Reflections on Mission for July

JULY – WEEK 1

Guarding a heritage

From the mountainous spine of the Zamboanga Peninsula in the Philippines you can see two coasts where the land rolls down to the sea. The Subaanen tribal people say the land was given to them by God and they have a responsibility to guard this heritage for future generations. It is not that they are unwilling to share it; they have accepted various waves of settlers over the centuries and moved into the mountains. Yet now they are threatened by large-scale mining and this will mean displacement, loss of livelihood and the end forever of their way of life. And what would the future hold for them if large-scale mining took place in their mountains? They would be casualties of “progress” and “development”.
Of course, large companies provide a service to the industrial world which demands cheap and plentiful mineral supplies. A part of the challenge must be to our consumer society to recycle minerals already extracted. The Subaanen offer us a sustainable model of living with the natural world that may teach our society valuable lessons.

Frank Nally

(Ireland, Philippines, Britain)

Look as far as you can see in every direction. I am going to give all this land to you and your offspring as a permanent possession (Genesis 13:14-15)

Reflect: Consider the minerals you make use of daily and reflect on the communities paying social and environmental costs associated with their extraction.

JULY – WEEK 2

International solidarity

I watch volunteers from the parish here in the Philippines being busy preparing “pinuso” (rice wrapped in leaves) to feed the many poor who will be coming from the barrios for the fiesta of San Jose (Saint Joseph). The people are worried because six different mining companies have made applications covering a large area of their land in Midsalip on Mindanao island.

We take heart from the life of San Jose, poor and humble and upright, who in his silent acceptance and wonder at the mystery of the Incarnation gained courage and wisdom to care for the vulnerable sacred life placed in his charge. The people here take heart too from the realisation that they are not alone in their struggle to care for their lands entrusted to them by God. As they face threats, harassment, lies and hardship they are encouraged by international support, concern and prayer.

Sr Kathleen Melia

(Philipppines)

Bear one another’s burdens, and in this way you will fulfil the law of Christ (Galatians 6:2)

Reflect: How can we show solidarity to poor communities in the Philippines and elsewhere who feel their way of life is under threat?

JULY – WEEK 3

Friendship

Look at the relationship between Jesus and his friends Lazarus, Martha and Mary. It must have been close and intimate because John says four times in Chapter 11 of his gospel that Jesus loved them. This is what relationship is about in a missionary commitment. It finds its roots in the depths of the Trinity itself, the divine community of persons loving each other. The missionary is sent out amongst the scattered to be friend, companion, guide: salt and light and leaven. The missionary is there for the life of the world.

Every time you cross a boundary to reach out to bring life, solidarity, new humanity, warmth and fraternity, be it at home, in the neighbourhood, in the school, at work, in your contacts with people of other faiths and cultures, with refugees, with the homeless, with the abused, you are responding to the Lord’s invitation to go out and make friends (disciples) of all peoples. Mission in this renewed understanding is about reaching out to others, wanting to call them friends.

Frank Regan

(Peru, Britain)

No longer do I call you servants, for the servant does not know what his master is doing; but I have called you friends for all that I have heard from my Father I have made known to you (John 15:15)

Reflect: How much effort do you make to establish new contacts and friends as part of your mission?

JULY – WEEK 4
Challenging patenting of life

Many people are sceptical about the motivation of the corporations that are promoting genetic engineering of food. They feel that it is driven not by a desire to help the poor but rather to increase the company’s profits. They worry particularly about the scramble to patent seeds, animals and living organisms. They believe that over a short period of time patenting will remove many life forms from the public commons where they have served humans and other creatures for millennia.

The possibility that a small number of multinational companies will control the seeds of the world’s staple crops, such as wheat, rice, corn and potatoes, is truly frightening. The food security of Third World countries could very easily be compromised if farmers have to buy patented seeds each year from agri-business companies. It would be the death knell for the 1,500 million subsistence farmers around the world if they were forced to buy patented seeds each year.

Sean McDonagh

(Philippines, Ireland)

God said, “See, I have given you every plant yielding seed that is upon the face of all the earth, and every tree with seed in its fruit; you shall have them for food…” (Genesis 1:29)

Reflect: How far does the issue of patenting of life by agribusiness companies worry you, from a faith perspective?

Intercessions for the 15th Sunday of the year A

PRIEST: Our Loving God is mindful of all who need Him and does great things for his creation. Let us not be afraid to ask for what we need today.

