Life as an immigrant
is difficult. Leaving one's home brings hardships. Coming from a
country with a low wage scale, and living in one with a high wage scale
needs preparation-- they are often looked down upon and feel ostracized, and the disadvantages and hardships are not just a few. Two articles in the Peace Weekly addresses
the situation of migrants in Asia. One article treats the FABC
(Federation of Asian Bishops' Conferences) recent conference in Thailand
on the issues.
In Korea as in other countries the Church does work pastorally with the immigrants. In Korea they are now addressed as guest workers which is an
attempt to be more welcoming. One article says that it reflects on the
citizens when our attitudes and behavior are not considerate of their difficulties.
Pope
John Paul II in his apostolic exhortation Ecclesia In Asia says: "At
the present time Asia is experiencing an unprecedented flow of
refugees, asylum seekers, immigrants and overseas workers. In the
countries to which they come, these people often find themselves
friendless, culturally estranged, linguistically disadvantaged and
economically vulnerable. They need support and care in order preserve
their human dignity and their cultural and religious heritage." This was
written 16 years ago and in Korea the situation has got worse.
In
Korea with the large number of migrants, we also have the need for
helping them to integrate. This is a concern for both the Korean Church
and FABC.
There
is the need for the pastoral care of the immigrants. In Japan we have
many Filipino women who have come to Japan to work in the country areas
and most of them would be Catholic, which is a concern because of the
small number of Catholics in Japan. One Japanese bishops considers them a
gift to the Japanese Church.
Secondly there is a need to protect the dignity of the migrants. The treatment
of illegal immigrants is a problem. Trafficking is fought against but
the efforts are few, illegal immigrants are the victims of trafficking,
men are used as slaves on vessels at sea, women are sold into
prostitution, and children become the victims in pedophilia, and there
are those from whom bodily organs are extracted.
No
one can remain indifferent to the suffering of the countless children
in Asia who fall victim to intolerable exploitation and violence,not
just as the result of the evil perpetrated by individuals but often as a
direct consequence of corrupt social structures. The synod fathers
identified child labor, pedophilia and the drug culture as the social
evils which affect children most directly, and they saw clearly that
these ills are compounded by others like poverty and ill conceived
programs of national development. The Church must do all she can do
overcome such evils, to act on behalf of those most exploited, and to
seek to guide the little ones to the love of Jesus" (Pope John Paul II).
The
article on the FACB ends with the need for prayer and to get involved
in the problems the continent faces. The Church needs to hear the cry of
those who are suffering in Asia.
Tuesday, June 2, 2015
Monday, June 1, 2015
Working for the Common Good
In the Peace Column of the Peace Weekly, the columnist doesn't know if it is his lack of knowledge, but he is not happy with the present government nor was he with the past one. He has bad memories of both; same problems exist as in the past.
Just a few weeks ago we had the suicide of three unmarried sisters in their late twenties and early thirties who had lost their jobs.We were supposed to have change; they did make plans but nothing changes. Can we say the government is incompetent?
Why is this the situation we face? The reality is the politics we have. What do we mean by politics? The dictionary gives us two meanings. Strict meaning is managing the government, sustain and exercise the powers of government in order that the citizens may lead a decent life; mutual understanding of one another that brings order into society.
The problem is with those managing the government. They have been given the authority to bring happiness into the lives of the citizens, but it is difficult to see. The opposition party is not much different; they are continually in factional fighting.
In a broader sense of the word politics as explained in a book for elementary school children: a way of enabling the different opinions and squabbling to come to an amicable conclusion. We have different dispositions, come from different environments, different ways of thinking; conflicts are inevitable. With dialogue and compromising, and coming to an harmonious solution is what politics is about. In our country the ability to compromise and communicate is deficient. If one doesn't agree with one side they become an enemy.
This is not only true in politics but this factionalism can be see in many other areas of life: regional conflicts, social status, rich and poor divide-- factionalism is an element of our culture.
He concludes the article blaming the failure to understand the meaning of the 'common good' as the basic problem. With this lack of understanding we are not negotiating a true agreement, but merely temporarily pasting the issues together but in short order they separate again.
Sunday, May 31, 2015
Happiness: a By-product of a Life Well Lived
Today,Trinity Sunday, the editorial in the Peace Weekly reminds
us that a true understanding of our faith is a short cut to happiness.
Strange that we have to be reminded of this but there are good reasons
why this seems necessary.
