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Parishioner Gifts Scholars with Bibles

Bible for Scholars
In line with its goals to provide educational and spiritual formation; the SSAP JPIC Scholarship Program scheduled its Annual Recollection for its 83 scholars on November 16 – November 17, 2013, at the Franciscan Spirituality Center, Botolan, Zambales. The recollection was facilitated by Jolly Gomez and the Youth Ministry focused on meaningful prayer worship through “Adoration, Contrition, Thanksgiving and Supplication” (ACTS) and “Praise, Ask, Listen” (PAL).

Atty. Gomez had recommended that each scholar be given a bible for scripture reading. The Committee, through Ms. Jackie, verified the posts of reasonably-priced bibles from several bookstores. This way a donation appeal for bibles could be published in the Parish Bulletin. It is through Divine Providence that a parishioner had heard of the scholars’ need for bibles. Through her benevolence never-tiring generosity to the JPIC Scholars, each scholar received an 8 by 5 inches bible in the vernacular purchased at the Philippine Bible Society along U.N. Avenue.

The SSAP JPIC scholars would like to thank our most kind parishioner for this memorable gift to mark a special event in their lives.

SSAP JPIC Scholarship Committee/Jean Chavez

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Articles Pastoral Team Reflections

“Stay awake… Be prepared” by Fr. Jesus Galindo, OFM

“Prepare the way of the Lord.” The way of the Lord is none other than our way of life.

As early as September 1, there were Christmas carols being played on radio. The department stores began to display Christmas cards, trees, lights, and all sorts of Christmas décor. Now comes the Church liturgy and announces the beginning of Advent. “What Advent,” you might say. “Father, huli ka sa balita. We have already been celebrating Christmas for over two months now! Our Christmas cards are out; our Christmas trees and lights are up; our Christmas shopping is almost done. Our homes are fully decorated. What Advent are you talking about?”

Kawawang Adbiyento! It is practically non-existent for most people in the Philippines. We plunge right away into the Christmas frills and trappings. We are pushed into this by business interests who use this season as an opportunity, not to bring us closer to Christ, but to rake in fabulous earnings. Big business rules even our spiritual life. That is, if we allow it to do so. Shall we?

It is for this reason that the Church comes now to remind us to “be vigilant” and to “stay awake.” Not to be like the people in Noah’s time who were eating, drinking and having fun; which is exactly what many of us do during the Christmas and pre-Christmas season—going by the number of Christmas parties which are held these days. Hopefully this year, after so many calamities have left millions of our countrymen hungry and homeless, we will.

Advent is meant to be like a fourweek retreat to help us prepare for a meaningful and rewarding celebration of the birthday of Christ. Advent reminds us that it is Christ who is coming, not Santa Claus or the reindeers. Christ, not Santa Claus, is the reason for the season.

Our retreat masters for Advent will be mainly prophet Isaiah and John the Baptist, with their resounding invitation: “Prepare the way of the Lord.” The way of the Lord is none other than our way of life. In today’s passage (First Reading), prophet Isaiah describes the messianic time as a time of peace among nations: “They shall beat their swords into ploughshares and their spears into pruning hooks; one nation shall not raise the sword against another.” It is clear that Isaiah’s vision has not yet been fulfilled, as violence and war wrack many parts of the world. This should help us understand why we need the season of Advent and Christmas to come around year after year: To remind us of the unfinished task of building up peace among the nations.

The symbol of this Advent season is the Advent Wreath–which should be displayed well ahead of the Christmas tree. It consists of four candles, one for each week. It can be made into a powerful means of personal and family reflection and renewal. How? By giving a name or theme to each candle, for instance, Patience, Forgiveness, Unity, Peace (or any other theme of relevance to or lacking in the family). Then, each week, as the family members gather for meals or for prayer, they can have a short reflection and sharing on the theme for the week, and end with a prayer, asking the Lord to bestow on the family the value or virtue meditated upon.

