Would the World, Heaven’s Message Understand? (Reflective Verse 5 of 9 for Advent Watch )

Does Gabriel in God’s presence speak?
An angel, whose message is the Lord’s.
What are humans that heaven should mind?
What are mortal children in God’s sight?

These lot even angels envy much,
Born is God’s own, a child in their kind!
Gabriel wonders, telling Christ’s birth;
Would the world, his message understand?

Kings carry greed for riches and pow’r,
Shepherds tend to sheep in fields at dark,
Bethlehem sleeps, careless about Christ,
A keeper grants a shed, no place else.

Zechariah, Mary, and Joseph…
A remnant watches for God’s promise.
Elizabeth, Ana, and Simeon…
And John in the womb will know comes Christ.

Sent to speak to the least of people,
The angels proclaim heaven’s message.
Would the world, their message understand?
Of God’s love for the least now send.

~ S. J. Earl P. Canlas

(We are seeing the last few weeks of 2013 as we move to celebrate the Christmas spirit. We should tremble at the thought of the Christmas story for we protect the powerful among us, even today. We glorify their exploits more than justice that God seeks from them. Shake in the mystery of God’s light breaking through the darkness.)

The Great One like a Blade of Grass Bends (Reflective Verse 4 of 9 for Advent Watch )

Why should the night this time be diff’rent?
What blows on the blade of grass that bends?
We watch for the sheep, no sleep for the night,
We look over flocks, no rest yet in sight.

Behold a light peeps in the darkness;
A song proclaims peace, but what is that?
To shepherds awake in lonely fields?
To a poor dirty band of tired lads?

Why would God favor them with such news?
The birth at Bethlehem of Jesus,
The Lord and Savior for us all,
Not to the great but to the worthless.

Surely the night this time is diff’rent;
The Great One like a blade of grass bends.
Lo, shepherds not for sheep at dark watch;
But look for Christ in a manger rests.

~ S. J. Earl P. Canlas

(We are seeing the last few weeks of 2013 as we move to celebrate the Christmas spirit. We should tremble at the thought of the Christmas story for we protect the powerful among us, even today. We glorify their exploits more than justice that God seeks from them. Shake in the mystery of God’s light breaking through the darkness.)

The Christ-Child Jesus Breaks into Our Lives to Restore Us

God must be ending something we did wrong to begin what he intends to be right and well for us.

Christmas is not about wishing on a star, whether it be rising or falling…. That should not be the way to celebrate or anticipate Christmas at Advent. We go instead through a liturgical routine of Advent-Christmas preparations, reading the scriptures about God’s promise to restore his people in the saving work of Christ and to expect renewal or change in lives and life situations.

The popular verses like Isaiah 9.1-6 tells of God’s gracious providence of a savior-child and the Almighty’s actions to change reigning darkness with his light. This part tells of uplifting the land of Zebulon and Naphtali or the so-called Galilee of the Gentiles–the northern portion of Palestine/Canaan, restoring them with God’s child of promise for his people.

This morning I contrasted this with a prophetic verse about the southern territory where the prophet Jeremiah (22.11-30) depicts Judah’s defeat and its kings and their courts carried off to a foreign country. The popular verse in Isaiah above is about a promised royal child and restoration from a past devastation that left the nation under foreign rule. The other is about judgment call on abusive kings who misled the nation to go against God:

“For thus says the Lord concerning Shallum son of King Josiah of Judah, who succeeded his father Josiah, and who went away from this place: He shall return here no more, but in the place where they have carried him captive he shall die, and he shall never see this land again.

“Woe to him who builds his house by unrighteousness,
and his upper rooms by injustice;
who makes his neighbors work for nothing,
and does not give them their wages….” (Jer.22.11-13)

We also live in economic conditions where political corruption over public funds are widespread; and wages if there is work are controlled more exactly among the poor laborers, and it can barely buy needs in life while the high and mighty enjoy to operate businesses with growing profits. Business brags even with the nation’s growing GDP indices. Yet they propagate low-wage levels to keep an economy that is skewed against grassroots people.