Humans were made to be happy. What we do and think will determine whether we are happy or not. In the Catechism of the Catholic Church we hear: "The Beatitudes respond to the natural desire for happiness. This desire is of divine origin: God has placed it in the human heart in order to draw man to the One who alone can fulfill it."
On Trinity Sunday we talk about God who is love, sending the Word in love who is Jesus, who in turn sends us the Spirit to instruct and lead us so that we will have joy now and forever. We forget this basic teaching which is that we were made to be happy now and forever.
The editorial mentions that today in Korea we also celebrate Youth Sunday.The young people are not happy. They study with great effort to get into college, achieved they have to find work, and then romance, marriage and raising a family, this package of three in many cases has to be postponed.
Young people are not getting the courage and consolation from their attendance at Masses, and consequently they are leaving the Church. They are not finding answers they need.
In the editorial mention is made of the message of Pope Francis to the youth of the world. He stresses true happiness. “Dear young men and women, in Christ you find fulfilled your every desire for goodness and happiness,” continues the Holy Father. “He alone can satisfy your deepest longings, which are so often clouded by deceptive worldly promises.”
Youth is a time of storm and stress. They have not found their place in life, are uncomfortable, and open to all kinds of temptations. What is kernel and what is the shell are not easy to discover, and to find the truth in their faith life is not easy.
Pope Francis earnestly entreats they never forget that God wants their happiness. For a Christian happiness is not only the object of life but also our duty, and the easiest way to achieve happiness is living our religious life.
The problem that arises is that the happiness that is given is not in the way the world gives, and here is the difficulty that many of the young do not understand--it is not found by searching for it. A Christian paradox which apparently few understand and one of the most important.
Humans were made to be happy. What we do and think will determine whether we are happy or not. In the Catechism of the Catholic Church we hear: "The Beatitudes respond to the natural desire for happiness. This desire is of divine origin: God has placed it in the human heart in order to draw man to the One who alone can fulfill it."
On Trinity Sunday we talk about God who is love, sending the Word in love who is Jesus, who in turn sends us the Spirit to instruct and lead us so that we will have joy now and forever. We forget this basic teaching which is that we were made to be happy now and forever.
The editorial mentions that today in Korea we also celebrate Youth Sunday.The young people are not happy. They study with great effort to get into college, achieved they have to find work, and then romance, marriage and raising a family, this package of three in many cases has to be postponed.
Young people are not getting the courage and consolation from their attendance at Masses, and consequently they are leaving the Church. They are not finding answers they need.
In the editorial mention is made of the message of Pope Francis to the youth of the world. He stresses true happiness. “Dear young men and women, in Christ you find fulfilled your every desire for goodness and happiness,” continues the Holy Father. “He alone can satisfy your deepest longings, which are so often clouded by deceptive worldly promises.”
Youth is a time of storm and stress. They have not found their place in life, are uncomfortable, and open to all kinds of temptations. What is kernel and what is the shell are not easy to discover, and to find the truth in their faith life is not easy.
Pope Francis earnestly entreats they never forget that God wants their happiness. For a Christian happiness is not only the object of life but also our duty, and the easiest way to achieve happiness is living our religious life.
The problem that arises is that the happiness that is given is not in the way the world gives, and here is the difficulty that many of the young do not understand--it is not found by searching for it. A Christian paradox which apparently few understand and one of the most important.
Saturday, May 30, 2015
Are We a Church of the Poor?
Pope Francis continues to be a topic of interest in even his
smallest actions and words. A fashion specialists after making a study
of the pope's style calls it 'minimalism'. This keyword includes
simplicity and plainness. A Salesian, priest columnist, who writes in
the View from the Ark, examines the life of the pope and leaves us with
his reflections.
Pope Francis in his visit to Korea was using a 50 dollar watch. He was wearing shoes made by a small shoemaker in Buenos Aires, the ring and the neck piece were made with silver. In his very person he was showing us a distancing from materialism with which we are surrounded. In Korea, especially, we have the economic progress firmly compressed, which makes the virtue of poverty difficult to practice
Jesus lived poverty but it was not a miserable life. It was a life freely chosen, which was his glory and blessing. Poverty gave him freedom. When a person feels the miserableness of poverty than we have real poverty. Christians today need to examine this theme in detail, we need to make known that poverty is not something bad. We need to show that we can be happy without money, contrary to the spirit of the times. Money when it becomes the answer to everything we are on the verge of falling into big hole. We are driving our older people to the edge of a cliff, making for a bleak future.