In this way, the Advent Wreath will not be a mere piece of décor but a useful aid for spiritual renewal in the family, by far more meaningful and spiritually rewarding than the mere sight of the twinkling lights around the Christmas tree. A fruitful Advent to one and all!

As published on December 1, 2013, Parish Bulletin
About Fr. Jesus and his reflections

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“Solemnity of Christ The King: The King Who Saves”, By Fr. Joel Sulse, OFM

The underlying spirituality here is despite our wickedness and misgivings, the love of Christ will always be overflowing in us. But like the repentant thief in the gospel, we need to recognize in faith the kingship of Jesus and His holy operations and intents.

We celebrate this Sunday the Solemnity of Christ the King. The gospel during this celebration bears a royal motif narrative. It relates the political charges against Jesus that he puts influence against the Jewish nation, advocates a revolt against Rome through its tax imposition and personally claims himself as the “Messiah and King.” These claims are like provisions to a death certificate that he has signed.

Following through the words of the leaders (v.35), the soldiers (v.36- 37), and the unrepentant criminal (v. 39) as well as the inscription on Jesus’ cross (v.38), one can comprehend the very nature of the kingship of Jesus. And this kingship is being challenged by the very words of the criminal “Are you not the Messiah? Save yourself and us!”(v.39) Such challenges call for Jesus to change his vocational identity. Such is a temptation to him to become a different sort of a King (a political one) very much distinct from the call that His Father wants him to do and live.

But it is good to dwell on how Jesus agonizes on the cross. He did not think of himself alone. He rather offered salvation to the repentant thief. We see here a God who suffered much, yet, still had that capacity to save others.

The current situation in the Visayas mirrors the many faces of the suffering Christ. Despite the difficulties they have encountered and the loss of loved ones, their faith remained strong. It helped them keep their sanity. It is nice seeing victims themselves sharing the relief goods in order for their families to survive. It is good to see the “rebuilding” spirit in them, helping their families build their “makeshift” or temporary shelter. It is so nice to see smiles on their faces despite the difficulties they have encountered during the typhoon. It feels good that despite the tribulations experienced, they remain committed to start once again; to give hope to others. We can see here the face of the suffering Christ, who “in his helplessness has that power to save!” He even asked the Father to forgive those who have crucified and tormented him, even promising the repentant thief that he will be with him in Paradise (v.43).

The continuation of this gospel text tells us that “when all the people who have gathered saw what had happened, they all returned home beating their breast.” Such is an indicator of a faith inside a person who realized that there is really something in Jesus. It is a clear and evident sign of a repentant spirit who recognized the compassionate and forgiving heart of Jesus. And for sure, their story will not stop from there.

“Amen, I say to you, today you will be with me in Paradise (v.43)!” The verse is a clear indication of a forgiveness granted exceeding the prayers of the repentant thief. Jesus granted him what he asked for. The underlying spirituality here is despite our wickedness and misgivings, the love of Christ will always be overflowing in us. But like the repentant thief in the gospel, we need to recognize in faith the kingship of Jesus and His holy operations and intents. May the compassionate and forgiving heart of Jesus, the King reign in our hearts as well. Onwards to the Paradise assured us by Jesus. Amen.

As published on November 24, 2013, Parish Bulletin
About Fr. Joel and his reflections…

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Fr. Robert Manansala Reflections

“CRUCIFIED KING” 34TH SUNDAY IN ORDINARY TIME, SOLEMNITY OF CHRIST THE KING by Fr. Robert Manansala, OFM

A story is told about some divers who discovered a 400 year-old sunken ship off the coast of Northern Ireland.

Among the treasures they found on the ship was a man’s wedding ring. When the divers cleaned it up, they noticed that it had an inscription on it. Etched on the wide band was a hand holding a heart. And under the etching were these words: “I have nothing more to give you.”

Of all the treasures found on that sunken ship, that ring and its beautiful inscription was what particularly touched the divers.

This story is often used when giving a wedding homily. But the inscription – “I have nothing more to give you” – could have been also placed on the cross of Jesus. Instead of the inscription, “Jesus, King of the Jews,” “I have nothing more to give” could have been a better inscription.

