Category: Fr. Mario Masangcay, CSsR

  • The Birth of the Church

    May 19, 2024 – Pentecost Sunday

    Click here for the readings (https://bible.usccb.org/bible/readings/052823-Day.cfm)

    Have you ever experienced a time when you are so caught up with the wonders of the moment that made you say how great it is in our own native language? And then…, a foreigner caught up with the same experience as you are having, utter words of how great it is, and also in your own native language?

    Like once, my Pilipino friend and I were walking sight-seeing in a street of Brussels, Belgium. We caught sight of a beautiful painting being done in the plaza. In our amazement, we both loudly utter words: “Ang Ganda, ano.” “Ohh, Such a beauty”. And then a Belgian guy also in wonder say: “Oo nga, napakaganda” (Oh Yes, Beautiful). All of us (Pinoy and Belgian) where not only caught up with the beauty of the painting, but also with the beauty of the moment where we can communicate and understand each other our appreciation of our momentary experience with the painting.

    Perhaps the same experience could be said about a French man who tries to eat kumtang – a famous Korean beef stew, inside a Korean restaurant with among Koreans, and after tasting it, said: “Masizoyo” (Delicious, Sarap). All understand how tasty kumtang is, and even a foreigner is able to appreciate it through in the local native language and tongue. In other words, Napa-Koreano sa Sarap. O Napa-Tagalog sa Ganda.

    Our shared experiences of wonders and mutual understanding among diverse cultures somehow describes us the experience of the people and the disciples during the day of Pentecost. Church tradition has it that fifty days after His resurrection (ten day after His Ascension), on the day of Pentecost, the disciples received the promised gift of Holy Spirit to the church, and inspired them to speak in different languages to proclaim the Good News of God’s salvation. Through the gift of the Holy Spirit, people from different cultures then and until now are able to speak, hear and understand each other’s Christian faith in each other’s own native tongues.

    Because of such experience, today marks not only the culmination of Easter season but moreso, the birthday of the Church – the day of birth, the day when the church becomes alive. The gift of the Holy Spirit is thus very essential in the life of the Church. Like a soul to a body, the Church is dead without the movements of Holy Spirit, as well as the spirit cannot inspire our life without body, the church. We, the church needs the Holy Spirit to live as well as the Holy Spirit needs our Church to offer us meaning and direction in life. For how does the Holy Spirit may somehow work in our lives?

    First, the Holy Spirit makes us experience and witness the present moment. Like being caught up with the beauty of a painting or scenery, with the delicious taste of food, with the wonders of the architectures & building, cooking, or working processes, with the intensity of a good book read, a good drama play or telenovela, and like the risen Lord made Himself known to his disciples, the Holy Spirit inspires us to situate and appreciate ourselves in the present experience. In other words, the Holy Spirit offers us PRESENCE in the here and now.

    Second, the Holy Spirit compels us to share our inspiration of the present moment with others. Our inspiration then is not ours to keep but to be shared with others. Like falling and being in love, the Holy Spirit moves us to proclaim and communicate our life and inspiration with others in a way that we can understand each other. In other words, the Holy Spirit provides us the LANGUAGE to articulate and communicate our inspiration of the present moment.

    And lastly, the Holy Spirit makes us respond rightly and accordingly to the inspiration-given and shared. Like Jesus giving us the mandate and mission to witness and proclaim our faith to all nations, the Holy Spirit encourages us to lead our lives according to our faith-life inspirations. In other words, the Holy Spirit obliges us a LIFESTYLE – a way of being and becoming human in life.

    Like, as Love is one of its gift, the Holy Spirit inspires us to love and be loved, to express humanly such love with an-other and others, as well as to live our lives as loving and beloved person. In the same way with faithfulness, the Holy Spirit inspires us to have faith and trust in the risen Lord in life, to express, proclaim, and share our faith with others (regardless of culture and race), and to practice and live out such faith in our daily lives.

    The Holy Spirit thus concretely offers us PRESENCE – LANGUAGE – LIFESTYLE of Love and Faith in life. That is how essential Holy Spirit is into our day to day lives as Christian and as Church.

    We can only receive what is being offered. And it will be offered us in our life, if and when we allow and invite the Holy Spirit into our very lives now. We can only share what we already have. We welcome then the Holy Spirit into our lives now so that others may feel its presence, relate with its language, & live its lifestyle in our world today.

