Saturday, December 29, 2018

New Year…New Life and a Better World

The end of one year and the beginning of the next is a time of goodbyes and hellos. It is a time of good wishes and of wishing for the prosperity of loved ones and for all of humanity. But, above all, it is a time for balance, good purposes and intentions. ...
When the year ends, we evaluate what has been achieved and what has not been achieved with respect to the objectives and goals that we set for the ending year ... goals that range from the merely individual and very personal to those that transcend family, social, racial, ideological and cultural boundaries, to open ourselves up to the best intentions and purposes for the good of all of us who inhabit the earth.
We all live, even he who ignores it and he who doubts it, through times of profound changes and crises that affect us all, anguish us and fill us with uncertainty regarding the immediate future in each of our lives, in the lives of those closest to us, of our compatriots, and of the world. ...
Changes and crises that touch all strata of human life in society and throughout the planet. Crises and changes that involve all spheres of society: political, economic, religious, cultural, social, etc. ... crisis in social frameworks, crisis in institutions and in social organizations. There are crises and changes in the traditionally known and established. ... If anything characterizes our time, it is the uncertainty about what is to come ...
Nobody, no one among us, is or can be a passive or foreign spectator before what is happening in this stage of man’s life on earth. We all share responsibility for the history that we are building or destroying. We are profoundly united in good and in evil. None of our words and deeds, our actions or omissions ceases to have an impact on the daily human task of building better personal lives, better families, a better society and a better world. ...
A brief analysis of our current reality at a micro or macro level, on a personal, family, social, national or global level, allows us to recognize great advances and, at the same time, enormous and very serious problems.
The advances involve, mostly, the growth in the material and financial, the world of markets, of science, of the technical, of technology and of telecommunications. But, unfortunately, it seems that as we grow materially, we regress morally and spiritually. Evidence from the news and daily events alerts us to the decrease in the world of the deeply human values and ideals that sustain and promote the construction of a better world, one that is more just, more equitable, more supportive, more compassionate, more fraternal: a world like a great table in which everyone has the right to a seat and to share in peace and prosperity.
I wish, at the beginning of this new year 2019, that we all become aware of the importance of each of our very personal and individual intentions, decisions, actions or omissions for the construction of social frameworks and institutions. That we understand, once and for all, that our daily life and being is not insignificant to the destiny of all humanity. That our contribution and our grain of sand counts, a great deal, in the mountain ranges of good and well-being that we must build as we search for a better present and better tomorrow for all. That, daily, we are not spectators, but protagonists of our own story and the stories of our neighbors.
Because if our biggest and most serious problems and crises involve social frameworks being eaten away by corruption, this is due to the crisis of the men who create them, shape and sustain them and, more than that, to the deep crisis of values inside each of us: a crisis in the spirit of man, of men; a crisis in the human spirit.
Therefore, I invite everyone to evaluate, honestly, the principles, values, goals and ideals that govern our attitudes and actions. I invite everyone at this time, as one year ends and another comes, for which we are so hopeful, to fill ourselves with the best wishes, to make the best resolutions, and to work to make 2019 a year of better successes in the pursuit of the common good and for peace for all men and all peoples of the world.
There is much we have done, but much more that we still have to do. Our story and our destiny are in the hands of each one of us. And our work and daily actions depends upon who we are, morally and genuinely, as individuals, and on our values and interests. And because our deeds reflect our values, I wish that every day of 2019 will reveal each one of us as better human beings and better citizens of the world. The song says it well: "New Year, New Life, happier days are coming... HAPPY AND PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR!”




Saturday, December 22, 2018

CHRISTMAS: A CALL TO ACTION ...



CHRIST,MANGER,SHEPARDS

There are men and women whose lives we cannot ignore: Simón Bolívar, Joan of Arc, Martin Luther King, Marie Curie, Gandhi, Teresa of Calcutta, Marx, Rosa Parks, Edith Stein.... What did these men and women do to make the impact they had on the history of humanity? What they did was to simply live, and make of their lives, a call to action.... Among them is a man who produced the greatest impact in the history of humanity: JESUS ​​OF NAZARETH. We count 2018 years of history since his birth in the small village of Bethlehem. This event is what marks the holiday season in the world. If there are messages, lights, gifts, trips, vacations, premieres, family reunions, music and parties, it is because we celebrate another anniversary of his birth.
December, then, reminds the world of the birth of Jesus of Nazareth, but with the celebration of his birth we remember, above all, his great contributions to the history of humanity and what his whole life, his deeds and his words symbolize and mean not only for his disciples, Christians for all ages, but for every man and woman of good will.
Thus, above all, the entire life and work of Jesus of Nazareth contains a proposal, an invitation for all human beings to build a better world through recognizing that we are brothers, children of the same God, who as we were taught by Him, we call a good, compassionate and merciful Father. A recognition through which we can achieve the happiness we all long for by loving one another, serving, forgiving, sharing, expressing solidarity, tolerating each other, understanding each other. This proposal of LOVE clashes with all forms of selfishness, injustice, discrimination, violence and death.
The proposal of Jesus of Nazareth, with his message and the testimony of his life, are, permanently, a call, an invitation and a challenge to the whole world to make our existence on earth a better and kinder space and time for every man and woman who comes to this world.
The celebration of Christmas, the birth of Jesus of Nazareth, on the other hand, reminds us of and marks us all a course, a path, a life philosophy, a logic, principles, values, a meaning for life that normally is neither our path nor our logic. Thus, while we build a life and a society in which what matters is to have, to pretend, to enjoy at whatever cost, to take care of and protect ourselves selfishly, to hoard, to accumulate, to run over and to crush to climb, to get ahead, to rise above others.... Jesus of Nazareth will always remind us of another logic, another direction for the life of men on earth if we want to be happy: the logic of the nativity scene of Bethlehem, of humility, of humbling, of detachment, of the total giving of one’s life, the logic of service to  others, especially the neediest, to the very end, the logic of forgiveness, the logic of love, even to the cross....
Finally, the celebration of CHRISTMAS also reminds us all - not only Christians - of the importance of the human, of the truly human. The deep and Christian meaning of Christmas contains and reveals to all this truth: God cares about humanity and everything that is deeply human. He cares for the child wrapped in swaddling clothes and lying in the manger, for the man who preached in Galilee and washed the feet of his disciples, for he who healed lovingly and was given to all without measure, for he who came into conflict with the legal and cultural institutions of his time because he placed love above all else, to the point that he died hanging on a tree. Christians confess the Son of God; they confess everything that resembles the Father, and recognize in Him the sum and perfect revelation of God's divinity in his humanity and the plan for man that God has for every man. So, from the first Christmas, until today, nothing that is human can leave us indifferent. Because it is in the deep humanity of Jesus that we are  revealed the absolute divinity of Jesus himself.
We can try to avoid the meaning of Christmas with a thousand expressions and terms. In the name of ideological pluralism and respect for a thousand beliefs, we can try to avoid the meaning of Christmas or confuse it with another holiday, with other breaks during the year, but we cannot help but recognize that the proposal of Jesus of Nazareth’s life and work is still a call, an invitation for the construction of "a new heaven on a new earth," for the construction of a personal and social life according to another logic, another criteriology ... according to which we can love one another in absolute respect for the dignity and fundamental rights of every human being: with love and absolute respect for man and for all men.
Christmas is, then, a bimillennial memory of what happened in Bethlehem; it is a gift from God for the world in the child in the manger, but it is also and above all a proposal, an invitation, a call, a challenge, a task, a commitment.... MERRY CHRISTMAS!