a time to grieve; a time to dance

Have you ever found a glistening coin on the bed of a flowing stream? You point at it but your friend isn't quite able to see it. Or maybe your friend is pointing at something at a short distance and, for all your neck-craning, you can't quite see what it is.

This blog is exactly that. This is me pointing at something that I know is there and hope you'd see, too. Whether it's at a golden mask at the bottom of the well or an eagle soaring high in the sky, I wish you Happy Looking!

24 March 2011

Bleat!

Inspired by an email from my Tita Rosella, and a url that my friend Ryan showed me, I am writing a blog on sheep. I'm not a shepherd but I know a lot about sheep because... well, I am one. And this sheep is in need of a shepherd.

I'm glad Jesus, the Good Shepherd, was willing to fill in the shoes.

According to sheep101.info, band together in large groups for protection. It is harder for a predator to pick up a sheep for dinner when it's in a flock. If it's a stray though, he's chicken feed.

And so, even though I resisted the idea of belonging to a d-group for the longest time, I now belong in one. Church community helps. I do know it's when Veck and I don't go attend d-group much that we quarrel more often. I also know that during rocky September last year, it was friends from the d-group who came to help us and pray for us.

Bleat Info: When one sheep moves, the rest will follow. When one sheep plunges down a cliff to its death, the rest jump, too. You bleat, I bleat. You jump, I jump.

Dumb, dumb, dumb... I shake my head at these sheep. But if I'm not careful, I follow the leader, too. I follow leading celebrities, leading TV shows, leading trends and pop psychology. I am easily swayed here and there. So as a dumb sheep, I ought to set my eyes on Jesus. I ought to follow Him. Not easy, but if He scales down a cliff, He'll be there. Maybe He'll even carry me on His shoulders.

Bleat Info: Sheep depend heavily upon their vision. Sheep have a very large pupil that is somewhat rectangular in shape. The eyeball is placed more to the side of the head, which gives sheep a much wider field of vision. With only slight head movement, sheep are able to scan their surroundings.

Perfect! But as Christians, we are admonished to live by faith, not by sight, and to fix our eyes on Jesus. I can be reading my Bible and I look up and voila! A world of stimuli ready to provide distraction. Or I can be at church and my eyes wander around: Who's going out with who? Oh, look, is that the new girlfriend? Oh, **** is coming this way. I certainly don't want to say Hi just right now.

Bleat Info: Sheep have poor depth perception (three dimensional vision), especially if they are moving with their heads up.

That explains it. I look at the outward appearance of people around me, and if I don't move closer, then I never get to know them better. Sometimes I don't even want to get there. Just surface is enough--and boom! I've made my mind up on judgments about this or that character. It also means I can be easily fooled.

Man looks at the outward appearance, but the LORD looks at the heart. Quite tough. I look at myself and I can't even see my own heart.

Bleat Info: Sheep have excellent hearing.

Excellent, it said. Now what am I listening to? The latest gossip? My own scheming thoughts? The chatter on TV? What was it that Jesus said? "My sheep listen to my voice; I know them, and they follow me." So I need to be careful what I listen to.

Bleat Info:
Healthy sheep are almost always hungry. They will overeat, if we let them.

On my desk now is an empty bag of McDonald's large fries, a cup of Coke Zero, styro package of this morning's breakfast of rice and eggs, the empty carton box of Fillet O' Fish, a bottle of Lipton... and I am still hungry. Now I am thinking of caramel sundae. Wait! I just had DQ Caramel Sundae.

Why can't I be hungry for the things of God? Like peace, and justice, and compassion and love? Or how about cultivating a hunger for God's Word. The truth is, the hunger is there. It's built-in. It's a sign of health. But what I choose to fill that hunger inside me with can be unhealthy. I can choose to fill this deep sadness with sugar, sexual thoughts, bitterness. Or I can ask God to fill me.

Bleat Info: While sheep are generally a docile, non-aggressive animal, this is not usually the case with rams. Rams can be very aggressive and have been known to cause serious injuries, even death, to people. A ram should never be trusted, even if it is friendly or was raised as a pet.

People who have had the [un]fortunate privilege of getting to know me know I am not always brotherly. That I can hurt. I have hurt a lot of people in my life, and the people I love more often. The secret is sometimes I don't even regret hurting some people in my life. So yeah, I can't be trusted entirely. My heart is the most deceitful of all things, and desperately wicked.

