front of the same altar was his mother. And in a few days, she would be gone.

Rev. Jayvee’s thanksgiving speech then was all about the mercy of God. But what kind of mercy was this, I asked, when on a day meant for rejoicing, the air was heavy with foreboding farewell. On a day your spirit magnified the Lord, your heart was also troubled. “Our hearts are troubled.” And these very words were the ones Jayvee used when he later preached at his mother’s funeral. Bittersweet—as descriptive as that word is, it still does not capture what we experienced on the day of Jayvee’s diaconate ordination, when the alleluias and hosannas struggled to float but were drowned in the somber melody of “Inay.”

Later that night, I sought consolation in prayer. And I realized that many times in our ministry, this is how things will be. As we live out our ministry, we will find joy. We will find fulfillment. But we will not really be able to jump up and down because many times, our ministry will simply be to journey with people in their pain—an awesome privilege, an awful responsibility. In this, we will be confirmed in our vocations; in this we will find our purpose. Amidst pain. Bittersweet? As descriptive as that word is, it will not capture the experience.

But Jayvee’s story does not end there… because today is Jayvee’s mother’s birthday. And today, the son she dreamed so ardently to see ordained graduates summa cum laude. Watch that in a Hollywood movie, and you would say it’s too contrived. Read that in romance novel, and you would say it’s corny. But witness it happen in real life, and you can only say, it’s grace. It’s God.

This is not just Jayvee’s story. When Elmer gets ordained a priest tomorrow and begins his ministry, when our OCD brothers profess their final vows and live out their Carmelite vocations, when Irvin and Randy are sent to Basilan, Jolo, or Tawi-Tawi with or without military escorts, when Thomas goes back to China, Tran to Vietnam, and David, William, and Salai to Myanmar—places where the Church thrives in circumstances less friendly but not any less blessed, when the fears grip us and shake us and pound us prostrate to the ground bitter, there will be sweetness. There will be an amazing turn of events we could have never predicted, a summa cum laude ending that will tell us that God was in charge all along. “All things work together for good to those who love God, to those who are called according to his purpose.”

It will be as Fr. Manoling Francisco taught us in Eschatology: We don’t know what will happen. But we are sure that it will be good. Because, as Bro. Irvin has been teaching us all morning, God is not just good. God is very, very good.

Two weeks ago, I was in front of the computer, dialing down Photoshop settings, as Bro. Jonald requested, on our graduation pictures. They will never see print, because LST Batch 2009 will not have a yearbook. Because of the financial crisis, it seems too much of a luxury. Instead, we will have a cheap CD-ROM alternative at one-tenth of the cost. Why? Because the rest of the allocated budget, LST Batch 2009 has decided to give to scholarships. I will never forget the text messages I received when this idea was floated around. Messages which basically said: “Of course, I want a yearbook I can hold and flip through. But I have grown much from the formation I received here in LST. I want others to experience the same blessings. What is memory when you can leave a legacy?” Until the very end, you, my batchmates, are still teaching me.

As I undid the digital retouching on our photographs, and the flaws and imperfections of each face started asserting themselves again, I couldn’t help but remember the words of Gerard Manley Hopkins:

Each mortal thing does one thing and the same…
Selves—goes itself; myself it speaks and spells,
Crying What I do is me: for that I came.
[But] I say more…

Looking at your faces, relishing what you have taught me, I knew why Hopkins could say more. And I say more with him:

…the just man justices;
Keeps grace: that keeps all his goings graces;
Acts in God’s eye what in God’s eye he is—
Christ. For Christ plays in ten thousand places

(I know of at least forty-two.)

Lovely in limbs, and lovely in eyes not his
To the Father through the features of men’s faces.

Men’s faces: Be they wounded, be they scarred, be they imperfect, God can still work perfectly through them. Through us. Because… from Hopkins we return to Bro. Irvin’s words one last time: God is not just good. He is very, very, very good.

Amen.

31 December 2007

Among Ed's Speech at the Ateneo

Gov. (Fr.) Ed Panlilio
Escaler Hall, Loyola Schools
November 22, 2007


Eight hours from now, I will be speaking before a similar audience at De La Salle University. I know what you are thinking. You got first dibs at the governor of Pampanga, and for that alone, the eagle has soared over the archer once again. Tuloy, I am tempted to shout, FABILIOH! By the way, I gave a talk in UP last week, so that probably settles the implied question. Beyond your deep-rooted and far-reaching rivalry, I am grateful to you for giving me a forum to communicate the moral crusade in Pampanga. I hope that the campus communities will respond positively and become an active partner in the renewal that we all desire for our country.

You invited me to share with you my experience in responding to the call of leadership in a time of crisis. I would prefer to rephrase it as a response to a crisis in leadership. In order to make it clearer to you, allow me to begin with a bit of an overview of the social and political situation in Pampanga a few months before the elections. Lilia Pineda, more casually called Nanay Baby, (nanay na, baby pa. Trust the Filipino to be that family oriented) broke into the turf of the Lapid father and son when she began a series of so-called consultations with the people, asking them two questions: first, if their lot has improved with the ascent of the incumbent governor, Mark Lapid. The answer of course, was quite obvious, leading to the second question, if they have an alternative leader they would want to take over the governorship. The answer was equally undeniable. Equipped with more than adequate resources, she covered the whole province, practically running a roadshow of grassroots building. There was talk that Pineda, then a board member of the Sangguniang Panlalawigan and the wife of Bong Pineda (who is quite notorious, I mean, famous in his own right throughout Regions One to Five), decided to face Mark Lapid head on in the coming elections because the governor chose Con Laus, the son of a local businessman, over her own son, who was the mayor of Lubao town. To make matters worse for the father of the province, Pineda ally and Vice Governor Joseller Guiao filed a case against him, alleging graft and corruption in the supervision and collection of quarry taxes.

