Sunday, 28 June 2015

Three tips to be an awesome Priest

Three Tips to be an Awesome Priest

“If you really want to be an awesome priest, I suggest you 3 things:

Be secure with your identity,

Build genuine Human Relationships and Dialogue and

Stand up for things you feel are not right (diplomacy does not help).” Marina D’Costa  

        The above quoted words make me think and reflect about my life as a consecrated religious. One day as Api Marina D’Costa and I were chatting, she gave me 3 tips “to be an awesome priest.” Even after many days these points keep lingering in my mind, so I decide to share with Fr. Anthony, a good friend of mine. The sharing lasts for two hours. Here I would like to put down the fruit of the dialogue on the three suggestions to be a good priest.

Be secure with your identity:  

 Father Anthony asked me: ‘What is your identity?’ I replied, ‘son of God.’ Again he asked, ‘who gave you birth?’ My Parents, I answered. He said to me, “if you love your parents, brothers and sisters, you are deeply human. And your first identity is to be truly human. He adds, grace is built on nature.” I agree whatever he said because only good human person can also be a good religious. In the context of religious life, prayer is important, without which one can be lost in the work and later questions one’s own identity. Jesus himself sets a good example: “In the morning, while it was still very dark, he got up and went out to a deserted place, and there he prayed” (Mark 1:35). In another passage we find: “He appointed twelve, whom he also named apostles, to be with Him, and to be sent out to proclaim the message” (Mark 3:14). “I am the Vine, you are the branches. Those who abide in me and I in them bear much fruit, because apart from me you can do nothing” (John 15:5). Indeed, a monk who does not pray is sure to undergo identity crisis.

Build genuine Human Relationships and Dialogue:  

Jesus’ final commandment: “Love one another as I have loved you” (John 15:12). He also mentions: “I give you a new commandment, that you love one another. Just as I have loved you, you also should love one another. By this everyone will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another” (John 13:34-35). Jesus clearly calls for genuine love relationship; to love as He loves. A person who is sure of his identity will be able to build good human relationships. Daily personal prayer will purify one’s soul and heart to love God and people more and more. Building genuine human relationship is not a safe state, one may fail many times but the humility to strive towards it should be kept alive.  

Stand up for things you feel are not right (diplomacy does not help):

 “Before I formed you in the womb I knew you, and before you were born I consecrated you; I appointed you a prophet to the nations.” (Jer 1:4). One of the tasks of a prophet is to speak up for the truth. However, one should keep in mind that every person has good side and bad side, so one has to be very polite and prudent in pointing out the mistakes and wrongs. However, if one seeks for cheap popularity and fails to tell the right thing then the purpose of being a religious is defeated.
  These threefold values are not achieved once and for all. They are to be consciously strived for. They are interconnected and the success in the 1st step will lead to the growth in the second and the third steps respectively. Similarly, identity crisis will lead to the downfall in human relationships and inner principles.

At the end of the day, what counts is love. How much one loves? St. Paul beautifully explains the meaning of love: “If I speak in the tongues of mortals and of angels, but do not have love, I am a noisy gong or a clanging cymbal. And if I have prophetic powers, and understand all mysteries and all knowledge, and if I have all faith, so as to remove mountains, but do not have love, I am nothing. If I hand over my body so that I boast, but do not have love, I gain nothing. Love is patient; love is kind; love is not envious or boastful or arrogant or rude. It does not insist on its own way; it is not irritable or resentful; it does not rejoice in wrongdoing, but rejoices in the truth. It bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things” (I Corinthians 13:1-7).

Don Bosco says, “Learn to make yourself loved.” Love is so important in human relationship. How does one acquire this energy to love? It is received from the time spent before the Lord. It is the love that comes from within; the overflowing love of God. The three principles can be summed up in one word: “Christ’s Love.” 

Everthing for Christ’s love.  