"Who really knows how bad it is?" Busted! But true.

"But I, the LORD, search all hearts and examine secret motives. I give all people their due rewards, according to what their actions deserve."

So what do I know then. Not much, really. I am as dumb as a ram. You know, I heard before that when a sheep is specially disobedient--like straying off to wolf territory in spite of repeated warnings--his shepherd would break his legs. Ouch! But that way he can't move out on his own any more. Then the shepherd takes this sheep, puts him on his shoulders, and carries him the entire time till his legs are healed enough.

Jesus carried my sins on the cross two thousand years ago. He said, "I am the good shepherd. The good shepherd sacrifices his life for the sheep."

I wonder how different my life would be with Jesus as my shepherd.

Psalm 23
1 The LORD is my shepherd;
I have all that I need.
2 He lets me rest in green meadows;
he leads me beside peaceful streams.
3 He renews my strength.
He guides me along right paths,
bringing honor to his name.
4 Even when I walk
through the darkest valley,*
I will not be afraid,
for you are close beside me.
Your rod and your staff
protect and comfort me.
5 You prepare a feast for me
in the presence of my enemies.
You honor me by anointing my head with oil.
My cup overflows with blessings.
6 Surely your goodness and unfailing love will pursue me
all the days of my life,
and I will live in the house of the LORD
forever.


Lea Salonga... Second Chances



When emptiness is all there is to see
The joy that you once knew a distance memory
When the purpose of each morning is forgotten with each night
And it doesn’t seem to matter if you give up or you fight
Look again. That is when your world is about to change
Nothing in life is so permanent that love can’t rearrange

Second chances
Life is rich with second chances
Second songs with second dances, second melodies
For if you only got one shot
if what's for nothing's all you got
Your days will just be filled with single moments, single memories
But I believe hearts can conceive
Of more than one bright happy ending
Roads may split in two
You can’t go down both really fast
We know and yet we still forget
Our paths are never so unbending

Life has given you a second chance
Second chances
The world provides with second chances
New adventures, new romances, new responsibilities

For if you’re always looking back
Your eyes might miss the second track
You take no chances, seize no day, live no possibilities
But heart’s desire, hearts afire
A blaze you grow from a single ember
Yesterday turns toward tomorrow with brand new circumstance

What’s past is past but it’s not the last
We’re not alive to just remember

When life has said to you
"Not a chance, but two"

Life has granted you a second chance.

-=-=-=-=-

Beautiful song, isn't it? I feel there are some kinks in certain lines that need to be ironed out or re-written, like for a song that is positive there's a line that goes "You take no chances, seize no day, live no possibilities..." which is negative and quite didactic... but it is a beautiful song and Lea renders it beautifully.

It's from Allegiance the Musical, scheduled to come out on Broadway in 2012. I hope it becomes a hit and Lea earns another Tony for it. It's about the Japanese people. Well, that's as much as I know about the musical.

I post the song here because I want to believe that what the song says is true. That life IS filled with second chances. I'd love to have second chances at life. To take another shot at school, and mend relationships I've severed, erase regrets.

Playwrights are great teachers. They teach us about the world, about people, about ourselves. Read Shakespeare, Wilder, Rostand. Better yet, watch theatre! For example, PETA's Care Divas talked about the plight of OFWs in war-torn Israel... and about love. Recently World Theatre Project staged Macbeth, and it taught me what corruption is.

That's my advice today. Watch some theatre. I can't tell you for sure if life does give second chances. But when Allegiance comes out next year, we'll hear that from them and learn.

23 March 2011

Amidst a culture of fake

But what if the culture among your colleagues is that of fakery? Of plasticity?

What if you're not used to that? What if in life you've learned that keeping one's integrity is not always easy but the better option? What if life experience has taught you that dishonesty only leads through more trouble--and who needs additional burdens in this day and age?

In a painful series of events, I recently found out that the team I work with at the office cannot be trusted completely. And for someone who already has trust issues, this was devastating. It takes me a while before I trust a person. Otherwise, I keep acquaintances at a distance. If I do trust a person, I let that person in my life and develop a deep level of friendship. With me, there is no middle ground. This was shown to me clearly by a friend of mine, who has these issues herself.

