Gospel:
Matthew 16: 21-27
“For
whoever wishes to save his life will lose it, but whoever
loses
his life for my sake will find it.”
For
Christ’s sake
By Bishop Precioso D. Cantillas, SDB, DD
Every day of our life here on earth
is a step towards our grave, the place where we will have lost our life. We may
not think of the losing this aspect of life at the end while we go about our
daily routine of activities. We focus more on the life at hand and enjoy what
the present brings us. Yet, it would also be reasonable and in order to foresee
the end, whether we find a new beginning, a new life. Jesus, who went through
death and also rose to new life, proclaims that one who loses his life for His
sake, will find it. This word of Jesus is worth believing and living.
Our daily work and activities drain
us of life eventually. It is good to ask ourselves what we lose our life for;
why we work and how we spend our energy and strength. Self-preservation and
maintenance of our life are the most obvious reasons for toiling; providing for
the needs of one’s family and loved ones is also a very human motive for
working. Self-fulfilment is considered a higher motivation for work than simply
survival and satisfaction of physical needs. Yet a higher ideal, one which
reaches up to the highest being, God, could provide a most valuable reason for
working and consuming one’s life and energy. Working for Christ’s sake is the
key to gaining new life after dying. Spending one’s talents and skills on one’s
job for the praise and worship of God whom the worker accepts as Lord of his
life, gives an added significance to one’s toil, and would provide a greater
satisfaction for the worker also after his life here on earth.
‘Turo-turo Christians’
By Teresa R. Tunay, OCDS
It’s common to have a “turo-turo”
canteen in our workplace where we can daily choose and point out the dishes we
want to eat for the day. We usually take
those that appeal to our taste, often disregarding what’s healthy for us. When
it comes to the precepts that Jesus has given us to guide our lives, we cannot
be so-called “cafeteria Christians”—we cannot “make turo-turo” and say “I
believe in Jesus but I’m sure He will understand that I want to follow this
rule, I don’t want to follow that one.”
There’s no such thing as part-time
followers of Jesus; when we consent to becoming His disciples, we must go with
Him all the way. Because what Jesus
wants of us is to love, to love as He loves.
Just as Jesus in His time on earth willed to carry His cross and give up
His life for others, so must we. If we
cling to what we hold dear—those that give us pleasure or honor, everything
from food to clothing to relationships to recreation that we work very hard for
in order to enjoy life—but reject the love that Jesus wants to share with us,
we will end up losing life itself.
Being an honest to goodness follower of
Jesus means trusting His leadership, believing that while He asks us to
pick up our cross daily and follow Him instead of immersing ourselves in what
gives us gain and worldly benefit, He will also always be there as we
experience difficulties and sufferings in life with Him.
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