“God Makes All Things New” (Rev 21:5)
Transcription
“God Makes All Things New” (Rev 21:5)
ACIT N E W S LE TT E R O C T O BE R -D E C E M BE R 2 0 13 “God Makes All Things New” (Rev 21:5) By Antonio Lumactod The Archdiocese of Manila, led by Cardinal Luis Antonio Tagle, organized the first Philippine Conference on New Evangelization (PCNE) held on October 16-18, 2013 at the Quadricentennial Pavilion, University of Santo Tomas. With the theme, “God Makes All Things New,” the conference was participated by five thousand participants from different dioceses all over the country, other bishops and lay missionaries from the United States of America, Japan, Taiwan, Hongkong, Indonesia and other countries. Day 1: “Come and See” (John 1:39) – A Personal Encounter with Jesus: The Beginning of all Evangelization The PCNE provided the participants an experience of God’s presence, an encounter with Him that impels all to bring back this personal experience to their homes, workplaces, Christian communities, and elsewhere; thus, becoming agents in the new evangelization. Activities: Misa ng Bayan Heart to Heart with the Cardinal Streams of Encounter with God: Prayer Experience Eucharistic Adoration with Taize Prayer Jesus asked the disciples, “What are you looking for?” The disciples answered, “Where do you live?” Jesus replied, “Come and see!” (John 1:39) Coming to the Philippine NaGod Makes/page 18 Sangguniang Laiko ng Pilipinas By Christine Lim The Sangguniang Laiko ng Pilipinas (Council of the Laity of the Philippines) held its 18th Biennial National Convention last October 18, 2013 at Bayview Park Hotel, Roxas Boulevard, Manila. It's theme was "Responding to the call of Christ now: To do what is just, to show constant love, and to live in humble fel- lowship with our God". This convention was attended by Amalia Ledesma, Rosa Basas, Christine Lim and Edna Quinto. What was unique about this recent Laiko Convention, when compared to its previous conventions, was that it immediately followed the three-day 1st Philippine Congress on New Evangelization (PCNE), which gathered 7,200 people from all over the Philippines and other countries in ASIA. The renewed spirit of those who were able to attend the PCNE was felt strongly in this Laiko Convention. The keynote address by Most Reverend Jesse Mercado, D.D., Chairman of the CBCP Episcopal Commission on the laity, was aptly entitled "Laiko Responding to the New Evangelization", taking Laiko/page 20 ACLAIM organizes the 3rd Archdiocesan Council Congress of the Laity By Antonio Lumactod The Lay Associations and Integrated Movements (ACLAIM) of Davao organized the 3rd Archdiocesan Council Congress of the Laity on November 30, 2013 at the Davao City Recreation Center (Almendras Gym), Quezon Boulevard With the theme “The Laity in the New Evangelization” the Congress was participated in by the members of various lay associations and movements of the Archdiocese of Davao. The congress commenced with the welcome address delivered by Dr. Michael Manalaysay, President of the ACLAIM. In his welcome remarks, he mentioned the new areas of evangelization for the laity, clergy and the religious, which are potent avenues for spiritual renewal and transformation. After the welcome address, Msgr. Paul Cuison, the Spiritual Director of ACLAIM gave his opening remarks. In his opening remarks, he said “Let us open our hearts to what the Lord wants us to receive.” This year’s Congress was graced by the presence of Sr. Mary Niere, OCD who gave a conference on Prayer as an important factor in the life of an evangelizer. “Like the apostles, to be an authentic evangelizer, one has to know and must have a personal relationship with Jesus. We are not evangelizers if we are not persons of prayer,” she stressed. Furthermore, she also challenged the participants to raise their level of consciousness of God through Page 2 This is Davao’s way of incarnatthe contemplative way of praying. Contemplative style of praying ing “inclusion of the poor” as one of the key elements in facilitates Evangelii Gaudium “Gospel deeper and of Joy”, the new exhortaintimate tion of Pope Francis adrelationship dressed to the clergy, reliwith the gious and lay faithful. triune God. The said Congress was In the participated in by the folafternoon, lowing members of the Belinda Teresian Association: “Daylyn” Villegas, a Archbishop Romulo Valles, DD Isidro Porras, Judith Lumactod, Liza Vallescas, member of Annerose Villarba, Rudylyn the Teresian Association, facilitated the open forum. It was fol- Demerin, Ria Ruiz, Pilar Ferrer, lowed by the Eucharistic celebra- Gigi Almario and Belinda Villegas. tion, presided by the Most Reverend Romulo Valles, DD, Insights: Archbishop of Davao. In his homily, he highlighted the following "The ACCLAIM Convention was points: like a recollection for me. It allowed me to re-examine the way I “In the context of new live my life and my relationship evangelization, there is no with God. One striking message something new (in the sense of Sr. Mary Niere, OCD, which of the word), it is the same really struck me, was her challenge paschal mystery of Jesus that for us to go deeper in our prayer. we are evangelizing; it is the To go deeper into our prayer life; same message and the same we are challenged to be contemgood news. He further said plative because it is in the silence “What is NEW? – the new of our heart that God speaks and vigor, new stamina, new apwe are able to listen clearly to His proaches and new passion to message and recognize His loving announce and proclaim the will for all of us. At this point in my Gospel of Joy to all.” life, I realize that God is inviting me “In the institutional level, to another level of prayer by with regards to mission, spending 30 minutes to an hour of there is something new in the silent prayer. It is a beautiful chalArchdiocese of Davao. The lenge for me, and I believe it is a establishment of the Archdichallenge for all.” ocesan Nourishment Center (Dr. Annerose V. Villarba ) (ANC) is a new way to cater to the temporal and spiritual needs of the poorest of the poor,” he announced. ACLAIM/page 3 ACIT Newsletter First IT Youth Cebu Homecoming By Geneveve Sy The idea of a homecoming for IT youth Cebu was just a random thought from ate Kathy with some of the former IT youth members, who visited Guadix during the celebration of the feast of Saint Poveda. What started to be just a casual talk soon came to a reality… December 15, 2013 was a memorable date for the former It youth members and campers, who came to Guadix Open Center and found a home and a family. The first ever IT youth Homecoming… The activity started with a Eucharistic celebration followed by Kumustahan of the different batches. Then after lunch, a series of presentations were showcased by the different batches, reminiscing the IT youth days. It was indeed nostalgic. The highlight of the activity was the inspirational message given by Ms. Jean Japitana herself. She was So continue to be God's instruments one of the reasons why IT youth wherever you are and in whatever you Cebu is so do. But, each one has to be an effialive. Most cient, calibrated, and accurate instruof us came ment!” to know the Indeed, we were like seeds before IT youth and the Teresianas journeyed with us and the and helped us unfold our potentials to Teresianas discover God’s perfect plan and that because of we may be instruments also to others. her. She is Thank you Lord for the gift of the and always Teresian Association…for the perfect will be our time and the gift of people. Amen. dearly beloved Ma’am Jean. Inspiring us once again with her words of wisdom...she told us that she did not know then the reason why she invited us at that specific moment and that specific time; but now, seeing us, she knows the answer—she was just an instrument. In a way, she challenged us to be instruments as well to others, wherever we are at present. To quote our founder, Saint Pedro Poveda, once said, "you are but instruments that the Lord uses so that Some IT youth members with Jean Japitana He may be known and loved." and May Revecho ACLAIM/from page 2 Some members of TA Davao with Sr. Mary Niere, OCD N.B. I would like to thank Isidro “Sid” Porras for providing the important information of the said Congress. Many thanks Sid. October—December 2013 “In contemplation, we let go of our inordinate tendencies; in loving and intimate communication, we allow God to penetrate in us. We listen to Him in silence. We tap our five senses to enter into a deeper level of consciousness in prayer. The impact of contemplation is greater and significant in life. We let go of our ego tendencies and become more God centered. In effect, we become more reflective, loving, just, caring and othercentered. We become fully human and fully belonging to God.” (Judith Lumactod) Page 3 Kilig Moments By Joselita Bongcaron Who knows what is kilig? What most Filipinos know of is that it is a feeling; or is it? What descriptions can you give it? “Yanig ?” Kilabot? Nginig? I bet my bottom dollar that you will not be able to tell me an exact description. There is simply no one-word equivalent. Am I right? Kilig is, what I could say, the