Inthanmei Scotland mei pui Margaret

Inthanmei Scotland mei pui Margaret

Inthanmei Margaret hei tinkum 1045, Hungary tu mei bam khou puan lou khuan nge. Kapu jan ruai na Edward Atheling tu na kau we. Kapu hei England mei Guang bam lin nimei the. Kapui jan ruai na Agatha tu na kao we. Agatha hei Hungary mei tuang Guang nah ye. Kumna Margaret hei English mei tuang guang nah khuan nge. Norman mei nun ruai England mei ta rih ngam khuan the tingkum 1066 khou. Kum ti pui jang ruai kakai kaikhun Scotland khou tei tat khuan the. Tingkum 1070 khou tei Margaret hei tinkum 25 tang khuan the. Kamei hei Malcom Canmore, Scotland mei tuang guang nou su khuan the. Margaret hei pei na rah lum mei pui khuan nge. Kamei ruai ni lungsi rianra mei nun ta kha lou pui tan peina tan lou khuan nge. Kanah katummei Scotland mei tuang Guang su khuan ne, kumna kanah tunapui ni England mei tuang Guang nou su khuan nge.  

Margaret kaghan ti hei peina tikalai lou khuan nge. Kamei ruai kaghan khang Bible ni pa lou khuan nge. Kumna kamei hei Church kalummei tuang tan duan kaguai na khou tei pei na lunggut na tan lou we. Kaghan akhatni kanha nun guai- kadai suna kanah ganlou liangmei David I- hei Guang  gai mei akhatni inthan mei nun chapat ngam khuan ne. Margaret hei pei na inthanne, kumna kakheiliak ni pei na gai khuan ne, kumti pui jang ruai kaghan tani kamei ruai tikalia lou the, kumna Scotland guandi ta ni gaimei cheng khou tei jai lou khuan nge.  

Kamei hei lungsi mei nun akhatni puipu mak mei nha nun khang nap ti tulou khuan nge. Kumna lungsi mei phai ni khu we, Jesu Christa tan mei lou mei ti kum ma. Jipmang khou ni rah kalum khang thao thao khuan nge. Kamei rah kalum khang kagan gei na tipat re, inthan mei larik nun ni gei na pakhuan ne, kumna church tuang phei nun ni lung gut na hui lou we.  

Kaghan Malcolm le kanha ganthao mei, Edward hei Alnwick rhi khou ruai thei the. Mi pau tei chu lou khou ruai ni kapum suanmei tei ni hian kulana kamei ni jang nei thum pui nei tang thai the. Kumna kata Dunfermline Anney tumei bam khou phum lou ka the. Kamei ti hei Pope Innocent IV ruai tingkum 1250 khou tei inthanmei the tuna daolou the. Kamei hei Scotland mei tuang jao sinlou bamei inthan mei the.  

Asei hei Kamei tati hei aniu tuang Church ruai Pui nun guai khang kadai su na Inthanmei lulung tei lung ngam khang tu na dao lou tuang the.  

Inthanmei Margaret, aniu guai kaikhun khang kalum lou wo!

Saint Margaret of Scotland

Saint Margaret of Scotland

St. Margaret was born in 1045 in Hungary. Her parents were Edward Atheling, heir to the English throne and Princess Agatha of Hungary. She was the English princess. Norman conquered England in 1066 so the family left for the Kingdom of Scotland. In 1070, at the age of 25, Margaret married the king of Scotland, Malcolm Canmore. She was a pious woman, and she established many charity centres. Three of her sons became kings of Scotland and a daughter became a queen of England.

She influenced her husband Malcolm by reading him stories from the Bible. She was concerned about the worship of the church. Her husband and children – especially her youngest son, later David I – also to became just and holy rulers. Queen Margaret was a strong, pure, noble character, who had very great influence over her husband, and through him over Scottish history, especially in ecclesiastical aspects.

She attended to charitable works, serving orphans and the poor every day and washing the feet of the poor in imitation of Christ. She rose at midnight every night to attend church services. She spent much of her time in prayer, devotional reading, and ecclesiastical embroidery.

