Showing posts with label Hope. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hope. Show all posts

Friday, December 12, 2014

Advent: Season Hope for Salvific Light of God Beyond Religious Boundaries: Immaculate Conception, Bodhi Day, Guadelupe, Santa Lucia, Simbang Gabi, and Chanukah

Light  in the Rising Conditions and Causes Behind the Fact that Immaculate Conception, Bodhi Day, Guadalupe, Santa Lucia, Simbang Gabi, and Chanukah to be in Advent Season

December 8, is the solemn feast of Immaculate Conception of Virgin Mary, the Theotokos, to the Roman Catholics, as well as the Bodhi Day to the Japanese Buddhist. I do not think it is a mere coincidence.

Am I just superstitious? No. I am more in to empirical science with my psychology background. However, with my theology background, I realize that there is just so much in reality but so little that we can comprehend. The rest of the reality that we cannot comprehend at this time, with our current sensory-cognitive capabilities, is accepted as a mystery, which is not to be confused with a myth.  Though I am Catholic, in fact, my study of and family background in Buddhism, helps us see that there is nothing by coincidence, as things exist and happen due to rising conditions and causes, which we can understand only as little as a tip of iceberg.  Given this background, I want to explore possible rising causes and conditions that put the solemn feast of Immaculate Conception in Catholicism and Bodhi Day in Japanese Buddhism not only on the same day but also so close to the feast of Nuestra Senora de Guadalupe (December 12), the memorial feast of Santa Lucia (December 13),  Simbang Gabi (December 15-24), and Chanukah (December 16-24, this year – 2014). Given religious meanings of these sacred days in Christianity, Buddhism, and Judaism, I believe that light, in particular, light of salvific hope, associated with the coming Messiah, is what makes sense to have these sacred says to fall on this time of the year – Advent .

There must be certain reasons or rising conditions and causes, as Buddhism teaches, for light to be a common theme not only for Immaculate Conception and Bodhi Day but also for the feasts of Nuestra Senora de Guadalupe, Santa Lucia, Simbang Gabi and Chanukah.  In fact, as candle lights and festively decorated lights are commonly seen at this time of the year, this is a season of light, though it is the darkest time of the year, if you live in the northern hemisphere, due to the proximity to the winter solstice.  Though Mother Nature tells that it is the darkest time of the year, God on the other hand, reminds us that this is when we recognize light more, because God created light first (Genesis 1:3) in His Creation process.

In God’s Creation, light must be the foundation to everything He created and blessed. This includes humans, which God created on the sixth day in His own image (Genesis 1:26-31). At that time,  there was no darkness of sin and its consequences, though there were day and night to punctuate time.  But, the focus of this punctuation is light (Genesis 1:14).


***

As indicated in Revelation 12:7-9, Satan, as in a serpent, came to Garden of Eden, which was the paradise on the newly created earth,  and tempted humans, as in Adam and Eve, into sin against God, Original Sin.  That was when the darkness of sin and its consequences, such as suffering and death, entered human life (Genesis 3). And, as the rest of the books in the Scriptures, both the Old Testament and the New Testament, describe,  Original Sin resulted in a vicious cycle of sins, called the deuteronomic cycle. This is an endless cycle, so far, of darkness of sin, indicating the eviction from Garden of Eden (Genesis 1:14-24) and not being in the Kingdom of God.

Throughout ages, as written in the Old Testament, especially through the words of prophets, humans’ deuteronomic (repetitive) sins have angered God to a point of punishing them, God’s mercy always overrides His anger.  God sure punishes for our sins. Yet, He always wants us to be back in harmony with Him. 
God always wants us back to Him. This is the nature of God’s mercy. And, this reflects why God’s Creation process was not completed until humans were created and why God created us in His own image.  To God, losing humans would mean losing His own image. It would bring so much grief to Him.  This is why God’s mercy always prevails to bring us back to Him when our sins separate us from Him.  And, as Buddhists use light as a metaphor to address the light of Amitabha, who is the cosmic Buddha, Christians view the mercy and benevolence of God as light that shines in the darkness of sin and its consequences, such as suffering and death.  Believers are willing to return to be in intimate harmony with God through repenting and reconciliation. So, we sure desire to have something like what Adam and Eve lost, Eden, which literally means “paradise”, more figuratively, as we hope to attain intimate harmony with God. And, it is the Kingdom of God that Jesus came to teach us and to usher us into. This is God’s redemptive plan, which will eventually win over our deuteronomic cycle.

Immaculate Conception

Now, the above-mentioned Old Testament background is very important to appreciate the solemn feast of Immaculate Conception as a feast of light – light of messianic and redemptive hope.  Immaculate Conception of Mary was God’s way of preparing to bring the light of messianic and redemptive hope. In other words, arranging Mary to be conceived without any stain of Original Sin in Anna’s womb,, though it is not a virgin conception,  is to prepare Mary to be fit to conceive and give birth to Jesus as virgin.