The stage therefore was set for a grand battle between the two political giants of Pampanga. Every media pundit and sari-sari store istambay were expecting a drawn out war of attrition, where no prisoners will be taken and no resources will be spared. A senior citizen described it with a mixture of expectation and dread, saying, “muran pera king kampanya,” or that it will rain money during the campaign. So many of the poverty-stricken in the province excitedly awaited the coming of the usual generosity, commonly experienced every three years, but only this time it will come like wave after wave of blessings. It was often said that it is only during this period that the poor get the attention and assistance they deserve, so they better make the most of it by playing one side against the other, conceding to the highest bidder, as it were. Many among the Kapampangans, however, were disconsolate at the prospect of having to choose between two candidates they did not like. A good many of them have decided that early to leave blank the space for governor in their ballots.

Before this backdrop, a group of people, a priest and some seminarians among them (no, I was not the priest) regretted the state of affairs that their province was in. If only to express a statement to the world that Pampanga is not bereft of good leadership, they decided to gather more of their like-minded friends and begin to search for an alternative candidate. Enough is enough, they said, the pride of the Kapampangan is at stake here. And if you know us, then you should also know that our kayabangan is legendary.

And so began the series of consultations in search of a candidate with the moral ground, the resources and the acceptability, who will stand as a symbol for the Kapampangan dignity and conscience. We had a great difficulty in searching for that candidate. It even dawned on us that we might have been too idealistic, too far removed from reality. Either our prospect could not measure up to our criteria, or he would not be willing to get entangled between two battling giants. “The election result is already common knowledge,” one of them said, conceding to the strength of one of the candidates, although I will not say who SHE is.

In the midst of this desperation, one seminarian turned to me and asked, “what about you?” My immediate and emphatic answer was, “no way!” My heart and mind was then running on hierarchical fuel. It was never an option for a Kapampangan priest to run for office in any previous election. Kapampangans being such a pious people, they revere their priests to a fault, conceding to them a spiritual leadership that excluded political power.

Like any other Filipino, Kapampangans live with a compartmentalized sense of morality. Our churches are filled every Sunday, but our jueteng industry is equally robust. We declare ourselves cerrado catolico, but we do not pay our taxes honestly. Our cars and jeepneys are festooned with images and pictures of the crucified Christ and the Virgin Mother, but they are not powerful enough to remind us to obey traffic laws. Thus, what place is there for a priest to enter the secular world of politics?

The idea of a priest running for the governorship snowballed among the people of conscience who have begun to call themselves the Third Force. Slowly, my outright refusal gave way to sober reflection as I thought of the people being under the yoke of patronage, and for how long, since we all know how easily political dynasties can take root and flourish. I looked back at my past to find a ground and a horizon for my final decision.

Even as a seminarian, I have intently dedicated my life for the uplift of the marginalized and the weak, and this had continued in my parochial and archdiocesan work. Thankfully, I was assigned later to direct the Social Action Center of Pampanga, more popularly known as SACOP. This enabled me to delve more deeply into the plight of the masses and be exposed to their needs and aspirations, and more importantly, to identify with their situation. Thus, I made it a personal choice to live a simple life and temper my wants to the more basic necessities, for it would not have been in consonance with the Gospel had I enjoyed affluence while people around me were hungry. If they did not eat, I did not eat.

The eruption of Mount Pinatubo allowed me to work more closely with government and non-government organizations in helping to ease the plight of the poor and dispossessed. I began to realize that good intentions were not enough, there must be a working structure that would efficiently and effectively answer to the needs of the poor. I also learned that I did not have the answer to all the problems besetting the needy, that there are others who can creatively contribute to the common pool of knowledge and wisdom. Thus, it was impressed upon me that I was not a modern-day Messiah, but rather, a bringer of grace from the Anointed One. On the other hand, I realized that redemption has its social underpinnings, and that I join all other people in a journey towards salvation. Having experienced all these, there came a certain point in my life when I dedicated my priesthood to the central message of the Gospel of John, that Christ came that man may have fullness of life in all its dimensions, that we as clerics must not only feed the soul, but also see to the nourishment of the body and the mind. I celebrated the sacraments as essential signs of relationship with the Divine, but encouraged my parishioners to share their graces to the less fortunate they meet outside the Church. In my own humble way, I persevered in my vocation and my service to the archdiocese, giving my obedience to my spiritual fathers, first to Archbishop Oscar Cruz, and then to Archbishop Aniceto, fostered by my brotherhood with my fellow priests.