READER: Let us pray for the Church that we may hear what the Lord God has to say, His is a voice that speaks of Peace. May Justice and Peace embrace in our World today. Lord in your mercy: Hear our Prayer.

The whole of creation is waiting for God to reveal his purpose and rejoice in the renewal of all that is. May we too rejoice and thank God for the wonder of life. Lord in your mercy: Hear our Prayer.

Let us pray for each other, as adopted children of God, that we may be able to forgive and be forgiven for the harm we have done to our brothers and sisters and indeed all of creation by failing to care. Lord in your mercy: Hear our Prayer.

Let us pray for Missionaries who in Proclaiming the Word of God face opposition and indifference to God’s message of life. May they be strengthened in their faith and courage. Lord in your mercy: Hear our Prayer.

Let us pray for the marginalised people among us, those ethnically different to us and that together we might build a more inclusive community Lord in your mercy: Hear our Prayer.

We pray for all victims of violence, be it domestic, corporate, or armed conflict who struggle for Justice and Peace. Lord in your mercy: Hear our Prayer.

Let us pray for all who bear the Cross of ill-health and long term sickness. May they be strengthened in their journey; encouraged by our prayers and support. Lord in your mercy: Hear our Prayer.

Now let us pray for a few moments in silence for our own needs and intentions.

Let us ask Mary the Mother of the Lord to pray with us as we say: Hail Mary…

PRIEST: Almighty and ever-living God may the seed of your Word always bear fruit in abundance in our lives. We thank you for hearing and answering our prayers. We ask this through Jesus Christ our Lord. AMEN

Engaging the Powers 5, The Victory of the Cross

Breaking the Spiral of Violence

This is final part of this set of studies of engaging the powers. It has been based on the works of Walter Wink, John Barton, Kallistos Ware and others including some of the latest discoveries of Archeology . The scripture texts are mostly based on the Jerusalem Bible and NRSV, with some modifications to illustrate the original languages and the meaning.

My thanks to all who have participated in this study over the last weeks. I hope the insights and challenges inspire a hunger for more understanding of our Loving God.

The cross marks the failure not of God, but of violence.

To understand what all this means one has to ask a question just who is Jesus? What is he?

Jesus is the God-man who saves us from our sins and pride. It is precisely because he is God and human at once, that he is able to save. Humans can not come to God, so God has to come to humanity, by making himself human.

God’s ecstatic love for Humanity, united himself to his creation in the closest of all possible unions, by himself becoming that which he has created. Jesus our saviour is a Bridge over the abyss between God and humanity, because he is both at once. The incarnation then is God’s supreme act of Deliverance enabling us into Communion with himself. The incarnation is is part of God’s eternal purpose.

We should not make the mistake that God, taking on our humanity is only an act of restoration, as a response to the Fallen nature of humanity. More fundamentally, it should be understood as an act of love and an expression of God’s nature.

Engaging the Powers 4 The Reign of God

Equality, Healing, Non-Violence and Sacrifice

Jesus challenged the very fabric of Jewish and Roman society. He challenged the laws of purity, including the rules against the sick and the deformed who were regarded as unclean, and so forbidden access to the temple for worship.

Jesus showed that his touching the unclean did not contaminate him, but healed them. He challenged the laws on Kosher food, the class system, Temple Worship, the social norms that belittled women and children, and the use of ethnic distinction and violence. Holiness is not something to be protected from the outcast and marginalised, rather Holiness heals and transforms them into wholesome people. The gospel of Jesus dismisses the purity laws across the board.

Downloads below for the use of the Bible study group in word and .pdf files

Engaging the Powers part 3 the Powers unmasked

Part 3 of our study of the Powers on Zoom Wednesday 10th March 2021 19:45 to -21:00

My thanks to all who participated. You are very easy to talk to, and thanks for the sharing.

the notes for session 3 are below as downloads in word and .pdf files

the Audio recording for session 3 in .MP4 format are below

Engaging the Powers Part 2

The Bible study group will continue with the subject of The Domination System.

The Greek words Kosmos meaning world, aion meaning age and sarx meaning flesh have generally been translated as ‘world’ in the scriptures.