For on the cross, Jesus gave us everything he had. He gave us his life and his love. He gave us all that one person can possibly give to another. “No one greater love than this,” Jesus said, “to lay down one’s life for one’s friends.” This is the kind of King we have – offering everything that he had for the love of us.

The Solemnity of Christ the King is not an easy celebration. The title Christ the King has connotations of power, prestige, wealth and pomp and these values do not reflect the life and mission of Jesus. Although Jesus, in the gospels, makes it clear that his kingdom is not an earthly kingdom or of this world, the symbols that we often use and the ways we celebrate this solemnity often manifest earthly and political kingdom. When we picture Christ the King, we usually use earthly paraphernalia: a golden crown, a gilded throne, an expensive royal robe. But Christ’s Kingdom is not an earthly or political kingdom; it is a kingdom of love, peace, justice, humility and reconciliation.

The imaging Jesus Christ as King is made even more difficult by the recent Typhoon Yolanda and the untold devastations that it has brought to lives and properties. If Jesus is the King of the Universe, of heaven and earth, why did he allow such suffering to visit millions of people in the south? How can Jesus, the King of kings, seem to be powerless in the face of natural calamities? How can we accept a King who seems to be powerless in the face of different forms of evil in the society and in the world?

To even compound the matter, the Christ the King that is presented in the gospel for this year’s solemnity is the Crucified King. The Jesuit priest Fr. Mark Link, in describing this kind of king, says: “He is a king who hangs from a dirty cross instead of sitting on a gilded throne. He is not like a king who did not come to be served but to serve and to lay down His life as a ransom for all. This is our king who gave up all He has and became obedient to death, even to death on a cross (Phil. 2). He is the model of all rulers and leaders both in the Church and in society as a whole. How different our world and Church would be if our leaders were to learn to look at Him and copy his example.”

In the gospel passage today, it is precisely on the cross and in the face of the threefold mockery by the people of the Crucified King, that Jesus showed God’s saving power. The Jewish leaders taunted Jesus: “He saved others; let him save himself if he is the Messiah of God, the chosen one.” The soldiers retorted, “If you are the king of the Jews, save yourself.” Finally, one the criminals crucified with Jesus exclaimed, “Aren’t you the Messiah? Then save yourself and us.” Luke has shown us, by way of an irony, that it was the enemies of Jesus themselves who confessed the saving event of his dying on the cross.

In the dialogue between Jesus and the other criminal crucified with Jesus, Jesus’ innocence is first established. The criminal said, “We are only paying the price for what we’ve done, but this man has done nothing wrong.” Secondly, the dialogue highlights the saving effects of Jesus’ death. Jesus’ innocent dying on the cross had an effect of converting the criminal. And in the criminal’s request, “Remember me, when you enter upon your reign,” there is recognition of Jesus’s kingship that goes beyond this life and that has authority to grant eternal pardon and mercy.

On that very day, Jesus promised the repentant criminal “paradise.” In the literature of Judaism, paradise meant the realm reserved for the righteous dead. In the New Testament literature paradise referred to the realm of bliss in heaven, which was thought to have began with the inauguration of the messianic age by Jesus.

According to Luke, Jesus’s making a promise to the repentant criminal clearly shows that everything said of him was in fact true. Jesus can save. He is the Messiah. He is the chosen one and king of glory who can forgive sins, has conquered death and can grant entrance into eternal joy of paradise.

But this Jesus Christ the King is the Messiah who saves others by not saving himself. He is one who is resolutely committed to God’s will, which includes betrayal and death in the hands of men. Only in the shameful powerlessness of the cross can Jesus demonstrate that authority that ultimately saves, forgives and rehabilitates. It is on the cross that Jesus defines what sort of King he really us. The true king is one who gives his all until there is nothing more to give. The true king is one who suffers not only for us but also with us and in us.