word for the day during that wonderful Advent celebration of ACIT Manila (with a few guests) last December 14, 2013. It was a Saturday, a Marian day at Covadonga Hall of Saint Pedro Poveda College. It seemed that the Christmas rush of the past weeks (not for shopping but for beating work deadlines) bottled up each one’s stresses & needed to find release. That encounter served the purpose of de-capping the bottle. You could not imagine the intensity of the bursts as the bottle got decapped. Bursts of laughter, stories, wholesome bullying (uhhmm, can bullying be wholesome? Only the attendees could tell), eating (pot luck lunch) and of course, praying. Coincidentally, there was a literal bottle that got de-capped: Novelino sparklers 4.5%. Lest the reader thinks of something else, let me reiterate that it was just one bottle for less than 20 persons (Maricar, Edith, Jelly, Edna Q, Edna A., Lolit, Lyn, Merla, Alele, Jen & Edzel, Agnes & Gigi, Lita & Ritche), enough to enjoy a toast. The alcohol percentage was not even enough to cause jitters to the brain cells, nothing compared to the intoxication of the kilig moPage 4 ments. What was it that brought about the kilig? I opt to hold you in suspense, keep it secret, until further notice. Only the attendees could tell. I usually hear kilig as associated with a spark of inspiration arising from a romantic feeling (think of the current screen idols, the KathNiel tandem; for the young & old, who are keen with Philippine show business, you know what I mean; or Boots Anson-Roa, who may be about to drop the name Roa as she now finds love the second time around years after her husband’s death). On a humorous note, ask ACIT Manila members, whose names start with E about kilig. Then those starting with J, M, A. & on & on. Only they can tell. On a serious note, I bet this is what they would say: In a deeper sense than that of romance, the word kilig is thought of as an inspiring feeling; not necessarily romantic. In that get-together, ACIT members experienced Advent as kilig moments, as sparks of inspiration while waiting for the coming of the Ultimate Idol, the Divine Messiah. This day was an invitation for us all to keep the energy of inspiration, especially at a time when waiting can be filled with temptations; temptations to be bored, to be tired, to be stressed, to be anxious, to be impatient. Life’s stressors may really be hard to bear, but faith in the lessons of the Manger make us wait with a light heart. Lessons of the Manger comprise in reflective & prayerful waiting. As Fr. Poveda strengthened our charism through prayer & study, aside from the Eucharist & Mary, we, too, affirm this strength as we derive inspiration this Advent Season from the Manger. Our celebration last December 14 was capped by praying together at the SPPC chapel. Exchanging gifts took place within the prayer time; not material gifts, but exchange of prayers; our names were written on pieces of paper with our wishes to be prayed for; all took turns in picking up one paper, with a pledge to pray for the person written on it. At the outset we sang “ Oh come Divine Messiah, the world in silence awaits the day, when all shall sing in triumph & sadness flee away”. After our country’s ordeals these recent days, we affirm that sadness will flee away. Meanwhile, we are keeping the kilig moments. Much like the inspiration emanating from the Manger, we, as ACIT Manila, derived inspiration from those kilig moments, the light prayerful moments that energized us once more to face the stressors of our lay life. What a blessing this year that the whole church celebrates the Year of the Laity. We’ve got the inspiration; we’ve got the prayer of the whole church, we’ve got the source of our kilig, the Savior in the Manger. What else can we ask for? Rejoice! Let our eyes sparkle, our hands interlocked, our shoulders shaking, & with a grin, show our kilig ! ACIT Newsletter Josefa Segovia Day—A Celebration of Life By May Revecho Four days after the 7.2 magnitude Earthquake, October 19, 2013, members of the Teresian AssociationCebu, together with the IT Youth and some guests, gathered to celebrate life in honor of Josefa Segovia. The gathering started with “kumustahans” with questions such as: “Where were you during the earthquake?”; “What did you do?”; “How’s your house, family and friends?”. Several other similar questions were asked and answered; questions that simply meant “how are you?” Originally, the celebration was planned to address the issue of the RH bill and things that follow it, such as abortion and divorce. However, due to the calamity that struck Central Visayas, prayers for the victims of the earthquake and their families were offered instead. The celebration formally began with a simple prayer, with the introduction taken from the comments printed on page 9 of the book dedicated to Josefa Segovia - “A Woman of Faith”, published in Manila in 1982. One of the salient features of Josefa Segovia is undoubtedly the spirit of prayer. But her prayer, at the present moment, is an enclosed garden in which it is not licit to enter. We firmly affirm what we all well know, ‘she was a woman of prayer’. “But her image, prayerful, and recollected was more eloquent than her pen in manifesting the power of a mother’s October—December 2013 prayer which in ‘itself is very powerful.’ Before the Blessed Sacrament she was the true “Canaanite woman”, who pleads, insists and humbles herself to wrest from the hands of Christ the grace that leaps from the heart of the mother to that of the sick and afflicted child.” It was quite fitting then that during these times of spiritual challenges, due to cultural innovations and natural calamities, that we look up and turn to one exemplary member of the Association who had clearly shown her strength through prayer. A video of Josefa and the first members was then translated by Rolinda Jover. The video showed how she spends her days with the first members and gives us a glimpse of her responsibilities. A second movie was played afterwards, while members enjoyed a simple snack of popcorn and pizza. The movie entitled October Baby was about Anna, an ordinary girl that discovered her physical condition was, more or less, caused by a trauma due to a failed abortion attempt by her biological mother. She sets out on a quest to find her biological parents. Through this quest she discovers herself and the power of forgiveness. The celebration ended with people smiling and sharing their wonderful experience of having this moment of prayer and pause from the nervewracking earthquake. It helped us realize that in any time and situation we may be, prayer is absolutely a source of strength and happiness. Now, that Visayas was again hit by a super typhoon in less than a month after the earthquake, how vulnerable life truly is and we can only lean on one thing-----prayer. I hope that as you read this, you would pause for a moment and offer a prayer for every Filipino victim of these natural disasters and a grateful thanksgiving for everyone who extended their resources to help others. Lord Jesus Christ You enabled Josefa Segovia to lead lay people in new forms of Christian witness by living the charism of the Teresian Association. Help us to share her strong faith And her deep love of the Church. Teach us, as you taught her, To live in friendship with You In our everyday activities and commitments, And to seek in Our Lady Inspiration and example For our Christian living Through the intercession of Josefa Segovia We ask You to renew the evangelizing spirit of the Church and to grant us the favours we now ask Through Christ Our Lord. Amen. Let us not forget that in times such as these, our vocation is of significance to help and educate others. Page 5 Repleksyon kag Aksyon By Rejie Palmos Sa amon pagpaambitanay, kami naghangpanay, experyensya kag kalipay sa amon nag-ubay. Madamo nga tinuig kami nag-upod : PA, ACIT, Youth kag mga abyan. Gani kami may ginkaisahan upod sa pangamuyo, pagtu-on kag aksyon! Ang pamilya may hilikuton. Sa ini nga tuig, kami nag-ugyon “Tuig sang LAYKO pagapasanyugon!” Page 6 ACIT Newsletter Visiting ACIT and PA Members in Tokyo By Agnes Garciano Osashiburi. This Japanese expression means “it’s been a long time”. That was precisely how Gigi and I felt when we went to Tokyo last September. We were fortunate to be able to go back to Japan in order to each attend conferences related to our fields – Civil Engineering and Mathematics. It was a good “excuse” to be able to visit our good friends in the Teresian Association. We stayed in the residence of the TA members in Setagaya-ku, Tokyo. Adelfa Armentia and Cora Viado, members of the Primary Association, welcomed us warmly to their place. On the day I arrived, we met our old Seated in the middle is Sayako friends from the ACIT group as well. Over sumptuous dinner, graciously prepared by Adelfa and Cora, we shared about our lives, our joys and struggles, as well as our faith. There we realized how much we miss both ACIT and PA members, as they were very much part of our family in Tokyo. October—December 2013 At the TA residence in TokyoSeated from L to R: Lisa Yamaguchi, Maeda Tatsue, Agnes