Monday, April 18, 2016

A Different Waze.

Many people these days, including myself, use what is called a GPS (Global Positioning System) navigation device or application.  However, way before this system even came into place, I have always relied on [and what I am now dubbing as] the “GBS” – that is, the Guided By the [Holy] Spiritnavigation system! 

Last Saturday, my biblical apostolate assignment was one of those times when I had to depend a lot on the GBS.  It was quite an adventure!

For those who know me and my "challenged" sense of direction, you can imagine that I would need very specific directions every time I would have to drive to a place that was foreign to me.  Thank goodness for the coming of Waze (a GPS app that you can install on your smartphone) into our lives – my driving anxieties have significantly decreased and I have been able to get around even if my best friend (who usually navigates) isn't in the car with me, and without having to call my "human GPS" (my brother) for directions whenever I would get lost. 

Initially, I was assigned to the Two Hearts of Jesus and Mary Chapel in La Salle DasmariƱas.  I was confident it would not be hard to find, especially with the use of Waze.  However, a few days before Saturday, I was informed that the venue had been changed and it was now going to be in Mary Euphrasia Parish.  I immediately went online to look for directions, but couldn't seem to locate it exactly on Google Maps!  So I asked my friend, who was one of the organizers of the bible study program, to please send me directions.  Uh oh.  Her text felt [to me, at least] like clues to a puzzle: 

DBB area E, dasma.  Arnd pliparan. Umc hosp lasalle.
pasok ng (enter) summerwind.

Hmmm.  No worries, my GBS is always ready and on stand-by!

On the day of the bible study, that was scheduled for 8:00 am, I left our home in Alabang at around 6:30 to give enough allowance for what I felt was going to be like a treasure hunt up ahead.  Armed with a fully charged mobile phone and power bank, and of course the Come Holy Spirit prayer, I set out, resolved to hold on to that initial confidence I had – in spite the change of venue.  Waze took me through the familiar Daang Hari, the not-so-familiar Molino Road and then to some smaller unknown roads that finally led to La Salle Dasma. 

Phase I: achieve! Time check: around 7:20 am (I think).  Okay, from here on, it was GBS mode!

A priest friend (who was recently assigned to Molino) told me that once I got to the area of La Salle, I could just ask around for this Parish.  So ask around I did!  I stopped maybe 7 or 8 times asking pedestrians, shop owners and tricycle drivers for help – I asked if they knew either Mary Euphrasia Parish (none of them did) or “summerwind” (they knew this more).  I had to u-turn a few times along the way as some directions didn’t turn out right.  I felt my time “allowance” slowly slipping away.  With only about 15 minutes to go before 8:00 am, I tried calling my friend, the organizer, to let her know that I was still looking for the place and maybe to ask for some help.  However, I couldn’t reach her!  I then started to feel a teeny bit of that familiar “navigation anxiety” starting to creep in – but I dismissed it immediately.  I just knew that my GBS wouldn’t fail me… I was going to find the venue, and I would find it just in time.  I finally came upon Summerwind Village 4. 

Phase II: achieve! Time check: 7:45 am.

Now given my “clues” – I would have thought that the guy collecting “toll” at the gate of Summerwind would already know where the Parish was… but he didn’t!  Hmmm, so what to ask next?  I asked him if he knew where “DBB-area E” was.  He was a little iffy but he said I should go further down the road and ask around there.  After making a u-turn to exit the village, I caught a glimpse of a man standing at the corner whose t-shirt had big, bold HEBREW characters printed on his back!  (What were the chances?? - for those who don't know me, I studied Biblical Hebrew a few years back and am currently aspiring to study it further).  Seeing this, I grinned from ear to ear, taking it as a sign from God that I was on the right track! (I wish I had taken a photo of the man, but at that moment, I was just in awe). 

So on I went, rolling down my window every few meters to ask anyone I could along the way.  NONE of them were familiar with the name of the parish, but some of them said that there was a church “doon banda” (somewhere there).   Then I came upon a T-road… hmm… now what?  Well, my mother would always say to choose right over left (and hey, mothers know best right?), so I turned right.  A few hundred meters down this chosen path, I saw a sign painted on a wall that said “Area-E”!  Aha!  I was getting warmer… and warmer… I could feel that I was close to my destination.  The GBS was on a roll! 

