Manila Bulletin

You are the hands of Christ

- By FR. BEL SAN LUIS, SVD

SOME years ago I celebrated the culminatin­g Mass of a two-day Life in the Spirit Seminar (LSS) of the Loved Flock charismati­c community at the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) chapel, Port Area, Manila.

It was participat­ed in by a cross section of teen-agers and elders, the masa and government office personnel, many of whom had not gone to confession and communion for years.

* * * What I considered inspiring was the realizatio­n that there are generous people who, forgetting their personal needs and comforts, still take time out to reach out to people who are in need spirituall­y. They don’t just work and pray and sanctify themselves, but share their three Ts – Time, Treasure, Talent.

* * *

They have understood the Christian calling which the gospel of this 2nd Sunday teaches. “Jesus invited John and Andrew to where he stayed and since then became his disciples. Andrew in turn invited his brother Simon to meet “Jesus the Messiah.” Seeing Simon, Jesus told him to follow him and changed his name to Peter (from the Latin “petrus” which means rock) (Jn 38-42).

* * * This band of fishermen formed the core group on which Christ founded his Church. Today their successors are popes, bishops, priests, and religious.

Unfortunat­ely, many have the idea that the call of Christ to evangelize is addressed only to these modern-day apostles. That’s not true. Every Christian is commission­ed to a ministry of love and justice by virtue of his or her baptism.

* * * Listen to these words of the Vatican II Decree on the Laity: “Incorporat­ed into Christ’s Mystical Body through Baptism and strengthen­ed by the power of the Holy Spirit through Confirmati­on, the laity are assigned to the apostolate by the Lord himself ” (3).

* * * So whether you are an accountant, a lawyer, clerk, doctor, musician, an executive, teacher, or laborer you are sent out to “preach, teach, heal, and witness to the Good News” by your good example and Christian living.

* * * Towards the end of the Second World War, the German army was retreating and the allied forces entered a badly battered Italian village. Some entered the village church. They saw the statue of the Sacred Heart toppled down from its pedestal and broken to a thousand pieces.

* * *

To boost the morale of the people, the soldiers reconstruc­ted the statue. Piece by piece they pasted it together with the exception of the two hands. These were so badly damaged that they were beyond repair.

* * *

In place of the hands, one of the soldiers, a Catholic who truly understood his faith, made a plaque (caratola) on which he inscribed the following words: “You are the hands of Christ.” When you have the chance to visit this church, you can still see Christ’s outstretch­ed arms without the hands. But the plaque is there which tells us graphicall­y what it means to be a Catholic.

* * *

Physically Christ is no longer with us. But his work of evangeliza­tion goes on. And it goes on--in and through us. For you and I are the “hands of Christ.”

* * * FAMILY TV MASS — aired on IBC 13 (channel 15 cable) at 7-8 a.m. every Sunday; also on internatio­nal GMA Pinoy TV. SPONSOR: FAR EASTERN UNIVERSITY (FEU), Manila. Celebrant: REV. FR. LAWRENCE LLONA, SVD. * * * PRAY WITH US ON TV.

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