Pope Francis in seeing the poor leaving the church is angry. The Church needs to lessen the gap between the poor and rich. A beautiful bridge needs to be built between them.Religious living the life of poverty is a good, but they need to share this with the poor.
Pope Francis is beginning to give us a spirituality of poverty following on that of St. Francis. The priest columnist remembers the visit to Korea of the pope and all his travels. He showed us what humility and poverty meant with his whole body. Everyone of his actions in meeting with the poor were intimate and natural. His visit has made for a new spiritual awakening for the Church.
We need to take his lead and work to bring about a change in our life as followers of Jesus. We don't want to change the direction he has given us--a small, poor church, with poor and humble pastors getting close to the poor.
The pope's words continue to resound in the ears of the columnist. We want to change the bureaucracy of the clergy at the center, and careerism within the church. We need to become a church of the old, the poor and the young. And concludes with the question: Are we making it easy for the poor to enter our communities without any feelings of discrimination and alienation?
Pope Francis in his visit to Korea was using a 50 dollar watch. He was wearing shoes made by a small shoemaker in Buenos Aires, the ring and the neck piece were made with silver. In his very person he was showing us a distancing from materialism with which we are surrounded. In Korea, especially, we have the economic progress firmly compressed, which makes the virtue of poverty difficult to practice
Jesus lived poverty but it was not a miserable life. It was a life freely chosen, which was his glory and blessing. Poverty gave him freedom. When a person feels the miserableness of poverty than we have real poverty. Christians today need to examine this theme in detail, we need to make known that poverty is not something bad. We need to show that we can be happy without money, contrary to the spirit of the times. Money when it becomes the answer to everything we are on the verge of falling into big hole. We are driving our older people to the edge of a cliff, making for a bleak future.
Pope Francis in seeing the poor leaving the church is angry. The Church needs to lessen the gap between the poor and rich. A beautiful bridge needs to be built between them.Religious living the life of poverty is a good, but they need to share this with the poor.
Pope Francis is beginning to give us a spirituality of poverty following on that of St. Francis. The priest columnist remembers the visit to Korea of the pope and all his travels. He showed us what humility and poverty meant with his whole body. Everyone of his actions in meeting with the poor were intimate and natural. His visit has made for a new spiritual awakening for the Church.
We need to take his lead and work to bring about a change in our life as followers of Jesus. We don't want to change the direction he has given us--a small, poor church, with poor and humble pastors getting close to the poor.
The pope's words continue to resound in the ears of the columnist. We want to change the bureaucracy of the clergy at the center, and careerism within the church. We need to become a church of the old, the poor and the young. And concludes with the question: Are we making it easy for the poor to enter our communities without any feelings of discrimination and alienation?
Friday, May 29, 2015
You Can Be A Saint
“I tell you the
truth, I am convinced that if each one of us would purposely avoid
gossip, at the end, we would become a saint! It’s a beautiful path!”
These words and similar ones on gossip are heard often from Pope
Francis. An article in a secular newspaper mentions the direction the
Church is making with 'poverty'-- the words of a columnist who
mentions Fr, Jin Seul-ki, who wrote a book titled: You Can be a Saint By
Not Backbiting. A collection of the sayings of the pope.
Fr. Jin Seul-ki a Korean priest who is in Rome studying philosophy at the Pontifical Gregorian University translated a collection of the pope's saying under the title You Can Be A Saint.... He has also uploaded the pope's sermons to YouTube with Korean subtitles, and in the book he has the video clips with QR code, for those who want to access the sermons.
Pope Francis has continued to express the need for the Church to identify with the poor of society. The article mentions the talk he gave to the priests and religious in Naples. He said diocesan priests do not take the vow of poverty but they should live the spirit of poverty. When profit comes into the parish life we dirty the message.
He also spoke of the danger of attachment to worldly goods. He said when priests or religious are attached to money, they will prefer people with money. In a humorous aside, the Pope told of a woman who was so attached to money that when she fainted someone suggested putting 100 pesos under her nose to awake her.
He also was very pointed about poverty when he talked to the bishops and priests in Korea. When he was asked how he viewed the Korean Church he answered: "Your Church is a growing Church, a wonderful evangelizing Church, a big Church. With the prophetic mission of the Church you don't want to exclude the poor. A Church rich and for the rich, a Church of well-being is not the Church you want to be." These words were sharp and bitter to hear.
