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Sunday, January 17, 2016

TELL ME A STORY.

I attended a Kerygma Conference one time.  That was in 2014. In one of the sessions I went to, there were five preachers who talked about their style of preaching and talking to a large audience.  In that session alone, (two same sessions ran concurrently side by side) there were at least a thousand people.

All preachers were excellent.  I actually liked them all, in varying degrees. But one preacher stood out for me.  She was the only woman preacher in the crop.

Up to this day, almost 400 days later, I could still recall parts of the story. 

What made her "talk" stand out? She told a simple story; a very tiny slice of her life.

This was the story as I remember it told:
She and her sisters were about to exhume the remains of her late mother for transfer to another site and were debating who would supervise it. Although they loved their mother dearly, they felt queasy having to see her actual bones and all. So they assigned the family driver to oversee.

The preacher then related how her mother used to be very careful about her physical appearance when she was still alive, but now that she'd gone, and just all ashes and bones, all the speaker could remember of her mother were the values she imparted to her and her siblings. She then told a scene in which her son asked for a hotel room with a big tub, and how the little boy said he'd pray for it when she told him they could not afford a fancy room. Her son learned early the value of prayer that she inculcated in him.

Simple story. And simple stories touch the hearts of people.

We do not have to look farther. When we read the Bible, we will discover that it is full of stories. The entire Bible, Old and New Testament, is a STORY.

The Old Testament is the story of the coming of the Messiah, and the New Testament is the story of Jesus, the Messiah.

Jesus loved to tell stories or parables. In all, He told 46 parables.
Parables of Jesus in Chronological Order:
1 New cloth on an old coat 9:16 2:21 5:36
2 New wine in old wine skins 9:17 2:22 5:37-38
3 Lamp on a stand (also see #6) 5:14-15
4 Wise and foolish builders 7:24-27 6:47-49
5 Moneylender forgives unequal debts 7:41-43
6 Lamp on a stand (2nd time, see #3) 4:21-22 8:16, 11:33
7 Rich man foolishly builds bigger barns 12:16-21
8 Servants must remain watchful (also see #44) 12:35-40
9 Wise and foolish servants (also see #42) 12:42-48
10 Unfruitful fig tree 13:6-9
11 Sower and four types of soil 13:3-8, 18-23 4:3-8, 14-20 8:5-8, 11-15
12 Weeds among good plants (Kingdom of Heaven) 13:24-30, 36-43
13 Growing seed (Kingdom of Heaven) 4:26-29
14 Mustard seed (Kingdom of Heaven) 13:31-32 4:30-32 13:18-19
15 Yeast (Kingdom of Heaven) 13:33 13:20-21
16 Hidden treasure (Kingdom of Heaven) 13:44
17 Valuable pearl (Kingdom of Heaven) 13:45-46
18 Fishing net (Kingdom of Heaven) 13:47-50
19 Owner of a house (Kingdom of Heaven) 13:52
20 Lost sheep (sheep as children, also see #29) 18:12-14
21 The sheep, gate, and shepherd ( John 10:1-5, 7-18 )
22 Master and his servant 17:7-10
23 Unmerciful servant (Kingdom of Heaven) 18:23-34
24 Good Samaritan 10:30-37
25 Friend in need 11:5-8
26 Lowest seat at the feast 14:7-14
27 Invitation to a great banquet 14:16-24
28 Cost of discipleship 14:28-33
29 Lost sheep (sheep as sinners, also see #20) 15:4-7
30 Lost coin 15:8-10
31 Lost (prodigal) son 15:11-32
32 Shrewd manager 16:1-8
33 Rich man and Lazarus 16:19-31
34 Workers in the vineyard, early and late 20:1-16
35 Persistent widow and crooked judge 18:2-8
36 Pharisee and tax collector 18:10-14
37 King’s ten servants given minas (also see #45) 19:12-27
38 Two sons, one obeys one does not 21:28-32
39 Wicked tenants 21:33-44 12:1-11 20:9-18
40 Invitation to a wedding banquet 22:2-14
41 Signs of the future from a fig tree 24:32-35 13:28-29 21:29-31
42 Wise and foolish servants (2nd time, see #9) 24:45-51
43 Wise and foolish virgins 25:1-13
44 Servants must remain watchful (2nd time, see #8) 13:35-37
45 Three servants given talents (also see #37) 25:14-30
46 Sheep and goats will be separated 25:31-46


In the Basic Bible Seminars that we run through the Biblical Apostolate at our Parish of San Andres Apostol, participants learn Bible sharing, and they become earnest and eager when it's time to share their personal stories and encounter with Jesus.

I have had also many opportunities to deliver small talks in our prayer meetings, seminars and fellowships.  I always tell stories. 

LET ME TELL YOU A STORY.  I have many to tell.  In this very blog.  By the way, the woman preacher above is Rissa Singson Kawpeng, Editor-in-Chief of Kerygma Magazine.


Wednesday, October 7, 2015

Tuesday, September 8, 2015

Wednesday, March 25, 2015

VIA CRUCIS TAKES THE ROUTE OF THE BATAAN DEATH MARCH. Historic Philippine Churches Pope Francis might have loved to see in His recent Papal Visit to the Philippines.