Thus, when I finally conceded to become a candidate for governor, it was in response to a gaping need for moral resurgence in a despairing province, and in a more personal way, a deepening of my ministerial priesthood. When Kapampangans of known capability, respected stature and proven worth would not want to give people an option to choose a better candidate, I had to stand up for my people. But believe me, I had to spend days of prayer and feverish consultations before I made my decision. I had to resolve if this was a genuine desire for good, or a hidden longing for glorification. Either way, I was made aware of the consequences of my decision. The reasons for not running were many and equally valid. Not a few friends came and gave me their advice. I listened. In the end, I had to listen to and obey what my conscience dictated. My own ministerial priesthood demanded that I come down from the safety and security of the pulpit and incarnate the Gospel message in the political world. The Church has been complaining for so long about graft and corruption, but she was generally being ignored. It would have seemed that she has lost her moral authority over the considering that most of the suspected practitioners of graft and corruption came from Catholic schools themselves, Ateneo included, or probably, Ateneo specially. It was my belief that the extraordinary situation prevailing in Pampanga at that time demanded an entirely different and fundamental response. I took the leap and decided to do something about it hands on. I leapt, and found that I was not alone. I was joined by men and women of good will who were willing to take a risk.

I honestly believe that the people who leapt with me, people from all class and all manners of persuasion were driven by a common desire to see through a crusade that will realize Gospel values in governance. I do not deny the fact that Kapampangans are personalistic, more so with their priests, but be that as it may, I have always explained that the crusade was not about me, but it was about something bigger than all of us combined. I was just a part of the whole, as important as the campaign manager, but equally as indispensable as the poll watcher.

Who were these people of conscience? A classic example would be our technical consultant on software systems. All his life he had never voted in any election, or even participated by any means whatsoever. He was a self-confessed apolitical and fence-sitting Filipino who would just let political dogs lie, for as long as they leave him in peace. But when the crusade began, he was convinced by his wife to visit the EDquarters and offer whatever talent or materials he could contribute to the furtherance of the campaign. We cannot quantify his involvement in pesos, much less measure its effects, but because of his free services, we were able to set up a text brigade, hook up the EDquarters in a wi-fi network, and more importantly implement an automated quick count system that helped us track down the results of the elections accurately. Given the fact that as independent candidate I was not privileged to receive a copy of the election returns, his help was truly incalculable. What is more notable is that during an interview, it was found out that he lived next door to a mayoralty candidate of the City of San Fernando . He could have earned tens of thousands of pesos, had he offered his services to him. But he chose to give it to us for free.

Actively involved, too were a dozen former seminarians who were among the workhorses of the campaign. Collectively known as Bakal Boys, their background often provided a spiritual dimension in our daily struggle. Where else would you find a campaign where strategies and tactics were discussed along with conversion, metanoia and kenosis? Many of them were influential in my decision to run, being members of the core group that searched for an alternative candidate. Among the Bakal Boys was one who lived quite an easy life in Cebu , earning a salary that would be the envy of most single men of his age and stature. But like Peter, he left everything behind, leaning on nothing but his faith and his earnest desire to do something good for our province. He is now a part of my team, involved in a sensitive position that requires my utmost trust and confidence. Another former seminarian came all the way from London, where his community produced the very first U-Tube video in support of my candidacy.

Perhaps it is the presence of the Bakal Boys that allowed us to look at the ordinary events of the campaign with the eyes of faith. The confluence of all the events, such as the blessing of good weather in both our grand miting de avances, the speed at which triumph was achieved, the mystery of the experts in statistics and probability being confounded by their own means, all pointed to the hand of God actively involving Himself in the affairs of man. At every turn, we looked for the sign of His presence, and we were not disappointed. Ours was not just a moral crusade, it transformed itself into a divine crusade.

A very palpable sign of God’s presence was the full support of brethren from other faiths and denominations in the crusade for good governance. Among the first to express their support on the day I filed my certificate of candidacy were Methodist pastors. Leaders of born again fellowships also boosted our stock, widening the spectrum of collaboration into dimensions previously unknown. I believe that there is no other previous experience in our nation where people of different faiths actively involved and immersed themselves in a mission as one body. What we were seeing was the Kingdom of God , a dedicated assembly of people under one dream: to see good governance become a reality.

Cyrelle was your typical Among Ed volunteer: multi-tasking, energetic, uncomplaining, except for the fact that she just graduated from a private elementary school. She was everyone’s kid niece or sister, a favorite object of pranks, but equal to every joke thrown her way. Forsaking a summer of visiting malls and beaches, she became the ultimate factotum, preparing coffee, manning the photocopy machine, answering the phone, encoding data and stapling sheets of paper. Not even four years social studies in high school would match up to the wealth of hands-on learning she attained during those months.

And of course, there were those who contributed their time, talent and treasure from all walks of life and practically from every corner of the earth. There was this public school teacher who was given a one thousand peso bribe by another candidate. She took the effort to visit our EDquarters and turn over the money to us. As fast as people were taking posters and flyers from our office, equally consistent were the kind donors who dropped by every day to deliver campaign materials they had printed on their own. During our motorcades, ordinary people threw coins into our showboats to share their support. Even non-Kapampangans generously shared their blessings.

And finally, there was Jomar Nulud, a barangay chairman in my last parish who was gunned down by still unidentified assailants days after my proclamation. Kapitan Jomar switched allegiance after he learned of my candidacy. The night before he was killed, he ominously told me to be careful. “Hindi baleng ako ang itumba, huwag lang ikaw,” he said. His was the ultimate sacrifice. I am nothing compared to him.