Now the problem presents itself when I've learned to trust a person who betrays me, or would not return the same commitment to friendship. It can be devastating. And in this case, it was. I thought I could trust my team with my heart, my creativity... I was wrong.

An air of phoniness has now set in and a game of politicking has kicked in. I don't want to take part in it. I can't. I don't want to lose my integrity for that. But what can I do? I'm afraid I'd be swallowed alive if I don't participate in the game--if I don't compromise my values.

I think the answer is simply DON'T. Don't compromise. Hold on. Hold fast. Trust that I am not friendless, that Someone promised to look out for me and never leave me, and that Someone is Truth. In the same way, I was advised to stretch my patience and compassion. Not everyone has equal level of understanding in these matters. Some probably are not still awake enough to comprehend spiritual issues surrounding this. And for these people, I must extend an open acceptance of who they are and the level of consciousness they're in, just as I have my own limitations to my level of consciousness.

In all these, to trust God. Trust God. Continue to be as honest as I can, continue to learn what I can, and to trust God.

So amidst a culture of dishonesty, be compassionate, understanding, open-minded, and honest. Never lose the honesty. Just be more expansive, inclusive. In my mind there can be space enough for acceptance of everyone in my life now.

-=-=-

And some encouraging words from friends:

"Disappointments in life makes us tough. Sometimes it's not a battle of what is right and wrong but what we have come out of it."

“If you were of the world, the world would love its own. Yet because you are not of the world, but I chose you out of the world, therefore the world hates you.” [John 15:19]

"Love is patient."
-=-=-

Extending patience. I need to learn this lesson now. Because this is in preparation for something in the future. And if I don't learn kind consideration and patience now then it'll be harder in the future.

Last night I read about Joshua in the Bible. That part of the Bible is all about land and how the Israelites, once slaves in Egypt, are now claiming their inheritance from God. Well, the land is theirs, God gave it to them as the Promised Land, and now it's theirs for the taking. Joshua 17.14-18 records some people complaining about it, though. They were asking for more land. Joshua says, "Well, go fight for it!" Like move! Do what you need to do. It's theirs for the taking, so take it.

I realize I'm like that sometimes. You know, God has promised us blessings and to help us but [if] I don't do my part, then I don't get it.

Caleb, in
Joshua 14.6-15, is the opposite. He claimed and fought for the land that was promised to him by God--and that showed faith. Faith does involve action.

Two days ago God instructed me to apologize to the members of the team at work. I didn't want to do it. I felt that they should apologize to me! But I obeyed, leaving the results up to Him.

Earlier today the instructions were to try to make contact with one of the team members, to just see things from his perspective.

I need to trust God in this. I owe it to Him. I owe it to Jesus who purchased me with the most precious thing ever: His life. I owe it to the Christians all over the world who are persecuted. What is this that I am experiencing compared to their travails? And yet they're faithful. And God is faithful.

I need to learn to be faithful.

22 March 2011

Disappointment

Maybe I should briefly tell the story of my discouragement. It can be a long story, so if I write a long winding email thank you for your patience. I scheduled to share this grievance with a confidante as per the task, but the person backed out. So I'm sharing it here.

Our boss from Australia sent us P10,000 so we our team (of six people, myself included) can spend on fun! We're to take half-day from work and spend the rest of the day eating out, or doing whatever, for team building purposes. We met about where we will eat and I suggested if we can take part of that amount (say P1,000) and give it to charity. After all, the amount is more than enough for all of us, and we all have salaries that can pay for restaurants, etc. The money is a sweet bonus from our boss.

One suggested that true charity means money comes out of your own pocket, and one another said that the P1,000 can better be spent on Starbucks. Well, the rest didn't say anything, and when we finished the meeting, I saw our team leader (I'm only second-in-command in this team) put in the P1,000 for charity and the rest of the money for our team building. So I believed everything to be settled.

Naturally, being the two team leaders, we emailed our boss. The first team leader said we're eating at this restaurant of choice. I emailed him that the team is giving P1,000 to charity under the name of the company. I also suggested Metro Ministries, a charity institution that helps homeless children giving them food, shelter, medical attention, clothes. The boss approved the charity and the restaurant.