Her husband, Malcolm III and her eldest son, Edward died in the battle of Alnwick on November 1093. After three days, she too died and was buried in Dunfermline Anney. She was canonized in 1250 by Pope Innocent IV and named patron of Scotland in 1673.

Today she stands as the shinning model for all Christians especially for the mothers.

St. Margaret of Scotland, Pray for us!

Friday, 26 June 2015

Silence

Silence...

“People talking without speaking,
People hearing without listening,
People writing songs that voices...”

This is a prophetic song. These days you see two people sitting in a park but each one is busy with the phone. One talks with a person who is far away, but one fails to speak to the neighbour. How many times we hear and not listen.

How often people like music to be always by their side: study, games, rest, meals, sleep, and in personal rooms. Is there fear of silence? Does silence make one in touch with himself or herself? 

Simon and Garfunkel were an American folk rock duo consisting of singer-songwriter Paul Simon and singer Art Grafunkel. They were one of the most popular groups of the 1960s, and were viewed as counterculture icons of the decade’s social revolution, alongside artists such as the Beatles and Bob Dylan.

This song was written in Feb. 1964. Paul Simon took six months to write the lyrics, which are about man’s lack of communication with his fellow man. He averaged one line a day.

The song contains right words and right melody. It is worth spending in contemplating the depth in those very fine lines.

Here are the lines of the song:  

"The Sound Of Silence"

Hello darkness, my old friend,
I've come to talk with you again,
Because a vision softly creeping,
Left its seeds while I was sleeping,
And the vision that was planted in my brain
Still remains Within the sound of silence.

In restless dreams I walked alone
Narrow streets of cobblestone,
'Neath the halo of a street lamp,
I turned my collar to the cold and damp
When my eyes were stabbed by the flash of a neon light
That split the night And touched the sound of silence.

And in the naked light I saw
Ten thousand people, maybe more.
People talking without speaking,
People hearing without listening,
People writing songs that voices never share
And no one dared Disturb the sound of silence.

"Fools," said I, "You do not know –
Silence like a cancer grows.
Hear my words that I might teach you.
Take my arms that I might reach you."
But my words like silent raindrops fell
And echoed in the wells of silence

And the people bowed and prayed
To the neon god they made.
And the sign flashed out its warning
In the words that it was forming.
And the sign said, The words of the prophets are written on the subway walls And tenement halls
And whispered in the sound of silence.  

(Thank You Friar Sidney J. Mascarenhas for sharing with me this inspiring song.)

Honesty! Walk with me

Honesty! You are welcome

Human beings tend to go beyond material and words in relationship. It takes courage to be true to ourselves and with everyone. The need for trust and honesty arises when relationship goes deeper. Just think to how many people you can really share your feelings and inner thoughts. How is that a person gets a lover but not honesty?

“Honesty is such a lonely word.” Looking within oneself and the society around us, one can see that honesty is disregarded. However, deep within one’s heart everyone longs for honesty. Sometimes functional relationship takes precedence over genuine relationship, when the other is treated in terms of productivity.

Yes, one can built a mansion, buy large plot of land, accumulate huge sum of money and so on and so forth. But at the end of the day, one longs for someone to whom one can trust. This deep thirst cannot be satisfied with material value but only with genuine human touch, that is, honesty.

There are many people who are sincerely seeking for meaning in relationships, work-place, school, hospital, religion, marriage, family, association, organization, and society at large.

The song “Honest” is one of the masterpieces of an American singer and song writer, Billy Joel in 1978. This song challenges the listener....will you let down your brother and sister, who silently beg you to be honest with them.  