A common thread that ran among all of these examples of people who joined us in our campaign was the element of sacrifice. The Japanese have a proverb: always replace a thing of value with that of a greater value. In giving up something of themselves, whether as mundane as a summer vacation, as abstract as a preconceived notion of a different faith, or as irreplaceable as a human life, their surrender was for a far greater cause. And because of this, they gained an ownership of the crusade. This ownership has been multiplied a thousand times and has reached the puroks and barangays, but we still need to reach out to a lot more people and convince them to own this new politics.

Once, I expressed my misgivings to a supporter, rhetorically asking, what if I got used to all the attention and the glory? What if I started to enjoy it? What if I started to demand it? Thankfully, I am surrounded by people whose presence always reminds me that the crusade is a team effort. Even now, I am not “Gov” to them. I am still “Among Ed,” and to the more familiar, I am “Brods or Jo.” I allow this informality, because I know that I am just one instrument among many volunteers, workers, contributors, prayer warriors and well-wishers who gave a part of their lives to realize a vision. It just so happened that my position warrants me to be a primus inter pares, a first among equals, or more accurately a father to sons and daughters who deserve my love, respect and attention, because they gave so much so freely.

That we have won through a plurality reminds us that we have to be gentle with our salesmanship. We have to convince the civil society and the civil service, by way of example and education,that honest governance works. We have to provide for a transparent, efficient and effective delivery of services, that the people may pay their taxes with cheerful hearts, knowing that their hard-earned money does not find itself in some bureaucrat’s pocket. Arriving much sooner than expected, as it were, we are quite pleased that the Capitol leadership, as well as the rank and file have for the most part adapted to our program of government quite quickly. I credit this to the government employee’s innate goodness and willingness to work. I have to admit, though that the adjustment period was quite tenuous. But when the Governor sets the example in punctuality, simplicity of lifestyle, openness to the constituents, dedication to work and pleasantness of disposition, the most taciturn employee has no other recourse than to follow.

Today, our province earns an average of a million pesos a day in quarry revenues. Suppliers have lowered their bids dramatically after being reminded that the days of SOPs are over. A system of fiscal discipline is being instituted. We have streamlined the manpower to make it more citizen-oriented. Our primary attention is now given to the equipment, staffing and development of our provincial and district hospitals. We are at the moment studying systems and processes that will make quality service be delivered on time. Capacity and confidence building measures are being undertaken in order that the bureaucracy can pride itself as a working and effective body. For the first time in the history of the province, a draft three-year executive agenda will be submitted to the people tomorrow for their comments and suggestions, in the spirit of consultation and collaboration.

But for society to be transformed, it is not enough that government employees be empowered and motivated. The desire for positive change and the willingness to sacrifice for the greater good must not only trickle down, but must engulf every barangay. A visual way of describing the approach to this objective is that of the way the bibingka is cooked: heat on top, heat at the bottom. We should inflame the governing and the governed. The inured system of political patronage and dependency may take a little more time and may require a more extensive strategy for the people to realize that in the end, the benefits to the community will outweigh any personal gain. Good citizenship must take root until following the law, paying taxes honestly, respecting the environment and upholding one’s dignity shall become second nature to every person.

I don’t think that God meant me to endure five seminaries just to become a Governor or some other public official. I love my vocation, and at the end of this temporary detour into politics, I shall desire nothing more than to have my priestly faculties once again, and be a shepherd of the faith anew. A personal glory shall be that day when I shall hold aloft the transubstantiated body and blood of Christ, recalling my first mass after my ordination. It is from this vantage point that I say that I really do not encourage the entry of priests or ministers to the electoral arena. It would be utter presumption and even a complete falsehood to maintain that only the clergy posses the moral superiority to lead the nation. A layman with the proper motivation and popular support can lead any province to glory, in the same manner that an elected priest with less than honorable intentions can bring the province to its knees. Every believer has a divine mandate to do good and cast out evil. For the sake of the beggar out in the street, for the sake of the baby who is fed with rice water, for the sake of the sick patients in our public hospitals, for the sake of every Filipino who persists in the hope of a brighter horizon, I ask you to help us prove that we are essentially good, and that we uphold the common good.

It has been said so often that Pampanga right now is a laboratory mouse in a grand experiment upon which almost every eye of every disillusioned Filipino is fixed, steadily observing how the dream of good and honest governance is realized, and if it can result in the improvement of the people’s plight. Historically, our province has always been the breeding ground of social unrest and revolutionary thought. Once again, there is something revolutionary going on in Pampanga. With fervent prayers, consultative and exemplary leadership, participatory and law-abiding citizenship, collaborative and dedicated service, together with the application of better organizational systems, technological processes and innovations, I believe that we can overcome and transform the individual and the society. Then shall our success in Pampanga be translated in every province of the nation. Let us all join forces to transform ourselves, and in turn our beloved Philippines.

Ang Josefino, Asin at Ilaw ng Mundo

+Ambo S. David
Main Talk
San Jose Seminary Alumni Homecoming 2007

I wonder if you are aware that the Department of Education requires elementary and high school students to sing, in addition to the national anthem Lupang Hinirang, also the song of Kuh Ledesma entitled, Ako ay Pilipino. In our seminary in Pampanga, even if we just happen to be passing by, if we chance upon the national anthem being sung, we normally also stop, face the flag and put our right hand on our chests and join in the singing.