Last Sunday, I said in my homily that what happened in the south was not God’s will, that it was more the historical results of man’s decisions and behaviors detrimental to the environment resulting to climate change plus nature’s imperfect and mysterious ways and designs. I also said that the image of Jesus I had in the face of the thousands of deaths and devastations in the south was that of a weeping Jesus. Jesus, out of love, wept over the death of his friend Lazarus and over the impending destruction of Jerusalem. In the same way, out of his love for the suffering, Jesus the Crucified King must have been weeping over the sufferings of our brothers and sisters in the south affected by the typhoon.

Can God really suffer and does God suffer when people suffer? Myron J. Taylor, following the insights of Jurgen Moltmann and Dierrich Bonhoeffer, says that because God cares—because God loves—He suffers… If God loves, then God suffers. To love is to be vulnerable—to be vulnerable means to be open to the hurts and risks that come with freedom.”

There was an old Scotsman who lost two sons in The First World and his heart was so broken that he quit going to church. He felt God had let him down. The minister of his town came by to visit and ask him why he was not in worship anymore. The old man said, “Where was God when my sons died?” The minister paused briefly, then looked up and kindly said, “Right where he was on the day his Son died, right down in the middle of it all.”

Where was God when typhoon Yolanda was hitting Tacloban and other affected places? Where is God in the aftermath of the typhoon? We must say by faith and on the basis of the Crucified Jesus: God has been right there in midst of it all – dying again with his people, suffering and suffering with his suffering people.

The theologian Jurgen Moltmann, in his powerful book The Crucified God, said: “When God becomes man in Jesus of Nazareth, he not only enters into the finitude of man, but in his death on the cross also enters into the situation of man’s godforsakenness. In Jesus he does not die the natural death of a finite being, but the violent death of the criminal on the cross, the death of complete abandonment by God. The suffering in the passion of Jesus is abandonment, rejection by God, his Father… He humbles himself and takes upon himself the eternal death of the godless and the godforsaken, so that all the godless and the godforsaken can experience communion with him.”

Dietrich Bonhoeffer wrote from prison to his friend Eberhard Bethge, nine months before his execution: “Only the suffering God can help.”

We have been witnessing, seeing and hearing stories of resilience, faith, solidarity and charity in the midst of great suffering brought about by the Typhoon. In all these, we experience a God who does not only suffer and suffer with and for us. We also experience God as light, consolation and hope.

One very touching picture I have seen coming from the south, from an evacuation center in Tacloban, is a picture of a little boy carrying a smaller boy with great difficulty. The two boys are not brothers. The older boy was protecting the younger boy for fear that he might get lost in the sea of thousands of people falling in line for relief goods. The younger boy must have been separated from his parents and family or, perhaps, he is the only surviving member of his family now. The older boy needed relief goods, but he could not just think of himself. He was also thinking of the welfare of the younger boy, perhaps even above his own needs. I dare to say the God’s goodness was reflected by the goodness of this boy in solidary with another suffering boy.

Again, Jurgen Moltmann says, “God weeps with us so that we may one day laugh with him.”

In April 1865, the slain body of President Abraham Lincoln lay in state for a few hours in Cleveland, Ohio. It was on its final journey from the nation’s capital to Springfield, Illinois.

In the long line of people filing by the body was a poor black woman and her little son. When the two reached the president’s body, the woman lifted up her little son and said in a hushed voice:

“Honey, take a long, long look. That man died for you.”

What that black mother said to her child can be said about Jesus by every mother of her child.

Pointing to the Body of Jesus on the crucifix, she can say: “Honey, take a long, long look. That man died for you.”

About Fr. Robert and his reflections

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Bro. Philip Wilhelm, OFM

Bro. Philip came to the Philippines in 1966 to help Fr. Madian, OFM open a school for lay brothers in Leyte. After two years, he was assigned to join the formation team for brothers at the Our Lady of the Angels Seminary (OLAS), where he was also in administration (in his words, “..to get things moving”). Since 1970, he has been actively involved in helping the lepers in Tala Leprosarium. He was assigned to Santuario de San Antonio in 1999 and has been here since then as procurator.