"Honesty"

If you search for tenderness
It isn't hard to find
You can have the love you need to live
But if you look for truthfulness
You might just as well be blind
It always seems to be so hard to give

Honesty is such a lonely word
Everyone is so untrue
Honesty is hardly ever heard
And mostly what I need from you

I can always find someone
To say they sympathize
If I wear my heart out on my sleeve
But I don't want some pretty face
To tell me pretty lies
All I want is someone to believe

Honesty is such a lonely word
Everyone is so untrue
Honesty is hardly ever heard
And mostly what I need from you

I can find a lover
I can find a friend
I can have security
Until the bitter end
Anyone can comfort me
With promises again I know, I know

When I'm deep inside of me
Don't be too concerned
I won't ask for nothin' while I'm gone
But when I want sincerity
Tell me where else can I turn
Cause you're the one that I depend upon

Honesty is such a lonely word
Everyone is so untrue
Honesty is hardly ever heard
And mostly what I need from you  

(Thanks Friar Sidney J. Mascarenhas for sharing with me this insightful song. This song is the true cry of humanity for building genuine human relationships.)

Let’s invite honesty personally and in our society.... Honesty! Walk with us....

You are a beautiful Rose!!!

You are a beautiful rose!!!  

The seed is within you.....in the winter of your life, the seed is beneath you and with the sun’s love you will surely bloom in the spring.  

Bette Midler (born December 1, 1945), also known by her informal stage name The Divine Miss M, is an American singer, songwriter, actress, comedian, and film producer. The song “The Rose” was performed in the year 1981 and won the Grammy Award for Best Female Pop Vocal Performance.  

“The Rose” is a classic pop song written by Amanda McBroom in 45 minutes and made famous by Bette Midler who recorded it for the soundtrack of the 1979 film The Rose in which it plays under the closing credits.  

"The Rose"
Some say love, it is a river
That drowns the tender reed.
Some say love, it is a razor
That leaves your soul to bleed.
Some say love, it is a hunger,
An endless aching need.
I say love, it is a flower,
And you its only seed.

It's the heart afraid of breaking
That never learns to dance.
It's the dream afraid of waking
That never takes the chance.
It's the one who won't be taken,
Who cannot seem to give,
And the soul afraid of dyin'
That never learns to live.

When the night has been too lonely
And the road has been too long,
And you think that love is only
For the lucky and the strong,
Just remember in the winter
Far beneath the bitter snows
Lies the seed that with the sun's love
In the spring becomes the rose.  

What is love according to you? It may depend on your experience.....The composer, Amanda McBroom,  says: “Love is a flower and you its only seed.”  

How can we learn to live?
As one tries to progress in life, one may encounter many tough times, bitter experiences, hard-times, and risks.  However, it is one who dares to face and accept the reality that grows.  

How can you discover your true worth?
Life may be mysterious and unsure. But, it is the love that we have for one another that will sustain us in our life’s journey. The present may turn out to be a severe winter and one may think that ‘it is all over.’  

Stop and listen to these words of the song “The Rose”:
“Just remember in the winter
Far beneath the bitter snows
Lies the seed that with the sun’s love
In the spring becomes the rose.”


You are the seed that holds a beautiful rose......  
Thank You Friar Sidney J. Mascarenhas, O.F. M.  For sharing with me this beautiful song.......You are a beautiful Rose!  

The world is a garden of beautiful roses.....You and I are part of it!

Maximum Happiness

Maximum Happiness!!!

This afternoon as I was glancing a book called You by Fulton J. Sheen, I was thrilled with the insight that was in the book. Fulton’s uses down to earth example here to convey something transcendent. Hope you too enjoy and gain from this message...

“Anyone who gives freedom to another assumes great risks, whether it be a parent to a child or a Creator to a creature. In a certain sense, even God took a great risk when He made man free, for the very freedom to become a child of God implied the possibility of becoming a rebel.

Since God made us free to choose what is right, we are also free to choose the wrong. We too often interpret freedom as the right to break God’s commandments. When you buy an automobile, the manufacturer will give you a set of instructions. He will tell you the pressure to which you ought to inflate you tires, the kind of oil your ought to use in the crankcase, and the proper fuel to put in the gas tank really, he has nothing against you because he gives you these instructions, as God had nothing against you in giving you His commandment. The manufacturer wants to be helpful: he is anxious that you get the maximum utility out of the car. And God is more anxious that you get the maximum happiness out of life. That is why He gives you commandments.