One time, one of my colleagues was passing by the quadrangle and the Lupang Hinirang was intoned. Like the others, he stopped when the singing of the anthem began, but proceeded as soon as it was over. Another colleague stopped him and said, Hindi pa tapos, meron pa. The impatient colleague continued walking and said, looking back, Kailan pa naging pambansang awit iyang kanta ng Kuh Ledesmang iyan? Ayoko ngang kantahin iyan, ang yabang ng dating.

I reviewed the lyrics, and I ended up agreeing with him. The song says,
Ako ay Pilipino may dugong maharlika,
Likas sa aking puso ang adhikaing kay ganda
Ako ay Pilipino, ako ay Pilipino
Taas noo kahit kanino, ang Pilipino ay ako.

I do understand the intention of reinforcing in our students a sense of patriotism. But a song like this sung as an anthem for schools can indeed come only from a nation that is suffering from a very low collective self-esteem. Para bang kung hindi man natin maranasan sa totohanan, e di kantahin na lang natin?

Dear brother alumni of San Jose, I have been asked today to share some reflections on the topic "Ang Josefino, Asin at Ilaw ng Mundo." Hindi ba parang kanta ni Kuh Ledesma ang dating? Baka maisip pang idugtong ng mga seminarista sa pambansang awit ang isang bagong San Jose Crusade song,

Ako ay Josefino may dugong maharlika
Likas sa aking puso, adhikaing kay galling
Ako ay Josefino, ako ay Josefino

Taas noo kahit kanino, ang Josefino ay ako.

Baka sabihin sa atin ng mga taga-ibang seminaryo, "Ok, Josefino na kung Josefino. E ano ngayon?"

When I hear ourselves engaging in a collective ego-trip about the superiority of the Josefino brand of formation, I am tempted to recall that our own Jesuit formators who have established their own excellence in various fields of discipline, have an anthem that is meant to remind them who they are before God. It says,

Sino kayong napabilang sa kanyang kapisanan?
Sino kayong tinawag niyang katoto at kaibigan?

And the answer to numerous lines asking the same question Sino Kayo is:

Kayo'y taong makasalanan hinubog sa lupa't kahinaan
Kayo'y taong makasalanan inampon sa kanyang pangalan.

The Jesuit who is asked who he is, is supposedly expected to answer: a sinner.

Excellence is not excellence if it needs to advertise itself. I think it has to speak for itself. Having made my point about what I do not intend to say about the topic Ang Josefino: Asin at Ilaw ng Mundo, let me now proceed with my reflection.

"Asin ng daigdig at ilaw ng mundo." Sa madalas tawaging "Pangaral sa Bundok" (Sermon on the Mount) sa ebanghelyo ni San Mateo (5-7), para kay Kristo, asin at ilaw ang ginagamit na larawan ng panawagan at gawain ng isang mabuting alagad. Kaya siguro sa lumang ritwal ng binyag, bukod sa kandilang nakasindi (ilaw), sinusubuan din ng pari ang bagong binyag na bata ng konting asin. Too bad, we have lost the salt and kept only the light.

Let me begin with salt. Salt is probably the humblest, the cheapest, but the most basic ingredient for cooking our food. It is colorless. Kahit mukhang puti, pag nilagay mo sa tubig hindi nito kukulayan ng puti ang tubig. It quickly disappears when mixed with food. It does not even have its own smell to add to the food. (Ang toyo pag nilagay mo sa pagkain, bibigyan niya ang pagkain ng lasang toyo at amoy ng toyo. Ang patis, gayundin, bibigyan ang pagkain ng lasa at amoy ng patis. Pero and pagkain pag nilagyan mo ng asin, hindi mo sinasabing lasang asin o amoy asin. Pag napansin mo nga ito, ibig sabihin hindi tama ang timpla. Maaring matabang o maalat.) You know only that you have put the right amount of salt in the food when you don't even notice it. What you notice instead is the natural taste, the natural flavor and aroma of the meat or vegetables that you are cooking.

I'd like to believe that Jesus had all these in mind when he used salt as an analogy for the mission that he expected his disciples to take part in. It is in fact an image that reminds me very much of several of our revered senior Josefinos. Take his eminence, for example, our dear Lolo Dency Rosales. In the height of his stature as archbishop of Manila, prince of the Church and candidate-Pope, he can easily become another superstar like the late Cardinal Sin, hug the limelight, and be in the headlines of national dailies for even a most insignificant comment on the daily goings-on in Philippine society. And yet he remains very low-key, and people have know him better as a humble, self-effacing, low profile, unpretentious, quiet, but very effective personality. Parang asin nga. Sometimes you don't even spot him in a crowd because he could quickly disappear. (Remember that time when he took bus to Batangas in order to catch up with the funeral of a friend of his?) He can easily blend with people; he doesn't call attention to himself. He is not the regal, imperious or monarchical type of a bishop. Rather, he is the empowering type who brings out the best in people. He is one extraordinary man who can make himself look so ordinary, people can easily relate and identify with him. Lolong-lolo ang dating. He is not an imposing figure and his voice is hardly audible when he speaks, but people keep quiet and strain their ears to listen to his wisdom and take it to heart. Instead of calling attention to himself, he calls people's attention to Christ.

