THE AUTHENTIC AND COMPASSIONATE SELF: REACHING OUT IS REACHING INTO

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We Car are Beca caus e We Pra ray Fift fth Su nday of Lent Marc h 18, 20 18 THE AUTHENTIC AND COMPASSIONATE SELF: REACHING OUT IS REACHING INTO By: Angela Cuadro I appreciate how community efforts have helped me towards being more compassionate and reaching out to suffering. The San Antonio Parish has been providing avenues to make this easier : community members leading by example, peer infl uence ( helpful coercion ), and opportunities to join and contribute time, talent, and all forms of resources. The most profound way the Parish has been helping me towards compassion is through knowing my authentic self, which is both the difficult and easy way. I am given avenues to know my authentic self -- through refl ection, in both guided exercises or sharing groups, through prayer, through the very experience of being with new friends who make me feel most accepted even while feeling most vulnerable. In the community encounter, I experience the authentic self, devoid of defenses and even easy comforts. The experience of the authentic, genuine self has been both refreshingly comfortable and heavily uncomfortable. While it has been a joy to know my self, free from pretensions, it has also been painful to be confronting the hurt and anxieties (which the defenses and comforts used to cover almost always effectively). In being (or at least trying to be) my authentic self, I learn to connect to a core of feelings raw, unadulterated, unmasked, quite primitive and universal. I learn to connect to a common humanity, and therefore gain a meaningful understanding of suffering, which can be as universal as it is uniquely my own. This then allows me not only to look but also to see pain; not only to hear, but also to listen to suffering. In being compassionate, we connect to the suffering, and share with the sufferer. Santuario de San Antonio Parish Forbes Park, Makati City Tel. nos.: 843-8830 / 31 www.ssaparish.com

PARISH BULLETIN Learning Authenticity from Someone Special By: Caren Tordesillas Conversion is a journey to authenticity. This statement brings me back to memories of being on a high from World Youth Day in Madrid back in 2011. I came home wanting to share what I had seen, learned, and experienced. Pope Benedict XVI s message to the youth was to be rooted in Christ and be fi rm in the faith, as well as to build friendships and preserve them. At the same time, I had fi rst-hand experience and was a witness to what it was like to party in the street while singing songs of praise, to sing about Christ, like no one is watching, and to make friends with everyone I met... I wanted just that for our community. Authenticity is being true, honest and sincere. In order to spread God s love, one has to talk the talk and walk the talk. It is what makes us genuine. For that I am grateful to my husband, Chris, for inspiring through his example and guiding me to share myself with the community. Chris, even before we became good friends, was someone I always looked up to for many things. When it came to sharing a love for church music to the community, he was my rockstar. When it came to being a person for others, a role model to the youth, he was the image that came to my head. And after going through a powerful World Youth Day experience with him in our delegation, I was compelled to take a more active role in our Parish and share fresh, new and vibrant music with the youth. Even now, his genuine love for music and singing for Christ still inspires me to be more committed to my role in the Voices of St. Anthony (VOSA), and to the youth groups in the Parish. He continues to teach me to be sincere in what I do for others and to do it from the heart. 2

March 18, 2018 A Witness to Authenticity and Compassion By: Monica Madrigal In a society that is obsessed with appearance and image, it is difficult to be authentic. Whether we do it consciously or not, we always want to make a good impression on others. It isn t wrong, but in the process of wanting to please others, often we sacrifi ce our authentic selves. In my case, sometimes I feel like I m wearing a mask, revealing only the best parts of me and hiding the rest. It can be a struggle to stay true to myself. But whenever I feel lost, I turn to God and remember His complete and unconditional love for us. I turn to my family and my best friends, the people who accept and love me for who I am. From them, I am learning the value of having authentic relationships, that it is only by being honest, sincere and true, that we can genuinely connect with others. Authenticity and compassion go hand in hand. When we love with authenticity, we love fully and, we become compassionate without seeking self-affi rmation or approval from others. We associate compassion with kindness and sympathy. But compassion alludes to something deeper and even more powerful. True compassion means to suffer with others, to make their heartbreaks and sufferings yours as well. My mom and my best friend are two of the most compassionate people I know. I see it in the way they treat people regardless of their backgrounds. When they listen to people sharing their problems, they listen not only with their ears but also with their whole heart. And they go beyond listening; they help these people to the best of their abilities. Witnessing these acts of compassion inspires me to do the same -- to feel the pain of others and to do something to ease their pain. This is what God urges us to do. He tells us Instead, be kind to one another, compassionate, forgiving one another, just as God in Christ also forgave you. (Ephesians 4:32) Santuario de San Antonio Pastoral Team Fr. Baltazar A. Obico, OFM - Guardian Fr. Reu Jose C. Galoy, OFM - Vicar Provincial, Parish Priest Fr. Judee Mar Maquinad, OFM - Bursar Fr. Jesus E. Galindo, OFM - Member Fr. Efren C. Jimenez, OFM - Member RDIP - PB Editorial Team & General Information Marie Tycangco - Head, RDIP-PB/Editor-in-Chief Javier Luis Gomez - Asst. Editor/Writer Ramon M. Ong - Asst. Editor Dennis Montecillo - Asst. Editor/Writer Clarisse Gomez - Asst. Editor/Writer Ervin Co - Asst. Editor/Writer Pisha Banaag - Asst. Editor/Writer Peachy Maramba - Contributor Lianne Tiu - Contributor Conchitina Bernardo - Contributor Jeannie Bitanga - Website Administrator Alexa Montinola - Asst. Website Administrator Edward Lu - Art & Design Colorplus Production Group Corp. - Production Santuario de San Antonio Parish Center Office Tel. nos. 843-8830 / 31 Email: ssap_info@yahoo.com Website: www.ssaparish.com Website email: webi@ssaparish.com Parish Pastoral Council Jun Rodriguez President Girlie Sison Vice President Marie Tycangco Secretary 3