Bodhi Day

Because of this light, Gautama in northeastern India (now Nepal) became enlightened and began to see the light of Dharma through the Eightfold Path on Bodhi Day. Upon becoming bodhisattva with enlightenment, the light of Dharma and the immeasurable mercy of Amitabha have become accessible to those who seek, leading to Nirvana by practicing Gautama Buddha’s teaching of the Eightfold Path and Paramitas.
About 500 years after Gautama opened his spiritual eyes to the light, God, who first created light (Genesis 1:3) began His preparation to send His light to the world, which has been infested with the darkness of sin, by making the Word (logos), the Holy Spirit, become flesh in Jesus. But, for this to take place, God needed the right human vessel. And, God chose Mary, before her birth, to be conceived in Anna’s womb without any stain of Original Sin, making this Immaculate Conception.  Because of Mary’s Immaculate Conception, she was able to conceive the Son of God, as announced by Angel Gabriel (Luke 1:26-38, the Gospel reading for the feast of the Immaculate Conception) and gave virgin birth to himthe divine light, has come to this world, as Christ, and the Messiah, through Jesus, to deliver us from the darkness of sins into the light of the Kingdom of God, as said in John 1:1-14; 8:12; 9:5; and 12:46.

The light to the world, Jesus Christ, the Messiah, came to this world through the virgin birth in Bethlehem, as described in Luke 2:1-14, Christmas Midnight Mass Gospel reading, and prophesized by Isaiah, about 700 years before (Matthew 1:18-25, the shorter version of the Gospel reading for Christmas vigil Mass), because Mary was immaculate, full of grace, ever since her conception. And, this light, Christ the Messiah, has begun God’s mission to deliver us from the darkness of sins in this world into the Kingdom of God, our ultimate “promised land”, which is envisioned in Revelation 22.  Christ the Messiah is the guiding light to us, shepherding us through the darkness, as sung in Psalm 23, while Buddha, an enlightened one, who has received light, has begun teaching the Dharma to deliver us from the darkness of dukkha, suffering to Nirvana.

Nuestra Senora de Guadalupe

The light of God has also touched us and the world we live, through Mary’s apparition to Santo Juan Diego on Tepeyac Hill in Mexico, December 9, 1531, as Nuestra Senora de Guadalupe to bring the light of healing and hope, in response to people’s cries.  Mary, who is Immaculate Conception, as she identified herself to Santa Bernadette of Lourdes, France, in 1858, “Je suis l'Immaculée Conception”(I am the Immaculate Conception), said these words to San Juan Diego:

I am truly your merciful Mother, yours and all the people who live united in this land and of all the other people of different ancestries, my lovers, who love me, those who seek me, those who trust in me. Here I will hear their weeping, their complaints and heal all their sorrows, hardships and sufferings. And to bring about what my compassionate and merciful concern is trying to achieve, you must go to the residence of the Bishop of Mexico and tell him that I sent you here to show him how strongly I wish him to build me a temple here on the plain; you will report to him exactly all you have seen, admired and what you have heard.    As recorded  in  “Huei tlamahuiçoltica” (The Great Event)
The Marian apparition as Nuestra Senora de Guadalupe was to shine the world with the light of God’s mercy through Juan Diego’s cooperation with her.

Santa Lucia

Santa Lucia, St. Lucy, is a patron saint of eye sight for the miracle of her eyes restored upon her burial, though her eyes were gouged out for persecutory execution. Another legend says that Lucia was able to walk as if she could see even after her eyes were taken out.  Not to mention, etymological meaning of her name is light (lux in Latin – luc) , which is deeply related to eye sight. In Scandinavian nations, where winter darkness is much longer, the feast of Santa Lucia is characterized with candle lights to lighten communities.
Not to mention, theological significance of Santa Lucia is not just about eye sight but metaphorically about our spiritual abilities to see God’s truth, as enlightened ones, bodhis, can see the truth of Dharma. The eye sight in a spiritual sense, is the abilities to recognize God’s wisdom in Spirit (1 Corinthians 2:9), which is the truth – the teaching of Christ, the Messiah, which continues on as parakletos  (John 14:26).

God has given us eye sight to see the truth (Exodus 4:11), even our physical eyes were gouged out. Thus, the feast of Santa Lucia reminds us of the importance of keeping our spiritual eye sight to see the light of God, meaning, seeing the truth of God.  And, the light (John 8:12) is also the truth and the way (John 14:6). Thus, our spiritual eye sight enables us to see God as the light, the truth, and the way, in the Messiah.

Simbang Gabi

The Filipino Catholic Christmas novena tradition, Simbang Gabi, is also about light of God.  Its prototype was Misa de Gallo, which has been a popular celebration on Christmas Eve through Spanish-speaking Latin America since 1587, given that the Philippines had been Spanish colony for more than 350 years until 1898.
Though Misa de Gallo takes place on Christmas Eve, Simbang Gabi is celebrated for 9 days leading to Christmas – from December 15 until Christmas Eve as it is a novena. But, both Misa de Gallo and Simbang Gabi starts before dawn. When Mass is over, the sun is rising or just risen.

Simbang Gabi is a 9-day preparation for the coming of Christ, the messianic light. And, each Simbang Gabi  celebration takes place in a way to welcome new light of a day, as it starts before sunrise and ends around sunrise.  Interestingly, the color of celebrant priest’s vestment color is always white for Simbang Gabi, though this novena is during the season of Advent, for which purple is used as the nature of Advent preparation is penance.  White as a liturgical color symbolizes light. Thus, Simbang Gabi is about light, who is Jesus (John 8:12), the Christ, the Messiah, and the Son, who is coming, juxtaposed with the rising sun at dawn. Perhaps, there is a bit of pun to put the Son, who is coming, and the sun, which is coming on the horizon, in Simbang Gabi. That you must ask your Filipino Catholic friend.

Chanukah

Chanukah is known as a Jewish festival of light. It is because of the miracle of the menorah candle light still burning even on the 8th day thought the oil for the candle was to last only for a day, when the Temple in Jerusalem was redeemed for purification from the hands of Greek oppressors, who defiled the Temple. The miracle menorah candle light that kept burning for 8 days, has become a symbol of God’s redemptive power, associated with salvation of the faithful.