Garciano; Standing from L to R: Cora Viado, Adelfa Armentia, Gigi Garciano She opted to go back to Tokyo in order to study and prepare for a licenture examination to teach Japanese to foreigners. Douglas Martin is a Canadian, who lives in Tokyo and teaches English to Japanese students. He handles the faith sharing group and helps in the formation of lectors and readers at the St Ignatius church in central Tokyo. The ACIT members in Tokyo Let’s meet some of the contribute invaluably to the growth ACIT members in Tokyo. of the church in Tokyo. Although Maeda Tatsue is a retired still a very small group, each one teacher who works every knows the important role he or she morning at a Montessori must play in order to fulfill the TA school near her parish mission. The members are hopeful church in Saginuma. that their there will be more people Maeda-san stayed in Cajoining the TA-ACIT in the future. gayan de Oro for a year. Let’s us pray that there will be more Lisa Yamaguchi and Gloripeople who will join their group. etta Ishizaki are both ACIT members residing in Omiya, a suburb of Tokyo. They both belong to a committee in charge of the formation of the parishioners in Omiya church. They organize catechism classes with the parish priest. Sometimes, they invite speakers, which include Teresians, on different topics Douglas Martin with Therese and related to formation. Sayako Sophia Garciano – future TA members Yoshida is a young lady who used to teach in Nagano, Japan. Page 7 A Gathering to Remember… By Leila Magalona This December, both the PA and ACIT members gathered at the Poveda Center to get together and plan for the next school year. After sharing our lunch, we started jotting down our responses to the question: “What are you so grateful of this 2013 and what do you look forward to in the next years to come?” Below are the responses of the ACIT members and guests: Terry: As a retiree, generally, I thank the Lord very much for allowing me to serve Him through the profession, vocation, and mission He has called me for. I thank God for sustaining me in the different challenges and difficulties encountered, good health, and many more. I served for 40 years in the City of Smiles, Bacolod— 31 years in public service and 9 years in private schools. What I desire and pray for 2014 are as follows: good health, be of service to Him in the remaining years of my life, to grow more in holiness and in the knowledge of TA. Keking: I’m so thankful to the Lord for making me a channel of His blessings. I’m hoping the same for the year 2014. Deding: I am very thankful for the blessings that God has given us. After finishing the studies on the Diocesan Lay Formation Center as Kapilyan of our parish for six months, it gave me additional knowledge about the church and spirituality in facing more challenging missions as church worker. For 2014, I ask God to give me good health to continue our mission as Teresian Association of spreading good news for all men. God bless and Merry Page 8 Christmas and a Prosperous New Year to all!!! Yehlaine: I’m so grateful and blessed all throughout because of the people who enriched and guided me all the way. I felt blessed when I accompanied my childhood friend in a trip to Hongkong and Macau. I felt great with God’s abundant blessings. I am still hoping for the fast recovery of my mom. I pray for a prosperous New Year to all! Sonia: The year 2013 is about to end and I like to thank the Lord for the harmonious family relationship and for the good health of all my family members. For the year 2014, with God’s help, I pray for a successful business venture and a continuous peaceful family relationship. Annaliza Villaver: I really thank the Lord for the year 2013, most especially to Ma’am Eres “Keking”, Carmona Family, Go Family, and Yehlaine Estores Family. They were a great help to me and my mother. I thank them for being with me in celebrating my birthday most especially to Mama and the Teresian Family. Thank you so much for welcoming me. May you all be blessed. More than anything else, I thank God for giving me good health and a lot of blessings. I wish that in this coming year, our togetherness and bonding will be stronger. I wish for more bonding time and happiness, long life, and good health. I pray that my father would arrive soon. May peace and forgiveness reign in each one of us. I hope I can buy a cell phone of my own. God bless us all! Leila: Reflecting on the year 2013, I can’t help but be grateful to the Lord for the many blessings I received. In our family, God has granted us good health and harmo- nious relationship. In school, He sustained me despite my hectic schedule attending to my school responsibilities and my children as well. In my vocation, He kept the fire of faith burning. Despite my limitations, I am certain that God is using me as His instrument as a member of the Teresian Association. For the coming years, I pray that God would make use of me in anyway He wants. I am sure that He will take good care of my own concerns while I take care of His. I don’t have big plans, I only have dreams. I just allow God to take the lead. I should worry less and let God do all the worrying. We also shared the reflections given by Fr. Jimmy Carmona, SDB about the 8 Steps to happiness which include: 1) Think less, feel more. 2) Frown less, smile more. 3) Talk less, listen more. 4) Judge less, accept more. 5) Watch less, do more. 6) Complain less, appreciate more. 7) Fear less, love more. 8) Do good deeds always! According to Fr. Carmona, we tend to forget achievers but we cannot forget those who were significant in our life. We will die but memories will live. He further added: “The people who make a difference in our life are not the ones with the most credentials, the most money, the most awards … but the ones who really care." All of us felt good sharing our insights to these steps to happiness. We hope that all those who are able to read these steps would also feel the same. ACIT Bacolod wishes everyone a Merry Christmas and a prosperous New Year! ACIT Newsletter Coming Home Retreat for Couples “A Venue of Healing and Celebration” By Antonio Lumactod Scriptural Passage: Wedding Feast at Cana (John 2:1-12) “They have more wine.” When the well runs dry. Grace abounds when there is a desire “to drink from the well of life”. The two day retreat provided the couples opportunities: to be thankful and grateful for all the blessings and gifts received and experienced for the last 15 to 25 years; to recognize God’s accompaniment in their married life for the last 15 to 25 years; to beg for the grace of sorrow and forgiveness for the gaps, shortcomings and limitations experienced as a couple; and to grow in faith in the context of marriage for the next 10 years of their marital life. I could not imagine how I lasted traveling by land with my daughter Jo Anne from Davao City to Cagayan de Oro City on November 15 and traveling back on the noon of November 17, 2013. Perhaps for Jo Anne, traveling for a total of 18 hours is enjoyable and full of excitement. As for me, traveling by land is quite uncomfortable and very tedious. I am no longer young and I just celebrated my 57th birthday last September 12. What was in store for us at the Covadonga Center for Culture and Spirituality on November 16-17, 2013? I was invited to conduct a “Coming Home Retreat for Couples”. These are couples who have been married for the last 10 to 25 years with a desire to renew and strengthen their marital relationships. October—December 2013 The two-day retreat was part of the ments were something very fulfilling. Family Ministry Program of the Helping the couples to renew and recCommon Mission of the Teresian oncile due to gaps, shortcomings, Association in Cagayan de Oro City. limitations or state of sinfulness in Cris Peroja, an ACIT member and intheir married life was to me the greatcharge of the Center, invited me as est miracle of God’s love that happened during the retreat. God interthe Retreat Facilitator. vened! I considered myself as an inI was quite apprehensive to accept strument of God’s love, no more, no the invitation when I received the less. It was God’s power and unconupdate from Cris that there were only ditional love that moved them to retwo couples, who have pre-registered newal and reconciliation. for the said retreat. I asked her: “Cris, is it worth pursuing the proOn the last day, the couples were gram considering that there are only guided to formulate their family fivetwo couples who pre-registered?” year development plan. They were Her response:“Yes, sir, we will progiven the opportunities to discuss and ceed despite the small number of parbrainstorm freely on matters that conticipants.” So Jo Anne and I travcern family, spiritual, financial, caelled on a Friday noon to Cagayan de reer, professional and community life. Oro City to facilitate the said Couples With their five-year development plan, the couples, Retreat. with new perspective We were and dynamism, went graced to have home renewed and two couples, reinvigorated to conwho long to tinue the travelogue savor, relish of loving, sacrificing, and deepen caring, forgiving, and their marital