On May 17, he will leave for his next assignment – a parish in South Field, Michigan, USA, where he will again do what he loves doing, that is, teach about St. Francis and help out in community life. Asked about his parting words, he said, “I am glad I came here not only to help the community but also to work behind the scene. Given the chance, I will do it all over again.”

Good-bye Bro. Philip and God bless.

A Special Message from Bro. Philip on July 7, 2013 Parish Bulletin

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“Sustaining Hope in Time of Terrible Loss”, by Fr. Efren Jimenez, OFM

Sustaining hope in time of terrible loss is a great virtue. It directs our attention that there is greater truth in God, creation must be respected and awed and must be seen as sustainers of life.

Vivid images of tragedy come crossing my mind as I write this reflection – powerful wind, uprooting trees, wiping out homes and buildings, unleashing rampaging sea water into the city, killing thousands! ‘Yolanda’ sounds like “yoledet” a Hebrew word which means holiday! Yes! Nature went berserk and ‘feasted’ without mercy! It did not only waste lives and meagre properties of the ordinary people, but destroyed their hope and their future! It was a waste of spirit, a waste of hope and confidence – it seemed it was sacred loot – “these things you’re staring at … everything will be destroyed.”

Sustaining hope in time of terrible loss is a great virtue. It directs our attention that there is greater truth in God, creation must be respected and awed and must be seen as sustainers of life. This God is alive not only in himself but in the life of every human being.

Our readings this Sunday, as we move towards the end of the Liturgical year, suggest these thoughts for reflection.

(1) The “day of the Lord”, a frequent theme in the scriptures, is portrayed (couched) in cosmic imagery. It is a day of clouds and fire, recalling the past intervention of God in which Divine presence avert before Israel as a pillar of cloud by day and a pillar of fire by night. It is a time of upheaval in the Heavens when the Earth trembles. People are terrified, but it is a time of purification and preparation for the end; God is doing battle for His people, and all who have placed their faith in God can be full of confidence in the middle of confusion and disaster, not because God has no control of the world, but guiding all of history to its fulfilment.

In the New Testament, the day of the Lord, which is the moment of God’s judgment and saving intervention, become also the day of Jesus Christ. It is time to reveal His glory and fullness of creation, a term for judgment and end of oppression and injustice.

As this super typhoon came suddenly and swiftly the day of the Lord will come upon as swiftly like a warrior completing his victory to the accompaniment of cosmic power and wonder. Is this not an image of God revealing his power over the world’s struggle in the grip of evil?

(2) These texts of our readings touch the present reality of our historical situation. The ways we live our lives now, and the disposition we make in our society and its resources and opportunities in economic and political spheres, unfold the events that make up the day of Lord within our history.

We are reminded that today amidst massive destruction of Mother Earth, there is inherent sacredness of creation itself, and in this context salvation means working to bring about the transformation of creation so that it would vividly show the Divine Sacredness.

We must bring ourselves to greater consciousness that nature, ourselves, and the whole created world is groaning for God’s act of redemption.

as published on November 17, 2013, Parish Bulletin
About Fr. EJ and his reflections

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“God of The Living: A challenge to re-frame our humanity”, by Fr. Reu Galoy, OFM

Enhance your life every day by pondering that life shares God’s life. Place your hope on immortality, not on fears your ego has over extinction, but on an understanding of your true inner being.– Michael R. Kent

Fear of the unknown is something we have to reckon with. The easy way to cope with this is either to deny it or negotiate the existence of the afterlife. It all depends on how we view our life in relation to God and the way we value our humanity. Yet, both are expressions of our crafted meaning and the relevance of God’s gift of freedom. This Sunday’s readings provide us with a faith- response to the question of the resurrection of the dead which for us Christians is a fundamental tenet of our faith. Let us take a look at the Gospel reading.

The Sadducees and Pharisees are often mentioned together, but in their beliefs they are poles apart. The Sadducees did not believe in the resurrection because they believed only what was revealed in the written Torah. They totally rejected the oral Torah or the traditions held by the Pharisees.