    As we celebrate the birthday of the Church, we especially once again invite the Holy Spirit into our lives, as we pray: “Come Holy Spirit, fill the hearts of your faithful and kindle in them the fire your love. Send forth your Spirit and they shall be created. And you shall renew the face of the earth.” Amen.

  • TO BE CONTINUED ….

    TO BE CONTINUED ….

    May 12, 2024 – Solemnity of the Ascension of Jesus

    Click here for the readings(https://bible.usccb.org/bible/readings/051224-Ascension.cfm)

    On the cross before His death, Jesus did not said, “I am finished”, but rather he said, “It is finished”. Meaning Jesus is not finished yet, but rather, He is just getting started.

    Somehow these insights and thoughts offer us much deeper meaning and appreciation of our faith in the Lord’s resurrection. Easter proclaims the Lord has indeed risen. And this would mean that our risen Lord is not only alive in us but also He is not finished yet.

    After his death, then, and in His resurrection, His mission for our salvation is just getting started, not yet finished, and is still work in-progress. His suffering and death must have finished already, but our salvation through Him is still going & continuing on.

    Ours is a salvation story with the risen Lord, not of sad “endings and goodbyes” but rather of hopeful “beginning and to be continued”. Easter thus proclaims the risen Lord is not finished yet, and still just getting started. So Abangan, Be ready. There are yet more to happen and much better to yet to come in our Christian lives from now on and beyond.

    Today we celebrate the Solemnity of the Lord’s Ascension during Easter season. As what was described in our readings today, church tradition has it that forty days after the risen Christ have made Himself known appeared to the Apostles and stayed with them, given them many proofs of the resurrection, worked many miracles and had spoken to them and taught them of the Kingdom of God, the risen Lord now brought them into a high mountain.

    There, Jesus gave them his last words, blessed them, and he was lifted before their eyes, and a cloud received Him taken out of their sight. Such event is now what we Christians believe and proclaim the second glorious mystery: the Ascension of the Lord – the risen Jesus Christ has ascended into heaven, and seated at the right hand of the Father.

    Perhaps the best way to appreciate its meaning is to see the Lord’s Ascension, not from what had happened to Jesus and his disciples but from what Jesus said to his disciples.

    As our gospel suggests the Lord’s Ascension is the moment when the risen Lord blessed and commissioned His disciples to be his witnesses to the world and to continue on the Mission he had begun.

    In the Lord’s Ascension, we remember then the event when Jesus has now entrusted to His disciples all the good things he had begun. In other words, Jesus was handing down the responsibilities and sharing on the task of proclaiming the Good News to us, His disciples. It is just like Jesus saying in these words, “Guys, I have already done my part. This time, rise up to the occasion and do your part. Go now, go ahead, move on to the world and proclaim that you are my witnesses and that I have given you the authority to share what you have experienced and learned from me, so that others may also enjoy what have you have enjoyed with me. By the way, don’t forget to believe that I chose, trusted, and have sent you, for we can continue to do great things, if you believe in me and remain in my love. Go now and do your part, for I have already done and yet still doing my part.”

    Like Easter message, Lord’s ascension is about our Salvation not as a story of sad “endings and goodbyes” but rather of “beginnings and to be continued.” It is also about not mission-accomplished, but rather “mission still-on going in us & through us”, and “mission-delegated to us” as well. Remember as the risen Lord ascended, the disciples went forth to do their tasks to preach everywhere while the Lord worked with them. Our salvation then is not a one-man operation but rather a joint-team effort, community-endeavor and church mission. And Lord’s ascension also reminds us that our collaborative mission with the risen Lord is not all about looking at the sky but rather about working with our Lord in lifting up our endeavors to our Father.

    During Easter season, we are called to believe in the Good News of Lord’s resurrection. Now, as we celebrate His Ascension, we are called to witness our faith in the risen Lord. Now is the time for us,

    Christians, not to look up but stand up and rise into the occasion and do our part in sharing and living our lives as witnesses to the Good News of Christ’s Redemption. As Christians, we are and to be God’s gospel to be preached to all nation. Each one of us do have our own special mission in life. It is our responsibility to be what God has intended us to be here in this life now. Do our part in fulfilling our life-mission God called us to be. So, rise up to the occasion, be responsible Christians for our salvation, work with the risen Lord, take all our chances to preach our gospel of Christ to all nation, and do our part for the future of our salvation in our church nations and the world. Only then that our Salvation Saga with Christ lives on.

