Wednesday, September 3, 2014

Will my India remain?

Taylors Road, Chennai, 3rd September, 2014:

Just last evening I had a wonderful experience and I would wish to share it loud and wide. Across our institution, we have a locality where there is a settlement typical of the Chennai city. And amidst the scores of houses that stretch in four different directions, right at the middle stands a simple little chapel to Our Lady of Good Health. For the past 39 years they have been celebrating the feast of our Blessed Mother, with a novena during the days between 29th August and 8th September. September 2, has always been the appointed day for a Eucharistic Celebration to be held at that chapel. Its a mere wayside chapel and has no place even to place an altar inside. Hence usually a stage is set up beside it on the road and an altar placed on it with all due decorum. This year, they had invited me to preside over the Eucharist and I gladly obliged. At the entry of that lane, at the middle of which is the chapel, there is a temple dedicated to Lord Vinayaka (the elephant-faced deity of the Hindus). Incidentally, these days are also the days of festivities around Lord Vinayaka, and as I entered that lane I noticed that temple too decorated splendidly and music blasting away, in the usual Indian style. When I reached the chapel and when it was time for Mass, one of the organising crew went straight to the temple people and informed them that it was time for mass. Instantly, the music ceased! And the Eucharist commenced. It was our turn to blast on the speakers... and then the rest of the festivities continued! Incidentally, it is remarkable to note here that quite a few of the members on the organising committee were hindu brothers! 

It left me thinking last evening and I am endlessly proud of my Indian heritage, a culture of peaceful coexistence and respectful collaboration, a seedbed of authentic interreligious dialogue! Will my India remain the same... how I wish and pray! 

WORD 2day: 3rd September, 2014

Defining Spiritual Persons...

1 Cor 3: 1-9; Lk 4: 38-44

Paul feels bad about the fact that he is not able to speak to the Corinthians as to Spiritual people, because of jealousy, rivalry and division among them. He presents those predicaments as directly opposed to being spiritual people. Jesus in the Gospel shines as a role model in being a Spiritual person or a person of the Spirit. He heals, casts out demons and refuses to gain any popularity mileage out of it. He rebukes the demons even, not to announce his Christ image, as he wants himself to be experienced in the depths of their hearts, by each one hearing him or following him. 

Are jealousy, rivalry and other divisive mentalities totally absent today in faith communities? Leave alone the communities, what about my heart, is it totally free of it? If not, I still am an immature believer. St. Paul, in a way, defines who a spiritually mature person is: one who is integral in his or her outlook, unifying in his or her relationships, loving in his or her consideration of the other and God centered in his or her understanding of one's own identity vis-a-vis the faith community. 

Spiritual Persons are persons of the Spirit, and what matters to them is the action of the Spirit within themselves and within their communities.