Sunday, 21 June 2015

Are You Happy?

     Fulton J. Sheen was a man of deep faith and intelligence. In this sharing, he talks about happiness. After reading this short note on hapiness, I decided to share with you as it is, so, because it is uplifting and inspiring. Hope you gain from this article...

Are you Happy?   Are you perfectly happy? Or are you still looking for happiness? There can be no doubt that at one time or another in your life you attained that which you believed would make you happy. When you got what you wanted, were you happy?  

Do you remember when you were a child, how ardently you looked forward to Christmas? How happy you thought you would be, with your fill of cakes, your hands glutted with toys and your eyes dancing with the lights on the tree!  

Christmas came, and after you had eaten your fill, blown out the last Christmas candle, and played till your toys no longer amused, you climbed into your bed and said, in your own little heart of hearts, that somehow or other it did not quite come up to your expectations. And have you not lived that experience over a thousand times since? You looked forward to the joys of travel, but when your weary feet carried you home you admitted that the two happiest days were that day you left home and the day you got back.

  Perhaps it was marriage you thought which would bring you perfect happiness. Even though it did bring a measure of happiness, you admit that you now take your companion’s love for granted. One is never thirsty at the border of the well. Perhaps it was wealth you wanted. You got it, and now you are afraid of losing it. “A golden bit does not make the better horse.” Maybe it was a desire to be well-known that you craved. You did become well-known only to find that reputation is like a ball; as soon as it starts rolling, men begin to kick it around.

  The fact is: you want to be perfectly happy, but you are not. Your life has been a series of disappointments, shocks, and disillusionments. How have you reacted to your disappointments? Either you became cynical or else you became religious. If you became cynical, you blamed things, rather than yourself. If you were married you said: “If I had another husband, or another wife, I would be happy.” Or you said: “If I had another job...”; or, “If I visited another nightclub...”; or, “If I were in another city, I would be happy.” In every instance, you made happiness extrinsic to yourself. No wonder you are never happy. You are chasing mirages until death overtakes you. But cynicism did not work, because in seeking pleasures you missed the joys of life. Pleasure is of the body; joy is of the mind and heart. Lobster Newburg gives pleasure to certain people, but not even the most avid lobster fans would ever say that it made them joyful. You can quickly become tired of pleasures, but you never tire of joys. A pleasure can be increased to a point where it ceases to be a pleasure; it may even begin to be a pain if carried beyond a certain pint; for example, tickling or drinking. But the joy of a good conscience, or the joy of a First Communion, or the discovery of a truth, never turns to pain.

  Furthermore, have you noticed that as your desire for pleasure increased, the satisfaction from the pleasure decreased? Do you think a philosophy of life is right that is based on the law of diminishing returns?

  You think you are having a good time; but time really is the greatest obstacle in the world to happiness, not only because it makes you take pleasures successively, but also because you are never really happy until you are unconscious of the passing of time! The more you look at the clock, the less happy you are! The more you enjoy yourself, the less conscious you are of the passing of time. You say, “Time passed like everything.” Maybe, therefore, your happiness has something to do with the eternal! The other reaction to disappointment is much more reasonable. It begins by asking: “Why am I disappointed?”; and then, “How can I avoid it?”  

Why are you disappointed? Because of the tremendous disproportion between your desires and your realizations. Your soul has a certain infinity about it, because it is spiritual. But your body, like the world about you, is material, limited, “cabined, cribbed, confined.” You can imagine a mountain of gold, but you will never see one. In like manner, you look forward to some earthly pleasure, or position, or state of like, and once you attain it you begin to feel the tremendous disproportion between the ideal you imagined and the reality you possess. Disappointment follows. Every earthly ideal is lost by being possessed. The more material your ideal, the greater the disappointment; the more spiritual it is, the less the disillusionment.

