Social Icons

Showing posts with label BlogPress. Show all posts
Showing posts with label BlogPress. Show all posts

Monday, December 27, 2010

Real Seasons Greetings...

The magi. Fresco in CappadociaImage via Wikipedia
Here are some more insightful articles to check up on, in our journey to get a grip on where our faith is taking us and, how, we as Catholics ought to carry ourselves:

Raging Mirth
Christmas Back in Christ
Questioning God
How Not To Fail Your Children

Those above are good meditational pieces do be done in front of the Christmas crib. Enjoy!

- Posted using BlogPress from my iPad
Enhanced by Zemanta

Saturday, December 25, 2010

Blessed and Holy Christmas!

Christmas cribImage via Wikipedia
Some fireworks and sounds of crackers can be heard going off in the distance. It is a little after midnight

Merry Christmas everyone and do have a meaningful and fruitful celebration of it for the festivities and season ahead! After all, we have 12 days to thoroughly enjoy them all.

- Posted using BlogPress from my iPad
Enhanced by Zemanta

Friday, December 24, 2010

Like Ice Cream and Peanut Butter...

Adventskranz PorzellanImage via Wikipedia
From Anon

------
hi fr aloy..

just my thoughts.. what do you think of our way of life in sinagpore? are we pursing recklessly? meaning excessive materialism, selfish culture, addictions of all kinds.. seems to be we are quite close but yet to this "culture of death"? than life.. look at it.. sinagpore seem to have all the ingredients of it.. high abortion rates, excessive materialism, quite high divorce rates.. etc..
While we may progress materially, our life esp morals is decaying day by day..
to me while economic growth is good.. but too much of it is bad enough yr thoughts?
blessed X'mas
tks

anonymous...

----

We are on the threshold of Christmas and tomorrow (or in the night closer to midnight) we will be celebrating the wonder of God's gift onto the world and the birthday of Our Lord and Saviour.

In the midst of the preparations and the festivities that follow, there will always be that niggling thought like anonymous above which can have us pause a little to question the very nature of our being.

Perhaps the following may give us that pause or two. This was written in the heart of 'evil' itself in the early 1940s and during the Advent season, as the writer considered the actions of man in the grip of arrogant power:

"[We] have stood on this earth in false pathos, in false security; in our spiritual insanity we really believed we could, with the power of our own hand and arm, bring the stars down from heaven and kindle flames of eternity in the world. We believed that with our own forces we could avert the dangers and banish night, switch off and halt the internal quaking of the universe. We believed we could harness everything and fit it into a final order that would stand.

Here is the message of Advent: Faced with him who is the Last, the world will begin to shake. Only when we do not cling to false securities will our eyes be able to see this Last One and get to the bottom of things. Only then will we be able to guard our life from the frights and terrors into which God the Lord has let the world sink to teach us, so that we may awaken from sleep, as Paul says, and see that it is time to repent, time to change things..." (Rev Fr Alfred Delp, s.j.)

The Jesuit Rev. Alfred Delp wrote those words from his prison cell shortly before the Third Reich executed him for resistance to Hitler's regime. His words are still very prophetic today, for even if that regime is no longer in existent today, ironically, its very ideology and attitude is now prevalent like ice-cream and peanut butter.


- Posted using BlogPress from my iPad
Enhanced by Zemanta

Sunday, December 19, 2010

Is This Too Much To Ask?

Hort Park46Image by Annoysius via FlickrSo, here we are onwards to Christmas and in the midst of the 4th Week in Advent.

From the comments in the previous entry, there seemed to be some varied response to the question 'All I Want For Christmas...' There were also other silent and unmentioned responses, which I am sure are still out there within the hearts and minds of those silent observers who frequent this dubious blog.

For all, here is my own take to that query.

What I want for Christmas is to regain the sense of awe and wonder to the beauty, greatness and mystery of this world that can open up all our inner senses to that glory and mystery of the divine, whom we as Christ followers call God and Father. There. I finally got that off my chest.

This is no small matter. Let me explain.

In April 19, 2005, Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger was elected the 265th successor of Peter, bishop of Rome and head of the universal Church. He was elected by his fellow cardinals, many of whom representing countries like Argentina, India and Nigeria, who would prefered someone more progressive who can modernize traditional Christian doctrines and to emphasize social issues, but decided in the end, to put in someone who earned a reputation for defending the traditional teachings of the Church and for emphasizing the priority of "right worship" of God as a way towards building a just human society.

Why did this happen? Here is where it gets interesting. Over the past 30 years or so, not only the cardinals who elected Ratzinger as Pope, but many Catholics and other men and women of goodwill around the world, have come to agree with Benedict that the greatest 'crisis' facing the Church and the world is the "absence of God" - a culture and way of life without any transcendent dimension, without any orientation toward eternity, toward the sacred, toward the divine. Benedict' solution to this is simple: the world needs the presence of God!

Benedict was elected by his fellow cardinals, including those from very poor countries, because they agreed with him for a need of a Pope who could preach the priority of God, and in doing so, lay the only secure foundation for a just society.

When reading his memoirs or autobiography, you will come to encounter Benedict as a man who sees the world and everyday life with a sense of wonder, as if all things are crisscrossed with hints and "traces" of God. In this attitude, is Benedict's great message: the world is a sacrament - an "outward" sign of the "inward" reality of God's love and that man would only be happy when he recognizes the primacy of God in his life and in the entire world.

That is what I am asking - reclaim our spiritual senses that will put us right back on track towards all clear understanding of the meaning of life and our ultimate destiny.

(sources from Let God's Light Shine Forth: The Spiritual Vision of Pope Benedict XVI, editor Robert Moynihan)

- Posted using BlogPress from my iPad
Enhanced by Zemanta

Wednesday, December 15, 2010

Advent Query


In case you are wondering about the recent lack of activity here, it is because I am out of town!

I am vacationing during this December break back at my parents place in Kajang (M'sia). The sparseness and no frills flavour of this entry is not, so much, due to the lack of sophistication of electronic or s/w means of blogging, but an intention of mine to make a point that blogging is still very possible, even with the more-than-average comforts of modern technology being sorely lessened.

Which brings me to the question: All I want for Christmas is?.....

Comment below and let me know, while I work this out myself for the next entry.

- Posted using BlogPress from my iPad
Enhanced by Zemanta
 

On Flickr!

www.flickr.com
This is a Flickr badge showing public photos and videos from Annoysius. Make your own badge here.

On Blurb

Life is really wort...
By Aloysius Ong

Online Now

Views last 30 days

Hits