The next person I asked finally said that there was a church just up ahead on the left and that I wouldn’t miss it (but he still didn’t know the name).  For a split second, I found myself thinking, But it could very well be any other church!  But once again, I quickly dismissed the thought, centering myself once more in the confidence that I had placed on the Holy Spirit. After a few more meters, I caught a glimpse of a cross, then the church building and finally the archway over the gate that read: Parokya ng Sta. Maria Euphrasia (Parish of St. Mary Euphrasia). 


 Phase III: achieve! Destination reached.  Time check: 7:55 am.

Seeing that archway made my heart leap for joy… and I think it did a few somesaults too!  I was just IN AWE.  Hallelujiah!!!  Thank you Lord!  Thank you GBS! 

“Not by might, nor by power, but by my spirit, says the LORD of hosts.”
– Zechariah 4:6

* * *

The journey to Maria Euphrasia Parish indeed felt like a treasure hunt and the new group of eager students of the Word whom I met there, were my new-found treasures!  I told them about my mini-adventure on the way there... how I really felt the Holy Spirit guiding me and how I knew for sure that He would be with us throughout our study. (Teaching in Tagalog is always a "GBS experience" for me!) 

This was my first “turn” in teaching this newly formed cluster of BEC leaders and members from about 9 different parishes of the Diocese of Imus, and it would be an experience I will always remember. I am already looking forward to next month's teaching! 


 (Gospel Strucks post on the lesson I taught that day coming soon).


* * *

Post-driving adventure reflection:

The GBS system has been a faithful companion throughout most of my life, but especially after learning more about living a life in the Spirit through the LSS (Life in the Spirit Seminar) that I attended 15 years ago.  And certainly not just for my travels on the road… but along the road of life itself.  Through big and small decisions – like in discerning whether to leave my job or in deciding where to park my car – the GBS has been an awesome navigator that I will always be grateful for. 

Of course, there have been many, many, maaaany times when my GBS “signal” would be a little (or a lot!) fuzzy and I would find myself not “flowing” with the Spirit.  That’s when I know that I need to stop and do a check-up on my prayer life – because sometimes, in the busyness of things, prayer ends up in the back seat.  And when that happens, the GBS can never function properly!   

What to do in times like this?  Just like the GPS (or any other gadget), sometimes all it takes is a quick reboot or restart.  We refocus, reconnect with God and make sure that prayer comes first before anything else. 

End of sharing. 

Tuesday, March 15, 2016

Go, and Sin No More.

“Woman, where are they?
Has no one condemned you?”
She replied, “No one, sir.”
Then Jesus said, “Neither do I condemn you.
Go, and from now on do not sin any more.”

- John 8:10-11




"Go, and from now on do not sin any more." -- now ponder this line for a minute.  

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Jesus believes in us! He believes that we can overcome the sins and struggles in our lives! (only with the help of His grace, of course).  

I've heard this Gospel so many times in the past -- but I've always only reflected on either the "second chance" aspect that Jesus lovingly gives the woman; or on the "do not judge others" aspect he challenged the scribes and Pharisees with ("Let the one among you who is without sin be the first to throw a stone at her." - Jn 3:7).

It was only while preparing and then teaching this Gospel for a Bible study class last week (see About this Blog) that it struck me: Jesus is not only our Lord, Savior, Strength, Brother, Friend, Hope, Consolation, etc etc... He is also our #1 Cheerleader! And He will root for us until the end of time!  The thought of this touches me to the very core (so much so, that I was brought to tears as I shared this with the class).  

This realization came via one of the books that I used as reference for this session:
The Daily Study Bible Series, The Gospel of John Vol. 2 (Revised Edition), W. Barclay

Sharing with you the portion that reflects on this point:

Jesus's attitude to the sinner involved a number of things.

a) It invovled the second chance.
b) It involved pity.
c) It involved challenge.
d) It involved warning.
e) It involved belief in human nature. 
When we come to think of it, it is a staggering thing that Jesus should say to a woman of loose morals: "Go, and sin no more." The amazing heart-uplifting thing about Him was his belief in men and women. When he was confronted with someone who had gone wrong, he did not say: You are a wretched and a hopeless creature. He said: Go and sin no more. He believed that with His help the sinner has it in him to become the saint. His method was not to blast men with the knowledge -- which they already possessed -- that they were miserable sinners, but to inspire them with the unglimpsed discovery that they were potential saints. 
* * * * *

And so in times of struggle or frustration along the journey to holiness, I will imagine Jesus telling me, "Kaya mo yan. Kapit ka lang sa akin." 




Images are screenshots from The Passion of the Christ movie.