Friday, December 21, 2012
LOVE, HOPE AND FAITH EXIST AMIDST THE NEWTON TRAGEDY AND EVEN AMONG PRISONERS THIS CHRISTMAS SEASON
LOVE, HOPE AND FAITH EXIST AMIDST THE NEWTON TRAGEDY
AND EVEN AMONG PRISONERS THIS CHRISTMAS SEASON
It’s less than a week before Christmas, and I am quite saddened, feeling so unproductively distraught and helpless as we are bombarded by bad news around the world, like the ongoing civil war in Syria, the hundreds of poor people who perished from the flooding in Mindanao, Philippines and the massacre of innocent young children in a school in Newtown, Connecticut. In the USA, this horrific tragedy in a Sandy Hook School in Newtown dominated the news and the airwaves for days that became an aberration for a joyous Christmas holidays. This worst tragedy in that peaceful city has caused in me mixed feelings of sorrow, frustrations, helplessness, anger and lots of questioning that beg for real answers, which I possibly will never understand in my lifetime. As a father, and now a grandfather for two very young girls I could never imagine how I would endure the agony of being the father or grandfather of any of those pure and innocent 6-7 year old children being mowed down, worse than wild animals in the jungle! I have questioned my own God, who I have been taught to be a just, loving and merciful God why these evil things happen especially in schools, where peace and quiet are traditionally the norms where children are nurtured and molded to become the best they can be in the future!
Schools are not war zones, but sacred places like churches where children spend a good part of their day surrounded and lovingly guided by caring teachers, the noblest professionals of all, who love to do what they do, not to become super rich like business executives in Wall Street, but to help develop young people to become good citizens of their own community when they grow up. But In just a couple of minutes last Friday, an indescribable tragedy the lives of twenty young children were snuffed like the life of a pesky mosquito attempting to suck someone’s blood. How can even the brightest person ever explain why these things ever happen in our society?
Last weekend, I spent many hours just watching CNN coverage on this tragic event in a town named Newtown (which I pray will get a New HOPE, New Beginning, New Promise amidst worldwide sympathy and publicity this Christmas), that included live coverage of a multi-denominational memorials of the 26 people who were killed. President Obama took precious time to personally deliver his emotional yet meaningful message and his challenge to everyone that we must do more to end these yearly tragedies. Rationalizations and so-called professional analyses were aplenty but they were always inadequate to fully justify the existence of evil, the dearth of love or lack of respect for human lives!
To help me make sense of all these, I have to reflect, ponder deeply while I kept myself busier. Despite of that, however, I was still very frustrated and angry, as if I could not cope up especially in my solitude during a cold rainy winter weekend. I am fortunate, however, that my faith brings me to accept the reality that all things here on Earth are finite, that everything, everyone will have its own ending. Sooner or later, we too will die as our journey on this planet is just an ephemeral trip. I was told that we are in all in a train of life, and we really do not know when our final destination ends, when our own train of life stops. For these children their train ride stopped just after a short distance of 6 or 7 miles, some will be 60 or 70 and a few lucky ones may be 100 or more! It will certainly come when we least expect it. This Year of Faith, that Catholics started universally last month, is quite timely for us to really reflect what matters most in our lives, as our train may stop tomorrow or even tonight! Christianity admonishes and reminds us believers that “what doth it profit a man if he gains the entire world, but loses his soul? Speaking about power and wealth, who really leaves a better and lasting legacy for the upliftment of mankind, a wealthy person like Donald Trump or a poorer person like Nelson Mandela or Mahatma Gandhi? Or a shallow material girl like Imelda Marcos or Evita Peron or a simple woman named Mother Teresa, whose material possessions may be contained in just one airline luggage? Writing these sobering thoughts on a cold winter morning forces me appreciate that I am still alive with all these human emotions and to have an alert mind to still recognize them.
To cope up and de-accelerate the build up of stress and frustrations, I have kept myself preoccupied with many activities the last couple days, so I can tire l tire myself to leave no time to worry over these “bad things” that I have no control. Last night, I joined 3 of my fellow certified church prison ministers to provide our Catholic services to the inmates in an Orange County Jail. The full two hours that we were in prison providing a well structured Bible Study and Catholic Services, and listening to the prisoners’ laments or dreams and praying with them as we try to answer some of their doubts and questions, were quite therapeutic to both the prisoners and us ministers.