In ancient Greece there were various meanings according to context. Kosmos, can mean variously, world – universe, Creation, humanity, the planet Earth, the Theatre of History. These conventional usages of Kosmos are roughly similar in Greek and English but alongside them, there is in the New Testament, another usage, that is quite unique in that period. It refers to the human, sociological realm that exists in estrangement from God, or the dominant system.

The notes for the session 3rd March 2021, below can be down loaded the audio recording of the session is also avaailable

Bible Study Engaging the Powers

Engaging the Powers, a study of Scriptural Themes
by Denis Carter SSC

based of the works of John Barton, and Walter Wink

outline of the study

Below are the audio .mp4 and texts files of the 1st session recorded on the 24th February 2021

The Powers in mythological context

The Myth of Redemptive Violence.

The Origin of the Domination System (Kosmos)

Naming the Domination System (Kosmos Aion Sarx)

The Powers, (Created Good, fallen, Redeemed)

Unmasking the System (Delusional Idolatry)

Jesus and the Reign of God (equality, healing, non-violence sacrifice)

Victory of the Cross (breaking the spiral of violence)

What are the ‘Powers?’

what do we understand as the powers?

In the bible the term is used many times to describe forces at work in the world that control and influence humanity, society and world events.

The ancients used the term to mean a merging of both spiritual and material forces. But there is no definition or explanation of the meaning any where in the scriptures. And modern western scholars have always tried to interpret the powers, principalities and elements as merely spiritual.

Gods, Angels, Demons Ghosts and spirits, were understood and accepted by the ancients as the elements that determined all life.

Eph.3:8- 11. I, who am less than the least of all the saints have been entrusted with this special grace, not only of proclaiming to the pagans the infinite treasure of Christ

but also of explaining how the mystery is to be dispensed. Through all the ages, this has been kept hidden in God, the creator of everything. Why?

So that the Sovereignties and Powers should learn only now, through the Church, how comprehensive God’s wisdom really is, exactly according to the plan which he had had from all eternity in Christ Jesus our Lord.

We tend to think that the ancients believed in these sovereignties and powers, as a way to explain the world they did not understand, as we do today, with our more mature science and better tech.

But maybe the reality is that they were much more in touch with the elements of the universe than we are.

Is it hard for us to see the principalities and powers as anything but imagination and not real forces.

Then how to explain the great popular interest in the occult, in stories of demonic battles, magic, witches and the like. It is almost as if there is a great psychological need in us for these to be true.

There is a major gap between ourselves and the writers of the Biblical texts in their world view and the meaning of these words. It is a gap that we as students of the scriptures and of our God really must bridge. We cannot interpret the scriptures using our modern world view of science and nature. We must go back to understand the meaning of the world as they did and to see the world as they did.

Doing that will change our understanding of the power of the Scriptures and revolutionise our belief in God and humanity’s relationship with our creator.

The Language of Power in the new Testament.

Archai kai exousiai = principalities and powers, is seen throughout the New Testament, arche’ referrers to human rulers 8 times and to divine rulers about 24 times.

Archon is used for the Prince of Demons and for Jewish leaders in Matthew and John

Matt. 20: 25, Acts 4:8, 4:26, Rulers and kings, elders (Archontes)

Mk. 10:42 hoi dukountes archien (those who supposedly rule and great men.

Rom. 8:38 (Archai), Angels and principalities

Acts 4:7, 1Cor.1:24, Luke 9:1, Rev. 17:13 Powers = Dynamin,

World Rulers = Kosmo kratoras.

Acts 26:12. Exousias= Authority. In the New Testament, 85% of its use is about a structural dimension of existence. The majority of its use is not about spiritual beings but ideological justification, political and religious legitimisation and delegated permission for authority.

The Greek terms are somewhat fluid and meaning can change according to context and could and were used in referring to both temporal/ human and spiritual powers.

There are many more references but we will get to them later as we discuss the scriptures in the light of the meaning of these words in their context.

Unfortunately, for too long there has been a common translation of all these terms to be spiritual while these terms in use by the Greeks and others of the time, always referred to an incumbent in office, or the structure of power , government, kingdom, realm or dominion.

Dynamis= Power. Mostly used for military or political power. By extension also used for the angelic army or host of God, heavenly hosts. In some of the disputed texts of Paul, 1Cor. 15:24, Eph. 1:21, and 1 Peter 3;22. the use could mean evil power. So in later writings of both Christian, orthodox and Gnostics we see a focus on the spiritual dimension of the powers no longer being agents of God but God’s enemies, evil spirits / powers in a cosmic struggle with God.