PARISH BULLETIN Desperate Needs By: Letty Jacinto-Lopez Four decades ago, I had a close brush with death. My blood pressure shot up so high, forcing my doctor to perform an emergency caesarean operation. Scrub up! she roared. I blacked out and woke up in a hospital room, not remembering anything of the danger or complications related to my pregnancy. A nurse was sitting near my bed, dozing off. Where is my baby? Is he all right? I asked. He s in the Isolette, responding well and even feeding, too, she smiled. Ma am, you gave us a fright, she added. Your uterus collapsed and you began to hemorrhage, losing so much blood that the doctor immediately ordered a medicine to make your blood coagulate. However, the hospital s pharmacy didn t stock up on this particular medicine. Your husband drove, at lightning speed, to pick up the medicine from another hospital. The moment the drug was injected intravenously, the bleeding stopped, just like that. The nurse continued, Last night, there was another pregnant woman who had exactly the same eclamptic condition like yours. Regrettably, the husband didn t have the means to obtain the same medicine. She died, and the baby, too. Oh yes! later confi rmed my nephew who was training in a government hospital. Situations get so desperate on the ground that interns and fellow 4 trainees dig into our own pockets to buy syringes, anaesthesia, and basic medical supplies. If we don t do it, who else will? Today, the suffering has not stopped. Like an old reel of frames played back in a movie projector, a person s eyes and brain merge the separate pictures together to create the illusion of life. Find it. Save it. Preserve it. At what cost? In the Parable of the Rich Man and his lavish banquet, there, in its periphery, the poor beggar Lazarus sat, covered with sores. How easy it is to be swept by money s unimaginable reach that can turn you blind to the grief and despair around you. Add to this the culture of entitlement that leaves you numb but hungry and craving for more, for yourself. Because I deserve it! When the rich man died, he went to Hell not because he was rich but rather because of his indifference towards those who had nothing. Lazarus went to Heaven not because he was poor but rather because of his generosity and his kindness. Even the dogs came and licked his sores. Who is not in need of aid and assistance? In life, we remember that the joy of giving starts with God Himself. What shall I return to the Lord for His bounty to me? Help. Please help.

March 18, 2018 The ABC s of Catholic Doctrine Is Your God like You? By: Lianne Tiu Mother Teresa of Calcutta was caring for a dying man who resented her care and spat on her face. For days, she continued to wash and feed him; but he told her he did not believe in human kindness nor in God. Despite his ingratitude and anger, Mother Teresa did not give up. Until the fi nal hours of his life, he weakly leaned into her arms, looked at her and begged, Please. Is your God like you? Such compassion shown by a saint is founded on Jesus words, Whatever you did for one of these least brothers of mine, you did it for Me. (Matthew 25:40). We touch the fl esh of Jesus in he who is hungry, thirsty, naked, sick, and imprisoned. Here is where we fi nd God, here is where we show our love for Him. Pope Francis said that when we receive news about tragedies (school children killed, OFW maltreated, etc.) it is not enough just to feel pity, but to be moved to help. True compassion is to suffer with, and not to remain indifferent to the pain and the suffering of others. understood what was going on and said, This is your fi rst Christmas away from home, isn t it? The guard replied yes. The pope touched him, looked at him, and said, Andreas, I want to thank you for the sacrifi ce you are making for the Church. I will pray for you during Mass this evening. This gesture truly comforted the guard. When we are sensitive to notice people s pain and show that we care, in small or big ways, we become living expressions of the kindness of God. (Reference: Compassion is Not just an Attitude but a Call to Action, says Pope by Catholic News Service posted Aug 2016; The Name of God Is Mercy by Pope Francis; Don t Look Away; Be Moved by Tragedy and Help, Pope says by Carol Glatz Catholic News Service posted Sept, 2017; The Pope and the CEO by Andreas Widmer; Mother Teresa s Lessons of Love & Secrets of Sanctity by Susan Conroy) Our inspiration comes from Jesus who is always sensitive to people s sufferings. He was moved with pity as He cured the sick, raised the dead to life. Our strength will come from being united with God through prayers and the Eucharist. One summer day, a Swiss Guard, dripping with sweat, stood guard at the courtyard of the pope s summer residence. Pope John Paul II and some colleagues came out from a door and walked past him. After which a religious sister came to the guard with a pitcher of water on the request of the pontiff, who thought the sentry might be thirsty. One Christmas Eve, a Swiss Guard was very sad. It was his fi rst Christmas away from home as he had to guard the pope s private apartments before Midnight Mass. He cried after talking to his parents on the phone; and he tried his best to hide his tears. Soon, Pope John Paul II came out, saw him, and asked, You re new! What s your name? When the pontiff noticed his reddened eyes, he immediately 5

PARISH BULLETIN Parish Announcement 6

Parish Announcement March 18, 2018 LEASE / SALE FORBES DASMA URDA SAN LO BEL AIR MAGA CONNIE PERIQUET GATMAITAN CYNTHIA GATMAITAN MENCHACA TELS.: 8130875 8672227 CELL (0917)8109379 3/F SEDCCO BLDG., RADA ST., LEGASPI VILL., MAKATI CITY 7

PARISH BULLETIN 8