celebrating the pasrel at i o n s h ip s chal mystery of for the next five Christ in their marto ten years of Tony with daughter Jo Anne and the ried life in the years their lives. two couples to come. God’s Miracle The closing ritual of Love was very significant and meaningful. Fatigue, exhaustion and long The couples’ five-year development hours of travel…What was the replan written in a personalized prayer ward after the two-day couple’s reculminated the two day retreat. Each treat? The experience of traveling by couple was given the opportunity to land for about 18 hours was transpray and offer their prayer– the fiveformed to joy and enthusiasm. Lisyear development plan to God in a tening to the couples’ stories on how very solemn manner. It was a celethey have sustained their relationship bration of life and love! for the last 15 years and 25 years was My Prayer for the two Couples enough of a grace for me. MotivatWith renewed vision, God assures ing the couples to beg for the grace of them with His words from the openness and humility and facilitatProphet Jeremiah:“I have prepared ing them to dialogue on concerns, issues, strengths and accomplishComing Home/page 17 Page 9 My Journey to Covadonga By Cristina Peroja It all began in Covadonga. Every time I hear these words, it really didn’t sink into me. Teresian Association began in Covadonga. But within 6 months of staying in Covadonga Center for Culture and Spirituality, I got a deeper understanding of the place called Covadonga and the story behind why it is significant in the Teresian Association. Covadonga means deep cave. It is a Spanish Marian Cave Shrine in Asturias, Spain. It is where Saint Pedro Poveda found an inspiration to form a group of people, who could help solve the problems of the community especially in education. This group was to help the people in the living of their faith, to help transform the world through education and culture. And it was there that the Teresian Association was found. March 2013, I was at home when Miss Amalia Ledesma called me and asked me if it’s okay with me to go to Cagayan to work in Covadonga Center for Culture and Spirituality. My first reaction was to ask her if I can handle the work, how about my work in JSSC. She assured me that I can. Before our conversation ended, she advised me to pray and meditate so I can decide well. Mixed emotions beset me after. Funny, but there were times in my life that I shared to my family & friends that I don’t like to work in far places because I want the comfort of working near home so that I can see my family often. I was a bit hesitant at first because, for me, Cagayan is a far place and it means working away from home and the work entails big responsibility. And yet, a part of me was telling me to go and go out from my comfort zone and explore. My Page 10 faithfulness to my vocation as a lay person, my experiences. that were enriched by my stay in JSSC, somehow helped me to say “yes” to another new and challenging responsibility -- another opportunity to grow emotionally and spiritually. After a week of prayer and sorting things out, I decided to give it a try. What really made me decide to go to Cagayan is the fact that working in Covadonga is sharing in the mission of the Work. How can I say no to the mission that, during my commitment in ACIT, I promised to help and share in the fulfilment of the dreams of Saint Pedro Poveda for the Association? There’s no turning back. Days before my flight to Cagayan I spent my time praying, meditating, asking for the grace, perseverance to continue despite difficulties that I might encounter, strength from God to make me strong as I am about to handle a new responsibility. With all these I turned to prayer as it gives me strength as it always does to me. After 10 years, I set foot again in Covadonga Center for Culture and Spirituality. The first time I was here was when I attended summer seminar 10 years ago. This place is significant to me because this is where I wrote my Carta. I didn’t continue my formation in the Primary Association, but I came back as a member of the ACIT Association. Never in my wildest dream had I any plan to work far from home, and not in Mindanao, which is so far for me. But following God’s plan wholeheartedly, I am here. Unexpected things happened. Indeed, no matter how much you plan your life, the Lord can have another plan for you. Lord, your will be done. I learned to let God decide for me since I know He has the best plans for me. When I was here last April 2003, I didn’t have the chance to explore the whole place. So when I arrived I was so excited to get inside. I only had a clear memory of the open space beside the Center, where we used to walked, but this time, it’s full of houses already. The view of the mountain at the back of the Center gives me a feeling of serenity and calmness. I’m so happy with the people I’m living with right now because they really consider me as part of the community. I really feel at home with the love and care they’re showing me, which eases my longing for my family. I’m comfortable with them even if it was the first time I met some of them in person. Some of the things and experiences are new to me but they bring out the best in me. They make my stay in Cagayan comfortable and happy. I’m learning some Bisaya words that are really different from the dialect I grew up with. I enjoyed riding in the motorela even though I’m afraid of falling off especially if I ’m seated at the back. Going to the morning mass in the parish, walking and meeting the same faces of the parishioners, makes me appreciate the life and culture of the place. Dealing with clients ran smoothly too. I learned to deal with people without shyness. My work pushed me to go out of my shell and meet people. These things developed my self-confidence and opened my awareness to the things around me. Things came out well and I thank the Lord for another proof that when you follow His plans, things will really fall into the right places. All things went well for my six months stay in the Center. My journey going to Covadonga was full of apprehensions but God My Journey/page 12 ACIT Newsletter An Apple with a Bite By Joselita Bongcaron When I was a kid (probably like most kids then), one of the fruits that attracted me to Christmas was an apple. Years passed; my Christmasses gained deeper meanings. The apple also evolved in meaning. In this cyber era, apple is no longer just what I used to know. Steve Jobs gave it a totally different concept. I was browsing a bit about the life of this man Steve Jobs. I was curious if a sense of God got into his technology-filled life, a sense of Christmas, so to speak. I came across this from his biography by Walter Isaacson. Walter says: Jobs announced that he didn’t want to have anything to do with worshipping such a God, and he never went back to church. Reflecting years later on his spiritual feelings, he said that religion was at its best when it emphasized spiritual experiences rather than received dogma. “The juice goes out of Christianity when it becomes too based on faith rather than on living like Jesus or seeing the world as Jesus saw it”, he told me. Steve’s stance is not far from that of a pragmatic seeker, wanting to see evidence of Christ’s presence in the most practical of human situations. At one time or another, we may have sought Christ also this way. We want to feel Christ visibly pulsating in every man who hungers for love. So one of my favorite song goes: Hesus na aking kapatid, sa lupa nami’y bumalik; Iyong mukha’y ibang-iba, hindi kita nakikilala; tulutan mong aking October—December 2013 mata; mamulat sa katotohanan; Ikaw Poon makikilala sa taong mapagkumbaba… Hesus na aking kapatid…punit -punit ang ‘yong damit; sa bukid ka nagtatanim; o sa palengke din naman, ikaw ay naghahanap-buhay… Although we may find some sense in Steve’s search, which we also experience to some degree, we know the limitations of his tenets. We know that our faith is not based solely on a human Christ, but also on the Divine Christ, one whom we can no longer touch as human flesh, yet still felt. The challenge of being incarnate in the world has been entrusted to us, His followers. If Steve were alive, will he find Christ incarnate in us? He searched for relevance in Christianity. I remember that our spirituality as members of the Teresian Association is spirituality of the incarnation. This is so loaded with serious demands of making Christ truly felt through us by those who seek His presence. At times, I fear these demands. Many times, my own human weakness puts me flat on my face. The kind of work that I do in molding young students to be genuine healers often sucks out the best of me. In Nursing, we get to deal with the stark reality of dying & death. The course I teach is Hospice Care, journeying with patients who are at the terminal stage of disease. At times, as my students witness the dwindling of breaths and they cry with bereaved families, I feel my own breath needing to be replenished as I absorb the tension of the process. When a patient at the morgue could not be claimed due to financial constraints & families sign