Chanukah prayer includes:

We light these lights
For the miracles and the wonders,
For the redemption and the battles
That you made for our forefathers
In those days at this season,
Through your holy priests.

Though the light that symbolizes the presence of God, God being with us, Emmanuel, was kept for the Temple’s redemption in 165 BC, it was not the case in 70 AD, as the Temple was destroyed  completely into ruins by the Romans. Even today, the Temple is not rebuilt.

This makes some people wonder why God did not keep His light as He did back in 165 BC – why God did not make the second miracle of light for another redemption of the Temple.

But, to those who believe in  Christ’s resurrection, God did not leave the Temple destroyed but rebuilt in a very different way already with the Resurrection, as these words of Jesus are written, “Destroy this temple, and I will raise it again in three days” (John 2:19).  Thus, the menorah light that kept burning until the Temple redemption and purification upon Maccabean revolt’s victory over Seleucids Greeks, who desecrated and defiled the Temple. In 165 BC, has been burning as the light of the risen Christ, even the Temple has been destroyed physically ever since 70 AD.. 

Jesus said, “I am the resurrection”(John 11:25). This statement of Jesus explains what he meant by his words in John 2:19. Thus, the risen Christ is the New Temple, who sits on the throne of God in the New Jerusalem (Revelation 21, 22), where he continues to shepherd us, through parakletos, upon his Ascension (i.e. John 10:11, 14; 14:16, 26; 15:26; 16:7), until the end of time (Matthew 28:20).  It means that the light of Chanukah, the menorah light that lasted for 8 days in the Temple  to signify God’s presence over God’s people’s victory of the Maccabean revolt is never lost, in spite of the Temple’s permanent destruction by the Romans in 70 AD., as the risen Christ’s presence, as the rebuilt Temple, is no longer necessarily visible and tangible.  The Chanukah light continues to burn and shine in the hearts of the believers.

***

God's Salvific Light in the Rising Causes and Conditions Beyond Religious Boundaries, Accented by Immaculate Conception and Bodhi Day

The solemn feast of Immaculate Conception of Mary is about how God had chosen Mary for the Messiah  to come to this world, as said in John 1:1-14 and 3:16. For the Messiah to come as the Word in flesh (John 1:14), meaning as God’s tangible revelation, Mary, who was chosen as the physical vessel to become pregnant with the Word in flesh, has to be born immaculate, meaning, absolutely free from any stain of Original Sin. And, the Messiah that Mary was prepared to be immaculate to serve as a vessel of his advent (coming), is the light (John 8:12).

On the other hand, Bodhi Day is about historical Buddha, Gautama Buddha, attaining enlightenment under the bodhi tree, awakening to the Four Noble Truths, which leads to the Eightfold Path, in response to his long quest of answers on causes of suffering (dukkha) and a way to overcome it. Thus, it is the day to commemorate Gautama Buddha’s enlightenment with the truths about suffering (the Four Noble Truths – the nature, cause, cessation of, and liberation from suffering. And, the way of liberation from suffering is the Eightfold Path.

When Gautama was born in Lumbini, Nepal about 2,500 years ago, the world did not seem to know a way to overcome suffering.  Suffering was like a business as usual. People were more toward finding ways to avoid suffering. But, such efforts did not see to get anywhere. People were living in the vicious endless cycle of Samsara, reincarnation. On the other hand, when Jesus was born from the immaculate body of Mary, the blessed virgin, about 2,000 years ago, in Bethlehem, Judah, the world was in the darkness of the deuteronomic cycle of sins, which has been spinning ever since Original Sin, because we keep sinning and sinning throughout generations.

About 500 years prior to the advent of the Messiah, Gautama went on a journey of seeking an answer to the questions on suffering: what it is, what it is caused by, what can stop, and how it can be overcome. For this, Gautama even went through ascetic monastic life. But, such a life of austerities did not bring any light to a tunnel of suffering, as he was suffering tremendously. Gautama gave up an ascetic life style and came to a village exhausted.  Seeing Gautama, seemed almost lifeless, a village woman, Sujata, offered him sweetened milk. Gautama regained liveliness and bathed himself in the Najranjara River as his strengths returned and began meditating under the bodhi tree. During the meditation, Gautama fought forces of Mara (Satan), who tried to derail him from his seeking and defile him with various temptations. Yet, Gautama overcame and attained the light of Dharma wisdom, as Jesus overcame temptations inflicted by Satan when he was about to complete his 40-days-and-night fasting in the desert (Matthew 4:1-11).

When Gautama overcome attacks by Mara (Satan), he came out of his meditation and began his ministry for overcoming the darkness of kleshas (defilement), which brings dukkha (suffering). When Jesus overcame assaults by Satan, he came out of his fasting and started his ministry for overcoming the darkness of sins. Gautama Buddha taught the way of breaking free from the vicious Samsara cycle of suffering to be delivered into Nirvana. Jesus Christ taught the way, by being the way, truth, life, and light, to shepherd us from the endless deuteronomic cycle of sin into the Kingdom of God.

In approximately 500 years of time span, both Gautama Buddha and Jesus Christ came to this world of darkness of sin to show the salvific light. But, with Jesus, we have come to know that this light of salvation is God’s constant work to deliver us from the vicious endless cycle of sin into the Kingdom of God better than what Adam and Eve lost, the Garden of Eden.