    So be it. Hinaut pa unta. Kabay pa. Siya nawa. Amen.

  • HIS Kind of Love

    HIS Kind of Love

    May 5, 2024 – Sixth Sunday of Easter

    Click here for the readings (https://bible.usccb.org/bible/readings/050524.cfm)

    “They said if you love someone, you set them free. If they come back again, till the end, you are meant to be.” Does it ring a bell? Sounds familiar?

    That’s a line from a popular song sung by Barbara Streisand and Barry Manilow called “Some good things never last.” Such line tells us more about love. It also tells us about growing up in life. Because we all know, big part of life is GROWING UP. We ourselves grow up – hopefully. And we help others to grow up as well. And surely we have witnessed how we and others have grown up. Growing up is really about helping oneself and others to help each other grow in maturity.

    And the commandment of Jesus to love one another has a lot of thing to do with growing up. To love means to help oneself and others to grow up in life. Loving would involve giving oneself and each other a chance to GROW, i.e. a chance to stand in one’s feet, and be responsible for one another’s growth in life.

    Meaning, loving yourself means not only pampering and taking care of yourself but letting go of your securities, taking risks and giving yourself a chance to grow. Loving someone also would also mean trusting someone enough to be on their own so that they can make a stand for his life. That’s why, in loving someone, set them free.

    This is very true in a Parent – Child relationship, especially the mother and child relationship. Because and out of her love to her children, a parent must learn how to stand back, (not to abandon or reject them) but in order to help and give her children a chance – an opportunity to stand on their own and be responsible for their own growth.

    Just like, a child cannot stand in his own two feet and walk, if the parent does not allow the child to stand up and walk. Mothers’ Day is thus all about honoring our mothers who loved us dearly even to the point of letting us go & grow in life.

    Experiences of standing back, letting go, saying goodbye, setting free have never been an easy part of growing up as well as loving an-other. Imagine how hard it was for you and your parent when you had your first step, your first day in school, your first jeepney ride on your own, your first camping, your first date, your first boyfriend/girlfriend, your first job, your wedding day, as well as your first child.

    But we all know that we have to be given a chance and to go through those experiences in order for us to grow up and learn how to live life and love life.

    This is the kind of Jesus is trying to teach us in our gospel today. As part of his Panamilit, last farewell, mi ultimo adios to his apostles, Jesus is trying to tell them that because of God’s love & His love for them, he has to leave them, not to forsake them, but to give them a chance to practice the love he has taught them and to experience for themselves the Father’s love he had preached them.

    In other words, as he goes back to the Father, Jesus has given us the opportunity to grow in our faith and to witness and share that faith to others. His commandment of love to us is His kind of loving, that we are to be set free from our kind of loving so that we may grow in Our Father’s love. Out of love and in order for us to grow in that love, Jesus, as parent, guide, leader, good Shepherd, himself has to step back, let go, say goodbye, set us free to love God for ourselves and help others love God for themselves.

    It is just like Jesus is saying to us now, “Guys, I have already taught you, guided you what to do. I have already done my part. Now is your time to do your part. Just carry on what I have told & taught you: Love God with all your heart and love one another as yourself, same as I have loved you. By the way, don’t worry. I will abandon you. I will be always with you in the Holy Spirit.”

    The popular song raised the question: “Why good things never last?” Good things never lasts… because we love as Jesus & God loves & in love, we grow in love as well. When we love, we thus not aspire & settle only for some good things but for BETTER life with God & one another.

    As we do now our part in glorifying & serving God’s kingdom by our love as God & Jesus loves us, may we learn to say goodbye to the good things we had, but rather aspire, grow & be mature enough for the better version of ourselves amid life-after pandemic has challenged & in store for us now & forever.

    So Help us God, So May it Be. Amen.  

  • Pruned yet Producing

    Pruned yet Producing

    April 28, 2024 – Fifth Sunday in Ordinary Time

    Click here for the readings (https://bible.usccb.org/bible/readings/042824.cfm)

    Plant-lovers – (plantitos & plantitas) know that for a banana shrub to grow and bear much fruit, it has to go against the natural process of growth through pruning or trimming. Meaning, for new shoots to bud and sprout, and more fruits to bear, planters have to prune, i.e., cut-off dried leaves, trim, or peel off the dried skins of the banana shrub. Otherwise, we got more dried leaves and skins, but undernourished sprouting shoots and bud, and in effect little or no fruit at all.