O, baka naman maging para eulogy na ito, e buhay na buhay pa itong ating si Lolo Dency. Marami tayong ganitong mga Josefino-ordinaryo ang dating pero matinding kagaya ng asin. (At pag nalagay sa mata o sa sugat, mahapdi.) They are so accessible, so reachable, so human, and remain so, even when bestowed with power and authority. Ganyan din ang ating si Lolo Angel Lagdameo, current president of the CBCP and Apu Ceto, head of the CBCP Commission on Family and Life. Because of Church leaders like them, our CBCP assemblies are never a stressful or intimidating kind of experience. To my pleasant surprise when I joined their ranks, the mood is friendly and familial, never formal or business-like. Of course meron ding occasional tendencies sa CBCP na mag-grand-standing o magpaistaran, but always, when you have people like Lolo Dency, Lolo Angel, and Apu Ceto and other alumni-bishops, such tendencies are easily put on check and dissipated. Their presence is always reassuring, sort of silently saying, "Come on, there is no need to over-assert yourself. We are family here; you are a brother, a friend. There is no need to pretend, no need to impress anybody, no need to seek approval. You can be your true self with us; we will accept you for who you are." That, for me, is an empowering presence.

Even our dear Chito Tagle is like that. You know, he seldom even raises his hand to speak at our CBCP meetings. Pero pag may trabaho nang kailangang gawin, si Chito lagi ang paboritong alipin. Kasi walang kiyeme, walang angal, laging "at your service", at "service with a smile." College pa lang kami, idol na ng bayan iyang si Chito. Kasi super-galing, pero walang ere ni katiting. Despite his brilliance he can make fun of himself. He makes lofty ideas sound so simple, mas magaling pang mag-explain sa mga professors namin. With Chito explaining things, even Marcel, Buber, Heidegger, suddenly become so easy to understand. I remember how in college, during one group review, a brilliant fellow seminarian explained a philosopher and he sounded so complicated parang ang feeling ko, napakabobo ko yata, ba't di ko maintindihan. And then when Chito explained the same stuff, it was so easy to chew and digest. When you get to participate in the discussion and follow Chito's style of putting complex ideas in simple words, pakiramdam mo ang galing mo na rin. Asin din iyang si Chito. Superior na walang superiority complex. Magaling na hindi nagmamagaling. In his company, hindi ka mabobobo. Magiging mahusay ka rin.

You are the light of the world. May iba-ibang klaseng ilaw. Merong spotlight na nakatutok lang sa isang direksyon. May mainit na halogen lamp na nagpapatingkad mabuti sa iniilawan. There is also the lamp shade in a corner that illuminates a room in a soft way. Pero anumang klaseng ilaw, iisa ang silbi nito-hindi upang manilaw kundi upang tanglawan ng liwanag ang paligid. (Di ba kawalan ng modo ang itutok ang flashlight sa mukha ng kasalubong na tao?) Sinisindihan ang ilaw hindi upang panoorin ito o pagmasdan, kundi upang maipakita nito ang kapaligiran, o ang ating patutunguhan. Talking of light may mga Josefinong napakaliwanag sa CBCP hall-si Bishop Nes. Makintab ang ulo. Si Bishop Ted maliwanag ang mga mata. Paligsahan kaming dalawa. At naku, kapag masyado nang complicated ang usapan, may magtataas kamay na Kuya Jess Mercado na magbibigay liwanag sa mga bagay-bagay, ang interventions nya laging simple, maikli, pero malinaw. And those CBCP statements that shine out in clarity over matters of faith and morals, informed by Scriptures, tradition and the magisterium? I tell you, most of them bear the silent unwritten signature of the small but terrible Lolo Orly Quevedo.

I don't know if my fellow junior bishop Kuya George Rimando feels the same way, but I am silently edified when I note the strong but unthreatening influence of brother Josefinos in the CBCP. But I don't want to push it too far lest we sound like bragging or boasting again. The light isn't there to shine out, not to try to outshine anybody. (I think, one of the curses of our Josefino aspiration for excellence is really that tendency to be sobrang bilib sa sarili, or even to develop an unhealthy sense of competitiveness. Di ba natin madalas marinig sa mga ibang pari na madami din sa atin ang medyo pasaway ang dating? What else can temper this tendency except a serious spiritual and prayer life that alone can put us in our proper places, and make us boast only in the Lord?) John of the Cross once said, "The closer I get to the light, the darker my own darkness seems." Even Matthew is clear about the purpose of shining out-"Your light must shine before people that they may see your goodness and give glory to the Father in heaven."

But take note, the Gospel is clear and categorical about it: Let your light shine that they may see. And perhaps we might even add: that they may feel it, hear it, smell it, touch it, experience it. through us!

One thing has become clear to me after almost 20 years of ministry as seminary formator: we spend many years in the seminary not just to train candidates to communicate the faith. What we shape in our candidates is not just the intellect but the whole character-a priestly character according to the mould of Christ.

Rolheiser says-and I hope you don't mind that I quote him at length, because I cannot say it better than he does- "Good theology stimulates and inflames the intellect. Thomas Aquinas and Bernard Lonergan add that it also helps to move the will. The heart needs to have some intellectual vision. Good ideas play no small part in any healthy change."

"Thus, the Christian community is always in need of good academics. As history shows, every time the Church has compromised on its intellectual tradition, seeing it as unimportant, it has paid a heavy price. Good, sound, abstract, academic theology is perennially the great corrective within church life and spirituality."

