Lunes, Hunyo 30, 2014

FROM OUR BRETHREN... A CHRISTIAN DENOMINATION THAT IS IN UNION WITH US IN OPPOSING THE FALLACIES OF THE RH/RP "LAW" AND THE OTHER DEATH BILLS: “Together Exalting the Lord Alone”

“Together Exalting the Lord Alone”

June 29, 2014

The 3rd Sunday In Ordinary Time/Kingdomtide/Time of the Church
 -and-
The 22nd Foundation Day of the International Communion of the Charismatic Church

Isaiah 2: 10 – 17/Psalm 89: 1-4; 15-18/Romans 6: 3 – 11/Matthew 10: 34 - 42

His Excellency
The Most Reverend Ariel Cornelio P. Santos D.D.

Auxiliary Bishop and Locum Tenens
of the 
Archdiocese of Manila
the 
National Church in the Philippines 
and the 
Territorial Church of Asia

International Communion of the Charismatic Episcopal Church

Today is the 22nd CEC Foundation Day celebration.  Twenty-two years now, God has been using the CEC as His instrument of restoration, unity and reconciliation.  We have part in this and we are thankful.

Laying a foundation about CEC - our mission, our calling - as in a building, foundation is the part that takes the longest to build.  In the Parable of the Laborers in the Vineyard, in Matthew 20:1-16, the owner of the vineyard called for workers.   He started early in the morning - first hour, third hour up to the eleventh hour - and he looked for workers for a harvest in his vineyard.   He called all of these workers into his own vineyard.  It was something that the workers did not owe him; it was something given to them according to the graciousness of the vineyard owner.  He got them to work in the harvest in his vineyard.

In Luke 10, Jesus told the disciples that the harvest is plentiful but the laborers are few and so pray that The Lord will send more workers into the harvest.  Harvest is an event of joy.   Biblically, when it talks about harvest, actually, they sing.  It is a joyful event, something that would benefit us.   Harvest is what you eat – what you sell so that you can have money and enrich yourself.   Jesus also says, "All of heaven rejoices over one soul that repents." This is harvest - even for one soul that repents, the heaven rejoices.  We are citizens of heaven and we must rejoice over the fact that people respond to the gospel. 

In the story, the early workers at the end of the day complained because they were given the same amount as those who worked for only one hour. They said, "We bore the heat of the day and all the work and you gave us one denarius, which is the same amount to these people who worked for one hour, and you gave to them first and you gave to us last."   They complained because they missed the point. They did not have the joy of the harvest. The harvest itself was a reward.  The denarius was additional. 

If we miss the point of the grace of God given to us to participate in His work of harvest, then we won't ever be satisfied.  If you are not happy with what you have right now, you will not be happy had you had more. As far as God is concerned, there is nothing more to give.  We are thinking, "God is eternally wealthy. He can give to us."  We also proclaim that He gave His life, what more could He give?  He gave us every spiritual blessing in heavenly places.  He gave us everything pertaining to life and godliness.  If we are not happy with that, there is nothing more for God to give to us.  Jesus, on the Table, gave His all.   We are also to give our all.  He gave everything already.  It is a matter of us, to borrow the words of a song, “Of finding the joy of reaching  His heart.” 

When Jesus asked us and told us to pray for more workers into the harvest,   it wasn't so much so that they can share the load or the burden as it is so that they can share the joy.  Before it is the work, it is joy.  It is more joy than work, load or burden and there is more than enough because our God is a God of abundance. Actually, the one denarius was more than enough for everyone because it was provided by our El Shaddai, the God who is always more than enough.

In the Parable of the Talents, in Matthew 25, those who were faithful in doing the task that was given to them, their reward was more work and more responsibility. The master said, "You were faithful in a few things, I will put you in-charge of many things."  This was the reward.  The master said then, "Enter into the joy."  More responsibility is joy. We need to find the joy of reaching the heart of our Master.  Participation in the work of God is sharing in His joy. 

Technically in the CEC, for 22 years now, God has allowed us to participate in the joy of His work. Even before that, He has already given us the grace to participate in the joy of working in His vineyard for harvest because His desire is, "That My joy may be in you and that your joy may be made full."  What joy was He talking about?  It includes the joy of seeing somebody repent but also includes those being persecuted. In St. Paul's case, it was being beaten by rods, going hungry, spending sleepless night among others. It was all joy. The reason we don't work is because we don't see the joy in the work.  Conversely, we don't see the joy because we don't work.  The heart of the Master is that He is ever-blessing, continually blessing. Therefore, He is ever-blessed with joy. 
There is this joke about one person asking the owner of a business for a job.  The owner gave him a job.  The day after the first day of this person, he goes into the boss' office and said, "Why don't you give me my paycheck."  The boss said, "I already gave you a job, why are you asking for a salary?"  I used that joke because in the first place, we must see that there is a salary in the work itself.  This comes in the form of sharing in the joy of God.  I am not saying that there is no future reward but the participation in the work itself is a reward. 

