Sunday, 24 July 2016

Message for World Youth Day 201

 Last Sunday, 17th July, about 289 youths, 10 Clergy and 3 Religious representatives from the Church in Malaysia left for Krakow, Poland for the 31st World Youth Day.
The Holy Father began this journey with the spirit of Beatitudes since 2014. He encourages the young people throughout the world to reread and mediate on the Beatitudes and use them as guides for their daily life. The theme for 2014 was on the first Beatitude: “Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven” (Mt 5:3). The theme for 2015 was: “Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see God” (Mt 5:8). The theme for World Youth Day 2016 is “Blessed are the Merciful, for they will receive mercy,” (Mt 5:7). This year the Holy Father focuses on mercy, the most prominent topic of the Universal Church. He stresses on our young people to be instruments of mercy for others. They should have merciful hearts by giving their time and efforts in their words and capacity to listen to those most in need.

The WYD 2016 will start from 25th July to 1st August (Monday to Sunday). The youth will be staying in the foster homes in Krakow or other parts of the cities. During this time they will meet for their catechetical sessions in various parishes or formation centers together with Bishops and leaders of the Church. There will be other programmes such as shows, music, group discussions, prayers, vigils, reconciliation and celebration of Mass. Pope Francis will travel to Krakow on July 27, meeting that day with political leaders and with the country’s bishops. On July 28, he will travel to Czestochowa, to the beloved shrine of the Black Madonna. On Friday he will visit the Nazi death camp at Auschwitz. On Saturday, July 31, he will travel to the Divine Mercy Shrine in Krakow. That evening he will join the WYD participants in a prayer vigil. He will celebrate the closing Mass for WYD on Sunday.

The World Youth Day (WYD) is an event for our Catholic youth throughout the world, which is celebrated on Palm Sunday every year at the diocese level. Once in every two or three years, it will be celebrated on a global level. St John Paul II initiated this WYD celebration in 1984. Ever since then, the WYD invites thousands and thousands and even millions of young people throughout the world to meet at one location. This meeting witnesses the living Church and brings liveliness and renewal in our Catholic Church. The main reason for the WYD is for the young people to meet the Holy Father, leaders of the Church and other youths from all over the world. It is also an opportunity to share their faith and the message of Christ to the world.

I had a very enriching experience of the WYD in 1995 in Manila, before joining the Major Seminary in Penang. It was my first experience abroad. I had a close look at St Pope John Paul II while he was passing by with his bulletproof mobile. My 10 day-experience meeting up with youths throughout the world in Manila had given me a sense of vocation to the priesthood and uplifted my faith.

We pray for the success of the World Youth Day in Krakow, Poland.

YOUR KINGDOM COME!

Everyone Prays. The length of Prayers has to do with individuals but pray as long as your heart is in it.
The primary purpose of praying is to have fellowship and relationship with the Father. When we pray, we fellowship with the Lord and the Holy Spirit.
One phrase from the Our Father (LK11:1-4) goes, “Your kingdom come.” We are asking the Heavenly Father to take control of our lives and inviting Him to fulfill His own will. Praying for God’s kingdom to come is to bring us a personal conversion and to make Jesus as a center of our lives, not anyone or anything else.
The other phrase of the prayer goes: “Forgive us our sins as we also forgive those who sin against us.” Forgiveness of sin is the greatest need of the human heart.
Is there anyone who comes to your mind who is in need of your forgiveness? Ask God to bring someone that you have been withholding forgiveness from and say: “I was wrong?”, “You were right”, “I am sorry”, “I forgive” “Please forgive me” and “I love you”.
We need to learn how to pray effectively. Lord, teach us to pray.