As a Christmas topic, we asked the prisoners what they would dream to have this Christmas. As this was my first pre-Christmas visit I never had any inkling or premonition what I will hear. Indeed it shocked me to hear some very intimate revelations. All of them wish and crave to be with their loved ones or families: spouses and children, and to be able to hug and tell that they love them! One man became quite emotional to narrate what his son wrote him that he has written the judge offering him that he can get all the gifts at their house in exchange for his father to be home for Christmas! No prisoner even mentioned about revenge, injustice or hatred against their lawyers or judges, but some said they pray to be forgiven as they would like to forgive others too!
As token gifts for them this Christmas, we were allowed to give them Christmas cards with postage to each prisoner, but not cookies like we did give to the deputies and guards, and the prisoners were quite happy to have them. For many of them, those Christmas cards may be the only “communication” they may have with a loved one this Christmas.
With just over an hour service that were rendered per group of prisoners, we were appreciated and even asked us if we were going back next Tuesday, that challenged us if we were to come back on Christmas day! On our drive back to our parish together, it was the consensus that unless we are in the hospital for indigestion or unless there a real emergency, we will invest another couple of hours to visit them, cognizant of the fact that normally most of them do not have close families or friends to visit them even on Christmas season! As many prisoners have intergenerational relatives in the prison system like themselves, this is a factual reality that I never ever imagined.
Before going to bed last night, I felt that some of the prisoners seemed even more optimistic and hopeful than I was the last several days! Their sense of optimism and hope for better days ahead, after serving their sentences in prison magically infused and reinvigorated my dying spirit and somewhat replenished my almost empty spiritual gas tank. I felt better and grateful that I forced myself ---- as I was quite ambivalent the entire day ---- to go with my fellow church prison ministers.
My almost one year experiences in prison ministry has given me great lessons in humanity that I never imagined before and have received some intangible dividends too. Undoubtedly, the prisoners are also learning something new at this stage of their lives from our ministry. Now I am no longer surprised why some of our prison ministers have been doing this kind of volunteer work for decades, as I am no longer shocked also why some prisoners become better persons or Christians or even become Christian ministers and authors like Charles Colson, known as the “hatchet man” in the Watergate scandal during the Nixon years after his incarceration. The life of an “unholy” man named Saul who persecuted and killed Christians before his conversion by Christ himself who eventually became St Paul, the great Apostle, is another example of a conversion miracle that can happen in any prison of any country in the world.
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In the spirit of Christmas, let me share (again) My Christmas Prayer, although written many years ago, is s still very relevant today, especially this Year of Faith with all the tragedies occurring in our world. It’s a year that some even predicted the “End of the World” according to some Mayan calendar. I pray that with the tragedy in Newton, a New Hope, New Promise and New Beginning will happen that should start from the heart and soul from everyone, and then it spread through the family, then to the community, to the town or city and to state, to the nation and then to the world. To paraphrase Mahatma Gandhi “Let the change begin in me!”
MY CHRISTMAS PRAYER
It’s Christmas time again and I feel all alone --- except with my thoughts, reliving where I have been, where I am now and where I want to go from here. Although I am a man, I can’t help but become nostalgic with mixed emotions while composing this unorthodox Christmas prayer.
Oh, Lord Redeemer of the World, is this what it takes to be alive? To witness and undergo the endless deprivations and tribulations on your people on Earth? Why can’t your children be happy and at peace not only during this season but every day? Not only in dreams and words but also in reality? For since I have flown from parental nest, I think I have seen more human sadness and struggles that the “joy and hope” that Christmas traditionally brings!
During this festive Season celebrating the Nativity of the Savior of Men, it has always amazed me that people do unusual things to bring out their brotherly concern towards another; it continuously puzzles me why can’t your people show signs and acts of love and charity every time? Tradition says, as I was told, that’s the way it was and that the way it is and that’s the mystery of Christmas time. But I asked in my prayer: “But why not?”
Dear God, I know I am just one creature who does not always understand and conform with what I see in this world, please help me that in my desire to be successful and strong, I may also become a more compassionate, understanding and loving person; that this Christmas and in the coming years, I may become more sympathetic gfwith those around me despite their divergent views of the world we share, as I also hope and pray that other people would also see your light and do what is right, and not only those actions that are convenient. This is my Prayer for the world and for all mankind.
Dear Lord, please hear these prayers from my heart and soul, I implore you especially that my health and general well being as well as those who I care and love, including my enemies will be at its peak; that the basic material things that are necessary to be happy and fulfilled be provided for; that my hopes, fears and dreams in life are shared lovingly with all the very special people in my life, and that my life on this Earth will have real purpose and meaning.
Oh Lord, my Savior, hear me, grant me my Christmas Prayer!
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Email writer: ernie.delfin@gmail.com or drbannatiran@yahoo.com
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