Immaculate Conception of Mary had to take place so that God can ensure that the Word becomes human flesh blessishlessly, as the Messiah – so that the faithful will be delivered from the deuteronomic cycle and ushered into the Kingdom of God. 

Advent is the time to remember how our ancestors in faith, at the time of John the Baptist, prepared for the coming (advent) of the Messiah in human flesh, as a result not only of Annunciation (Luke 1:26-88, the Gospel reading for Immaculate Conception Mass and feast Mass for Nuestra Senora de Guadalupe) but also Immaculate Conception.

The apparition of Mary as Nuestra Senora de Guadalupe shows the salvific light of God is always casted upon us. However, for this light to work, it takes our cooperation to God’s salvific will, as exemplified by Santo Juan Diego.  The memorial feast of Santa Lucia reminds us that God’s light is never lost, even though our physical eyes are taken away or lose their visions, as in the case with Lucia. As long as we kep our faith, we can always see the salvific light of God.  Simbang Gabi  teaches us how we can prepare for the coming of Christ the light, in connection of preparing for the rising sun, in a unique Hispano-Finilipo way. And, Chanukah, to Christians, is not only remembering that God never abandons us even His Temple was physically defiled by enemies of God’s people, as the miraculous menorah flame burning symbolizes, but also the ultimate miracle menorah light is continuously burning in the hearts of the faithful, preparing for parousia (second coming ) of Christ, the light, for the judgement and deliverance into the Kingdom of God at the end of time.  And, these are all in God’s magnificent salvific plan, which kicked off, when we started our deuteronomic cycle of the darkness of sin, accented with Immaculate Conception and Christmas, during Advent season.  Though Bodhi Day seems to have irrelevant to this God’s salvific plan, who knows, God may have let Gautama become enlightened about 500 years before Jesus, the ultimate enlightened one, came. Thus, like John the Baptist shortly before the beginning of Jesus’ public ministry in Galilee, Gautama Buddha also prepared a way to see the light by overcoming the darkness of sin (kleshas), though he did not mention God. If you study Buddhism – the teaching of Gautama Buddha, you sure notice how Buddha’s teaching makes sense in Christ’s teaching  as the way into the Kingdom of God.


Immaculate Conception, Bodhi Day, Nuestra Senor de Guadalupe, Santa Lucia, Simbang Gabi, and Chanukah are all connected through the salvific light of God, as in the rising causes and conditions, , crossing three religious traditions: Catholicism, Buddhism, and Judaism.  And, December 8, the day for both Immaculate Conception and Bodhi Day highlight this truth veiled in mystery. 

Thursday, April 24, 2014

An Abandoned Dying Spouse – Abandoned Jesus in Gethsemane and in Calvary, A Deserting Spouse – Peter Who Failed to Keep His Promise



One thing that bothers me and puzzles me so much in providing counseling and pastoral care to dying persons is that their spouses abandon them in some cases.  

Imagine what it would be liked to be abandoned by your spouse when you are dying.

In the Sacrament of Matrimony, a wife and a husband are bound by these words of the wedding vow:  I promise to be true to you in good times and in bad, in sickness and in health. I will love you and honor you all the days of my life”.  They have sworn their fidelity and unconditional love, represented in these words of the vow, at God’s alter, in God’s presence.

So, how can the sacramentally bound husbands and wives can be broken when one of the souses is dying? 

As a mental health professional and pastoral minister, seeing a dying person abandoned by his or her spouse is extremely painful. But, the pain and grief of an abandoned spouse, while facing the relentlessly fast-approaching death, are far greater. In fact, this is not something I can every fully understand. 

As a counselor and minister, all I could do to help such an abandoned dying spouse is simply to be present for him or her and listen to his or her painful heart speak  - verbally and non-verbally.
Having this special deeply emotional privilege to be with such a person, amidst of his or her unfathomable spiritual and emotional pain of abandonment, what strikes me that an abandoned dying spouse reminds me of Jesus in the garden of agony in Gethsemane and Jesus walking into the Calvary, abandoned by his beloved disciples, especially Peter. 

Among the disciples, Peter was very passionate and vocal about expressing his care and love for Jesus. In fact, it was Peter who said to Jesus, “Even if I have to die with you, I will not deny You” (Matthew 26:35) during the Last Supper. And, the rest of the disciples said the same to Jesus, following Peter. 

But, it was Peter, who was one of the disciples fell asleep, when Jesus was praying in agony, after the Last Supper.  Jesus asked Peter, James, and John, to watch him pray in this dark garden as he prepared himself for his path into the Calvary.  And, it was Peter, who denied Jesus three times, once Jesus was taken to be crucified, contrary to his words of absolute loyalty to Jesus in Matthew 26:35.
………..

As long as an abandoned dying spouse I counsel and minister to is Catholic or some type of Christian or receptive to biblical stories, I gently invite him or her to reflect his or her own unfathomable pain and sorrow of being abandoned by his or her beloved spouse at a moment of dying to Jesus being deserted by his disciples, especially Peter. 

There is rather a long period of silence upon this invitation.  But, this silence is spiritually pregnant.  This silent period is like the Holy Saturday, the day between the Good Friday, the death of Jesus, and the Easter Sunday, the Resurrection of Christ. 

So, after this silence,  I notice tears begin to run from the eyes of the abandoned dying spouse.
Yes, it’s tears of sorrow. But, it is also tears of something else.
……….

When Mary Magdalene and another Mary found that the tomb of Jesus was empty and were told by  about what happened, on the Easter Sunday early morning,  they left the tomb quickly with fear and great joy and ran to report it to other disciples (Matthew 28:8).