ST JOSEPH, AN HONEST, HUMBLE AND HONOURABLE WORKER

A lecturer in a seminary asked his students to write a brief essay on this topic: ‘What relic of which saint would you like to have, if you were to be granted your wish and why?’ One student had written this: “I would like to have in a vial some drops of the sweat of Saint Joseph. Reason: Because his sweat would symbolise honest, humble, honourable work. It is because it was by the sweat of his brow that he was able to feed the Son of God, His Mother and himself.”
The Church celebrates two feasts in honour of St. Joseph. His official feast day is March 19; whereas May 1 is the celebration of him as patron saint of the universal Church, social justice and of honest, faithful and dedicated work doing God's will as husband to Mary, foster father of Jesus and as a carpenter – in order to provide for his family.
Everything we know about Joseph comes from Scripture. He was not rich; but despite his humble work as a carpenter he came from royal lineage, a descendant of King David himself. Joseph was compassionate and a caring man – always ready to protect those he loved from outside harm and disgrace - Mary and Jesus. Joseph was a man of faith, obedient to whatever God asked of him without question, and without knowing the outcome. He took Mary as his wife under unusual circumstances; he took his new family and fled to Egypt at the bidding of an angel, without knowing why or asking questions.
We know that Joseph loved Jesus – he regarded him, cared for him and respected him as his own son – as any good foster-father would. Joseph probably died before Jesus' public ministry – in the company of Jesus and Mary – and is therefore known as the patron of a happy death!
The verse from 1 Cor 10:31: ‘... whatever you do, do it for the love of God’, reflects greatly the spirit of St Joseph. Joseph did everything he did because he loved God first; and those God put with him in life, second, to prove that love.
Feast of St. Joseph the Worker
Pope Pius XII instituted
the liturgical feast of May 1,
in honour of Saint Joseph the Worker
to coincide with Labour Day
On May 1, 1955, Pope Pius XII granted a public audience to the Catholic Association of Italian Workers, whose members had gathered in Saint Peter’s Square to celebrate the tenth anniversary of their society. They were solemnly renewing, in common, their promise of loyalty to the social doctrine of the Church, and it was on that day that the Pope instituted the liturgical feast of May 1, in honour of Saint Joseph the Worker to coincide with Labour Day. He assured his audience and the working people of the world: “You have beside you a shepherd, a defender and a father” in Saint Joseph, the carpenter whom God in His providence chose to be the virginal father of Jesus and the head of the Holy Family. He is silent but has excellent hearing, and his intercession is very powerful over the Heart of the Saviour (from Heavenly Friends: a Saint for each Day, by Rosalie Marie Levy, Saint Paul Editions: Boston, 1958).
We should understand the significance of celebrating the feast of St. Joseph the Worker on May 1. He has been described as a saint who “knows how to roll up his sleeves and put in a hard day’s work.” In other words, we can describe him as a man who “turun padang dan kerja” (got down into the fields and worked). St. Joseph also reminds us that we should give dignity and respect to our own work and that the fruits of our labours which we offer to God are corresponding to the redemptive work of Jesus Christ. This has been beautifully described in the Second Vatican Council, Pastoral Constitution on the Church in the Modern World,“Through labour offered to God man is associated with the redemptive work of Jesus Christ, Who conferred an eminent dignity on labour when at Nazareth He worked with His own hands,” (Gaudium et Spes, no 67).
By commemorating the feast of St. Joseph the Worker, the Church offers us the example of St. Joseph, the carpenter from Nazareth, who was a model worker, keeping up his family and developing his profession. This is the normal way to live in this world of ours; by earning one's own bread by the sweat of one's brow. Human rights tell us that each one of us has a right to a decent and well- remunerated job. This is how we fulfill our duties and are paid the salary we deserve. The Church prays for the working world, so that every worker may fulfill his/her duties and live with dignity.
This feast is not only a mere celebration for labourers as workers because the intention of the Church in instituting this feast is for the workers and people in general to see work in the context of relationship, more specifically around the basic unit of society. This is to show also that the Church recognises the basic rights of labourers.
Therefore, the Church invites us to appreciate labour and work in terms of the following values:
Vocation: Through labour and work, we give meaning to our existence. We realise that we are not just here to waste time and to occupy space. We have a unique role to play; we have contributions to make in our world.
Stewardship: Through labour and work, we show the highest accountability for all the talents and abilities that nature and education endowed on us.
Service: Through our labour and work, we employ our talents and abilities not only to make a living but to meet the needs of others.
Five Lessons from St. Joseph
St. Joseph the Worker is the patron saint for labourers precisely because in that they are affirmed in their dignity as working persons, they are also reminded to be faithful in their responsibilities not only to society in general but above all to their respective families and especially to God that they worship and believe. 
There are five lessons that all of us who are ‘labourers’ can learn from St. Joseph:
Saint Joseph was OBEDIENT. Joseph was obedient to God’s Will throughout his life. Joseph listened to the angel of the Lord explain the virgin birth in a dream and then took Mary as his wife (Matthew 1:20- 24). He was obedient when he led his family to Egypt to escape Herod’s infanticide in Bethlehem (Matthew 2:13-15). Joseph obeyed the angel’s later commands to return to Israel (Matthew 2:19-20) and settle in Nazareth with Mary and Jesus (Matthew 2:22-23). How often does our pride and willfulness get in the way of our obedience to God?
Saint Joseph was SELFLESS. In the limited knowledge we have about Joseph, we see a man who only thought of serving Mary and Jesus, never himself. What many may see as sacrifices on his part, were actually acts of selfless love. His devotion to his family is a model for fathers today who may be allowing disordered attachments to the things of this world distort their focus and hinder their vocations.
Saint Joseph LED BY EXAMPLE. None of his words are written in Scripture, but we can clearly see by his actions that he was a just, loving and faithful man. We often think that we primarily influence others by what we say, when so often we are watched for our actions. Every recorded decision and action made by this great saint is the standard for men to follow today.
Saint Joseph was a WORKER. He was a simple craftsman who served his neighbours through his handiwork. He taught his foster son Jesus the value of hard work. It is likely that the humility Joseph exhibited in recorded Scripture spilled over into the simple approach he took to his work and providing for the Holy Family. We can all learn a great lesson from St. Joseph, who is also the patron saint of workers, on the value of our daily work and how it should exist to glorify God, support our families and contribute to society.
Saint Joseph was a LEADER. But, not in the way we may view leadership today. He led as a loving husband when he improvised to find a stable for Mary to give birth to Jesus, after being turned away from the Bethlehem inn. He led as a man of faith when he obeyed God in all things, took the pregnant Mary as his wife and later brought the Holy Family safely to Egypt. He led as the family provider by working long hours in his workshop to make sure they had enough to eat and a roof over their heads. He led as a teacher by teaching Jesus his trade and how to live and work as a man.
Learning from the Spirituality of St. Joseph
When reflecting on St. Joseph as a worker, a carpenter, what comes to our mind? As a general rule, we associate the word ‘worker’ with the words ‘career’ or ‘employment’. This association relates to our secular work. But what about our spiritual work?
Through St. Joseph, a great model for all Christians, we see a love for both, his worldly and spiritual labour. St. Joseph was an artistic carpenter who loved to transform a piece of wood by creating useful objects. In his mind, he surely perceived that the wood that came from the trees was a God given gift. As Christian carvers of wood do, St. Joseph must have surely spent endless hours in prayer to the Lord God so that he might be inspired as to the potential end result of each piece of wood that was processed through the labour of his hands.
Let us always look up to St. Joseph as one of our patron saints. As the Patron of Workers, for those of us who work, St. Joseph is the model that we should imitate to ensure that the grace of God shall continue to flow upon us and flourish richly through us.
The church of St Joseph, Sentul, Kuala Lumpur was built in 1908 as a symbol of dignity to the workers of the Railway Central Workshop. I have a personal devotion to St. Joseph and I am inviting the faithful to visit the shrine of St. Joseph situated next to the parochial house.