The hypothetical question of the Sadducees on whose wife the woman will be at the resurrection since all seven brothers have been married to her is primarily intended to know on whose side Jesus is – is Jesus on their side or the Pharisees’? On the other hand, the practice of Pharisees that a man takes the widow of his brother is demanded by the law that seeks to guarantee family continuity (Dt. 25:5-10). John J. Pilch claims that this pattern of thinking is family-centered and this-worldly. In consideration of the Middle-Eastern culture, it means continuity of the lineage of the husband and in a male dominated culture, the woman-wife’s role was subjected to this law.

It appears at first glance that the issue at stake is about the resurrection of the dead. But if we take a closer look at the conversation, the primary concern is to push Jesus to take sides – either of the power-brokers that made use of the written or oral tradition or of the law to perpetuate their influence on the lives of other people. In short, they were trying to religiously manipulate Jesus.

In response, Jesus took their argument or question from the point of the God of the living. He pointed out that Moses himself had heard God say, “I am the God of your father, the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob” (Ex. 3:1-6), and that it was impossible that God is the God of the dead. Filch pointed out that Jesus explains that immortal beings (angels) do not need to reproduce, only human beings do so in order to ensure the continuity of the race. He identifies these immortals as “children of God,” a favourite Old Testament name for angels (Gen. 6:2; Job 1:6) since they share in the resurrection, a life-giving act of God.

Apart from the content of their argument, the process Jesus applied is something to learn from pastorally. Jesus used arguments that people he was arguing with could understand. He talked to them in their own language, he met them on their own ground and with their own ideas, and that is precisely why the common people understood his point. We will be far better teachers of Christianity and far better witnesses for Christ when we learn to do the same, says William Barclay.

For our daily meditation and Christo-praxis, Michael R. Kent made a very challenging invitation for us to consider:
One of the most important, and rewarding, reflections you can make is about your spiritual nature. Spend some time reflecting on who you are. Enhance your life every day by pondering that life shares God’s life. Place your hope on immortality, not on fears your ego has over extinction, but on an understanding of your true inner being. Sharing God’s life, you live eternally as God lives eternally. It is all one life! Take heart and enjoy that the one life you share from God makes you immortal.

Our faith in the resurrection modifies our whole way of looking at human existence and the way we relate to people and nature.

as published on November 10, 2013, Parish Bulletin
About Fr. Reu and his other reflections

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Articles Hospital Ministry

The PGH Christmas Gift Giving

It’s November once again and Christmas is fast approaching. Gift shopping, preparations for Christmas dinners, parties, Noche Buena, and more, keep us busy and preoccupied during this busy season.

Wouldn’t it be good to pause for a while and give thought to our less fortunate brothers and sisters and see how we can share our blessings to them, as well? We know that there are many of you who would like to help out but may just not know how to volunteer or where to donate for a worthy cause.

The Hospital Ministry is one such channel. Aside from the weekly visits to the PGH Pediatrics Wards and sponsorship of medication to patients, we end the year with a bang with a Christmas activity – a mass led by Fr. Joel at the PGH Chapel followed by a gift giving to the patients for the aforementioned wards and students of Silahis ng Kalusugan (a DepEd school in the premises for students who are chronically ill and need continuous treatment). These gifts are goodie bags filled with toiletries, food items, slippers, multivitamins, toys, etc. that we know the patients and parents/caregivers need and surely appreciate. Lunch packs are also distributed to ensure that they have a good meal for the day.

This will be held this year on December 10 (Tuesday), 9am – 12pm. If you would like to inquire, volunteer, or donate, please feel free to drop by the parish office and look for Nimfa Dumago. You can also reach her at 8438830.

We look forward to more parishioners joining and helping out this year!

By Sabrina Soriano

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“Money Fills Your Pocket But Empties Your Heart”, Fr. Jesus Galindo, OFM

As long as we are ruled by greed and selfishness, we only think of ourselves and our welfare. But as soon as Jesus takes hold of our life, we begin to think about the needs of others.