    Jesus in our gospel today describes our faith relationship with Him, akin to relationship of plant’s vine & branches. He reminds us that while He is the vine and we are His Branches, Our Vine grower – our plantito, “the father takes away every branch in me that does not bear fruit, and everyone that does, he prunes so that it bears more fruit.”

    In other words, for us to be His good disciples we must not only remain connected, loyal and steadfast in Jesus, but we also have to experience & go through pruning & trimming in life for us to bear much fruit.

    Spiritually, sometimes that is what God our Father does to us. Sometimes God prunes or trims us, make us experience suffering, sickness and trials not for its own sake but for us to grow and bear much fruits. Sometimes we do need to experience our limits so that we may be open to receive God’s abounding blessing.

    Why? Because sometimes somehow we grow comfortable and complacent in our spiritual life that we become naturally content with our routine of personal prayers, devotions, personal salvation – trying to lead healthy spiritual life, but we fail to bear fruits of spiritual life for others. Remember: A healthy branch, plant or tree is useless – is nothing, if it does not bear flowers and fruits for others to taste and see.

    So often we view religion as merely our personal relationship with God that exists as though a plant in a vacuum. Yes, we acknowledge a connection with others and the need for community, but so often we see the community merely as a support to have a healthy relationship with God.

    There is something critically missing here. Where is the fruit? The Lord wants us to build up the community by producing more and more Christians followers & believers, i.e. how we can increase the Christian population & the spiritual life of the world. Our goal in life then is to bear and produce fruit, His fruits – fruit for our lives now & His Kingdom.

    In one way or another, pandemic times made us experience sufferings then with a lot of trials, problems, restrictions, and difficulties in life. Somehow God was unusually & especially pruning us then. Perhaps we have been pruned or trimmed by God not only to be healthy in our spiritual life but for us also to bear much fruit for others & for our life now.

    Definitely we experienced a lot of losses during pandemic that still affects & hurting us. But perhaps at this stage, hopefully new buds are getting to sprout, new flowers are starting to bloom & some signs are growing of life in us.

    Saint Teresa of Calcutta is wise enough to remind & advice us that “God did not call us to be successful in life, but rather calls us to be faithful & fruitful in life.” Thus, the Lord places upon us the mission & responsibility for the growth of the kingdom of God. He uses us to call & invite other people to Himself.

    And above all, He longs not for our success, but for our faith & fruits in life. Consider then, at the end of our lives we have to stand before the Lord showing him what our lives produced. He is not going to be interested in our bank accounts, our homes, our athletic, intellectual, or artistic exploits & accomplishments. He is going to consider how well we loved others. He is going to count fruits of our faithfulness. He is going to look to see if we did all we could to bear & produce the fruits of His salvation to everyone.

    Remember, Jesus is concerned not only with the plant but also with good fruits. He wants us His disciples not only to be healthy plants but moreso to become fruit-bearing & producing plant for life & God’s Kingdom.

    And so, if we want to do our best in bearing fruit for Him, we need to stay united to the vine, united to Christ. We need to have His Life flowing through us – which at times needs the Father’s pruning. We received His life at baptism, but if we cut ourselves off & distance from His life by ignoring the vine, by slacking off from our worship of God, by allowing ourselves to be untended & unpruned, then we will have no fruit to bring before God’s presence. It is not enough to say we are people of faith, to say we are Catholic. We ought to practice our faith. We ought to stay united to the vine. We ought to bear & produce fruits for God’s kingdom in our lives.

    Being Christian, being Filipino Catholics is indeed not easy vocation & mission. It means dedication, sacrifice, determination to live as Christ called us. It demands being pruned by God & having to produce for the Kingdom – something to show & contribute for our lives. But we can do this, and we will do this, as long as we are stay connected & united to the Lord, to the vine whose life flows in us & through us.

    In this mass, we pray then that as the Lord’s branches being pruned & trimmed by God, we Christians may all have the spiritual courage & perseverance to remain united and connected onto Christ, our true Vine Jesus, so that we may bear fruit for our life & His kingdom now & forever.

    So Help Us God, So May it Be. Amen.

