Lunes, Hunyo 23, 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 As Christ’s Body”

“Together As Christ’s Body”

June 22, 2014

The 2nd Sunday In Ordinary Time/Kingdomtide/Time of the Church
 -and-
The Feast of Corpus Christi

Isaiah 62: 6 – 12/Psalm 125/Ephesians 1: 15 – 23/Matthew 16: 13 – 19

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 Second Sunday after the Feast of Pentecost. Today, we also celebrate the Feast of Corpus Christi. Corpus Christi in English means the Body of Christ.  It is both about body of Christ – the Eucharistic elements; and the mystical Body which is the Church. Both are sacraments. We don’t have any problem with the Eucharistic elements because they are sacraments.  But do you know that the Church is also a sacrament?  The sacrament, by definition, is a visible sign of an invisible grace or truth.  Our being the Church, the Body of Christ, is an incarnational sign of God’s hidden grace and truth.  

Incarnate came from the root word “carne” which means flesh.  Incarnation, then, means the taking on of flesh.  The term “reincarnation” which some belief is that after the first life, the soul comes back and takes on another form of flesh.  If you are fortunate, you may become a human being again. If not, you may become an insect or any other form.  Incarnation is taking on of flesh – not just the visible signs in so far as our being incarnational sacraments. Not just the visible, but also the tangible that can be touched, seen, smelled, heard, tasted, experienced and most of all, both the Eucharistic elements and the Body of Christ is assimilated, absorbed or incorporated into the spirit.  The Eucharistic elements literally and physically; the Body of Christ mystically or figuratively. 

Our calling is incarnational. We are Jesus in the flesh.  This is why we are called the Body of Christ.  Is Jesus with the flesh and blood seen on earth today?  Did Jesus that took on the physical body seen on earth right now?   No, because He is sitted at the right hand of the Father.  In the Ascension, His very flesh, the body that He took on, ascended before the eyes of the apostles.  What is sitted at the right hand of God is not a spirit; it is flesh.  The physical body is sitted at the right hand of God.  The mystical Body, which also took on flesh, remains on earth in the person of the Body of Christ – you and I.    We make Jesus visible and present through our visibility and presence on earth.  We are Christ’s body – the mystical, the visible and alive.  We are Jesus in the flesh.  Jesus was God’s incarnate because God is incarnate and cannot be seen.  We are Jesus’ incarnate. 

Jesus asked the apostles, "Who do people says that I am?”   Some of the apostles answered, “Some say Elijah, some say Jeremiah, or one of the prophets or John the Baptist.”  The answers given Jesus were not accurate.  It was out of ignorance.  People did not know Jesus, which is why they had opinions of Him which were not based on the truth.  They were ignorant, inaccurate and untrue answers.  Jesus turns to the apostles again and asks, “But you, who do you say that I am?”  Peter says, “You are the Christ, the Son of the living God.” 

Rephrasing what Jesus asked the apostles and asking the Church, “As the Body of Christ, who do you say that I am?  Who, as the incarnate Jesus, do you portray Me to be? What kind of witness do you project and proclaim to the world as being My incarnate representative?  Who do you say I am by the way you are, by the way you live, by the way you relate to each other, and by what people see in you?”  I am convinced that there is one translation of the Bible that is most understandable.  You have your own preference of a translation of the Bible.  There are many translations of the Bible online, but the most understandable and easiest to understand translation is called the Church because we are the incarnate Jesus to the world. 

I ask you what Jesus asked then, “Who do people say I am?”   What today will be the basis of the people’s answer?  It is what they read from the most understandable translation of Jesus, the written Word.  Jesus asks, “Who do people say I am?”  The answer will be based on what we say He is!  We, the incarnate Jesus, the most understandable translation, will answer according to what the people read and according to what we say or portray who Jesus is!  Roman 1:19-20 says, "That which is known about God is evident within them…His invisible attributes, His eternal power, and divine nature are clearly seen through what has been made, which is us.”    We are God’s creation.  We are made by God and made to be the incarnate representative of Christ. 

Adam, who represented the Church before, reflected these things in his lifetime until he fell. This is why a second Adam had to come and also reflect God’s image and likeness and His invisible attributes, His eternal power and divine nature. Jesus, in His earthly life, displayed this.  Thus, redeeming us from the fall and making us a new creation and showing us the way of what it is to be human bearing God’s image and likeness and being Jesus incarnate on earth. 

The Father already revealed to us that Christ is the Son of the Living God.  Jesus is the Christ and the Son of the living God.  He revealed it to us; we are to reveal it in us because we are incarnation.  We sing the song, “Emmanuel,” and we say, “God with us revealed in us.”  This is our calling.  Ephesians 1:23 says we are the Church and the Church is Christ’s body, the fullness of Him.   We are the showplace of Christ, so to speak.  What are we making people read in this translation?  Is it a good translation or a bad translation?  It is the most readable because it is the loudest proclamation of the Word of God, but are we giving a good witness or a bad witness? 