Rom. 8:38-39. For I am certain of this: neither death nor life, no angel, no prince, nothing that exists, nothing still to come, not any power, or height or depth, nor any created thing, can ever come between us and the love of God made visible in Christ Jesus our Lord.

The Myth of Redemptive Violence.

It is a modern bias to separate the physical from the spiritual, but for the ancients reality was a seamless robe, a continuous interactive reality.

The physical matter, spiritual energy, life force, nature, the world, was understood as being part of the whole of creation. Not separate bits but a unified whole, interconnected with the creator.

Different cultures and times, thought and reason came up with variations and differing creation stories to explain the way things worked.

A common thread for almost all of humanity around the planet, is the notion of a supreme creator.

Some peoples developed an idea of a group of deities, ruled by a Father God . The minor gods were responsible for different aspects of the world and nature. Gods that controlled the seas, the air, the land, fertility, war, death-life of creatures and tribes and ethnic groups.

But nearly always there was a ruling deity over the minor gods that existed in a kingdom beyond this world outside of our perception of time and space.

For some of the earliest civilisations this physical world was thought to be a mirror of the spiritual that worked both ways. Events in the heavens were mirrored on earth, wars on earth were extensions of the cosmic wars between the deities. The actions of the gods influenced and determined the events on earth. Ritual actions here influenced the gods to look with favour, on a particular people and on their desires. Sometimes the rituals were an attempt to control the gods as in trying to claim the god for their own exclusive protection. [what god is as great as our God?] there are many variations of that idea in the OT.

Violence is the dominant force today as it has been for thousands of years. It a religion with it’s own rules and rituals.

It demands total obedience even to the devotees willing to die to uphold the myth that violence is the way to peace. Violence seems to be accepted as the only way since it appears to work. The threat of violent retaliation keeps the peace. It is the nature of the world.

Where does this idea come from?

We must go back to the origin of the oldest religion in the world to Mesopotamia, the time of Babylon and their creation stories, such as the Enuma Elish,an epic saga of the creation of the world (Kosmos). The story of Tiamat and Marduk. [The texts we have today are dated to about 1250 BC but they are much, much older. There are significant similarities with the Hindu creation stories which may predate it, with the Norse sagas and Japanese myths].

Jesus taught that we should love our enemies, But the ancient world of Mesopotamia taught extermination of one’s enemies is the only solution.

For them violence was the central dynamic of existence. Life is cruel, nature is violent, the earth is violent, floods earthquakes, volcanoes, storms. Chaos threatened every one’s attempt to bring some semblance of order to their lives. From this perception the creation myth of Tiamat and Marduk is told to explain the violence of the cosmos. Tiamat, the primeval serpent, the female symbol of chaos and evil. Marduk, a minor god is elected to defeat Tiamat in exchange he becomes the ruler of the Gods. From the murder of Tiamat by Marduk and the dismemberment of her body, physical creation comes into existence. A prisoner god is murdered, his blood is mixed with the soil making humans to become the slaves of the gods. Chaos is defeated by Marduk and order is established, a paradox in that it was through the violence and chaos of war that the rule of Evil, Violence and Chaos is defeated. So existence is created from evil and the actions of an evil, violent god. In this myth the primal force of nature is evil.

Violence was seen to work and was and is worshipped.

In this creation story, humans are made from an act of evil, it is in our blood to be violent and to kill. We are made by a god from the blood of a murdered god. We are not responsible for evil in the world but the product of evil. The human task then, is to produce food to be sacrificed to the gods by way of the representatives of the gods, the priests and the king. Sometimes that sacrificial food is a human being. The king is through ritual to re-enact the war of the gods to constantly bring order out of chaos. There must be a death to bring peace, the king must subdue or destroy all enemies to maintain order and dominance. The system of dominance politics is a cosmic rule and can only be maintained through constant conflict and expansion of the rule. The basic ideology of the domination system is that the gods favour the conqueror. People exist to serve and perpetuate the power of the gods through conflict and war. Through the idea that might is right.

The Hebrew exiles in Babylon [Modern Iraq] were well aware of this creation story in the Enuma Elish and the Gilgamesh Epic, but it was alien to their experience of their God, Yahweh.