In one of the talks the columnist mentions the pope said: when we are too interested in money and its benefits we lose our freedom to speak the truth.
He concludes his column by stating that the religious groups are busy determining how they are to become transparent in the use of monies. People want to see clergy live a poorer life style, and reminds us that here we have the original thinking of all religions.
Fr. Jin Seul-ki a Korean priest who is in Rome studying philosophy at the Pontifical Gregorian University translated a collection of the pope's saying under the title You Can Be A Saint.... He has also uploaded the pope's sermons to YouTube with Korean subtitles, and in the book he has the video clips with QR code, for those who want to access the sermons.
Pope Francis has continued to express the need for the Church to identify with the poor of society. The article mentions the talk he gave to the priests and religious in Naples. He said diocesan priests do not take the vow of poverty but they should live the spirit of poverty. When profit comes into the parish life we dirty the message.
He also spoke of the danger of attachment to worldly goods. He said when priests or religious are attached to money, they will prefer people with money. In a humorous aside, the Pope told of a woman who was so attached to money that when she fainted someone suggested putting 100 pesos under her nose to awake her.
He also was very pointed about poverty when he talked to the bishops and priests in Korea. When he was asked how he viewed the Korean Church he answered: "Your Church is a growing Church, a wonderful evangelizing Church, a big Church. With the prophetic mission of the Church you don't want to exclude the poor. A Church rich and for the rich, a Church of well-being is not the Church you want to be." These words were sharp and bitter to hear.
In one of the talks the columnist mentions the pope said: when we are too interested in money and its benefits we lose our freedom to speak the truth.
He concludes his column by stating that the religious groups are busy determining how they are to become transparent in the use of monies. People want to see clergy live a poorer life style, and reminds us that here we have the original thinking of all religions.
Spirituality Is Not All the Same
This Chinese Character 靈
is the one we use in Korea for the Holy Spirit and spirituality in
general. This doesn't fit our Christian understanding of the spiritual.
Korea's shamanistic history shows itself in the way the icon expresses
the spiritual. The top part of the character is the icon for rain, the
three mouths are said to express the rain falling and the bottom
character is the icon for sorceress who dancing, asks for rain.
A seminary professor who teaches spirituality begins a series of articles in the Peace Weekly on the subject. He has the need to speak about spirituality with the modifier Catholic, because of the possibility of misunderstanding, due to the shamanistic understanding of spirituality in Korean history.
After the second Vatican council we use the word spirituality often in our teaching. Not only within Christianity but even outside of religion altogether. But the professor makes it clear that in Korea the word does have a context that is different from what we would understand by the word. In Korea the word would mean marvelous, magical, and strange. The context in which the West understands the word is missing. He admits this is also changing in the West. The Church in Korea started using the word regularly about 20 years ago. He says it is not an exaggeration to say that Christians are forcing a Christian meaning on to their past understanding of the word. In Korean society all feel no restraint in using the word spirituality, which he says requires we be attentive to this reality.
The shamanistic history of Korea will continue to influence the native religions and those from the outside and society. This common denominator probably is the reason that Koreans have a good feeling towards the practices of other religions.
Spirituality as used in Korean society does not have the Christian meaning of the word. If we do not understand the Christian meaning we will easily, without any discernment, have an eclectic acceptance of other religious beliefs, and the possibility of losing our faith.
We have in recent years accepted a great deal from what we have learned from anthropology and psychology in our spirituality which is a good but we have to discern otherwise spirituality can be just the results of what we have learned from psychology. Our spirituality becomes a hodgepodge of the teachings of many other religions and ceases to be Christian, consequently, he concludes the need to use the modifier Catholic when he speaks about spirituality.
A seminary professor who teaches spirituality begins a series of articles in the Peace Weekly on the subject. He has the need to speak about spirituality with the modifier Catholic, because of the possibility of misunderstanding, due to the shamanistic understanding of spirituality in Korean history.
After the second Vatican council we use the word spirituality often in our teaching. Not only within Christianity but even outside of religion altogether. But the professor makes it clear that in Korea the word does have a context that is different from what we would understand by the word. In Korea the word would mean marvelous, magical, and strange. The context in which the West understands the word is missing. He admits this is also changing in the West. The Church in Korea started using the word regularly about 20 years ago. He says it is not an exaggeration to say that Christians are forcing a Christian meaning on to their past understanding of the word. In Korean society all feel no restraint in using the word spirituality, which he says requires we be attentive to this reality.