A week after that, when we found out that the restaurant will cost P1,400 each for lunch... and since there's six of us that'll be P8,400 + 1,000 (for charity) and only a remaining P600 left for whatever, the team changed its mind and said they don't want to give the P1,000 for charity and instead spend it all on team building. They were, they said, willing to give out of their pockets for charity instead. They also said that I was imposing this on them, that I coerced them into giving! I felt crushed. I used to think highly of these people, but after this change of heart and mind, I saw them as lacking integrity and compassion. This was so sad because I actually sent them a profile of Metro Ministries and a photo of the young boy, Jimmy, who will receive the P1,000 donation.

I apologized to the group if I ever made them feel coerced into giving. After I recovered from initial shock, I emailed my boss and told him that the team would rather not give the P1,000 to charity. It's my boss's money. He has the right to know where we're spending it.

Almost immediately my boss messaged me on Skype asking if it was the whole team's decision. I had to be honest, I told him. I said, it was majority. I also told him that I wanted to give the P1,400 that was supposedly for my lunch treat and give that to charity, and I can pay for my own lunch during the team building.

My boss said that won't be necessary. He said he'll still send the P10,000 for us, and an additional P2,000 to give to charity. I was so thankful!

But even that didn't settle the issue with my teammates. They felt I painted them in a bad light in the eyes of my boss, that they were willing to give to charity out of their own pockets and it was unprofessional of me to email him.

The next day I didn't join them for lunch. One of my friends here in the office said that my team were making fun of charity, saying, "Don't finish your lunch! Leave half of it and give it to the poor!" and they were all laughing and mocking. Then they reported me to the local supervisors and soon I found myself in a room with the two Filipino supervisors and the rest of the team.

The team said I assumed they agreed to giving the P1,000 and then jumped the gun by emailing our Aussie boss. I said, I saw it put in the budget! I thought you all were in agreement. And they said I imposed it on them. I looked at the team leader, asking him to say that he did put it in budget and that at that time it was a decision, but he didn't say anything. I was thrown under the bus! The supervisors said it was all my fault, and they all felt happy having someone to blame. The newest of the team even called me unprofessional for showing him how to improve his writing--which is my job as quality control for the team!

I said, "I can never be friends with people like you." And I have never spoken to them ever since, unless it's related to work.

So now I'm stuck working with people who have zero integrity. Why can't they take the example of my boss? He approved the P1,000 for charity, and even when the rest went against that, he still gave to honor his word! I grieve the loss of friendships I had with the team, but really, I'd rather not be friends with them. I told them we don't have to be enemies, but I can't be friends with you anymore.

Well, that's the gist of it. I think I shall write about this some more in the coming days. It may be expurgative, therapeutic for me. And new things happen every day.

Thanks for listening.

03 March 2011

Times, Tenth Avenue North

I know I need You
I need to love You
I love to see You, but it's been so long

I long to feel You
I feel this need for You
I need to hear You
Is that so wrong?

Now You pulled me near You
When we're close I fear You
Still I'm afraid to tell You
All that I've done

Are You done forgiving?
Or can you look past my pretending?
Lord, I'm so tired of defending
What I've become
What have I become?

I hear You say:
My love is over, it's underneath
It's inside, it's in between
The times you doubt Me; when you can't feel
The times that you've questioned, 'Is this for real?'
The times you've broken, the times that you mend
The times you hate Me and the times that you bend
Well My love is over, it's underneath

It's inside, it's in between,
These times you're healing
And when your heart breaks
The times that you feel like you've fallen from grace
The times you're hurting
The times that you heal
The times you go hungry and are tempted to steal
In times of confusion and chaos and pain
I'm there in your sorrow under the weight of your shame
I'm there through your heartache
I'm there in the storm
My love, I will keep you by My power alone
I don't care where you've fallen; where you have been
I'll never forsake you
My love never ends, it never ends.

-=-=-=-=-=-=-

I recently heard this song over Klove.com. I needed to hear it. I needed to believe that God's love stays with me at all times.

22 February 2011

Art Restoration

I now gaze at Michelangelo's The Creation Of Adam on my computer. I follow with my eyes the slope Adam reclines on and study closely God's flowing beard. I stretch my finger touching that space between Adam's and God's fingers--eternally reaching out to each other to close that gap which is the largest chasm in all of human history.