Up until this point in time they had no coherent creation story. For the Hebrew people their history begins with Abram and Sarai, obeying the voice of God to leave their city culture and become nomadic, to spend the rest of their lives as wanderers with a vague promise of becoming a nation and to be settled in a land that would be their home.

Their God was active, involved personally in their lives and communicated with them. Yahweh/ Elohim treated them as children and cared for them, even if at times punishing them as a parent punishes a wilful child.

For the Hebrew people the created world was designed and maintained by God. They took the Babylonian Myth and turned it on it’s head. The cosmos was created by a loving God that made everything good. There was no evil, chaos was not evil, just formless.

The chaos of an unformed cosmos was overcome by a word of love not violence. The elements of the myths were used to explain the problem of evil in the world, through the stories of the garden of Eden and Adam and Eve. Gilgamesh in that epic, searches for immortality and finds the Garden of Eden with a couple of immortals living there. They gained their immortality through the snake/ serpent, but are not able to have children, since procreation of immortals would be a disaster and unsustainable for the world.

It follows logic that if everything was made good, there is a problem. There really was evil in the world, there was the reality of death. It was obvious that some people were destructive and bad and the forces of nature seemed to have no care for humanity,so who or what made evil?

The ideal paradise created by a good and caring God became corrupted. For the Hebrew people their experience of Yahweh, showed that the troubles they faced came from their own disobedience of God’s Law, they were to blame.

It is widely accepted now by most Scripture scholars that it is during the exile period [6th- 5th Century BC] that reflection on the origins of the Hebrew people started to take shape and recorded their folk memory of their history. What little written records of the times of Moses, the Judges, prophets and kings were organised and collated, The editors not wanting to lose anything from the different traditions, included what they had, to the effect that some of the texts seem to either contradict or jar in style and content. In the book of Exodus, Yahweh is thought of as a god of war and as a god of thunder. Ex. 15:1-15. 19.

What these texts show is the reality that as a people they were always in conflict with the the surrounding populations, as they tried to remain faithful to the covenant with God and at the same time adapt to and claim the land they occupied. And when they resorted to the same tactics of their enemies they lost. [as when they entered the promised land to become farmers, they adopted the local fertility gods.]

In-spite of what seems to contradict, what emerges is the understanding that they were a people that their God, Yahweh/ Elohim, adopted and claimed, so that they would be different from all other people, in their way of life and relationship with each other and God.

Redemptive Violence.

Take a look at modern myths of redemptive violence. The cartoons and films of the early and mid 20th Century. Popey and Bluto, Tom and Jerry, the Cowboy and Indians, the war films

Superman (Kal El, a Jewish name),

1938 With Hitler’s rise in Europe with his anti-Semitic words and the negative stereotypes of Jewish people, pushed Siegel and Shuster to make a hero that defended the weak. They often would portray Superman, an other world being, protecting the weak and those who were mistreated. He was a hero the world needed as World War II began in Europe

Captain America, an enhanced human, Batman a vigilante, highly trained in martial arts and technology , Green Lantern, a human given super powers by aliens, Captain Marvel taken to another world infused with alien energy, and so on. All of them as individuals or together fight superior forces, to restore order from the chaos of super evil villains.

The Babylonian Myth of redemptive violence is alive and thriving, evil violence is overcome by the hero’s violence, a just might against a bad might. Little Popeye defeats the bigger villain Bluto, Little Jerry mouse always gets the better of Tom the Cat. It goes on and on, a never ending of fight after fight, revenge and retaliation, between indestructible adversaries. Battle after Battle in a never ending War.

In every story the formula is the same, the hero in trying to defend the weak, is almost defeated and villain appears to have won and gloats but the hero escapes and in the last moments beats the enemy and order is restored. In psychological terms we the onlooker initially identifies with the hero. But we are able to project our anger and violence and live out our repressed feeling with the aggressor while he seems to be winning. And when the hero finally wins we can reassert our self control and salvation is guaranteed by identifying with the hero.

Discussion…

Homily For 1st Sunday of Lent Mission Appeal

by Fr. Denis Carter SSC

Readings: Gen. 9: 8-15 Covenant with all creation after the Flood.

Ps. 24(25) 4-6,

1 Peter 3:18-22 The Spirit saves through Water/ Baptism

Mk. 1:12-15 Jesus led by The Spirit to be tempted by Satan

Since it is not possible for me to be with you today, I have written my appeal to you.