Imagine the prophets speak for the benefit of ordinary folks over powerful kings. And even Mary sings:

“His mercy is for those who fear him
from generation to generation.
He has shown strength with his arm;
he has scattered the proud in the thoughts of their hearts.
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.” (Lk.1.50-53)

Is sinfulness of the leadership demonstrated by indifference to the lives and well being of ordinary folks suffering a long standing economic dilemma that render them vulnerable to deprivation, bodily hazards, and death, among other things? Is this not a crucial point for social reform in our country. Rulers of Judah were guilty of building grand homes while the people lived in grinding poverty. War and its ravaging conditions and its catastrophic consequences in defeat is just one picture of devastation in the Bible. Famine, disease, lack of food, destroyed homes, and deaths among family members are pictures that follow disaster and war.

The Prophet Joel (2.1-3) tells one story of the calamity wrought by the pestering dark sky of locusts. Imagine the devastation that hunger for lack of food with greens consumed by a devouring millions of locusts, grinding agricultural production to a halt, and placing the nation’s future in distress.

So we had hunger, we had earthquakes, typhoons, and even freaking violence in Zamboanga destroy communities and their means of livelihood. We recall the storm that destroyed telecom and power lines in Nueva Ecija, Aurora, and its nearby localities. We recall destroyed buildings and homes in the Visayas due to the earthquake and the super typhoon that came one after the other.

And many asks the Lord, “Why?” “What next?” “When will we have a respite from calamities and disasters?” There are those who freak you out with words about an impending ultimate end, like there will be no tomorrow.

Yes, even God’s people live through calamities. There were catastrophes that struck Christians in Macedonia and Jerusalem on separate occasions in the New Testament. And Paul once said, “…Whether we live or whether we die, we are the Lord’s” (Rom.14.8 ). But we are NOT told to worry about the end but to WORK in God’s continuing grace in all conditions of life in the world.

Restoration is the story of Advent and Christmas messages in the scriptures we cherish. It tells about rising again despite tragic circumstances. It is about being lifted up by the Lord, above even the mighty and the powerful, above the privileged and affluent, a reversal of status that comes with God’s justice and mercy.

The Christ-child is to be born not on December 25, but in hearts and minds that nurture the faith in God who gives and promises life and salvation with justice and compassion. It’s not about a wish but faith in God’s plan. If you see a star, let its brightness symbolize God’s light breaking through the darkness. And remember the Christ-child Jesus breaks into our lives. (a message at Advent watch ~ S. J. Earl Canlas)

A Star so Bright in My Heart (Reflective Verse 3 of 9 for Advent Watch )

Twinkle, twinkle…little, little star!
Brightly shine, in my heart and mind.
Despite the dark spaces in the sky;
Add to my delight, twinkle afar!

Many stories were told by old men;
Many children lit up their faces,
To hear lighted sky as mysteries.
Of little star, of blessings times ten!

On the night of a little babe’s birth,
Came out a star, in my mind so bright.
O, a shepherd boy, not much to count,
Finds the shining light warming the heart!

Why honor for such child so little?
Why such songs sing glory the angels?
Jesus, they call out his name in peace,
They sing of a Savior-Christ: Jesus!

Have you seen him yet, his brightness shines!
Honor him, have you been at his feet?
A child whose mission is spelled for us,
A child whose future is shed for us!

The darkness of the soul he will wash,
On darkness of the world, his star will light.
A people in despair he will cheer,
Flashing to our day, Joy of Ages!

~ S. J. Earl P. Canlas

(We are seeing the last few weeks of 2013 as we move to celebrate the Christmas spirit. We should tremble at the thought of the Christmas story for we protect the powerful among us, even today. We glorify their exploits more than justice that God seeks from them. Shake in the mystery of God’s light breaking through the darkness.)

A Child Over a King (Reflective Verse 2 of 9 for Advent Watch )

Did the stars and the sky tell you?
O, precious child, where were you born?
A song was heard so long ago,
A child of promise to the crowd.