This painting is not in any museum but is among many other pictorial scenes adorning the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel in Rome completed in 1481. Two hundred years later, the ceiling would suffer from water leaks. Simone Lagi arduously wiped the ceiling with linen cloths and rubbed it with bread. This was what has come to be known as art restoration or conservation. Now there are more modern and technologically-advanced techniques in art restoration, but it doesn't make the task any less arduous.

We don't see this--and maybe we never will--but we are works of art. We are masterpieces of the Creator, the Great Artist. "We are God's worksmanship," Paul wrote. We are His poetry, His obra maestra, His pièce de résistance in all of Creation. We would need His eyes to see us as we truly are.

My niece posted on Facebook, to my chagrin, a picture of me at six years old, bright-eyed and self-content. I was in a bright yellow shirt sipping a Coke. I looked at that child as if he wasn't me. If I could find that child I would apologize to him. I'd say "I'm sorry this is who you came out to 23 years later. I'm sorry I made you go through bad decisions. I wished I'd have done better." What I really wanted to say is I wish I never allowed sin into my life.

Sin has damaged me. Sin has damaged my relationships. Sin is the death of me. Ten years ago I wouldn't have cared less--a teenager rebelling against my dad, partying till the AM, and allowing others to treat me any way they wanted. "I'm worthless," I told myself, and believed it, too. If I were any piece of art, I'd be the picture of Dorian Gray. Restoring me would need more than the occasional swab of linen cloth and spongy bread.

Restoring me required that the Son of God, my Creator, would suffer and die for my sins. It would require that He shed His blood completely. It would require stripes on His back, thorns on His head, and nails on His hand and feet. And as He went through these 2000 years ago He looked forward to Rico restored, to Rico rejoicing in His presence. In three days He broke through the grave that couldn't hold Him.

When Ondoy hit us my father-in-law came to live with us as the self-appointed nanny to my daughter. There was good in this because he stopped drinking and regained a vigor he lost when he retired. Which meant of course I had to make certain adjustments: not all my decisions as man-of-the-house were carried out if my father-in-law was against it. The stench of cigarette smoke hung around the house like a specter. And we would have his favorite crab day after day after day. I'm vegetarian. I thought these were small sacrifices in exchange for seeing my cynic-to-the-Gospel father-in-law attending Sunday celebration.

But I reached a boiling point. In about a year we were at each other's throats, like steamed crabs with giant claws. With a harsh exchange of words he moved out, along with my petulant sister-in-law who was staying with us, too at that time. My wife was devastated, but I felt I only did the right thing. I was not without any self-justification or self-pity for doing what I did. My father-in-law and I have never spoken to each other since.

These were my choices. I wanted to stick by them. But they weren't necessarily godly choices. God's will is for me to forgive my father-in-law, to reach out to him in humility, and to pursue love above all. I can seek to restore this broken relationship ony after and in much prayer for strength and wisdom, in meeting with him, and humbly listening to his heart. Naturally I am reluctant.

Have you noticed that Adam's hand and gaze in Michelangelo's painting are slack? His arm and forefinger are relaxed. Contrast that with God's outstretched arm and finger and eager gaze, as if He is doing all in His power to come in contact with the man He created and loves. In God there is strong intent and action to fill that gap between Him and man. In Jesus, that gap was closed forever.

Excuse me. I'll need to stop writing now. I'll pray to the God of restoration and healing. Then I'll give my father-in-law a call. I'll reach out to him and close the gap. This is what Jesus did for me with His blood.

16 February 2011

Nothing is more important than relationships

The Relationship Principles Of Jesus day one

I frankly feel this is another huge marketing scheme by Saddleback... old message (in fact ancient message since Biblical times), a tried format of 40 days, a marketing ploy of dispersing to churches worldwide to study the book in small groups, complete with video, study guides which will be greatly supplemented if you buy Tom Holladay's book on which this whole thing is based on. All this was done in the Purpose Driven Life Campaign many years ago based on a book written by Rick Warren of Saddleback Church.

Tom Holladay's writing sounds a lot like Rick Warren's. It's a little... churchy. Pastor-talk. I've my own favorite Christian authors and those mentioned above are not in my list. Tom and Rick are associate pastors of Saddleback so it's not as if Tom wrote a book independently and from another part of the country and Rick read it, caught on its promise, and contacted Tom to convince him to turn the book into a PDL take 2 campaign. (PDL has seen decrease in sales in the recent years.)