promissory notes to release the body, my students would sometimes ask: Where is Christ here in the hospital system? Isn’t Christ the staunch defender & supporter of the poor? I hold my breath, say a prayer, debrief & guide the students, and once satisfied with some imperfect answers, I allow them to their independent thinking, and give them space to attend to the spiritual needs of patients & families. At dismissal time after they are gone, I run to the Blessed Sacrament & in utter silence stare at the cross & ask like the gipsy in the animated movie version of the Hunchback of Notre Dame “ I don’t know if you can hear me, or if You’re even there; I don’t know if You would listen to a humble prayer; though I know I’m just an outcast, I shouldn’t speak to You; still I ask myself and wonder, were You once an outcast, too?” Ikaw Poon makikilala sa taong mapagkumbaba. Once an outcast, You challenge me to tell people that You walked in our midst, the Emmanuel. Take flesh in me, in all the TA members & make us humble servants. There are still many Steve Jobs in our midst seeking relevance in Christianity. His Apple Co. left so much impact even if he is already gone. Make our Christianity leave an impact as You made in Your earthly existence until now & at the end of forever. I personally interpret Steve Jobs’ symbol of an apple with a bite as a sign of incompleteness, a sign that his genius was still limited, not completely whole. His own humanity left a space which God will fill in, whether he felt that God in his life or not. I bet he felt Him, somehow, somewhere. Isaacson also wrote an anecdote how Jobs somehow alluded to God through some of his favorite songs which were spiritual in nature. An Apple/page 12 Page 11 Preparation In Contrast: The Old Testament and Saint Poveda’s Writings By Mary Jennifer Juezan The history of our faith speaks a lot about Preparation. In the book of Genesis Noah forewarned by God about the great flood that will destroy everything on earth. Thus, he abandoned his worldly attachments, built the Ark and saved his family and two of each kind of the animals. In the story of Joseph, son of Jacob, God gifted him the ability to interpret dreams. When summoned by the Egyptian Pharoah to interpret his dream, Joseph was able to foretell the seven years of abundance and seven years of famine. He then was appointed to manage the production of food which includes the preparation for the next seven years to come. The Messianic prophesies in the Old Testament indicated of the coming of Christ. In Genesis 22:18, God said to Abraham: “And in thy Seed shall all the nations of the earth be blessed; because thou hast obeyed my voice” (Gen. 22:18). On the death bed of Jacob, grandson of Abraham, he spoke about the fate of Judah, saying that it will live with its own leaders until the Shiloh (Councilor who is interpreted as the Messiah), who will end the enmity between man and God. The preparation of the coming of Christ was more pronounced starting from the history of King David when God, through Nathan, promised to establish His kingdom in the personage of his Descendant: “I will establish his throne for ever. I will be his Father, and he shall be my Son” (1 Chron. 17:12-13). Then as we all know the prophets thereafter spoke of this Promise as the history of Christ began. As it reverberates in the history of Christianity as spoken in the Holy Bible, “Preparation” is a very important word in writings of Fr. Pedro Poveda as well. In his context he spoke of Preparation in the task that every Teresian Association member will have to face in carrying out the Work. He said, “Preparation is in- An Apple/from page 11 Lord, as I stare at You each time I visit the Blessed Sacrament, my sins throw me flat on my face. Like an incomplete apple, fill in what is lacking in me, let me be the extension of Your healing presence so that the likes of Steve Jobs will find relevance in Christianity. Steve may not have had a sense of You, the Child born on Christmas day. But other Steve’s still await…in hospital rooms, in rural communities, in asylums, in operating tables, in intensive care units, in hospice facilities, in disaster areas, in my locus of ministry: the young people’s souls seeking to heal other souls. I am an imperfect apple, not whole. Fill me. Use me, so that other Steve’s will see new inventions of apples that give deeper meaning to Christmas. After all, apple is still one of the fruits that reminds me of a beautiful Christmas…an apple with a bite. Page 12 dispensable in order to be equal to the task to be able to give a reason for things, to fulfill our duty, and to carry out the mission.” (Staunch Friends p. 125) He recognizes the complexity of the world and that he requires the members to be relevant in order to be able to reach out. Specifically in his writings he emphasized to the members to pray, evangelize and in everything prepare intellectually. The intellectual preparation of those working in the different areas of knowledge and of profession especially in education. However, Saint Poveda warned that “under no pretext should we allow any human element into something founded in Christ, by Christ and for Christ.” While the Old Testament spoke of the preparation for the coming of the Son of God, Saint Poveda spoke of our preparation to the evangelizing work entrusted to us by Christ. Two different times, yet consistent in foundation. Both founded in Jesus Christ. My Journey/from page 10 guided me and showed me that coming to this place is indeed a good decision. I have this feeling of happiness that somehow I become a part in helping in the mission Saint Pedro Poveda has for the Work. With the significance of Covadonga in the TA, I am more inspired to make Covadonga really meet the expectations and the reasons why this was built. Of course, with the help of St. Pedro Poveda and Our Lady of Covadonga. As the realities of my work continue to unfold everyday, my trust in God also soars because I believe that only God can lighten our load and help us in our endeavors. God is so good, indeed. And Covadonga made me realized that I can do more, that I can conquer my fears as long as I offer to God everything that I do, doing my best and letting God do the rest. I learned to love the place. I am looking forward for a fruitful stay and more beautiful experiences in Covadonga. ACIT Newsletter TA President MAITE URIBE Visits Davao By Ma. Trinidad Tonogbanua TA President, Maite Uribe visited Davao last December 15, 2013 to meet with the local group and to be present for Joni Alingalan’s reception of the Crucifijo. The private celebration of Joni’s reception was followed by a mass concelebrated by Digos (Davao del Sur) Bishop Guillermo Afable, a friend of the Association, and Msgr. Paul Cuison, parish priest of Sacred Heart Parish, to which the Davao Sede belongs. The fact that it was Gaudete Sunday added to the joy and meaning of the celebrations. The dinner that followed was marked with much laughter Seated L-R: Eloisa Maglana (Asesora), Judith Lumactod, Maite Uribe (TA Pres), Prima Hilot. Standing L-R: Sid Porras, Elisa Gonzales, Cris Buyan, Anne Villarba, Liza Lao, Tony Lumactod, TrinaTonogbanua, Liza Vallescas. and camaraderie. After dinner, Maite devoted exclusive time with the ACIT members who shared with her and the group, their life stories, struggles, joys and experiences. It was an enriching session as, once again, the members’ stories brought to the fore the same underlying life-force that moves in them—the Spirit of a loving God and the vision of Saint Pedro Poveda of women and men impelled to be Christ’s witnesses in the ordinary circumstances of their lives. Maite’s Visit to Other Localities Visit to CDO: L-R: Felix la Victoria, EJ Innis, Zalina Aboc (MIT), Maritess Laurilla (LDE participant), Maite Uribe, Agnes Adviento, Cris Peroja, Isay Tancinco (pre-ACIT), Norwin Duay (LDE participant) October—December 2013 Visit to Cebu: L-R Seated: Kathy Lorenzo, Vilma Laranas, Maite Uribe, Tony Laranas, Gigi Bartolo; Standing L-R: Chuck Jugar, Glee de Pio, Geneveve Sy, Jessica Pulvera, Christine Lim, Doris Sy, Linda Ehido, Elka Canete, Elsie Cabahug, May Revecho, Kimberly Dizon, Rolinda Jover, Cherie Mae Aunzo Page 13 With Mary, our companion… Gratitude and thanksgiving, With Teresa of Jesus… Trust and Faith in God, With Josefa Segovia…Strength in the Lord, With Saint Pedro Poveda, we are sent for a mission By Antonio Lumactod October is a month of celebrations for the members of the Teresian Association all over world. In Davao, both members of the Primary Association and ACIT Association gathered in prayer and fellowship on October 13, 2013 from 3:00 o ‘clock in the afternoon to 5:00 PM at Poveda Center at Generoso Street in barrio Obrero to celebrate the following feast days: October 10— birth anniversary of Venerable Josefa Segovia, the Beatification of Saint Pedro Poveda and Blessed Victoria Diez and October 15— the feast day of Saint Teresa of Avila. With the theme: With Mary, our companion…Gratitude and Thanksgiving, With Teresa of Jesus…Trust and Faith in the Lord… With Josefa Segovia…Strength in the Lord and with Saint Pedro Poveda, we are sent for a mission, the