  • Gut-Felt Sense Recognition

    Gut-Felt Sense Recognition

    April 21, 2024 – Fourth Sunday of Easter

    Click here for the readings (https://bible.usccb.org/bible/readings/042124.cfm)

    Once while giving a graduation speech, the Late-Philippine lady senator Miriam Santiago made a joke. She said… Beside the swimming pool, two girls are having this following conversation. G1 said to G2: Know what? You are going to float (Alam mo. Lulutang ka). G2 to G1: Why? Is it because I’m slim, light & sexy? (Bakit? Dahil ba, magaan, slim at sexy ako? G1 replied: No, it’s because you are Plastic (Dahil plastic ka).

    Funny & rude it maybe, but it tells a lot how do we distinguish a GOOD parent, teacher, friend, politician, leader, mentor or coach from a BAD one? How do we know if that person is real, true, authentic, deep, honest & trustworthy? How do we know that person is fake, shallow, liar & unreliable?

    Nowadays it is normal for us to suspect things simply because it is not easy to know whether it is real or fake. Because it is difficult to detect the authentic from artificial or plastic, the durable from disposable, nowadays we do tend to be suspicious of things & even of one another. Same way with our relationships with others. We rather suspect, doubt, and distrust one another, than believe and trust others because it is more challenging to distinguish who are real or fake, honest or deceitful, smart or shrewd.

    Jesus in our gospel today introduced and made Himself known to us as The Good Shepherd who knows His sheep and His Sheep knows Him, and who will lay down His Life for His sheep. As Jesus distinguished Himself from a Hired Worker who work only for pay and no concern for the sheep, he reminds us here that as OUR good shepherd He is a hands-on and committed caretaker/caregiver of His sheep who maintains a personal intimate relation with His sheep, and will commit His life to live and work with His fold in life.

    Be reminded the risen Lord reveals Himself In FLESH. In last Sunday gospel, as the risen Lord reveals Himself in the midst of the disciples, he showed and asked them to touch and see His wounded hands and feet.  The risen Lord then reveals Himself not as ghost but in flesh and bones with wounds.  The Lord has made Himself known to us as “Jesus with a Cross” – a risen Lord in wounded flesh and bones who struggles and sacrifices painfully yet victoriously in life who understands & feels with our own daily crosses in life. He is then our seasoned/experienced life-hero who, by letting us touch and see His wounds in Life -not His glorified body or His spirit, is now willing to shepherd, coach and journey us in & thru life.

    In other words, the risen Lord is Our Good Shepherd because He is hand-on and committed in making known Himself to us, journeying with us and feels  with & for us in our day-to-day humanity and struggles with joys, pains, and wounds of life. And We Christians proclaim that our risen Lord Jesus Christ is OUR good shepherd. We believe that He is our Shepherd, who knows and loves us personally. We also believe that we know Him personally for we His sheep know His voice & recognize His presence among us.

    Christ Holding a lamb.

    Particularly For us Filipino Catholic, we do have special or unique take in knowing our Good Shepherd. We know Him not only because Kilala  natin siya (Kaila ta niya) but because Dama natin siya (Bati nato Siya). Culturally gut-felt recognition is important to us. Like,… I may know you, but I may not feel you. I may feel you though I may not know you. (Kilala kita, pero di kita ramdam. Ramdam kita kahit di kita kilala). (Kaila ta, pero Koy pagbati nimo/ Bati ta ka, bisan dila ta Kaila) This is how we distinguish real from fake & how we discern good & bad.

    Same way as we Filipinos have this natural felt-instinct to recognize & felt-sense to distinguish the real from fake, to discern the good from evil, we also come to be familiar with & know more the shepherd’s voice through our gut-sense and feelings. We do come to know the risen Lord as our true Good Shepherd in life not only by our volition, consent & reasonings, but most of all through our sense & feeling perception (damdamin, pagbati at kalooban).

    By our sense-perception & gut-feeling insights, we come to know the risen Lord with us – in person & in flesh. Knowing the Shepherd is thus not only for us an intellectual or cognitive familiarity but more so a deep felt-sense knowledge and insight of His presence, love & blessing.

    We pray then that the Easter Season this year be our moment to enhance and improve our special felt-sense of knowing our True &Good Shepherd, so that we may not be gone astray from His fold but rather have a much deeper relationship with Him, and be always attuned with His will & plan for us now, especially during this Easter season.

    So Help Us, God. So May it Be. Amen.