Having said all my critique, I will never deny how God used Rick Warren and the Purpose Driven Life book and campaign to transform many, many lives. I never finished reading it, though. At least not in the one chapter a day format. Not that it's a terrible bore... the topics are really relevant! But it's the writing I don't like. (If you're curious who my favorite Christian writers are, just nudge me and I'll spill.) But reading through PDL I thought, bleah, I'd rather go straight to the source and read the Bible instead of this rehash.

So here I am in 2011, and tonight I'm supposed to facilitate a small group on ta-dah! The Relationship Principles of Jesus. I read the first chapter today and my thoughts are... You Can't Do That!

No, Tom, you can't! You can't tell me to "place the highest value on relationships" just with that short chapter. I need something more than that. I need... convincing, motivation, drive. I need something that speaks to my humanity. I can't be a robot that does what it's told.

Tom uses Mark 12 as his basis. While I have no questions that to love God and others is the greatest commandments, that wouldn't be enough for me to obey 100%. I am, after all, human. Praise God He knows this!

God doesn't just say "Love me!" God actually gives us reason and power (energy, spirit, drive--you get the picture) to do that. The Bible says we love because He first loved us. First John 4:10 says, "This is real love—not that we loved God, but that he loved us and sent his Son as a sacrifice to take away our sins."

And there it is! That's why I can love God and love others. Because God loved me first, even before I was born. Tom might have forgotten to mention this, but Peter Tan-Chi didn't, when he spoke about this topic last Sunday at CCF. Neither did my small group leader forget. Kuya Mon, after going through the video and discussion questions with us immediately went into the Gospel. The Gospel is the good news of God's love for us. Because of the Gospel, I am enabled to place the highest value on relationships.

Let me talk a bit about God's love. God is the most wonderful, magnificent friend a person can ever have... and He wants me—despicable me—more than I can ever want Him. I don't understand it! He wants to have a relationship with me so much He suffered and died just to make it possible. "Yes, by God's grace, Jesus tasted death for everyone" (Hebrews 2:9).

I do know that the father ran to his son (Luke 15:20), not the other way around.

The way I used to do it is base my lovability on how I feel and how I perform. If I do good, I feel good, and I feel loved by God, naturally. But when I foul things up, which I do often being human, when I trip and fall, I feel rotten, unlovable. Then I become convinced God hates me.

But God's love is unconditional. Nothing I can do can make Him love me more. Nothing I have done can make Him love me less. My lovability is not based on who I am or my person. It is based on who God is. God is love. God loves me. That's how it is from the beginning. And I can't change that. It's truth long before I was born.

What's more, Jesus took the fall for my sins. Then, He embraces me and kisses me in His love. Everything was done so I can come.

Consider this. I have sinned against God. I don't deserve to have a relationship with Him. But He made a way. He paid the price. He did it all.

And now I come. I come to Him. I come and I want to say, "I want to love You back. And I want to tell others about your love. And I want to love others like You do."

Listen to the lyrics of this song by Hillsong.


14 February 2011

The spiritual and the secular

When I was younger in the faith and in the arts, I was accepted as an apprentice in a Christian theatre arts ministry. I learned a lot of good from them, but learned some bad also in the mix. One such learning was that being Christian, all my work must be exclusively for God's only, which was translated into: secular theatre work is bad. For years I had this thinking and shunned auditioning for theatre other than evangelistic community theatre. In this arts ministry, I learned acting second-hand, because I was rarely recognized for my talent. I was made to play second fiddle to my co-apprentices who were deemed more talented than me.

Each time I did make something worthy (my writing was something none of my other co-apprentices could do so I was recognized for it), I will be praised but immediately admonished that it's for God and I shouldn't feel satisfaction for it. To make sure of that, there would be all sorts of critique for my work--particularly if it were written in the genre of fantasy and did not mention "God" at all. But even in my "Christian genre" writing, that was criticized, too.

I never once thought that this was out of ordinary. I remember a member of that group once auditioned for a local musical of CS Lewis's "The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe" and that was disapproved. Only now do I remember all these incidents in my work with JC's books.