  Having discovered why you are disappointed, you take the next step of trying to avoid disappointments entirely. You ask yourself: “What do I desire above all things?” You want perfect life, and perfect truth, and perfect love. Nothing short of the infinite satisfies you, and to ask you to be satisfied with less would be to destroy your nature. You want life, not for two more years, but always; you want to know all truths, not the truths of economics alone, to the exclusion of history. You also want love without end. All the poetry of love is a cry, a moan, and a weeping. The more pure it is, the more it pleads; the more it is lifted above the earth, the more it laments.

  With your feet on earth, you dream of heaven; creature of time, you despise it; flower of a day, you seek to eternalize yourself. Why do you want Life, Truth, Love, unless you were made for them? How could you enjoy the fractions unless there were a whole? Where do they come from? Where is the source of light in the city street at noon? Not under autos, buses, nor the feet of trampling throngs, because their light is mingled with darkness. If you are to find the source of light you must go out to something that has no admixture of darkness or shadow, namely, to pure light, which is the sun. In like manner, if you are to find the source of Life, Truth, and Love, you must go out to a life that is not mingled with its shadow, death; to a Truth not mingled with its shadow, error; and to a Love not mingled with its shadow, hate. You go out to something that is Pure Life, Pure Truth, Pure Love, have been disappointed is because you have not yet found Him!  

It is God you are looking for. Your unhappiness is not due to your want of a fortune, or high position, or fame, or sufficient vitamins; it is due not to a want of something outside you, but to a want of something inside you. You cannot satisfy a soul with husks! If the sun could speak, it would say that it was happy when shining; if a pencil could speak it would say that it was happy when writing – for these were the purposes for which they were made. You were made for perfect happiness. That is your purpose. No wonder everything short of God disappoints you.

  But have you noticed that when you realize you were made for Perfect Happiness, how much less disappointing the pleasures of earth become? You cease expecting to get silk purses out of sow’s ears. Once you realize that God is your end, you are not disappointed, for you put no more hope in things than they can bear You cease looking for first – rate joys where there are only tenth – rate pleasures.

  You begin to see that friendship, the joys of marriage, the thrill of possession, the sunset and the evening star, masterpieces of art and music, the gold and silver of earth, the industries and the comforts of life, are all gifts of God. He dropped them on the roadway of life, to remind you that if these are so beautiful, then what must be Beauty! He intended them to be bridges to cross over to Him. After enjoying the good things of life you were to say: “If the spark of human love is so bright then what must be the Flame!”  

Unfortunately, many become so enamoured of the gifts the great Giver of Life has dropped on the roadway of life that they build their cities around the gift, and forget the Giver; and when the gifts, out of loyalty to their Maker, fail to give them perfect happiness, they rebel against God and become cynical and disillusioned.  

Change your entire point of view! Life is not a mockery. Disappointments are merely markers on the road of life, saying: “Perfect happiness is not here.” Though your passions may have been satisfied, you were never satisfied, because while your passions can find satisfaction in this world, you cannot. Start with your own insufficiency and begin a search for perfection. Begin with your own emptiness and seek Him who can fill it.  

Look at your heart! It tells the story of why you were made. It is not perfect in shape and contour, like a Valentine Heart. There seems to be a small piece missing out of the side of every human heart. That may be to symbolize a piece that was torn out of the Heart of Christ which embraced all humanity on the Cross. But I think the real meaning is that when God made your human heart, He found it so good and so lovable that He kept a small sample of it in heaven. He sent the rest of it into this world to enjoy his gifts, and to use them as stepping stones back to Him, but to be ever mindful that you can never love anything in this world with your whole heart because you have not a whole heart, in order to be really peaceful, in order to be really wholehearted, you must go back again to God to recover the piece He has been keeping for you from all eternity!  

(Address delivered on December 3, 1944 by Fulton J Sheen)