Perhaps, tears were running from the eyes of these women, who first discovered the Resurrection, though they did not yet see the body of the risen Christ at that time.  The fact that they ran quickly to tell this news tells that these women were driven. 

Maybe they still had some sorrows, because what they heard:  Jesus was risen and gone from the tomb, was so confusing and did not yet see the very risen Jesus.  But, at that moment, their sorrow was no longer holding them down.  Even though they were fearful, as the scripture tells, they were not held up by the fears.  It is because of joy that they began to feel. 

It was joy of anticipation, because they did not yet see the risen Christ. And, it was sufficient enough to mobilize Mary Magdalene and another Mary.
………

As I see tears from the eyes of an abandoned dying spouse, upon reflecting his or her own painful abandonment experience upon deserted Jesus,  I now suggest to juxtapose his or her tears to the fear and joy that Mary Magdalene and another Mary had upon learning about the Jesus’ resurrection.
Yes, an abandoned dying spouse still feels deep sorrow. But, now, there is another feeling. 

Through this juxtaposition, I ask him or her if there is also joy that is drawing tears from his or her eyes – a kind of joy of knowing that he or she is so intimately close to Jesus through his or her deeply painful and sorrowful experience of being abandoned by his or her most beloved. And, a kind of joy to know that this Jesus, whom he or she feels so close through the pain and sorrow,  rose from the dead.
……

This pastoral and psychological identification of his or her pain with Jesus and his resurrection is not to suggest that his or her deadly prognosis would change.  Such a suggestion would be unethical because it means planting a false hope. 

In fact, Jesus died in deep sorrow and pain. The fact that Peter deserted him really hurt Jesus – even though he knew as he predicted Peter’s denial.  

What is so important here is that Jesus’ resurrection comes after his real death. 

So,  linking an abandoned dying spouse’s experience to Jesus, who died and resurrected – also identifying with Mary Magdalene and another Mary, who were the very first witness to the mysterious resurrection – is to help he or she discern deeper faith-based meaning amidst his or her immeasurable and indescribable pain and sorrow.
…………

Fr. Pedro Arrupe, S.J., the Jesuit Provincial of Japan (1958-1965), the 28th Father General of the Jesuits (1965-1983), said as he was dying from debilitating conditions after a stroke :
More than ever I find myself in the hands of God. This is what I have wanted all my life from my youth. But now there is a difference; the initiative is entirely with God. It is indeed a profound spiritual experience to know and feel myself so totally in God’s hands.

 In “Hearts on Fire: Praying with Jesuits”, edited by Michael Harter, S.J. (2005)

No, Fr. Arrupe was not cast out just because he was losing his abilities to remain on the top of the Jesuits, to perform priestly service, due to the paralyzing effects of his stroke. His Jesuits brothers stayed with him and cared for him and prayed for him, while he was becoming weaker and dying. Nevertheless,  as only a dying person can understand,  Fr. Arrupe must have felt alone – so alone.

But, he did not feel lonely, as these above words of Fr. Arrupe tell. It was not because he was always physically surrounded by his caring Jesuit brothers. It was because he was, indeed, more intimately with God.

Perhaps, Fr. Arrupe was deeply identifying himself with dying Jesus as he was dying, losing his abilities to the unfolding consequences of his stroke. And, he knew that Jesus was not just in pain and sorrow as he walked into the Calvary, because of his deeply intimate and absolutely inseparable oneness with the Father (i.e. John 10:30).

………..

When someone, who swore his or her absolute love into the matrimonial sacramental union with you,  abandoned you,  what else could be a better way to cope with such unfathomable pain and sorrow, such as what an abandoned dying spouse had to bear – than identifying it with what Jesus went through?

………

It is my mission as a pastoral psychologist to guide an abandoned and dying spouse to feel like what Fr. Arrupe felt before he or she dies. 

Yes, it sure bothers and pains me to know that even someone who swore his or her absolute love and loyalty in entering into the matrimonial sacrament can abandon his or her love, as the spouse is dying. But, witnessing an abandoned dying spouse begin to find joy amidst his or her pain and sorrow, upon coming so intimate with God also brings me a sense of purpose to be given an opportunity to be with him or her.

After all, it is the God who said, "I will lead the blind by a way they do not know, in paths they do not know I will guide them. I will make darkness into light before them and rugged places into plains. These are the things I will do, and I will not leave them undone” (Isaiah 42:16).

Saturday, November 23, 2013

Christ the King: End of Time Juxtaposed to an End of a Liturgical Year, Discerning Fresh Hope for What Is To Follow - Christmas



As it draws near to the end of the liturgical year, the scripture readings focus on the end of time. And, this liturgical year – Year C – ends with this week! So, what does it mean? 

Does it mean there is no more liturgy, including the scripture readings in Mass, because it is the end? 

No. 

It is only “an” end. Not “the” end. 

There remains continuity beyond an end – beyond the end of this liturgical year, because this liturgical year will gives its way to ring in a new liturgical year – Year A, as we maintain the 3-year liturgical cycle (A-B-C) in the Church. 

This coexistence of an end and continuity is one important thing to bear in mind as we approach the very last week of this liturgical year, focusing on the issues about the end of time through our scripture readings.  This is very important so that we won’t get “lost” in an end-of-time pessimism as we retain a sense of continuity beyond an approaching end. 

To highlight the end of this liturgical year, we solemnly commemorate the feast of Christ the King, the 34th Sunday of Ordinary Time.  And, that’s this Sunday! 