In the rebellion of Korah against Moses in Numbers 16:9, Moses asked, "Is it not enough for you that God brought you to Himself to do the service of the tabernacle and to minister to the people?  Don't you find joy and reward in serving God?”  If we ask ourselves that, we probably need to repent because that alone is a privilege and an honor from our gracious God. In His kingdom, there is absolutely no reason for us to complain. There are things that need to be addressed, but nothing to complain about because His grace is sufficient for us to address those things. 

In the song, "Raise Up An Army of God," it says, "O God our glorious Maker, we marvel at Your grace that You would use us in Your plan." It is God's grace that He uses us in His plan.  "Rejoicing at Your favor, delighting in Your ways, will gladly follow Your commands." This is not exactly what we do. Sometimes, we don't rejoice at His favor.  In the first place, we don't see it as a favor but an inconvenience to us so we don't rejoice.  "God is disturbing my life, inconveniencing me.  This is not joy. I am not thankful for that. He is bothering me."  It is a pleasure, an honor and a favor.  We are to give thanks and not to complain.   The right understanding and the right attitude are prerequisites to being the army of God.  Remind each other when we forget.  It is a favor - God's gracious favor.  There are other things to learn, but we start with the right attitude and right understanding. 

Zaccheus' salvation was not just about a heaven in the future, but the joy he found in the present. He found the joy of discovering who Jesus was and His ways. He delighted in Jesus' ways. He said, "If I defrauded anyone, I am very willing to pay four-fold." The jealous religious leaders missed that.  They became jealous of him.   Grumblers, complainers don't have joy. When they find the joy, they won't grumble anymore over a denarius. For eleven hours, those members missed that which was supposed to be joyful for them. May that not happen to us.  Ask for God's grace. 

In 2Corinthians8, the Macedonians were given God's grace and they found the joy in blessing others. They gave voluntarily and generously with an abundance of joy.  They were the ones who beg Paul to participate in this work.  Their circumstance was that they were in a great ordeal of affliction and they were in deep poverty.  They were hungry but yet they begged St. Paul for them to participate in blessing the Judeans because they have been in poverty and in need. 

I don't believe that the early Christians, the martyrs who were persecuted under Roman emperors when the day comes when we all gather in the presence of the Lord, will say, "Jesus, it is so unfair!  We were fed to the lions; we were burned alive.  We were skinned; we were sewn into; and these people in the 21st century complain because they have no internet at home or on the road?"  They won't do that because the joy will overwhelm them and they will forget the past, the "unfairness" of the past. 

I know of a woman who gave birth to six children with no anesthetics or pain killers. She is not so big, not so strong, but she gave birth to six children.    She smiled after each delivery.  She never told her husband, "You did not share in the labor. I carried the baby for nine months. Don't touch my baby." She never put her children in a guilt trip by saying, "You are the cause of my flabby skin."   She never did this because she forgets all of these things because of the joy. It is about the joy! When you see the joy, all things melt like it is in the presence of the Lord. I am not saying there is no challenge in work. I am saying that there is joy in work, in the participation, in the ministry. Don't miss this! 

In the 22 years in the CEC there are challenges of highs and lows, but first of God's grace.  He wants to share His joy so that His joy may be in us and so that our joy may be full.  God is good all the time! He is eternally good. Men may fail and disappoint you and hurt you sometimes, but God doesn't.  We are still being perfected as God is perfect. I can't say this enough: the participation in the work and in the ministry of God is His grace. We cannot boast of our accomplishments; we cannot boast of our efforts; we cannot boast of how much we have suffered for Him because it is first grace. 

Isaiah 2 tells us how that the pride of man has no place in this Kingdom.  We cannot boast except in the Lord.  Romans 2 says that our old nature died - the prideful nature. We live unto God now because the old self is dead. You cannot exalt the dead, only God.  It is futile.  Galatians 2:20 says, "I have been crucified with Christ; it is no longer I who live, but Christ who lives in me. The life that I live now I live by faith in the Son of God who loved me and gave Himself up for me." This was so important that it was preached to the first pope. This was spoken by St. Paul to St. Peter when he was rebuking him.  It is only the Lord that is to be exalted. 