When we were in the Sheridan building, the Deacons had a devotion before the Mass.  One time, I was asked to speak to them and I asked them a trick question.  “Who is the Gospel proclaimer today?”  They answered, “Deacon Randy.”  I said, “You are all wrong because today’s Gospel proclaimer and the following days is the Usher, the Counselor, the Singer, the Dancer, even the  Deacon, the Reader and the Presider and the people who sit in the nave.  We are all Gospel prolaimers because we are called to be Jesus’ incarnate.  It is not just when we are gathered in Mass on Sundays, but it is every day. 

I defined Catholic as “believe by all, always, and everywhere.”  This is not the full meaning of Catholic.  The full meaning is believe and lived by all, always and everywhere.  2Corinthians 2:14 says, “God manifests through us the sweet aroma of the knowledge of Him in every place, everywhere.”   Psalm 29:9 says, "In His temple, His body, everything says, "Glory." It is everywhere, by all.  Everything says, “Glory.”  It is not just talking about the temple building, but the temple of the Body of Christ.  In the temple, everything is to proclaim God’s glory - each one of the parts of the temple, the Body.  Do not depend on the Presider for the beauty, for the success or if the Mass is spirit-filled or not.  It is the work of the people.  Liturgy is the work of the people of God.  It is not one person, not a few persons, not the song leader, not the Deacons or Priests, but by all.  We are all to proclaim the glory of God. 

They say that there are three offices in the Church - Bishop, Priest and Deacon.  I don’t agree because I believe there are four offices in the Church:  Bishop, Priest, Deacon and Lay people.  You were ordained at baptism.  This is your ordination.  It is a legitimate ordination.  If you are baptized, you are ordained into an office in the Church and you are a minister.  You are called.  Romans 1:7 says, “We are called as saints (holy ones).  1Corinthians 1:2 says, “We are saints by calling.”   You are no less holy than the people you see in vestments on Sunday.  What you are wearing is your vestment.  The only difference between you and the clergy with funny clothes on is the altar rail.  It doesn’t mean the holy side and the unholy side.  It just means the altar is the clergy’s place during the Mass.  Just like in the bus where the driver is in the back of the steering wheel and the passengers are sitted at the seats.  It is just a matter of position where God puts each one of us. 

We, though many, though different, are one Body of Christ.  We are all called to be holy.  Holiness is both a gift given to us by grace and also a calling. It is a gift because we all have been created in the image and likeness of God – that is God’s gift.  It is also a calling because He commands us to be holy as He is holy.  We are already created, being given a gift, but still called to become and be that gift.

This is same with unity.  Unity has already been given.  We, as the Body of Christ, have been made one.  At the same time, we are commanded to preserve our being one.  Preserve the unity of the Spirit.  Celebrating Trinity Sunday where Trinity is such a profound term and concept, we are Trinitarian by belief.  As the incarnate Body of Christ and representatives of God, who do we say the Trinity is by how we relate to each other?  As in the Trinity, there is unity; there is unity in Trinity.  Is there unity seen in the Body that has already been made one by God?  Our relationships, not our doctrine, will explain the Trinity. It is simply because we are incarnational by calling. 

I don't understand:  why do we destroy each other?   Why do we pull each other down?  Our nature, the whole Church, is love.  It is not hatred or bitterness.  Our nature is love because we partake of the Divine nature.  If we operate in something opposite that, then, we are kicking against the goads.  Goads are pointed sticks that the shepherds use to bring the sheep back to the fold when it goes astray.  Jesus asked St. Paul, “Why is it painful for you to be kicking against the goad?”  It is not pleasant.  That is what we do if we operate according to that which is  contrary of  our nature.  Our nature is love, not hatred, not bitterness.   There is so much joy and fullness of life when we spend our energy and time on love instead of other things that we waste our time and energy on.  Love, respect and the building of one another.  This is what we should be doing.  This is our nature.  Jesus said, “I will build My church.” 

I started experimenting on lifting any kind of weight at 16, when I was in high school.  Anything that has weight in them, I would lift and do something out of ignorance.  I just wanted to build my muscles.  I started at sixteen and it wasn’t serious.  It was sporadic and I lasted two to three years and then I stopped.  When I was 25 years, I went to the gym.  I got more serious and I got a more regular schedule but again, it only lasted for a few years.  When I was 38 years old, my wife and I were in a Doctor's Offices where several doctors were holding office.  While waiting in line for one of my children’s check-up, I noticed a cardiologist who did not have any patient.  I thought, “I am 38 years old, I am not that young anymore, maybe I could consult him.”  I did and we had a talk.  The doctor was a little abrasive and he told me. “You are 38 now; you should start watching your diet and consider exercise.  Your metabolism is not as fast as it used to be and you should think of avoiding certain foods, and among other things is red meat.”  We were just talking and I said, “Doctor, that is what I like the most.”  The doctor said, “If you want to die young, then, you continue eating it.”  To me, that was uncalled for, but it challenged me to really take things seriously.  From that day to this day, I have been regularly exercising – three to four times a week. 