During this liturgical year (Year C), we primarily read Luke’s Gospel, and the Gospel readings for the 32nd Sunday and the 33rd Sunday really touch on our eschatological concerns. 

When we are hinted with something that invokes an end, such as death, we tend to become anxious. And, we often wonder and worry.  But, in order to cope with our anxieties and worries, invoked by our awareness of an end, it is important to maintain a sense of continuity beyond an imminent end. In pastoral care for dying patients, this is important. But, we do not have to be dying patient to have a sustaining sense of continuity beyond an end, in order for us to meaningfully cope with fears and anxieties involving an end and uncertainty.  There is important wisdom for this, drawn from the Gospel readings leading to the last Sunday of the liturgical year. 

These Gospel readings from 32nd Sunday (Luke 20:27-38) and 33rd Sunday (Luke 21:5-9) are meant to help us deal with our tendency to become anxious about a prospect of an end but also to prepare us for the feast of Christ the King, marking the end of the liturgical year. The Gospel reading for feast of Christ the King – 34th Sunday (Luke 23:35-43) is not only to highlight the very last week of the liturgical year with a scene of the very last hour of Jesus’ life in Calvary but rather to reveal apocalyptic nature of Jesus’ Kingly identity a bit. The Gospel readings of the 32nd Sunday and 33rd Sunday are to build up our mindset well-prepared for a gradual revelation of Jesus’ Kingly identity, leading to its completion in the Book of Revelation. 

Psychologically and spiritually, this arrangement of the Gospel reading across these last 3 weeks of the liturgical year is to appreciate the beginning of the revelation of the apocalyptic nature of Jesus’ Kingship nature without being misguided and fooled.

The Gospel reading for the Christ the King (Luke 23:35-43), indeed, provides a case study for being misguided with a criminal, who mocked Jesus as a failed king of the Jew with cynicism and pessimism (Luke 23:39). This man, being crucified with Jesus, had thought the Jesus, the king of the Jew, was simply to die without the resurrection. And, this pessimistic view echoes the Pharisees’ view in the 32nd Sunday Gospel reading (Luke 20:27-38). 

On the other hand, the Gospel reading for the Christ the King (Luke 23:35-43) also gives a case study counter to the case of cynical and pessimistic criminal.  Another criminal being crucified with Jesus to his right hand, also known as a “good thief” or “patient thief”, viewed Jesus on the Cross differently. The “god thief” said, “Jesus, remember me when you come into your kingdom”(Luke 23:42), instead of mocking him.  And, you may want to ponder why the “good thief” said “your kingdom”. He did not say, “when you come into your republic”, though. Apparently, the “good thief” had seen Jesus, the man being crucified like him, right next to him, as a king beyond the king of the Jew, which was a conspired “crime” allegation to kill Jesus. This awareness of the “good thief” is extremely important to appreciate the meaning of the solemn feast of Christ the King. And, because this nature is apocalyptic, its full revelation has to wait until the end of time – the time described in the Book of Revelation, the very last book in the Bible.  This is why this man is also called “patient thief”.

A very important lesion from the Gospel readings of the 32nd Sunday and the 33rd Sunday to see Jesus as the “good thief” did is not to be misled or fooled by false teachers and false prophets, who are to prey upon our fears and anxiety about uncertainly toward the end of time. 

In preparing us to face our eschatological concerns, Jesus’ teaching through the Gospel readings for the last 3 Sundays of this liturgical year (Luke 20:27-38 for the 32nd Sunday, Luke 21:5-19 for the 33rnd Sunday, Luke 23:35-43 for Christ the King – 34th Sunday) is to help us overcome our anxieties and fears.  In this respect, these 3 Gospel readings are good antidote to fears and anxieties we tend to experience on uncertainty toward the end. 

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For the 32nd Sunday Gospel reading (Luke 20:27-38), the focal theme was on the resurrection.  For the 33rd Sunday Gospel reading (Luke 21;5-19), Jesus offers advice as to how we should prepare ourselves for the end of time. Then, for the feast of Christ the King, in the Gospel reading (Luke 23:35-43), Jesus is portrayed as a mocked and crucified “king”. But, what is apocalyptic here is that this mocked and crucified king is the King of Kings – not the “king of the Jews”.  And, this prophetic message to be revealed is made clear in the Book of Revelation, which describes a process of Christ’s return, parousia

In fact, following these 3 Gospel readings toward the last Sunday of the liturgical year – the feast of Christ the King – guides us through our psychological path of increasing anxiety and perhaps some fears toward the end. 

First, the 32nd Sunday Gospel reading (Luke 20:27-38) is to assure that the resurrection of us is real. Thus, this helps us prepare for the tribulations we may experience on our way to this salvific phenomena further down on our journey of faith. Then, the 33rd Sunday Gospel reading (Luke 21:5-19) addresses how we are to conduct ourselves during tribulations, especially in dealing with false teachers and false prophets, who often take advantage of disasters to fool us about the end of time. This warning wisdom of Jesus is, in fact, very timely, as we are now dealing with catastrophic and traumatic consequences of Typhoon Haiyan (Yolanda). There have been some “religious” people linking the disaster to the end of time, trying to lock us in fears and anxieties toward the end of time. 

In this regard, going over these Gospel reading at this time is even more meaningful to reflect what it means to live as Christians in the time like now – not only it is nearing the end of this liturgical year but also it is facing tragic aftermaths of Typhoon Haiyan in the Philippines. 