Having listened to these powerful words of scripture, I cannot help seeing that they are so appropriate for me in speaking to you about the Missionary Society of St. Columban.

The Columbans were founded over 100 years ago by young Priests inspired with the call of God and led by the Spirit to go out to the world and evangelise, beginning with China.

The challenges of being a missionary in those days were many and dangerous.

learning new languages and cultures. risking ones health and life by living with and sharing the suffering of the poor .

The Columbans were soon asked to take on new missions to other countries mainly in the Far East and eventually Latin America. Vocations from Ireland, the UK, Australia and America, grew to meet the demand.

As the Society grew our purpose and way of being on mission was shaped and refined by the people we served and by the conditions that they had to endure. Recalling the Temptation of Jesus, He was driven by the Spirit into the desert and tested to refine his understanding of what God was asking of him and what kind of Messiah he should be. Jesus rejected the common expectations of what kind of Messiah the ruling class of his day wanted.

Jesus saw the suffering people, the sick and outcast, those with little or no hope. He touched their lives with healing and acceptance as the suffering servant, not as a ruler.

After much discernment, the Columbans accepted a mandate from the Church.

It was the challenge of Crossing boundaries, boundaries of preconceived ideas, languages, culture and attitude, to Stand with the Poor and Marginalised, to help them understand and experience the love and healing of God.

We are to help people experience that Love God has for every individual regardless of social status, cast or ethnic origin. To realise that we are all one human race, children of a loving God.

We are to help establish the Church among peoples to whom the Gospel has not been preached;

We have to promote and encourage inter-faith dialogue between Christians and those of other religious traditions; to have the courage to listen to and hear the other.

To learn how to find common ground in our understanding of God. We have to find ways of doing this with integrity and honesty, building up communities of faith and hope, sharing our abilities and gifts, for the common good.

We are to help facilitate interchange between local Churches, especially those from which we come and those to which we are sent. So today we have young Lay-people from the mission lands, working with us in other missions.

We have to promote Justice, Peace and Reconciliation. Which means we must discover just what are the root causes of conflict and violence and then to find ways of repairing and healing it. We must use the means and method of Jesus, in confronting evil, with non-violent resistance, compassion and love.

We have to promote care for the Integrity of Creation. Remembering that the covenant God made with Noah, was with all of Creation not just with Humanity. So as the stewards of Creation and our environment, we are responsible for the earth. The earth is our home, it is all we have to sustain all life here, if we do not look after it, how will it feed us and be a home for us?

And finally we must foster in local Churches an awareness of their missionary responsibility.

That is why I am here today, to help foster that awareness of the need for the Church to be more missionary.

All that I have said here is not easy to make real and to put into practice.

We often find ourselves at odds with the powers and vested interests of those who see us as a threat. It is by our educating the poor and our non-violent fight for Justice with mercy that we risk our lives for the sake of the Gospel.

Columbans have for the last 100 years served in many countries where Martial Law and Dictators were and are the rule. And many of our members have made such a difference in the lives of so many people, some have even been killed.

It is a sad fact that when the Gospel is preached and lived out authentically, then there are forces and people who will try to stop it with violence, deadly violence. In spite of this we keep trying

We accept that there have been times we failed, but there are also many successes.

We sometimes measure our success by the number of Martyrs we are blessed with.

Missionary life is not easy, but looking back at about 40 years as a Columban, I have had pain, but I also have many memories of great Joy and knowing that I have made a difference in the lives of perhaps thousands of people, people that I was a part of and people who will always be a part of me.

I wish that I had more time to share with you some of the stories of my life in Pakistan among the tribal people of the southern province of Sindh. Some of the stories of success, such as how we were part of the campaign to abolish slavery and bonded labour. Or programmes of adult literacy, projects to immunise children in the remote villages, and celebrating 3 hour long Masses under the stars with congregations of Christian, Hindu and Muslims, where we shared our understanding of God and the joys and hardships of life.

Maybe another time?

If you would like to help us continue this work, I would like you pray for us, for vocations to the missionary life, or if you are able, to join us as a missionary.

You could help by a donation, through the collection, or through the website, details on the notice board.

If you wish to learn more about the Columbans you can subscribe to the Far East Magazine the details can be found on our website: www.columbans.co.uk or you could write to us by email: office@columbans.co.uk or by snail-mail to St. Columbans Widney Manor Road, Solihull B93 9AB

Many thanks for having the patience of listening to this, and God Bless you and yours.