I am not sharing this because I am boasting but it is all about building up the body. It makes me feel good physically, but I also am reminded of a commercial jingle from the 70’s where a family was singing and saying to the father, “Take good care of your heart so you can be with us longer.”  It is not just for me that I exercise. I want to be with my family.  I want to provide for them and I want to live longer so that I can do that for them.  It is not just to build muscles and feel good.  For nine years, there were days when I would have a headache and days when I would have fever and days when I did not feel like working out.  Yet, I did; and most of the time, I kept my schedule.  You are not just building yourself up; you are doing it for the sake of others also. 

Spiritually and character-wise is more productive when you train even if you would rather not, even if you don’t feel like it because you believe it is a duty and you have die to yourself. This is maturity.  1Corinthians 12 and 14 talk about spiritual gifts and the right use of them. Right in the middle of this discussion on spiritual gifts is what you call the “love chapter.”  Everything and anything we do, using our gifts, is supposed to be out of love.  Let all things be done for edification. 1Corinthians 13 also says that if something is done not out of love, it is nothing.  It amounts to nothing and it is a waste of time. 

Build up the Body out of love.  Forget self; forget inconveniences; forget excuses; forget opposition.  The Gates of Hades will not prevail against the Body of Christ.  Forget all of those things!  Understand, remember your incarnational calling because Jesus Himself gave Himself up for the His church, His body.  It wasn’t easy for Him; it wasn’t pleasant; it was painful. He suffered and died. We are the Body.  We are to love our own Body.

A quotation from a Protestant theologian says, “With Augustine, I affirm a hermeneutics (correct interpretation of Scriptures) in which the fuller understanding of Scriptures remains hidden until Christians learn to live in unity and love with one another.” We are the most understandable and most readable translation of Scriptures.  John 1 says, "Jesus has explained God the Father in His flesh.”  If we work together, we can do it because we have been equipped to be one. 

The geese, when they travel for the winter, form a “V” formation because the goose in front gives an upward draft behind him so that that the other birds flying behind him have a wind beneath their wings.  It makes them easier to fly and it makes them tire slower.  When the leader gets tired, he goes to the back, and somebody else takes his place.  They are a team; they help each other.  Everything is awesome; everything is so cool when you are part of a team. 

We are the incarnate Body of Christ.  His Paschal Mystery is not just an activity that we do.  It is not a ritual that we do every Sunday or every day.  It is a mystery that we must become.  We already are, but we must become.  We are one Body, and what we eat, we become.  What we do, we also become. 

The real presence of Christ in the elements is not just about scientific or mystical verification of Christ’s presence in the elements. It is not about using technical terms like “transubstantiation or real presence.”  It is more about the actual presence of Christ and what it actually does for us and to us as His body.  So what if you win the argument?  “I am right.  The Lord is present in the elements.”  What does that do to the person you argued with now?  The real presence is so we can fellowship with Him and able to partake of Him.  When we eat the body of Christ, we become more and more what God already made us to be, the Body of Christ, His fullness.  In turn, we can give ourselves as His body for the life of the world. Not so that we can prove that we are correct theologically. It is so that we can be the life of the world. 

“This is My body, given for you. Do this in remembrance of Me.”  In other words, perpetuate this.  This is not ritual but incarnational. We are an incarnational sacrament.   I found in the English Standard Version of Isaiah 62:6 that says, “You who put the Lord in remembrance, take no rest.” You are Catholic and you proclaim it by all, always and everywhere.  Take no rest; always proclaim it. “As often as you eat this bread and drink this cup, you proclaim Christ’s death until He comes again.”  Thus, we participate in the building of the Body of Christ. 

We have been given the keys of the Kingdom.  Let us not be like the Pharisees and the scribes locking the door and shutting people out. Worst of all, we don’t enter in ourselves.  We have been given the keys. Let us open the doors of the Kingdom to those who are in need to see the Kingdom because we hold the keys as the Body of Christ. 

Isaiah 61 says that when we do that, those who seemingly had no hope, whom many have given up on, will be used by God, as His body, and will be given the keys of the Kingdom also and they will be called oaks of righteousness, the planting of the Lord.  They in turn will be the life of the world.  They will also be part of the Body of Christ. 

This is who the Body of Christ is and this is the way it is in the kingdom of our 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

Walang komento:

Mag-post ng isang Komento