Fear and anxiety can derail us from our right path of faith and draw us away from God.  Devil works hard to do this as its mission is to separate us from God – making us lifeless in this way. Thus, we must be aware of this and vigilant about a possibility of Devil’s attack on us through our anxieties and fears. When we find ourselves growing in pessimism and cynicism – becoming like the Pharisees in Luke 20:27-38 of the 32nd Sunday or like the criminal who mocked Jesus in Luke 23:35-43 of the Christ the King – 34th Sunday, chances are, you have been attacked by Devil. And, unless you take an affective spiritual intervention and exercises right spiritual disciplines, you may sink deep into the abysmal quagmire of despair beyond an irreversible point. This psychospiritual state is like what Viktor Frankl calls “spiritual death”.

When Jesus was mocked and crucified as a failed king in Luke 23:35-43, those who used to believe in his teaching were gravely disappointed – even to a point of anger and resentment, soon to have their anger and resentment replaced or mixed with fears and anxieties about the end of time, invoked by Jesus’ death. And, they had to wait for 3 days in order to testify the validity of Jesus’ teaching on the resurrection. 

But, in the 32nd Sunday’s Gospel reading (Luke 20:27-38 ) , Jesus is speaking about our resurrection, and even indicating that we are the children of the resurrection (Luke 20:36). 

With this understanding, we can appreciate the Gospel reading for the feast of Christ the King in a way that the King of Kings we call our Lord is beyond the death of the mocked king – the king of the Jews. Those whose faith is none or lukewarm lost their vision with the death of the mocked king of Israel on the Cross, just as those whose faith is weak and pathological are easily swayed and fooled by false teachers and false prophets, sinking in to fears, anxieties, and eventually irrecoverable despair. 

But, if your faith is mature, healthy, and strong, then, you are able to endure all the tribulations that may occur between now and the end of time – trusting the Lord, as David did in his Psalm 23, and cope with fears and anxiety that may arise along the way. The false teachers and false prophets prey upon our fears and anxieties. Their purpose is to lock us in fears and anxieties in order to keep us away from God – to cut us off from God. The weaker and the more lukewarm our faith becomes, the more vulnerable we become to become fooled by such false teachers and false prophets, thus, becoming imprisoned in the darkness of fears and anxieties. In fact, this is rather sinking in the abyss of the darkness of fears and anxieties, more like being sucked into the black hole – the spiritual black hole  - when we lack our faith during the time of tribulations in life. 

Anxious and fearful hearts and minds tend to see the reality myopically and find it very difficult to accept the reality with mystery. Such hearts and minds are prone to impatience and irritation. Then, anxious and fearful hearts and minds may deteriorate into paranoia – finding it increasing difficult to trust each other and God. And, this is the real darkness that Devil tries to sink us in. If there is such a thing called hell, this must be it.
The darkness symbolizing our suffering and grieves brought by calamities in the world are not necessarily the darkness of the end of time – though false teachers and false prophets may myopically and hastily say so to drive us into the quagmire of fears and anxiety. The real darkness we must fight against is the fears and darkness that false teachings and prophesies will throw us into.

“Magic pills” and the ones who prescribe the pills, “shrinks” won’t do. But, it is our steadfast faith in God that will do steers us through the darkness of trials in life while keeping us from the real darkness of the abyss of fears and anxieties. Even if we get drawn into the darkness of fears and anxieties, recovering our faith can pull us out of the abyss – if it is  not too late. 

Heralded by Dr. Harold G. Koenig of Duke University, evidence-based rigorous scientific studies pretty much consistently indicate that people with strong spirituality and intrinsic religiosity are better able to cope with challenges in life, coping with fears and anxieties that tribulations in life may invoke. Echoing this fact, Dr. Robert Coles of Harvard University has discovered a strong association between children’s psychological resilience and spirituality. Because faith is an expression of spirituality, Jesus’ teaching on strong faith to weather through the darkness of trials and tribulations in life – calamities and sufferings in the world also makes sense also scientifically.  This is how we fend off the negative fear-inducing influences of false teachers and false prophets, as the 33rd Sunday Gospel reading (Luke 21:5-19 ) reminds us. 

So, put the spiritual of Psalm 23, totally trust in God when walking through the darkness of trials in life and calamities in the world. This way, we become stronger in fighting the bad influences from false teachers and false prophets – even though these false teachings and prophecies may seem to be an easier way. By trusting God, as in Psalm 23, we are not fooled by an illusion that false teachings and prophecies try to infuse in us.
Even though we may have to walk through the darkness of persecution because of our love of God, we can endure and preserve our life – meaning, our souls, our spiritual life – not to be confused with our physical lives. 

Jesus also inspires us to cultivate our heart – our spiritual discipline ahead of time so that we won’t worry about how we will defend ourselves in front of our enemies, as said in Luke 21:14. And, this is because we trust in God’s providing of words and wisdom invincible to our enemies’ attacks (Luke 21:15). In fact, this echoes how Jesus himself proved his teaching on the resurrection is indisputable by the Sadducees’ attack in the 32nd Sunday Gospel reading. And, the Pharisees’ in the 32nd Sunday Gospel reading can be understood as an example of false teachers and false prophets in the 33rd Sunday Gospel reading. 

