Manila Bulletin

Bridging gap between faith and conduct

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THERE’S an amusing story about a pet parrot trained by pious nuns to pray. By pulling the right foot, it would recite the “Our Father”; when pulling the left, it would pray “Hail Mary.”

* * * One day a bishop paid the nuns a visit. To impress their distinguis­hed guest, the nuns bragged of their pious bird and gamely prodded him to pull the bird’s feet successive­ly. The bishop eagerly obliged as instructed. He was amazed how the parrot promptly responded, praying the “Our Father,” then the “Hail Mary.”

* * * The bishop was amused and wondered what it would pray if he pulled both feet at the same time. Slowly, he grabbed both and the bird got offbalance­d and angrily swore, “Lang hiya ka, matanda, mahuhulog ako!” (“Darn you old man, I’ll fall down!”). Poor bishop, he thought the bird would pray “Glory be to the Father.”

* * * Today is the feast of the Sto. Niño. Just like the feast of the Black Nazarene, mammoth crowds of devotees jam the streets joining long procession­s and street dancing and pack ing churches full.

This form of devotion shows how religious and prayerful we Filipinos are. However, like that parrot in the above parable, when we’re in a fix or when the worse takes our better part, we forget our moral values and Christ’s teachings.

* * * The piety split between daily conduct and dealings is shown in the corrupt practices of certain government officials and their religious devotion.

This is also observed in traffic situations where road courtesy is unknown to many drivers, yet they are devotees to the Sto. Niño as shown in mini-images displayed above their windshield­s.

* * * Further, we are a country which is vastly Christian but we are among the highest when it comes to graft and corruption, crimes of violence and extra-judicial killings (EJK).

While popular devotions are certainly part of the Christian faith, the greater challenge is to apply Christ’s teachings of love, honesty, justice, forgivenes­s in every social, political, economic sphere of life. * * * If we fail to live our true faith, we stand to incur the indictment the Lord said to the hypocrites during his time: “This people honors me with their lips but their hearts are far from Me.”

Let’s bridge the gap between our faith and conduct.

* * * SUPPORT SEMINARIAN­S. Seminarian­s are our future priests and bishops. We don’t have INSTANT priests and bishops. They all start as seminarian­s. We cannot have them if we don’t form, nurture, and support seminarian­s NOW. Hence, this appeal.

* * * GOD BLESS — the latest donors to our Adopt-A-Seminarian scholarshi­p program: ANITA ALCASABAS, ANA SANTOS, MARIE ROSE NAVARRO.

* * * Others who want to help may e-mail me at: belsvd@gmail.com.

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