Luke’s gospel can very well be called the “Gospel of the Underdog.” Jesus consistently shows his love and preference for the outcasts and the little ones: In the gospel, three Sundays ago, it was the Samaritan leper, an outcast, who was praised by Jesus – not the nine Jewish lepers. Two Sundays ago, it was a little old widow who won over the corrupt judge and got her demand. Last Sunday, it was the tax collector who was justified in the temple, not the self-righteous Pharisee. Today, it is Zacchaeus, another tax collector, who welcomed Jesus in his house, not the self-righteous critics.

Zacchaeus (his name means “just” or “clean”) is described by St. Luke as “a chief tax collector, a wealthy man, but short in stature.” He wanted very badly to see Jesus; and he did not stop at anything to have his wish come true, to the point of forgetting his social standing and making a fool of himself by climbing on a tree like a little monkey. Why did he want so badly to see Jesus? Was it plain curiosity? Was it remorse? Was it dissatisfaction with his wealth and with his way of life? Author J. Oswald Sanders, is his book entitled Facing Loneliness, says: “The millionaire is usually a lonely man, and the comedian is often more unhappy than his audience.” Money can fill your pockets but it empties your heart.

Zacchaeus’ act of childish abandon amply paid off. He got a lot more than what he was looking for or had expected. He not only got a glimpse of Jesus from his advantage point; he had the immense privilege of bringing Jesus right into his house. It looks like Jesus was just as eager to meet him as he was to meet Jesus. We can always find the Lord, if we really want to. He is always eager to meet us; in fact, he often takes the initiative. But then, we have to come out of ourselves, like Zacchaeus. Jesus will never find us if we remain enclosed in the bunker of our selfish, sinful ways.

Zacchaeus found salvation when he let go, not only of his social status but also of the wealth that enslaved him. He was a wealthy man but he was not happy; he was not really free. Money and power, especially if they are ill-gotten, enslave us. Ours may look like a golden cage, but it is a cage nonetheless. We must let go of it in order to be free.

Once Zacchaeus welcomed Jesus into his house and into his life, his heart was filled with grace and boundless generosity: “Behold, half of my possessions, Lord, I shall give to the poor.” As long as we are ruled by greed and selfishness, we only think of ourselves and our welfare. But as soon as Jesus takes hold of our life, we begin to think about the needs of others.

Zacchaeus’ story tells us that we cannot reconcile ourselves with God without reconciling with our fellowmen. We cannot seek forgiveness from God in the sacrament of reconciliation and then go on committing injustice and abuse against our workers and household help. It tells us further that restitution and reparation are necessary ingredients of true repentance: “If I have extorted anything from anyone I shall repay it four times over.”

Lastly, Zacchaeus’ story shows that, just as our wrongdoings often hurt the people around us (e.g., irresponsible parents bring shame and embarrassment to their children), so also our conversion brings about blessing and grace to the entire family: “Salvation has come to this house.” Not just to Zacchaeus but to his entire household as well.

May our encounter with Jesus in the Eucharist transform our life and that of the people around us, as it did transform the life of Zacchaeus and of his household!

as published on November 3, 2013, Parish Bulletin
About Fr. Jesus and his reflections

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Francisfest 2013

“COME BUILD MY CHURCH”
October 3, 2013, Thursday 8PM, Main Church

featured in The Philippine Star Article by Letty Jacinto-Lopez
Our sincere gratitude to the additional PATRONS & DONORS to the FRANCISFEST 2013 whose names were not included in the playbill. Also, THANK YOU to all who came to watch and participated in the show and everyone who responded to the call, making this annual fundraising event a most successful one!

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THE CAST

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THE BENEFICIARIES

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“ABOUT THE BENEFICIARIES OF THE ANNUAL FRANCISFEST”

Tickets are now available at the Parish Office, 843-8830.
Prices are, Red: P5,000., Blue: P3,000., Green: sold-out
Seat planOur sincere gratitude to the sponsors and donors of the Francisfest 2013 who have responded to the call!