With this understanding from the 32nd Sunday Gospel reading (Luke 20:27-38 ) and the 33rd Gospel reading (Luke 21:5-19 )aforementioned, now we can better appreciate the Gospel reading for the 34th Sunday (Luke 23:35-43), the very last Sunday of this liturgical year – the feast of Christ the King.
If you have this understanding discerned from these two Sundays’ Gospel readings, then, you will see Jesus on the Cross, not as a mocked “INRI – Iesus Nazareus Rex Iudaeorum: Jesus of Nazareth, King of the Jews” as the “bad criminal” did but rather as the salvific or messianic King above all kings, as the “good thief” did. And, because of his discovery of this truth, Jesus assured salvation to the “good thief” by saying, “Amen, I say to you, today you will be with me in Paradise”(Luke 23:43).

Those who lack faith and are vulnerable to false teachers and false prophets are likely to see Jesus as a poor INRI, mocked and killed – nothing more. They are, thus, unable to see the resurrection in Jesus. They are left in the darkness. To them, the Temple of Jerusalem is forever destroyed. 

On the other hand, as long as our faith is strong and trust in God is unconditional, as in the spirit of Psalm 23, and as understood from the Gospel readings of the 32nd Sunday and the 33rd Sunday, the Temple will be built anew – though its reconstruction may not come as the same old one. Likewise, we understand that Jesus, though dying on the cross, is not the king of the Jews but the Messianic King, the only one who can shepherd us into salvation through our resurrections when it is due in his time. As described in Psalm 23 and Revelation 19, we will be happily sitting at the heavenly banquet, in front of the conquered enemies. And, as imaged in Revelation 19, Jesus, the Christ, will reveal his Messianic and Kingly identity – King of kings and Lord of lords (Revelation 19:16) in order to defeat Satan (Revelation 20:7-10) and to complete the final judgement (Revelation 20: 11-15). This is how we close this liturgical year to bring in the new liturgical year with Advent.

The new incoming liturgical year, then, opens with Advent – a time of our anticipation for the coming of the Lord.

So, during Advent, our time of spiritual preparation for Christmas, we gradually begin to know the darkness we have been enduring will give its way to the new light. In other words, the darkness of our sufferings and world’s tribulations are not eternal as we endure and begin to be transformed to the new light of hope.  Eschatologically, this transition during Advent into Christmas, following the feast of Christ the King of the previous liturgical year’s closing is echoes in the flow from Revelation 19 to Revelation 22. In other words, Christmas we celebrate every year is a psychospiritua projection of our hope and anxiousness toward parousia, imaged in Revelation 19 on. 

With our mature and healthy and steadfast faith, we can endure tribulations and trials, both internally and externally, whether sufferings of our own or sufferings of the world, because of our eschatological hope firmly latched on the resurrection to come. With this, we trust God as the shepherd who guides us through the valley of darkness (Psalm 23) and the Good Shepherd, who protects us and even willingly lays his life for us (John 10:10-18).  And, as sung in the hymn, “I Am the Bread of Life”, and as envisioned in Revelation 20:5, the Christ the King will raise us up on the last day. 

The lyric of this hymn also reminds us that the Christ the King will not only raise us upon his return (parousia) or the last day vision of Revelation 20:5, but also is the Bread of Life, the Holy Eucharist, to sustain our journey through tribulations and trials, so that we can endure and persevere all the way into the salvation to come upon parousia. This Christological revelation also echoes another identity of Christ the King as the Good Shepherd who willingly gives his life for us (John 10: 10-18).

I Am the Bread of Life
You who come to Me shall not hunger
And who Believe in Me shall not thirst
No one can come to Me unless the Father Beckons

And I Will Raise You Up
And I Will Raise You Up
And I Will Raise You Up on the Last Day

The Bread that I Will Give
Is My Flesh of the Life of the Lord
And if you Eat of this Bread
You Shall Live Forever
You Shall Live Forever

And I Will Raise You Up
And I Will Raise You Up
And I Will Raise You Up on the Last Day

Unless You Eat of the Flesh of the Son of Man
And Drink of His Blood
You Shall not Have Life Within You
You Shall not Have Life Within You

And I will Raise You Up
And I will Raise You Up
And I will Raise You Up on the Last Day

I am the Resurrection
I am Life
If You Believe in Me
Before You Die
You Shall Live
You Shall Live Forever

And I Will Raise You Up
And I Will Raise You Up
And I Will Raise You Up on the Last Day

Because of this understanding of our King of kings – Christ the King, the very one who feeds us, shepherds us, and raises us, so that we won’t become a lost sheep into the abyss of fear and anxieties, we always cite:
Christ has died, alleluia, Christ is risen, alleluia, Christ will come again, alleluia!  for Memorial Acclamation during Mass.

Christ has died on Good Friday, as the Gospel reading for the feast of Christ King – 34th Sunday (Luke 23:35-43) suggests to. But, what follows this end, which symbolizes the end of this liturgical year, is the coming of Christ to this world, Christmas, upon Advent, with which we will begin the next liturgical year, juxtaposing our eschatological hope for Christ’s return – parousia.  So, Christ is risen on Easter and has ascended in 40 days. And, God has sent the Holy Spirit, as he promised, on Pentecost. And, he also promised his return – parousia (Luke 21:27, echoes by Revelation 1:7). So, we sing, “Christ will come again, alleluia!” And, this is our hope – what we keep our eyes on to help us endure and persevere, keeping ourselves from spiritual derailment from the right path, protecting from false teachings and prophecies.

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May God bless and continue to shepherd all of us, feed us, and sustain us, the faithful, through this transitional time, through the turbulent and traumatic time of the world and our sufferings, as we set our eyes on our resurrections into salvation, imaged in Revelation 21 and 22….as we project such our hope in Christmas.