Saturday, 16 July 2016

SET ASIDE TIME FOR SPIRITUAL ENRICHMENT

I must admit that I am very impressed with some of our SJC ministries and members who take their leadership roles seriously and responsibly by organising events using their own resources rather than depending on speakers or professionals from outside of the Parish.
Last weekend two important events took place in our Church and which was organised by own leaders. The English Catechetical Ministry organised a 2-day camp/retreat for our Forms 1 – 5 catechism students at our Formation Hall. You can read more about this on our parish website. In conjunction with Bible Sunday, our Tamil Apostolate and Tamil Catechetical Ministry organised a Bible Quiz for adults and a colouring competition for the kids at our Church Hall after the 7 am Tamil Mass.

This is how you should all come forward to share your knowledge, skills and talents within our community. In this way you are empowering, inspiring and energising our own youngsters and adults and bringing out the best among us. Keep up this spirit in your ministries.

My dear parishioners, if a little bit of spirituality is added in your own lives then you can see your leadership role and your Christian way of life grow tremendously. If someone asks you to stop communicating to God for some period of time, what will you do? Will you cease praying? Will you stop coming to Church? It sounds “un-Catholic” to say that I don't feel like praying to God or I just forgot to pray. It is also not good to say that I don't feel like reading spiritual books or listening / viewing spiritual and religious audio-visuals.

We are in tune with a new culture that draws us to depend on technology such as smart phone, I-pad, Internet, etc. We spend excessive hours with these gadgets. That is why we have become “slow to listen, quick to speak and quick to become angry.” We hardly have time to listen to God. We hardly have take time to read and pray with the Bible. We rarely read spiritual books or view spiritual materials in the forms of audio-visual.

Some of the spiritual and religious books, articles or audio-visual materials are available free on our Catholic websites. Do make it a point to visit some proper Catholic websites and take the time to browse through the many resources, materials and guides available there. Don't waste too much time browsing through your smart phone and I-pad just playing games or searching/reading things that are non-beneficial. Instead use your time and these social media platforms wisely.

As the psalmist says, “Such knowledge is too wonderful for me; It is too high, I cannot attain,” (Ps 139:6). Do take time to go to the depth of the riches and wisdom and knowledge of God. Through your spiritual reading and combined with your spiritual exercises, you will discover and rediscover of yourselves and of God. Your relationship with God and others will become very fruitful and unique.

DOING AND BEING!

In today’s Gospel (LK 10: 38-42), Martha got so involved in cooking a meal for Jesus that she forgot why Jesus came to her house. Jesus wanted to be with His friends – Martha and Mary.

Martha was so distracted and angry… “Tell Mary to help me!!!” There’s a bit of Martha in all of us. We hardly find time to sit quietly in God’s presence. Jesus invites us to slow down, be calm and sit with him for a moment at His feet.

When you are at Church, where is your focus today? On the clock, on your job, on breakfast/lunch/dinner? Worship is one of the most important parts of our life. When we come to Church let our focus on the worship and not one the gadgets or with other preoccupation or engrossed with something.

Often we do not take our spiritual life seriously. We don’t set aside some time to be with God. We need concentrated, dedicated prayer, and these kind of prayers make us satisfied. These kinds of concentrated and dedicated prayers always transform and strengthen us.

Jesus visits us each day, each moment of our lives. We need to slow down, listen and enjoy the encounter and the presence of Jesus in the Word, Sacrament and all events of our lives.