Reflections on Mission for February

FEBRUARY – WEEK 1

Mission today

Missionaries who work in cross-cultural situations are acutely aware that the poverty they encounter in one part of the world is structurally related to decisions and behaviour in another part, perhaps in the missionary’s home country. Therefore questions of justice loom large for the modern missionary. One of the most intractable of these justice issues is the wholesale destruction of the environment in order to facilitate Western cultures’ insatiable consumption. Practical efforts to encourage respect for God’s creation are encouraged and missionaries are involved in a kind of international mediation.

Another point which distinguishes the modern missionary from his or her colleagues in the past is a more positive attitude towards the other religions. Many missionaries find that through genuine dialogue with other religions, their own religious experience is deepened even to the extent of being able to pray together. And they may find common ground for cooperation in dealing with justice issues.

Sean Dwan (Korea, Ireland)

When he entered Capernaum, a centurion came to him… When Jesus heard him, he was amazed and said to those who followed him, “Truly I tell you, in no one in Israel have I found such faith” (Matthew 8:5,10)

Reflect: How have understandings of mission developed since the Second Vatican Council?

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FEBRUARY – WEEK 2

Indifference kills

A lot of the Christian churches don’t see justice and peace as a core Christian activity. If there is any justification for calling yourself a Christian, it is because you have compassion for the poorest of the poor. Yet somehow the poverty of the majority is not impinging on us. When I’m in church preaching, I can often see the resistance, I sometimes feel like shaking people and saying, “What if you had to sell your child into slavery just to exist?” Because it’s not going on here we don’t want to know about it, and even when we do know, we don’t want to respond. 

My job as a priest and missionary here in Australia is not to comfort the afflicted, but to afflict the comfortable.  I suppose I’m trying to touch the consciences and hearts of people and say, “This is just not acceptable, that we, the 20 percent have for our disposal more than 86 percent of the world’s wealth; the bottom 20 percent have something like 1.4 percent, so that divide has to be breached”.

Brian Gore (Philippines, Australia)

He has brought down the powerful from their thrones, and lifted up the lowly; he has filled the hungry with good things, and sent the rich away empty (Luke 1:52-53)

Reflect: How far would you agree that missionary outreach is not just about comforting the afflicted but afflicting the comfortable?

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FEBRUARY – WEEK 3

Enthusiasm for Mission

It can be hard to keep one’s initial enthusiasm for mission. Enthusiasm can be eroded by increasing age, diminishing energy, the struggle against seemingly insurmountable odds, the constantly changing situation, and the lack of success for one’s best efforts. It’s easy to slip into the ‘survival mode’ and settle for what can be handled comfortably and without hassle.

Perhaps one of the best antidotes for the erosion of enthusiasm is a deep sense of being called and sent on mission. The prophets of old had that conviction of being called, empowered and sent by God and that kept them going in trying circumstances. As one filled with the Spirit, Jesus too had a strong sense of being called and sent to bring good news to the poor.

For the ancient Greeks, enthusiasm (enthousiasmos) had to do with being inspired, being possessed by a god. We can keep our enthusiasm for mission only if we remain open to the Spirit and allow God to take possession of us.

Tom O’Reilly (Pakistan, Ireland, Britain)

You did not choose me but I chose you. And I appointed you to go and bear fruit, fruit that will last (John 15:16)

Reflect: Identify the ways in which we can keep up our enthusiasm for mission.

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FEBRUARY – WEEK 4

Water of Life

Water is life. That is why it has a central role in the liturgies of many religions. Life began in the oceans 3.8 billion years ago. It remained there for almost 2 billion years. All the creatures in our world emerged from a watery environment and carry around this water with them. Human beings are almost 70 percent water. If we continue to abuse and poison water then humans and all other forms of life will be adversely affected. If our waters are polluted our tears will be toxic and the water in the wombs of women who nurture new life will also be toxic.

Caring for water globally and locally is a major ethical and religious challenge for Christians today. Each local Christian community must ensure that the water used for baptism is truly ‘living water’ with the ability to carry all the symbolic dimensions highlighted. We need to respect water as Jesus did and do all in our power to ensure that it remains living water and a source of life for all creation.

Sean McDonagh (Philippines, Ireland)

They deliberately ignore the fact that the heavens existed of old and earth was formed out of water and through water by the word of God (2 Peter 3:5)

Reflect: Why is appreciation of water and the earth’s natural resources an important dimension of our faith?