In the gospel, it says, "He who loves his life loses it; and he who loses and gives his life, finds life." What is life? What is the life that God wants us to have? Righteousness, peace, and joy in the Holy Spirit!  This is what His kingdom is all about. He who loves any person or thing more than Christ, is not worthy of Him and does not receive the reward of life. We are not to love anyone more than Him. We are to love everyone because of Him.  There is no contradiction between this gospel and what He says to, "Love Me and love your neighbor." It is not a competition. We love our neighbors because we love the Jesus in them.  So, we are to receive, we are to accept anyone, everyone in His name.  Not for their reward, but for His exaltation. We receive and accept everyone - from the prophet to the least of His brethren, to any of His little ones.  There is reward, not only in the future but in the present. 
The CEC started in what was called the convergence movement of three streams - the liturgical, charismatic and evangelical.    We are not Roman; we are Catholic. To me, it is providential that CEC Foundation Day comes after the Feast of Corpus Christi because the CEC is all about restoring the one Body of Christ, going back to being Catholic and being undivided.  There is only one Body and one Lord.   Convergence is not just about theology, ritual or worship format, but towards unity, oneness and reconciliation.  It is toward Jesus' prayer in John 17. We are for convergence, not divergence.  We are for cohesion, not division.  In the process, we are going to restore and foster unity and relationships.  It will involve a lot of resolving of issues, disagreements, conflicts, friction, offenses, but also of reconciliation, respect, and acknowledgment of differences and strengths and weaknesses because  each one of us is still being perfected. 

Reading a part of Pope Francis' homily which he delivered at St. Peter's Square last Wednesday:
 "There is no ‘do-it-yourself’ in the church, no freelancers. How many times do we hear Pope Benedict describe the church as a ‘we’ church?  Sometimes you may hear someone say, 'I believe in God, in Jesus, but I don't care for the church.' This is wrong. There are those who believe you can have a personal, direct and immediate relationship with Jesus Christ outside of the communion and mediation of the church.  These temptations are dangerous and harmful. They are, in the words of the great Pope Paul VI, ‘absurd dichotomies.’ (Dichotomy = a division between 2 things that are represented as being opposed to each other).
It's true that journeying together is challenging, and sometimes it can be tiring. It may be that some brother or sister might cause a problem or even a scandal. But the Lord entrusted His message of salvation to humans, all of us, as witnesses. It is through our brothers and sisters with their gifts and limitations, that Jesus comes to us and makes Himself known. This is what it means to belong to the Church. Remember: being a Christian means belonging to the church. First name: Christian, last name: church member.
Let us ask for the grace of never falling into the temptation of thinking we can do without others, without the Church, and save ourselves on our own. We cannot love God without loving our brothers and sisters no matter how sinful; we cannot love God outside of the Church; we cannot be in communion with God without being in the Church; and we cannot be good Christians if we are not with all those who seek to follow the Lord Jesus, as one people, one body. This is the Church." 

There is this saying, "In essentials, unity. In non-essential, liberty; freedom; diversity. In all things, charity." This is a very good foundation for unity.   In essentials, like doctrine, we are one.  We share a common Creed.  Non-essentials – “You are not a Christian if your candle is low in the Altar.” “Should you dunk a baby when you baptize them or hold them under water until you are sure that they have repented?”  This does not matter; it is non-essential. We must have diversity and freedom in expressing ourselves. "In the Church, you must not clap your hands because that is sacrilegious. You must not jump or if you do not jump, you are not a Christian." These are non-essentials.  The most important thing is in everything we do, there must be love and charity. 

The founding CEC vision is: making visible the void.  There has always been unity given to the Church from the beginning, but that has become void because it has become invisible.  It is still there and we are to preserve it, but we have not exactly been making it visible.  We must make the void visible - that which has become void.   This is the unity of the Church.

One Archbishop in the Episcopal Anglican Church has been working with the present Pope for unity.  He and the Pope agreed that we are to make that unity visible.  It is not different than the founding vision of the CEC. We are to make unity visible. On the 10th anniversary of the CEC, also marking the consecration of the Patriarch Adler, a prophet, he said in his homily, "The CEC will not be known for its doctrine.   The CEC will be known for its relationships.  How we treat one another, how we relate to one another, how we love one another.” 

It is not the three streams and I am not saying that these are not necessary, but they are secondary. Relationship is what we will be known for.  After all, they will know we are Christians by our love.  This is harvest.  This is what we are privileged and honored to be participating in. Blessed are we whom God graciously invited to this harvest, to this vineyard and to this work.  And yes, it brings joy and promises reward, but it is all about the exaltation of God alone because this is the way it is in the kingdom of God. 


LET US CONTINUE OUR REFLECTION 
WITH
HIS EMINENCE, THE MOST REVEREND LUIS ANTONIO "CHITO" GOKIM TAGLE D.D.

ARCHBISHOP OF MANILA, 
CARDINAL OF HOLY MOTHER CHURCH
AND 
VENERABLE PRIMATE
OF THE PHILIPPINES
THROUGH


THE WORD EXPOSED

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