prayer and fellowship provided a venue for reflection, sharing of experiences and bonding among the members of the Teresian Association. I invite you to journey in prayer with Mary, Sta.Teresa de Jesus, Venerable Servant of God Josefa Segovia and Saint Pedro Poveda. Find your own sanctuary or sacred space where you find most comfortable to commune with the Triune God in prayer. Introduction: The letter of the year, 2013 by Maite Uribe invites us to welcome Mary as our companion throughout the year. She said and I quote: Page 14 Mary’s attitude, proclaimed in the Magnificat, is what I would like to have as our companion throughout the year 2013, so that we learn from Mary that the God who works marvels in her is the faithful God who commits himself day by day, year by year, to each person and to each generation. “As believers, it is an invitation to believe and proclaim, as Mary did, that God will work marvels, for his mercy is from age to age, from generation to generation, thus, fulfilling the promise made to our ancestors. He is the merciful God who exalts the lowly and fill the hungry with good things, the God of tenderness and faithfulness who enters history to prepare of peace and justice. (Maite Uribe, Letter of the Year 2013). Praying our Spirituality Song: Magnificat First Moment Grace to ask for: (Picture of Mary) With Mary, we ask for the grace of appreciation and thanksgiving for the wondrous deeds the Lord has done for us these past months. Praying with Scripture: “My being proclaims the greatness of the Lord, my spirit finds joy in God my Savior… God who is mighty has done great things for me, holy is his name.” Leader: We contemplate Mary’s words and resonate her experiences. Imagine the setting and listen to Mary expressing her words of appreciation and thanks to the Lord. What do you see? Hear? Smell? Touch? Taste? (pause) I invite you to be calm and serene with Mary. Allow her presence become more real to you now. Enjoy her presence. With Mary’s accompaniment and her words of joy, I invite you to recollect the wondrous deeds that the Lord has done for us these past months. Name and savor the experience. How did God reveal to us? (pause) Our Litany of Praise & Thanksgiving: I invite you to express your prayer of praise and thanksgiving for the marvelous deeds that God has done for you these past months. Response: My soul proclaims the greatness of the Lord! The Almighty works marvels for me! He raises the lowly! He fills the hungry with good things! For the gift of faith that sustains us in moments of emptiness, loneliness and other struggles in life. ® For the gift of associative unity that binds us closer to work for the common mission in the Teresian Association. ® For the gift of persons who have been Your instruments of peace and personal care in our lives. ® For the gift of collaborative effort in formulating the TA 3 year developWith Mary/page 15 ACIT Newsletter With Mary/from page 14 ment Plan in the local level. ® For recognizing our struggles and difficulties and for considering them as challenges and opportunities to make You known in our lives. ® Song: Your Heart Today Second Moment: Grace to ask for: (Picture of Saint Teresa) With SaintTeresa de Jesus, we beg for the graces of trust and faith in God. Praying with Scripture: “Only in God is my soul at rest; from him comes my salvation. He only is my rock and my salvation, my stronghold; I shall not be disturbed at all”(Psalm 62:2-3). Leader: I ask you to remember a particular experience of worries, fears anxieties these past days? How was it for you? What was the prevailing feeling? How did these affect your temper, your feelings, your thinking, your mode of doing and being? When you are filled worries and anxieties, “always remember that your faith and hope should be in God” (1 Pet 1, 21). How did God show his saving and accompanying presence to you during these moments? (pause) As these memories of worries, anxieties and fears become more vivid in your memory, I now invite you to offer these to the Lord begging for the grace of trust and faith. Allow St. Teresa of Avila to be your companion today as she assures you “Let nothing disturb you, God alone suffices.” (pause). “Let nothing disturb you, God October—December 2013 alone suffices.” (pause). “Do not let your hearts be troubled. Have faith in God and faith in me” (John 14:1). Song: Web of Life Third Moment Grace to ask for: (Picture of Josefa Segovia) With Josefa Segovia, we beg for the grace of strength in the Lord Leader: Josefa Segovia journeys with us today as we look back to the past weeks, when we experienced worries, fears and anxieties in our families, in our place of work. Most especially, we were much affected by the recent conflict in Zamboanga. Scriptural Text for Meditation: With Venerable Josefa Segovia, we show our trust in the Lord. “In Him who is the source of my strength I have strength for everything (Philippians 4:13). (Pause) May Josefa Segovia be our exemplar of strength and stronger faith as we meditate her words, “Lord, be my strength for the sake of others, If you sustain me, I can do everything” (Josefa Segovia Inner Yearnings; 2000). (pause) Venerable Josefa Segovia, the embodiment of the Spirit of the Teresian Association Today, we thank the Lord for her gift of person and leadership as the first President of the Teresian Association. On the feast of St. Francis of Assisi on October 10, 1922, Saint Pedro Poveda declared and confessed: “Josefa Segovia, You are the embodiment of the spirit of the Teresian Association.” Our God, the Creator, Redeemer and Sanctifier inspire us to imitate our most admirable Josefa Segovia. In prayer, I invite you to savor and relish Poveda’s words declaration, affirmation and appreciation on her and I quote: “I praise your love of the Blessed sacrament, your faithfulness to prayer; You always reflect, as if you had been born with it.” (pause) “Your fervent desire to receive Jesus and your Eucharistic life.” (pause) “Your veneration for sacred things and the esteem in which you hold them are very evident, as well as the lessons about divine worship that you spread wherever you go.” (pause) “Your humility and passion to notice and live in the presence of God to the highest degree.” (pause) “Your prudence would be enough even for someone who had to govern a congregation.”(pause) “You are most self-sacrificing, without ever appearing to be a victim, or giving signs of the extent of your sacrifice.” (pause) “All the gentleness you lavish on others is turned into austerity for yourself.” (pause) With Mary/page 16 Page 15 With Mary/from page 15 “Regarding honesty, an excellent virtue.” (pause) “Your orderliness is most admirable, and because you are so orderly, by your presence you bring order to everything around you.” (pause) “Your firmness, your equanimity, your fairness, your holy freedom, free from the slightest favouritism, not appearing to be impressionable or emotional because of your selfcontrol and the integrity of your judgements.” (pause) Reflection: Choose one characteristic of Josefa Segovia that best characterizes yourself. Unknowingly and unconsciously, you have lived and practiced her core values. Which of these core values have you lived and practiced? Recall an experience on how it happened? When? Where? How was it for you? How did God reveal to you? or How are you challenged to live the core value or characteristic that you have chosen? (pause) Sharing our stories of life : Tell and narrate your story. We share the fruit of our reflection: Song: You are mine Living Out our Spirituality (Challenge to Action) Fourth Moment: Grace to ask for: (Picture of Pedro Poveda) With St. Pedro Poveda, we are sent for a mission; We must act with [your] our whole heart (Crei Por Esto Hable, p.27). Page 16 Scriptural Text for Meditation: Saint Paul reminds us “Whatever you do, do it with your whole heart. Do it for the Lord rather than for your masters” (Colossians 3:23) (pause) With St. Paul, St. Pedro Poveda also continuously reminds us, “Everything that we do we should do with our whole heart…To be everything, it must include thoughts, words and deeds…Our apostolic mission is founded not to offer human opportunities to young women, nor to teach them and make them cultured, nor to shine in the field of the sciences, but to become holy and lead others to holiness; to train holy teachers capable of saving towns; to educate as Christians those who afterwards in their teaching posts, in the exercise of their respective professions, at home, in society, must be models of virtue, to form a legion of apostles of Christ to extend the reign of Jesus”. Amen (Crei Por Esto Hable). The XVI General Assembly reaffirmed the writings of St. Pedro Poveda the importance of intervening in situations... (altogether) … Where there is vulnerability, exclusion or marginalization, let us offer “our best academic qualifications, of thought, reflection etc. to serve society; … We firmly believe in the healing power of faith-science dialogue. … We believe in Poveda’s teaching, … Where there is living faith, we generate charity which is united with outstanding knowledge, nourished by study and the critical analysis of the destructive systems that threaten millions of people, … let us is offer our commitment work together in the process of social and cultural transformation. …We continuously advocate as agents of Faith-science dialogue who are believers who dare to join forums of social debate and intellectual honestly and competently. Reflection: Looking back to the past months... What specific actions that expressed our commitment to [justice] love and charity in 2013?