Reflections on Mission for October

October -week- 1 Mission in Weakness

October -Week – 2 Listening and Learning

October -Week – 3 Right relationships

October – Week – 4 Christian Comfort

OCTOBER – WEEK 1 Mission in Weakness

Are you weak enough to be a missionary? Hardly a question one expects to find in a vocations’ brochure. Yet mission today needs people who have a real sense of their own limitations and feel the need for God’s empowering Spirit.

Faced with the global challenges of structural injustice, environmental destruction and increasing tension between peoples of different cultures and religions, one can easily lose heart and say, “How can I possibly change the situation?” The Spirit, however, is the principal agent of mission. Our task is to discern what the Spirit is doing in our world and offer ourselves as channels of the Spirit’s transforming activity.

To engage in mission in the way of Jesus means loving even those who do not deserve our love, forgiving when it is humanly impossible to forgive, hoping when we see no grounds for hope. Responding to these gospel imperatives is beyond human strength. But the Spirit can make us effective instruments in the hands of God who is bringing about the new creation.

Tom O’Reilly (Pakistan, Ireland, Britain)

I will boast all the more gladly of my weaknesses, so that the power of Christ may dwell in me… for whenever I am weak, then I am strong (2 Corinthians 12:9-10)

Reflect: How important is prayer and contemplation in allowing the Spirit to work through us?

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OCTOBER – WEEK 2 Listening and Learning

I set out on mission to the Philippines in 1967 believing I was bringing God to the Filipino people. That changed the day I went to say mass for villagers celebrating a fiesta in honour of their patron saint. I arrived early and the church was empty. As I waited, I noticed that people nearby were already busy making preparations for visitors and that many were at the basketball court and the cock pit. I realised that God wasn’t in the little empty church but among the people, in their homes, with them while they were fishing or in their rice fields, with them in the cock pit and in the basketball court. God was with them when they struggled to survive in the midst of poverty.

Mission for me is being led by the same Spirit which took Jesus out among the people to listen and learn from the word of God that lives among the people. Going on mission is not about bringing God to people but of going to meet God, which is very much a listening and learning experience.

Ray Collier (Philippines, Britain)

Morning by morning he makes my ear alert to listen like a disciple (Isaiah 50:4)

Reflect: Use the long quote above to reflect on where you find God in your own lives.

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OCTOBER – WEEK 3 Right relationships

Every day we come into contact with the victims of globalisation. We meet asylum seekers caught in the crossfire of forces whose origins are in many cases global. We meet the unemployed from factories, from mines, from City offices, all closed as a result of global consolidation and merger. We meet the victims of child labour from countries who can compete in global markets only because they must exploit their weakest citizens. We feel everyday to some degree the ongoing devastation of the planet.

We shall walk in the Spirit of justice by which we shall exert every energy to create a social order, local and global, based on right relationship with our life systems. Thomas Aquinas wrote that in order to change the world we must change the images through which we perceive the world. To the extent that we can dream about and build a different world order which is just, equal, compassionate, and non-violent, we shall be salt and leaven and so change the world.

Frank Regan (Peru, Britain)

Pursue righteousness, godliness, faith, love, endurance, gentleness (1 Timothy 6:11)

Reflect: In what ways can Christians be “salt” and “leaven” in today’s world?
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OCTOBER – WEEK 4 Christian comfort

The world economic system today is particularly embarrassing for Christians. The 1.5 billion followers of Christ, ‘who had no place to lay his head’, now control two-thirds of the Earth’s resources and, on average, are three times better off than their non-Christian neighbours.

Fortunately, there are signs that attitudes are beginning to change. During the past two decades some Christians in the ‘developed’ world are beginning to respond to the challenge of their brothers and sisters in the ‘developing’ countries. They are becoming more aware of the legacy of colonialism. This formed the basis of much of the West’s wealth while it often impoverished Third World countries. They now feel challenged to work for a new, more just, international economic order which will redistribute the world’s resources in order to ensure that every person in the world has enough of the world’s goods to live a decent human life.

Sean McDonagh (Philippines, Ireland)

What does the Lord require of you but to do justice, and to love kindness, and to walk humbly with your God? (Micah 6:8)

Reflect: What challenges does the affluence of Christians present to us?