On March 14, 2015, our parish of San Andres Apostol of the Diocese of Antipolo went on a local pilgrimage to the northern province of Bataan in the Philippines.  It was part of the parish's Lenten celebration, dubbed VISITA IGLESIA, a Catholic practise which involves visits to as many churches as possible, usually done on the eve of Maundy Thursday.
Bus 5, Visita Iglesia 2015 of San Andres Apostol Parish

On such Visita Iglesias,  the faithful does the Via Crucis or the Stations of the Cross, praying at each of the 14 stations depicting Jesus Christ's suffering, and crucifixion. The object of the Stations is to help the faithful to make a spiritual pilgrimage of prayer, through meditating upon the chief scenes of Christ's sufferings and death

The province of choice for the Visita Iglesia 2015,  Bataan, is the site of the historic Bataan Death March.

In barely less than a month, the Philippines will commemorate this historic event which took place  some 63 years ago, on April 9, 1942 to be exact.

On this date, some 72,000 Filipino and American soldiers surrendered to the Japanese military, which brought to end the three-month Battle of Bataan that started on December 21, 1941. The Allied forces retreated to the Bataan Peninsula when the Japanese forces headed towards Manila after several deadly surprise air attacks that commenced in the bombing of Pearl Harbor in Hawaii in December 8th.
Bataan Death March

The goal of the march was to get the 72,000 captured Filipino and American POWs from Mariveles in the southern end of the Bataan Peninsula to Camp O'Donnell in the north. To do this, the prisoners were to be marched 65 miles from Mariveles to San Fernando, then travel by train to Capas. From Capas, the prisoners were again to march for the last eight miles to Camp O'Donnell.

The POWs were soon forced to make the 65 mile trek – with no food or water – to the confinement camp in O'Donnell.   Thirsty and exhausted, those soldiers who attempted to steal a sip of water from roadside streams or collapsed along the way – were shot or bayoneted on the spot by their Japanese captors. In total, 10,000 men – 1,000 American and 9,000 Filipino – died during the Bataan Death March.

The Visita Iglesia 2015 became not just a religious exercise for me, but allowed me to dwell on the significance of the province of Bataan to the overall Philippine modern history.
THE ROUTE OF THE BATAAN DEATH MARCH









The Death March started in the town of Mariveles, passed through Limay, on to Orion, Balanga City, Orani, Hermosa, and Dinalupihan, Bataan, and on to Lubao, Guagua and San Fernando, in the province of Pampanga.

From the chronicles of www.batch2006.com/visit_bataan_death-march.htm:

"The Death March started from two points in Bataan: on April 10 from Mariveles, on April 11 from Bagac. The Filipino and American troops were marched day and nighrt, under blistering sun or cold night sky, staggering through Cabcaben, Limay, Oion, Pilar, and Balanga, where they were given a brief rest and some water, From Balanga the Prisoners of were organized into groups of 100 to 200 and under guard marched on through were segregated from the Filipino Prisoners of war and marched separately, The march continued northward through Hermosa to Layac Junctio, then Eastward into Pampanga through Lubao, Guagua, Where the Prisoners were rested and given a little food at the National Development Company Compound.
 
Already suffering from Battle fatigue, The Filipino and Americans troops were strained to utter exhaustation by this long march on foot, many were ill, most were feverish, but none high rest, for the enemy was brutal with those who lagged behind. Thousands fell along the way, Townspeople on the roadside risked their lives by slipping food and drink to the Death Marches as they stumbled by.

In San Fernanco, The Death March became a death ride by cargo train when the prisoners were pack so densely into boxcars that many of them perished from suffocation, Those who arrived alive in Capas had still to walk the last and most agonized miles of the Death March: The 6 Kilometers to Camp O'Donnel, Which was become one of the most hellish concentration camps of World War II."
Death March Marker, Km. 65, Hermosa, Bataan
 
Death March Marker, Km. 60, Orani, Bataan

 
Death March Marker, Km.  44 in Balanga City, Bataan

The San Andres Apostol Visita Iglesia 2015 took the reverse route and passed through San Fernando, Lubao and Guagua in Pampanga and proceeded to Hermosa, Bataan for its first pilgrim stop at the old Church of St. Peter of Verona.




           St. Peter of Verona in Hermosa, Bataan

The Parish of Saint Peter of Verona belongs to the Roman Catholic Diocese of Balanga. Its Feast day is May 3. It is untheder Vicariate of Saint Peter Verona. 

Historically, the town was established in 1756 by Dominican priests. It became an independent missionary center in 1756 with St. Peter de Verona as its patron saint.


The church features a baroque-style façade with marvelous stained-glasses windows amid the splendor of the ornaments inside the church which illuminates the whole of Hermosa.
 

The major retablo of Hermosa is made more attractive by the variations of saints placed in it amid its majestic dome. The church brings remembrance of the colonial past.


Next, our Visita Iglesia proceeded to Orani, and visited the Our Lady of the Most Holy Rosary Church.