I wish I can go back in time and help myself as young artist by being the gentle mentor I needed at that time.

In one bold move, I took a hiatus from that group and auditioned for other theatre productions--where I was recognized for my drive, my discipline, and my talent in acting--something that I never received from the former group. These being secular productions, I heard all these accolades with a twinge of guilt. And my former theatre groups interpreted my leaving my company as losing my faith. Still, steadily, I really learned to act from my secular directors and gained a trust in my talent. Sometimes I would show up in my former theatre group, but nothing has changed there. I still was treated as a second-class talent in spite of my outside work.

Well, that Christian theatre group has now dissolved. None of its members turned out to be that committed to theatre work, and in contrast, here I still am, with a hunger and passion for theatre.

Last Sunday at church, the minister said something about the spiritual and the secular. He said anything done for the Lord is spiritual--whether it be our desk jobs. I was like, a ha! All those times I did secular theatre but prayed backstage dedicating that work to God--then it's not secular theatre after all! The minister went on to say that all seemingly spiritual work like ministry, if not done for the Lord, isn't spiritual at all.

That healed me. So I thought I just might share it here.

Happy Valentine's Day!

11 February 2011

How He Loves Us, David*Crowder Band



He is jealous for me,
Loves like a hurricane, I am a tree,
Bending beneath the weight of his wind and mercy.

When all of a sudden,
I am unaware of these afflictions eclipsed by glory,
And I realize just how beautiful You are,
And how great Your affections are for me.

And oh, how He loves us so,
Oh how He loves us,
How He loves us all

Yeah, He loves us,
Oh! how He loves us.

-=-=-=-=-=-

I share this video because I listen a lot to K-Love.com and that's where I first encountered this song. I need to be reminded of what David Crowder writers here: He loves us.

God loves us! No condition, no exemption.

08 February 2011

Customized Affirmations from The Artist's Way at Work

Julia Cameron's groundbreaking book, The Artist's Way, has helped more than a million people access their creativity and realize their dreams. Now, at the urging of their students, authors Mark Bryan, Julia Cameron, and Catherine Allen expand the original Artist's Way tools in an all-new program specifically addressing the world of the workplace.

The Artist's Way at Work blends cutting-edge ideas on creativity and group dynamics with the timeless values of integrity and simplicity to produce a powerful process that will assist you in whatever work you pursue.

The result will be a heightened sense of adventure, excitement, creativity, and satisfaction—not only in your business, but in your whole life as a whole.

- from the back of the book

The Artist's Way at Work suggests that you use some affirmations for your workplace. Here are some:

  1. My creativity profits me and others.
  2. My creativity is clear and expansive.
  3. I trust and use my creative impulses.
  4. My creativity is safe and exciting.
  5. As I trust my creativity, it becomes stronger.
  6. My creativity flourishes.
  7. My creativity brings joy to me and my world.
  8. There is a divine plan of goodness for me and my work.
  9. As I create and listen, I am led.
  10. I am willing to create.
  11. I am willing to use my creative talents.
  12. Through using a few simple tools, my creativity flourishes.
  13. I am allowed to nurture my creativity.
  14. My creativity leads me to friendship and service.
  15. I am a conduit of God to create good things.
  16. My creativity is God-given.
  17. Using my creativity is a gift back to God.
  18. I allow creativity to flow through me.
  19. I welcome a flow of creative ideas.
  20. I act on my creative impulses with faith and clarity.

31 January 2011

dil·i·gence

Okay... sometimes I really get too lazy when I'm at work. I end up daydreaming or playing an online game addiction instead of facing the task at hand.

So to help me, I collected some verses from Proverbs. I post them here to serve me as inspiration, as a net for casting a vision, as a through-line setting a goal, or as a cheerleading squad. I know I'll need this sooner or later.

I'm posting the list here so I can just glance at it instead of leafing through my notebook where I wrote these down.

The Proverbs on diligence

A wise youth harvests in the summer,
but one who sleeps during harvest is a disgrace.

Lazy people irritate their employers,
like vinegar to the teeth or smoke in the eyes.

A hard worker has plenty of food,
but a person who chases fantasies has no sense.

Wise words bring many benefits,
and hard work brings rewards.

Work hard and become a leader;
be lazy and become a slave.