(Letter of the Year, 2013).(pause) What specific actions have fulfilled our desire to love in deed and truth in 2013? (Letter of the Year, 2013). (pause) Which signs that have accompanied our search for God, our longing for God? (Letter of the Year 2013). (pause) We are sent for a Mission As we go back to our homes, in our place of profession and field of apostolate, let us carry and ponder in our hearts the words of Saint Pedro Poveda which he wrote in 1917. He emphasized to us as founder in the process of developing his work: Poveda’s reminders “You must make a special effort to know the life of Christ well, studying the holy Gospel with love… It is there that you will find the protoptype that you should all imitate. Learn to be humble like Jesus, like Jesus be prudent, strong, patient, kind-hearted, compassionate, charitable. Pray like him and with Him; prepare yourselves for your apostolic mission as the Master prepared himself” (Letter of the With Mary/page 17 ACIT Newsletter With Mary/from page 16 Year 2013, [84] 1917, Selected Writings, No 9, p 35). With Mary, on our road fulfilling Our Mission Filled with passion, joy and enthusiasm, we entrust to the Lord all our personal goals and apostolic plans and dreams for the remaining months. We beg for the grace of becoming more and more conscious of Mary’s presence in our life. Mary, in her Magnificat who continues to accompany us in our travelogue of life as members of the Teresian Association as we say Hail Mary… Hail Mary “All our groups, and associations, families, groupings, projects and every area where we gather and are sent forth on mission, are theological spaces where we can experience God’s love of and the love of our brothers and sisters.” (Maite Uribe, Letter of t the Year, 2013) Closing Prayer As one community renewed by each other’s presence and filled with God’s presence, let us now invoke the guidance and inspiration of the Holy Spirit as we desire to live by the spirit and to walk in the spirit. Let us be inspired by the Holy Spirit to better fulfill our mission. To count once again on the Spirit’s palpable energy and power, we pray together recreating today our petitions as an extended family throughout the word. (Altogether) Come, Spirit that sustains our vocation Come and [consolidate] inspire the members of the Teresian Association Come, strength of those who believe Come and open our whole being to the God of life Come and animate our testimony Come and lift us up to a life more in accordance with the wishes of God Come and confess with our lips that Coming Home/from page 9 for you a future full of hope, not of sadness or woe.” (Jeremiah 29:11) And from the Book of Revelation, “New Heaven and New Earth. Behold God makes all things new (Revelation 21:5).” Back Home— A Joyful Arrival Jo Anne and I arrived home at around 9 o’clock in the evening of Sunday, November 17, 2013. Yes, we were physically tired from the trip; however, the Spirit of God inflamed my heart to sing joyfully of the goodness of the Lord as we have visited and touched the lives of two couples in Covadonga. With Mary in her Magnificat, I invite you to celebrate God’s goodness as we pray; “My being proclaims the greatness of the Lord, my spirit finds joy in God my savior For He has looked upon his servant in her lowliness All ages to come shall call me blessed God who is mighty has done great things for me, holy is his name.” (Luke 1:46-49). October—December 2013 Jesus is Lord Come to the structures of our world and fill them with your light Come to all of us, builders of human society, so that it will be one of fellowship Come to the poor who await you Come to those who can give more so that others may live Come and give movement to those who are paralyzed Come and help our hearts to give a generous “yes” Come and destroy fear and distrust Come and convert us in loving consolation Come, Spirit that came upon Mary Come and make of us a house [and a community] that welcomes God’s plan Come to our family which looks for you and needs you Come, Spirit of holiness Come and carry forward the work begun (Aguado, Aranzazu, To the Ends of the Earth, 1998). Closing Song: Send us your Spirit Let us pray the Prayer for the Families O Mary, Grant our families the grace of loving and respecting life from the first moment of its existence – from the moment of conception. May we love with the same love, the love you had when you bore your Son Jesus, the Son of God. Blessed Virgin Mary, Mother of Faith and Love, protect our families and give us the grace of unity, charity and of sound education of children. Grant to each one in our family the desire for sanctity. Raise up in our family sons and daughters, who will become true children of God. Mary our hope, look with compassion on all families. (Blessed John Paul, Mexico, 1989) Page 17 God Makes/from page 1 tional Conference on New Evangelization, I was filled with enthusiasm and joy to listen to the different speakers, to meet new friends and old acquaintances, to encounter the Lord through the various activities and rituals and, hopefully, to be set afire with the gifts of the Holy Spirit to become an agent in the new evangelization. Indeed, the first day was a real personal encounter with Jesus through the various religious activities: The Misa ng Bayan, the Heart to Heart Conversation with Cardinal Tagle, Streams of Encounter with God: Prayer Experience and the Eucharistic Adoration with Taize Prayer. The morning began with the joyful and meaningful celebration of the Holy Eucharist using the Misa ng Bayan. Integrating our Filipino customs and popular devotions into the Misa ng Bayan made me appreciate deeply our values and attitudes as Filipinos and, most specially, our Catholic faith and tradition. Truly, faith and music are the Filipinos’ wealth! The Veneration of the Cross at the beginning of the Mass to me was very meaningful. It is through the Cross that we have been redeemed by Jesus Christ. On that day also, the Crucified Christ reminded me of the sufferings of our brothers and sisters in Bohol and Cebu, who were hit by the earthquake with a 7.2 magnitude on October 15. As a congregation, we offered special prayers of hope for the victims of the said earthquake. The Heart to Heart Conversation with Cardinal Tagle left a great impression on me since I was able to listen to the invited guests, representing the media, non-government organizations, youth, Catechists and Page 18 other lay people in civil society. Carto compose and recollect my experidinal Tagle asked the guests, “Ano ence of the first day of the conference. ang gusto n’yong ipaparating sa atIn these recollected moments, I aling mga Church leaders today?” lowed myself to be embraced by Jesus This question also made me reflect who invited me to come and see… to on how I can creatively respond to dine with him in the Eucharist that the challenge of new evangelization morning, to listen to him during the Heart to Heart Conversation with Caras a formator and catechist. dinal and to be nourished by Him in I was struck most with the experithe Streams of Encounter with God: ence shared by the female catechist Prayer Experience. from Palawan. Her story was very As I left the Quadricentennial hall touching because, despite the limitations and other difficulties such as that afternoon, I asked myself “Why lack of books and catechetical materidid the first day of the Conference als, she showed industry, perseverstart with Prayer?” I guess, it is very ance, and passion in her work. This important to consider that we can only made me realize how blest I am as a be a genuine and effective evangelizer Catechist working in a private Cathoof faith if we have established first an lic University. intimate relationship with our Lord. In the afternoon, Bishop Ted BaEverything we do springs from a real cani led us into prayer-contemplation of Mary’s Magnificat. It was an afencounter with the Lord in prayer. ternoon of praying with Mary in her God Makes/page 19 Magnificat that I allowed myself to see, sense, feel and rediscover the Day 2: wondrous deeds 2nd Phase: “Stay with us” (Like 24:29) that the Lord has done for me “We encounter Jesus in the Church through these through the Word and the Eucharist” years. Like Mary accounting the The PCNE highlighted the Scriptures and the goodness of God Liturgy, provided the participants moments to in her life, the strengthen bonds of communion with each other prayer experience so that they can relive the experience of the disled me to recogciples of Emmaus in the context of new evangenize all the blesslization. ings I received Activities: Morning Praise from the Lord. Conference on Popular Devotions and God indeed is so the New