"More recently," he continues, "we have been blessed with an abundance of good theology. It is hardly the academy of theology that is weak at the present moment. The last thirty to forty years have produced (literally) libraries full of wonderful books on scripture, church history, liturgy, dogmatics, moral theology, spirituality, and pastoral practice. We are not lacking for solid ideas." he says.

What Rolheiser thinks we are lacking however, is "fire, romance, aesthetics, as these pertain to our faith and ecclesial lives. What needs to be inflamed today inside religion is its romantic imagination. " He insists that "solid ideas and solid programs alone are not enough. We need someone to re-inflame the romantic imagination of Christianity, a new Francis, a new Clare, a new Augustine, a new Thomas More, a new Ignatius, a new Therese of Lisieux."

Rolheiser also says the same thing about vocations to the priesthood and religious life. He says, "More than strategies of recruitment, we need new romantic fire." He proceeds to cite romantic figures among the religious of the past few decades like Thomas Merton, Mother Teresa, and Sister Helen Prejean and asks why one stirs up vocational romance more than another. Rolheiser also cites the explanations proposed by both conservatives and progressives over the graying and the emptying of Churches in the western world. He recognizes that there is some truth in all the reasons they propose but insists that "Among other things, we lack a romantic ideal for our faith and church lives. We have too little idealistic fire left.. We need to re-romanticize faith, religion, and church and give people something beautiful with which to fall in love."

None of this is possible at all if we allow our petty selves to get in the way of the mission of Christ. Unknown to many, the real reason why I chose KENOSIS as motto for my coat of arms was precisely to temper that over-assertive ego that often gets in the way of the ministry. (Perhaps it is the same spirit behind Ignatius' AMDG-because the world tends to condition us to aspire for our own glory.) There is much that must decrease in us if God is to increase through us. Paul must have struggled with this tendency himself. He was all too aware of his inner inconsistencies. In his desire to be strong, he is supposed to have asked the Lord to remove his weakness. And God's reply is, "My grace is enough for you. For in weakness, power reaches perfection. It is when I am weak, that I am strong." (2 Cor 12:9) In our weakness, we have reason to hope only in the power of God made most clearly manifest in the weakness of the cross. This experience of paradox once moved Paul to say, "This treasure we possess in earthen vessels in order to make it clear to us that its surpassing power comes from God and not from us." (2 Cor 4:7) I think you know well as I do that this is not always clear to us.

And strangely, it will always be the worst and most painful trials that will make this gradually clear to us-the many experiences of self-emptying and dying to self, the many instances that would prove Francis of Asisi right when he said,

For it is in giving that we receive
It is in pardoning that we are pardoned
It is in dying that we are born to eternal life.

I started with salt, so let me end with salt again by reading to you the story of the salt doll that a friend of mine quoted in full and wrote in a hand-made card he sent me on the occasion of my ordination as bishop. The story goes:

A salt doll journeyed for thousands of miles over land, until it finally came to the sea. It was fascinated by this strange moving mass, quite unlike anything it had ever seen before.

"Who are you?'' said the salt doll to the sea.

The sea smilingly replied, "Come in and see.''

So the doll waded in. The farther it walked into the sea the more it dissolved, until there was only very little of it left. Before that last bit dissolved, the doll exclaimed in wonder, "Now I know what I am!''

Sabi ni Father Roque Ferriols, ang tanong na SINO AKO ay hindi masasagot nang minsanan. Paulit-ulit din nating sasagutin kung SINO TAYO, mga kapwa Josefino, hanggang di natin natutuklasan na tayo'y asin at ilaw. Mga mistulang manikang asin na unti-unting malulusaw sa dagat; mga mistulang kandilang aandap-andap upang magbigay ng konting liwanag hanggang sa tuluyang maubos tayo at maging kabahagi ng ganap na liwanag ng Diyos.

27 August 2007

sa kambas ng lipunan

On Society's Canvas

when joey velasco painted his version of the last supper, "hapag ng pag-asa", he made yet another testament to the old truth: a picture is worth a thousand words. to say the least. his masterpiece has since then led many to discover many more poignant words and sublime truths.

01 June 2007

an unusual valedictory speech

i have received this email forward recently, introduced by 'This is an unusual valedictory speech'. the valedictorian is Mikaela Irene Fudolig. the 'unusual' tag may, at first glance, refer to the fact that ms fudolig graduated summa cum laude from UP, bs physics, & she is only 16 years-old.

graduation speeches and valedictions from the country's premier universities seem to become email staples. (last year gawad kalinga founder tony meloto's speech at UP made the rounds.) maybe because they easily fit the description of being 'inspiring'. ms fudolig's speech certainly continues the tradition. what makes it properly unusual, i think, is that she delivered it wittily, succinctly, with a wisdom expectedly well beyond her years. & then she announced she's putting her money where her mouth is: she'd like to teach at UP.

high score for idealism! except (& here my nitpicking begins) for the apparent show of disdain to the present administration's critics and the 'perverse sense of satisfaction' they get 'from vilifying our state of affairs'. endless political squabbling & vilification do indeed dampen the youth's, or for that matter, anyone else's, idealism. then again, what alternative does the critics' critic offer?

do whatever you can with the best of intention, imagination and effort, and steer clear of politics in this country as much as possible? never mind if a major reason why this country could not find its longed-for redemption, in spite of the 'bravest' efforts of the best of its individuals and groups, is that this very government is hell-bent on convincing us not to mind them while they proceed to lie, cheat and steal from the rest of us. my words, of course.

incidentally, this was, in a way, the same line of value-reorientation that the much-esteemed mr. meloto proffered in his speech last year. focus on the positive. don't mind too much the negative. think about the good you can do. not the bad that some people are doing.

when the best of us moves on convinced of this spin, the rest, of course, will try to catch up but stay in wonder as to why we just can't make progress.

still it’s an inspiring read.