Great ones would bow, kneel to the child,
But a rogue king seeks without sleep;
The child he desires to defraud,
With greed, his power all to keep.

What a babe in a manger holds,
What threat does it pose to pharaohs?
But is the future in the child?
And is tomorrow in its breath?

In the river floated Moses,
A song tells the story of old.
God’s son Egypt and Pharaoh flees,
Not the king holds him, only God.

Little ones and poor will find him,
The meek and lowly shall discover.
But the strong and mighty are blind,
They see only a little child.

Despite the sword the rogue king pokes,
The irony to force and might,
In meekness is this little child,
The way of force to set aside.

Why do you seek this little child?
What glory does it hold at hand?
It sleeps at manger with donkeys,
Colt and ass witness against kings.

~ S. J. Earl P. Canlas

(We are seeing the last few weeks of 2013 as we move to celebrate the Advent and Christmas spirit. We should tremble at the thought of the Christmas story for we protect the powerful among us, even today. We glorify their exploits more than justice that God seeks from them. Shake in the mystery of God’s light breaking through the darkness.)

Like passing swirls in a stream…but hold on

Crediting God as creator of the world and all the universe is the easiest part when we tell our faith story.

But then we ask about details, like who made typhoons, earthquakes, magnetic effects, radiation, and solar flares that affect the weather.

Then it is hard to connect that humans so favored by God in the Bible story are part of the physics and chemistry that are behind our moving planet, moving solar system, moving galaxy, or the whole expanding universe.

Even “used to be atheist” scientists are mystified to believe evolutionary order in creation and the gradual development of moral codes in varied societies are not random but Providential incidences. They are not accidents but caused by an intelligent will.

Deep, deep underneath the land we walk on is the core remains of molten earth formed so long ago by the explosion of earlier matter. At surface we see only the cooled portions of solids eroded by successive climatic change.

The lighter substances of gases and water, also part of the explosion that formed the earth from its beginning, are held by gravity to form what we call the atmosphere.

Heat from the molten core causes the outer solid plates of earth to expand and collide against each other at varying forces. Some plates slide up together on collision and formed the Himalayan mountains. Some plates slide inward together in trenches that swallow outer layers. One plate slid up and the opposing plate slid down when the 7.2 magnitude quake happened in Bohol last October.

Heat also does something to the air and the surface of the seas where typhoons form. We are familiar with the winds that blow rain as it comes from the Southwest to our country early in the rainy season. We also know the winds that carry rain as it blows from the Northeast as we approach the last quarter of the year. There are also winds that trek the path converging toward us from the wide seas on the eastern side that are called the inter-tropical convergent winds.

The wind generated by heat moves upon the earth like there are corridors. You can observe the stream of water and see the main corridors of its path. But somewhere it causes some water to whirl and swirl on the side of the major path. Typhoons form somewhat like this. Starting like a little swirling depression (a vortex in the middle) on the water, the spinning motion can be intensified as heat generates currents of wind to spin it more.

The vortex becomes what we call the eye in a storm. The satellite images of Haiyan or Yolanda as we named the recent super typhoon showed what was said to be one of the most perfect eyes of a storm indicating the force driving the storm.

The physics and chemistry that are behind our moving planet, moving solar system, moving galaxy, the whole expanding universe–even a moving storm–are natural parts of God’s creation. It is as natural as swirling water in a stream.

Birth…death. Life…decay. Part of nature in its physical and biological sense. But in the faith story we keep in the Bible, a sovereign hold on sense of being is God’s domain alone. And yet we ask what humans are that God finds attention for them? God finds favor for human beings. And even Christ is called to become him who will perfect creation and our lives.

It is God who makes the story move more. Has he stopped making the story happen? The Bible story of creation is like the main corridor of life that blows little spinning motions in a continuing story. Perhaps each of us are mere passing swirls in a stream. Our sense of being is senseless apart from God’s big story. Hold on.