IMPORTANT NOTICE:
No ticket, no entry. Show will start promptly at 8:00 pm
No video-recording, no flash bulbs.
Limited parking space. For drop-off points, pls. refer to this map

Car Route and Parking
randy

by Randy Limjoco
Francisfest 2013 Chairman

2013 is the sixtieth founding anniversary of the Santuario de San Antonio church. In 1951, the Ayala Corporation donated to the Franciscan Order two hectares of prime land, part of their vast Hacienda Don Pedro, Forbes Park, Makati City. The church’s cornerstone was laid on August 1, 1951.

The architectural plans were presented to the Ayala family through Joseph R. McMicking on August 29, 1951. The construction of the church was completed in 1953. Since then the Santuario de San Antonio has evolved into a center of worship, with the villages of South and North Forbes Park, Dasmariñas Village, Urdaneta Village, and the apartments and buildings along the North side of Ayala Avenue from EDSA to the corner of Makati Avenue as part of the parish.

Francisfest is our Parish’s annual celebration honoring the Patron Saint and founder of the Order of Friar’s Minor, a.k.a. the Franciscan Order, of which San Antonio de Padua is one of Saint Francis’s most ardent followers. God spoke to Francis from the Damiano Cross in a dilapidated chapel in Assisi in 1205 extolling Francis to “Build my Church”.

Thus, “Come Build my Church” is the principal theme of Francisfest 2013, in the celebration of the sixtieth Foundation of the Santuario de San Antonio. For this, your Parish has organized a musical, which will be shown on October 3, a Thursday. Through song and dance performances, it will chronicle how our church/parish has evolved into the dynamic and spiritual center it is today for our parishioners and non-parishioners alike.

The Parish has retained the artistic services of Joel Trinidad, who is a writer, actor, producer, and director, to assist in the creation of the musical worthy of our theme as well as provide our parishioners and guests with a novel way of recounting our sixty years as a Parish. It will also show how the Santuario reaches out to other parishes, especially those with less in life, to bring the good news to them and provide assistance in various forms including but not limited to spiritual formation, medical services, educational programs, rehabilitation of inmates incarcerated in jails, and much more. The Francisfest musical will be held inside the main church and feature many of our talented parishioners including the CORO and San Antonio Youth.

The Francisfest is our Parish’s sole annual fund raiser. It is our chance to help keep God’s church strong and vibrant, able to continue reaching out to the poor while providing a center of spirituality. Our church is where the faithful can congregate, worship and give thanks to God for the abundance He has lavished upon the many families who regularly visit it, receiving blessings from womb to tomb.

I enjoin all to take an active part in responding to God’s message to Saint Francis by vigorously participating in the Francisfest activities, including financial support in the form of advertising in the playbill being crafted for our musical and of course generous donations to our annual Francisfest fund drive.

In the meantime, may God bless us all with good health, peace, and love.

Working Committees:
Chairman – Randy Limjoco
Vice-chair: Agustin Bengzon & Amelita Guevarra

1. Production: Amelita Guevarra
Edmund Lim – Girlie Sison
Suzette Gatmaitan – Mike Limpe

2. Publicity/Playbill: Myrna Jurilla
Jeannie Bitanga – Karen Blanco – Marilou Consing
Mike Limpe

3. Tickets: Mike Limpe
Micaela Poe – Jaime Blanco – Jun Rodriguez
JPIC – Hospital Ministry – Prison Ministry

4. Sponsorships: Randy Limjoco
Tina Teehankee – Bobet Vera
Anagine Guevara – Regina De Ocampo
Cathy Goquinco – Mike Limpe

5. Physical arrangement: Carina Lebron & Mike Limpe
a) church – Edmund Lim, Shubee Poe
b) food – Karen Limpe, Wilma Huang
c) cocktails – Lucille Villanueva, Entang Carballo
d) ushers – John Huang
e) Security and traffic – Cesar Poe

6. Finance: Lita Ascalon & Mike Limpe

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