Mikaela Irene Fudolig / BS Physics
Speech at the Commencement Exercises, University of the Philippines in Diliman
April 22, 2007


One of the things that strike me as being very "UP Diliman" is the way UPD students can't seem to stay on the pavement. From every street corner that bounds an unpaved piece of land, one will espy a narrow trail that cuts the corner, or leads from it. Every lawn around the buildings sports at least one of these paths, starting from a point nearest to the IKOT stop and ending at the nearest entry to the building. The trails are beaten on the grass by many pairs of feet wanting to save a fraction of a meter of traveling, no matter that doing so will exact some cost to the shoes, or, to the ubiquitous slippers, especially when the trails are new.

What do these paths say about us, UP students?

One could say that the UP student is enamored with Mathematics and Pythagoras, hence these triangles formed by the pavement and the path. Many among you would disagree.

Others could say that the UP student is naturally countercultural. And the refusal to use the pavement is just one of the myriads of ways to show his defiance of the order of things. This time, many would agree.

Still, others will say that the UP student is the model of today's youth: they want everything easier, faster, now. The walkable paths appeal to them because they get to their destination faster, and presumably, with less effort. Now that is only partly true, and totally unfair.

These trails weren't always walkable. No doubt they started as patches of grass, perhaps overgrown. Those who first walked them must have soiled their shoes, stubbed their toes, or had insects biting their legs, all in the immovable belief that the nearest distance between two points is a straight line. They might even have seen snakes cross their paths. But the soiled footwear, sore toes, and itchy legs started to conquer the grass. Other people, seeing the yet faint trail, followed. And as more and more walked the path, the grass gave in and stopped growing altogether, making the path more and more visible, more and more walkable.

The persistence of the paths pays tribute to those UP students who walked them first ? the pioneers of the unbeaten tracks: the defiant and curious few who refuse the familiar and comfortable; the out-of-the-box thinkers who solve problems instead of fretting about them; the brave who dare do things differently, and open new opportunities to those who follow.

They say how one behaved in the past would determine how he behaves in the future. And as we leave the University, temporarily or for good, let us call on the pioneering, defiant, and brave spirit that built the paths to guide us in this next phase of our life.

We have been warned time and again. Our new world that they call "adulthood" is one that's full of compromises, where success is determined more by the ability to belong than by the ability to think, where it is much easier to do as everyone else does. Daily we are bombarded with so much news of despair about the state of our nation, and the apparent, perverse sense of satisfaction our politicians get from vilifying our state of affairs. It is fashionable to migrate to other countries to work in deceptively high-paying jobs like nursing and teaching, forgetting that even at their favored work destinations, nurses and teachers are some ofthe lowest paid professionals. The lure of high and immediate monetary benefits in some low-end outsourcing jobs has drawn even some of the brightest UP students away from both industry and university teaching to which they would have been better suited.

Like the sidewalks and pavement, these paths are the easiest to take.

But, like the sidewalks and pavement, these paths take longer to traverse, just as individual successes do not always make for national progress. The unceasing critic could get elected, but not get the job done. The immigrant could get his visa, but disappear from our brainpower pool. The highly paid employee would be underutilized for his skills, and pine to get the job he truly wants, but is now out of his reach. And the country, and we, are poorer because of these.

Today, the nation needs brave, defiant pioneers to reverse our nation's slide to despair. Today, we must call upon the spirit that beat the tracks. Today, we must present an alternative way of doing things.

Do NOT just take courage, for courage is not enough. Instead, be BRAVE! It will take bravery to go against popular wisdom, against the clichéd expectations of family and friends. It will take bravery to gamble your future by staying in the country and try to make a prosperous life here. It might help if for a start, we try to see why our Korean friends are flocking to our country. Why, as many of us line up for immigrant visas in various embassies, they get themselves naturalized and settle here. Do they know something we don't?

Do NOT just be strong in your convictions, for strength is not enough. Instead, DEFY the pressure to lead a comfortable, but middling life. Let us lead this country from the despair of mediocrity. Let us not seek to do well, but strive to EXCEL in everything that we do. This, so others will see us as a nation of brains of the highest quality, not just of brawn that could be had for cheap.

Take NOT the road less traveled. Rather, MAKE new roads, BLAZE new trails, FIND new routes to your dreams. Unlike the track-beaters in campus who see where they're going, we may not know how far we can go. But if we are brave, defiant searchers of excellence, we will go far. Explore possibilities, that others may get a similar chance. I have tried it myself. And I'm speaking to you now.

But talk is cheap, they say. And so I put my money where my mouth is. Today, I place myself in the service of the University, if it will have me. I would like to teach, to share knowledge, and perhaps to be an example to new UP students in thinking and striving beyond the limits of the possible. This may only be a small disturbance in the grass. But I hope you'll come with me, and trample a new path.

Good evening, everyone.