Our Lady of the Most Holy Rosary
The Church of Our Lady of the Most Holy Rosary in Orani

The Roman Catholic church of Orani was  declared an independent parish on April 21, 1714, and also known as Our Lady of the Most Holy Rosary Parish Church ("Our Lady of the Rosary of Orani Church", "Nuestra Señora del Rosario Parish Church", "Simbahan ng Orani" or "Virgen Milagrosa Del Rosario del Pueblo de Orani Shrine"). It is a Neoclassical  (heritage) Diocesan Marian Shrine and Pilgrimage church located in the center of Orani, Bataan in the Philippines.

Museum within the church complex

















 
Our pilgrimage visited St. Catherine of Sienna, located in Samal, Bataan for our 5th and 6th Stations of the Cross.



http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d4/ParishChurchofSt.CatherineofSienajf3477_04.JPG/220px-ParishChurchofSt.CatherineofSienajf3477_04.JPG
St. Catherine of Siena in Samal
The 1596 Parish Church of St. Catherine of Siena belongs to the Romn Catholic Diocese of Balanga. (Dioecesis Balangensis - Suffragan of San Fernando, Pampanga Created: March 17, 1975. Canonically Erected: November 7, 1975).

It has a Catholic population of 11,581 under the Titular of St. Catherine of Siena whose Feast day falls on April 30.

In 1596, the Dominicans directed the spirituality of Samal.  Attacked by Dutch invaders in April 1647, the local garrison of Pampanga under Alejo Aguas ousted the Dutch forces. 

Rev. Jeromino Belen, O.P. rebuilt the ruined church and the convent. In 1896 the Katipuneros burmed the church and the convent which were rebuilt by Rev. Justo Quesada in 1903.


For the 7th and 8th Via Crucis, we went to the Bahay Puso Home for the Aged and on to  the Cathedral of St. Joseph,  both of these located in the capital city of Balanga.









Below right, one of the structures in the Bahay Puso property where abandoned elderly are being taken cared of.




At the height of the afternoon sun, our  Visita Iglesia disembarked at the St. Joseph Cathedral, also known as Balanga Cathedral.  St. Joseph Cathedral stands massively amid the town center of Balanga, itself a showcase of early 18th century architecture.
Balanga City Hall

Town Plaza in Balanga
St. Joseph Cathedralin Balanga










 The Cathedral is the seat of the Diocese of Balanga which comprises the entire civil province of Bataan.
Staircase leading to choir loft
An angel as Holy Water and Confessional Box guardian
According to historical records,  St. Joseph Cathedral during the Japanese invasion was used as an artillery emplacement to bombard Mt. Samat, where the Filipino-American troops made their last stand. It was later renovated by the first bishop of the Diocese, Celso Guevarra DD and made Saint Joseph as its patron saint.

There were other parishes also doing their own pilgrimage on the same day as our Parish that's why the roads leading to the churches were extra ordinarily jammed. We walked quite a distance to the churches themselves.

For the 11the and 12th Stations, we went next to the Church of Our Lady of Pillar which has a quaint archway leading to the main ground. 

The 7th town and parish founded by the Dominican Fathers after Abucay (1588), Samal (1596), Orion (1667), Orani (1714), Balanga (1739) and Hermosa (1757), Pilar was made an independent vicariate on March 10, 1801. The Secular clergy replaced all regular Spanish religious missionaries including Bataan.

On April 10, 1801, Pilar was declared an independent municipality. Fr. Damaso Salvador Lintag, the first Filipino secular assigned in Pilar proclaimed Our Lady of the Pilar its Patroness, hence the town’s name Pilar.

The first chapel in the poblacion was made of wood and nipa roofing. In 1834, the Dominican priests built the stone church but local revolutionaries burned down the church, including the rectory on May 28, 1898 but the image of Nuestra Senora del Pilar survived.

A temporary church was built. Fr. Fermin de San Julian, the last Dominican priest in 1901 stayed as the parish priest until 1931, building a new stone church.

Our Lady of Pillar  Church in Pilar




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St. Michael the Archangel Church in Orion


As the summer sun continued its blaze un-abated, we climbed back to our air conditioned buses and proceeded to another beautiful Church, the St. Michael the Archangel in Orion for the remaining Stations of the Cross.
Our Visita Iglesia would have ended as planned at the Dambana ng Kagitingan in Mt. Samat, Bataan, where the Fil-Am soldiers made their last stand against the Japanese forces.  But due to delays caused by traffic and other circumstances, the trip to the Shrine was cancelled, and our Pilgrimage headed back to Manila. 


The main altar at St. Michael the Archangel 

In his final blessing at the St. Michael the Archangel Church, the priest, Fr. Vic Flores referred back to the Gospel reading of the day, Lk 18: 9 -14, and asked the pilgrims who they were like, " Are you like the Pharisee, who thanked God that he was not like the thieves, rogues, adulterers and tax collector," or "Are you like the tax collector or publican, who would not even look up to heaven, instead beat his breast and said, God be merciful to me, a sinner."


Dambana ng Kagitingan in Mt. Samat