Evangelization with Fr. Catagood and generlino Arevalo, SJ Testimonies: Hosts: ous! Boots Anson Roa and Fr. Nono AlThe day ended fonso, SJ well for all of us Pathways of Communion and Rethrough the Eucharistic Adoranewal tion with Taize Eucharistic Celebration Archbishop Prayer. Praising, Jose S. Palma singing and mediConcert of the Millennium tating the Words of God helped me ACIT Newsletter God Makes/from page 18 The first day of the PCNE prepared me very well for the second day of conference. The second day highlighted the theme “We encounter Jesus in the Church through the Word and the Eucharist. With the Scriptural passage, “Stay with us,” the experience of the two disciples on the road to Emmaus from the Gospel of Luke was the prevailing story of the day. The talk of Fr. Catalino Arevalo, SJ on Popular Devotions and Evangelization was very comprehensive and moving. He emphasized the importance of imagination as a means to renewed evangelization. More significant is the use of the five senses (seeing, feeling, hearing, smelling, tasting) when we pray to connect with God whom we cannot see physically. In Contemplative prayer, we tap our five senses to commune with God. In context, he recalled that after 50 years of the Church’s renewal through Vatican II, the faith of the Filipino remains stable and steadfast through popular devotions. The praying of the Rosary, our devotion to the Saints through the statues and novenas, our religious gestures and other forms of popular devotions make our faith more alive. Through these practices, we Filipinos have maintained our sense of connectedness with the Divine- with the Triune God. Similarly, this holds true in Latin America for the last fifty years. The talk on popular devotions was followed by spiritual conversations hosted by Boots Anson Roa and Fr. Nono Alfonso, SJ. I was evangelized by the faith testimonies on popular devotions of the followOctober—December 2013 ing invited guests: Archbishop Leonardo Legaspi, OP to Ina, Our Lady of Peñafrancia in Bicol; Msgr. Clemencio Ignacio and Coco Martin to Black Nazarene in Baclaran; Judy Ann Santos to Our Lady of Manaog and Christopher de Leon to San Lorenzo Ruiz. The Pathways of Communion and Renewal in the afternoon provided food for the mind through the various concurrent sessions in the areas of spirituality, theology, politics, environmental care, laity’s involvement in the parish, etc. What were the challenges posed to me at the end of the second day? As Catechist and formator, I am most challenged to prepare meaningful and contextualized form of prayer materials. Better preparation of liturgies and communal prayers are key elements to new evangelization. Sacred spaces for individual and communal prayer must be planned very well. These preparations are important factors to provide people avenues to be more imaginative in communing with the Lord in prayer. On the third day of the Conference, the activities challenged us to go and “put out into the deep.” This is a call for every evangelizer! The Assisi Revisited: Inter-faith prayer for peace organized by the Focolare Movement was very touching. Invited religious leaders from other Faiths were asked to speak on how we, as one people of God, can work for unity, dialogue and communion. At the end of the prayer and speeches, Cardinal Tagle’s gesture of reconciliation and forgiveness with other religious leaders was a genuine expression of peace and dialogue. It was another Assisi experience! The second part of the third day conference was the testimonies given by Bishops and selected lay personparticipants from Taiwan, Hongkong, Indonesia, Malaysia, Japan and other countries. Again, we were re-evangelized by the inspiring testimonies of Bishops and lay missionaries—Catechists and evangelizers of faith. Faith becomes more alive in countries where Catholics are a minority. The Holy Eucharist, presided by God Makes/page 20 Day 3: “Duc in Altum” - “Go…And Preach the Gospel To the Whole of Creation” (Mark 16:15) (Mission and Spirituality) The PCNE provided the participants avenues of inspiration and directions imbued with the spirit of mission so that they can hear more clearly the words of Jesus: “Duc in altum” or “Put out into the deep!’ Activities: Assisi Revisited: Interfaith Prayer for Peace Missionary Dimension of Evangelization with Cardinal Tagle Testimonies: Bishops and selected lay persons from Taiwan, Hongkong, Indonesia, Malaysia, Japan and other countries Wellsprings of Hope – Evaluation Closing Eucharist Message of Pope Francis Mission Sending Page 19 God Makes/from page 19 Cardinal Luis Antonio Tagle, culminated the third day of the Conference. Seemingly, it was an Eschatological experience. Candles were lighted as we sang the recessional hymn. We were ignited and set afire with the lighting of the candles. At the end of the recessional hymn, Cardinal Tagle Laiko/from page 1 into consideration that the year 2014 has been named as the Year of the Laity. This is part of the Church's 9year preparation for the celebration of the 500th Anniversary of the first Mass and Baptism held in the Philippines. The Year of the Laity will start on the first Sunday of Advent, December 01, 2013 and will end on the Solemnity of Christ the Kind on November 23, 2014. The theme is: Called to be holy… sent forth as heroes. “The focus will not only be on the universal call to holiness but also on the universal call to restore all things in Christ. Holiness must lead to social engagement. The target priorities are the hurting and disillusioned Christians, the marginalized sectors of our society,” explained the Bishop. Since many of the participants of this Laiko convention were not able to attend the PCNE, Most Reverend Mercado made a quick overview of the three-day event as a prelude to his talk. The first day of the PCNE focused on "Who is Jesus?", with the biblical texts "Come and see" and “We have seen the Lord” as it's binding theme. The day's activities aimed to awaken the sensitivity of the participants to a God who has a face and a human heart. "Stay with us, Lord" Page 20 instructed us to encode in our cell phone the Scriptural passage “Behold, God makes all things new” (Rev 25:4) and to send it to our families, friends and colleagues in different parts of the globe. A new method to evangelize others! What a beautiful experience! At the end of the three-day conference experience, I reflected: Were not our hearts burning as Jesus invited us to “Come and See”, as we invited Him to “Stay with us” on the road to Emmaus and as He challenged us, with vigor and renewed spirit, “Let us put out our nets into the deep”? Let us go back to our own Jerusalem and announce the Gospel of Joy, “the Lord is Risen!” and “God is with us” were the biblical texts for the 2nd day. It's activities showed the many ways people have been touched by our Lord and how they have been strengthened in faith through their personal devotions. A concert for the young was held in the evening. For the 3rd day, "Go and preach the Gospel" and "Here I am, Lord, send me" were the Biblical texts. Here, the universality of the Church is revealed and how God speaks even to non-Christians. Challenging now the Laiko on how to respond to the New Evangelization, Most Reverend Mercado showed a thought-provoking video that can be found in this internet address vimeo.com/24570032, showing the 4Ls needed for today's Disciples love, liberate, lead and launch; to love especially the marginalized, to liberate those who are in bondage, to lead by humility in order to form disciples, who can also be launched or sent to spread the good news, sharing new experiences with new methods, new expression, new fervor. The Catholic Bishops of the Philippines has mandated the Sangguniang Laiko ng Pilipinas to prepare programs capable of forming the laity to respond to the call to holiness, ready to be sent forth with the willingness to give up one's life when asked for. The second chal- lenge for the Sangguniang Laiko ng Pilipinas is to finish making its Statutes so that it can be clear to all members the reason for the organization’s existence, its identity and mission. A workshop was facilitated in the afternoon wherein everyone was asked to answer three questions: What was your strongest personal encounter with God? How did you respond to the love and how did it change your life? How can you spread this love with new ardor, method and expression? These were the answers gathered on the first question: near death experience, bottom pit experience, meeting the destitute, meeting The Lord in the Sacraments, miraculous experiences. For the second question: the experience made them wounded healers, church volunteers, grow stronger in faith and commitment, become more humble, forgiving and tolerant, realizing the importance of family over profession. Answers to the third question are as follows: using the social media, teaching livelihood, spreading the PCNE learning to listen more than preaching, evangelizing through film showing and networking with other organizations. An election was held for 15 new members of the Board of Trustees. Rosa Basas was elected as a member of the Board. ACIT Newsletter