The shamanistic history of Korea will continue to influence the native religions and those from the outside and society. This common denominator probably is the reason that Koreans have a good feeling towards the practices of other religions.
Spirituality as used in Korean society does not have the Christian meaning of the word. If we do not understand the Christian meaning we will easily, without any discernment, have an eclectic acceptance of other religious beliefs, and the possibility of losing our faith.
We have in recent years accepted a great deal from what we have learned from anthropology and psychology in our spirituality which is a good but we have to discern otherwise spirituality can be just the results of what we have learned from psychology. Our spirituality becomes a hodgepodge of the teachings of many other religions and ceases to be Christian, consequently, he concludes the need to use the modifier Catholic when he speaks about spirituality.
Thursday, May 28, 2015
Natural Family Planning
Back in last years of the 1970s, a retired professor from the Catholic Medical School,
remembers a two day workshop he gave to a representative group of
mothers in a diocese at the request of the bishop. The workshop was
sponsored by the Happy Family Movement and was to teach the Catholic birth regulation methods to the women who were to spread the movement
within the diocese.
The method was the natural regulation of births, now well know in Korean society. Whether a person wants to become pregnant or avoid pregnancy, women are taught to notice the changes during the period of ovulation by tracking changes in the vaginal discharge. Examining the mucus would indicate the need for avoidance or not.
After the end of the workshop he asked the group of mothers about their thoughts. He recalls the sharing that took place,and how moved he was. Each person gave their assessment of the program, the common element would be the physiological mystery of the women's fertility cycle, and their surprise in hearing about it, and the desire to spread the news to those in the diocese.
One woman in the group when her turn came had her head down and did not arise from her seat. He thought she was overly moved by the sharing of the group, and urged her to speak out. Having no other option but to stand up, she began speaking very softly.
She and her husband had only a elementary school education, and accepted children as they came along. She had five and not able to take care of any more had two abortions. Hearing all that was needed to avoid a pregnancy was to refrain one week before and after ovulation broke her heart. Her husband was a devout Catholic and avoiding the time of fertility would not have been a problem. Would a person like me be accepted in heaven, and she began to cry.
The hall became solemn, and the professor saw many wiping tears from their eyes. For a moment he didn't know what to do, went over to the woman and held her hand. Sister, do not worry, if God is going to get upset it will be with me for not making the message known before.
People do not like to talk about abortion, contraception and matters of sex but they are important matters dealing with our religious life and should not be neglected. The Church spends much time teaching about these matters and what is central is the need for self-discipline and responsibility.
These virtues are not only needed in matters of sex and contraception for they are important in all areas of our lives. In matters of sex we are not free to do anything we want to solve our problems but need these values to be present--a mysterious reality of our lives.
The method was the natural regulation of births, now well know in Korean society. Whether a person wants to become pregnant or avoid pregnancy, women are taught to notice the changes during the period of ovulation by tracking changes in the vaginal discharge. Examining the mucus would indicate the need for avoidance or not.
After the end of the workshop he asked the group of mothers about their thoughts. He recalls the sharing that took place,and how moved he was. Each person gave their assessment of the program, the common element would be the physiological mystery of the women's fertility cycle, and their surprise in hearing about it, and the desire to spread the news to those in the diocese.
One woman in the group when her turn came had her head down and did not arise from her seat. He thought she was overly moved by the sharing of the group, and urged her to speak out. Having no other option but to stand up, she began speaking very softly.
She and her husband had only a elementary school education, and accepted children as they came along. She had five and not able to take care of any more had two abortions. Hearing all that was needed to avoid a pregnancy was to refrain one week before and after ovulation broke her heart. Her husband was a devout Catholic and avoiding the time of fertility would not have been a problem. Would a person like me be accepted in heaven, and she began to cry.
The hall became solemn, and the professor saw many wiping tears from their eyes. For a moment he didn't know what to do, went over to the woman and held her hand. Sister, do not worry, if God is going to get upset it will be with me for not making the message known before.
People do not like to talk about abortion, contraception and matters of sex but they are important matters dealing with our religious life and should not be neglected. The Church spends much time teaching about these matters and what is central is the need for self-discipline and responsibility.
These virtues are not only needed in matters of sex and contraception for they are important in all areas of our lives. In matters of sex we are not free to do anything we want to solve our problems but need these values to be present--a mysterious reality of our lives.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)