Lazy people don't even cook the game they catch,
but the diligent make use of everything they find.

Lazy people want much but get little,
but those who work hard will prosper.

Work brings profit,
but mere talk leads to poverty!

A lazy person's way is blocked with briers,
but the path of the upright is an open highway.

A lazy person is as bad as
someone who destroys things.

Lazy people take food in their hand
but don't even lift it to their mouth.

Those too lazy to plow in the right season
will have no food at the harvest.

If you love sleep, you will end in poverty.
Keep your eyes open, and there will be plenty to eat!

Good planning and hard work lead to prosperity,
but hasty shortcuts lead to poverty.

Despite their desires, the lazy will come to ruin,
for their hands refuse to work.
Some people are always greedy for more,
but the godly love to give!

he lazy person claims, "There's a lion out there!
If I go outside, I might be killed!"

Do you see any truly competent workers?
They will serve kings
rather than working for ordinary people.

I walked by the field of a lazy person,
the vineyard of one with no common sense.
I saw that it was overgrown with nettles.
It was covered with weeds,
and its walls were broken down.
Then, as I looked and thought about it,
I learned this lesson:
A little extra sleep, a little more slumber,
a little folding of the hands to rest—
then poverty will pounce on you like a bandit;
scarcity will attack you like an armed robber.

A hard worker has plenty of food,
but a person who chases fantasies ends up in poverty.

Okay, here's my plan. If I need a break either because laziness sets in, or I'm genuinely tired, I look at this list, grab one, and meditate on it. May God's Word do its work in me.

17 January 2011

Baby Steps, a silly kindergarten ditty



Baby steps! Baby steps!

These delight the Father.
Baby steps, careful/confident
They bring joy to Mother.

Baby steps, little feet
God is their Maker.
Not to run ahead
but to walk in step
with the God of baby steps.

16 January 2011

Borrowed story: Doug Nichols in the toilet

Doug Nichols tells of his experience in missions:

When I finished Bible school, the school had to put me in special tutoring class. They tutored me through school because I could not read well, or study well, and then could not do things. I applied to 30 different missions. I wanted to be a missionary. I felt God calling me to Him and people would say, "Ah, forget it, you'll never be able to be a missionary." I applied to 30 different missions, finally one accepted me on a trial basis.

For two years, I went to India with the group called Operation Mobilization and I was so excited on being with these Indian believers, these leaders because Indians taught me, train me in ministry. Indians did train me, and as we were down south in India, they would teach me how to preach and how to give gospel tracts and how to share the gospel. I was so excited. And I was preaching one day, I began to cough, cough and it got worse and worse and they discovered that I had tuberculosis, very serious tuberculosis.

We had no money so I had to go into a government TB center, and I was so discouraged. The only reason they let me in was because someone died that day and they let me have his bed. They didn't even change the sheets. I'm in a corner and I'm discouraged at that filthy, smelly, people dying all around, no money, only one meal a day. So I thought at least I can go from bed to bed and distribute gospel tracts.

I started going from bed to bed and people would look at this tract and look at me and they tear it up and they throw it back in my face. Because they didn't like this American taking the place of an Indian in the TB sanctuary. So nobody would talk to me, everybody would treat me badly, I couldn't even give out tracts. Most people can at least give out tracts. I couldn't even do that effectively. So I went to sleep that night very discouraged.

About 2:30 in the morning, I woke up, coughing. Do you think that God has anything to do with our sickness? Do you believe in the sovereignty of God? I woke up at 2:30 coughing and as I was coughing trying to catch my breath from the tuberculosis. I looked across on the other side of the room and one of the patients was trying to get out of bed. He would get out of bed, he'd take a few steps and had fall back in bed. He get out of bed, take a few steps and fall back. He was so weak he could not walk that he laid down in bed and I heard him cry. I didn't know what's going on, I couldn't speak the language, I couldn't ask what's wrong, I'm sick, he's sick. But he begin to cry, well, I went back to sleep.

I woke up the next morning and I knew what had happened. He was simply trying to get up to go to the toilet. But because he was so weak, he couldn't get to the toilet. So he went to the toilet in his bed and the stench was so bad and people were upset and the other people were yelling at him. One threw a tea cup and threw it at him. When the nurses come in to change the bed, one of them slapped him in the top of the head. