Saturday, 11 May 2013 : 6th Week of Easter (Scripture Reflection)

God is love, and love is God. For in God is the true love, not merely the love as we are taught to believe by the world, that is the lust and passion between two persons, but as a true form of noble feeling that transcends everything, and indeed made everything possible. For as long as we have love within ourselves, we can do everything, because with love as our anchor, God Himself is with us, and becomes the anchor of our actions. We cannot go wrong, as long as we keep the true love, that is God’s love, within all of us.

God Himself had revealed Himself in His full glory to us, none other than through the Apostles, to whom Christ, the Son of God, spoke to directly just before His death. He showed them who He is, and what His mission in this world is, through His words and His actions. Through His death on the cross and His glorious resurrection on the third day, He proved yet again and again the truth of His words, and therefore His love for all mankind, and He showed the perfect fulfilment of the prophecies of the prophets, and that of God’s promise, since the beginning of creation, through Abraham, and to us.

If we truly have love in us, and if we truly love God our Lord and Father, we will naturally grow stronger in our faith. For faith and love cannot be separated from one another. In order to love, we need to have faith in that we want to love, and in order to have faith in something, we must first love that something before we can put our trust in it. That is why we need to love God first before we can have faith in Him. If we are just merely ‘Sunday Catholics’ who come for the Mass just because we feel it and treat it as an obligation, then we are merely empty vessels without love, without love for God, and therefore our faith in God will be found wanting.

Christ who is risen, and then taken up to heaven at Ascension, did not leave all of us empty-handed, but He sent us a great Advocate, that is the Holy Spirit, which He sent to the apostles, and become the  source of their inspiration, strength, and courage to carry out the mission which He had entrusted to them, that is to make disciples all the nations of the earth, and to bring His Good News of salvation to the ends of the earth.

Have faith in the Lord, and put our trust in Him, always. Never forget His kindness, and the sacrifice He had made so that all of us may be saved. Be courageous and take up the mantle of the apostles, who preached the Good News to many, not only through our own words, but also through good deeds, that show to the many who sees us, that we truly belong to God.

Therefore, dear brothers and sisters in Christ, let us love one another and love our God ever more at all times, that we truly become creatures of love, and love guide our actions and all our being. May God bless us with a warm and growing love within our hearts. Amen.

Sunday, 10 March 2013 : 4th Sunday of Lent, Laetare Sunday, 2nd Scrutiny for Baptism (Scripture Reflection)

Forgiveness. Something that is easy to be said, but difficult to be done. Something that we want to do, but hard to do, because either we lack love in our hearts, or have the hatred and darkness in our hearts that block us and prevent us from carrying out acts of forgiveness and mercy.

Today, our Lord Jesus Christ showed us the virtues of forgiveness and mercy, just as what God the Father had done for us, through the parable of the prodigal son. It shows the extent of God’s boundless and infinite love for us, who are sinners, but yet He is willing to take all of us as His children. After all, are we not His most beloved of all creation? The very beings created in His image? Though indeed, we were marred by our rebellion, beginning from the rebellion of our foreparents Adam and Eve, who fell into Satan’s temptation.

But God again shows that no sinner is beyond His mercy and salvation. That is why, out of His great love for all of us, the only One worthy to redeem us, His Son, Jesus Christ, was given to us as a ‘Sacrificial Offering’, the perfect offering that redeemed us every single cents of our debts, that is our sins and faults.

We who had been saved by Christ through His Sacrifice, and through our baptism, either when we were infants or when we were already adults, when God took us to be His sons and daughters, are like the elder son of the father in the parable, who had already had a share in the wealth and all the properties of the father, who is God represented. We should not act like the Pharisees, who thought themselves of worthy, and that others who had ‘erred’ in their eyes, they labeled as sinners and unworthy to share their salvation and faith.

For the Pharisees in the blind man case, represented exactly the sentiments of the elder son, where pride, arrogance, and power trumped over humility, love, and compassion. Just like the elder sons of Jesse, whom the Lord asked the prophet Samuel to visit to appoint the new king of Israel, they had been rejected although they were strong, powerful, and has that aura of command, being the elder and thus more mature sons according to the society’s norms.

No, the Lord seeks not these kind of strength, pride, and power, for these things often corrupted men and deviates their heart from their true love for God, and instead to love mankind, the world, and all the temptations of power and glory that Satan offered through the world. God desires indeed the qualities found in David, whom he chose as the new king of Israel to replace the disobedient Saul.

For David is humble and loving, and he truly loved the Lord with all his heart and after his anointing, he set out to do good throughout all his life, for God’s sake. And except for the sin he committed in murdering the husband of his future wife (he is still like us after all, a sinner), he was committed to a life of dedicated love to God, and to all his fellow men, whom he ruled justly.

It is through humility and love that we can learn the true nature of God, that is love, mercy, and compassion. For if we let ourselves be blinded by our pride, jealousy, our hatred, and all things of evil and sin, we blind ourselves, not only from the truth in our fellow men, but also blind ourselves from God. This is exactly what happened to the Pharisees and the people gathered, who condemned the blind man, cured by Jesus, failing to see God’s work in Jesus, and failing to listen to the testimony of the blind man, which is truth.

For they are too embroiled in their own self-vanity, pride, and preservation, and jealousy against all who intruded into their sphere of control and power (who was indeed Jesus), that they rejected God directly, out of these sheer darkness in their hearts. For them, these had closed their hearts from God’s love, but still, God gave His life to save all, including them, and He forgave them in the end at Calvary. This is how great the love that God has shown us, that He gave Himself for us.

Therefore, brothers and sisters in Christ, let us strive that we will not be like the ungrateful and arrogant elder son, who think highly of himself and failing to see God’s love in all, and for all, even for the greatest sinners, represented by the younger son. Because he has been always with the Father as we are with the Father through Christ and through our baptism, but we have to reach out and help out those who are still struggling, and those who had lost their way to God.

Help one another, strengthen one another in faith, and bring the Good News to others who had yet to receive it. Let us, brothers and sisters in Christ, as One community, One Church in Christ, do our best to show God’s mercy, forgiveness, and love, through our charity and our actions, which will make God’s love manifest in this world. That more can be saved, through our action, not out of jealousy, not out of pride, but out of love, and humility, and let us rejoice together when anyone returns or comes to the Lord, acknowledging Him as their Saviour.

May God bless us all, and bless those who had rejected Him, those who had hated Him, and those who had closed their hearts to His love. Amen.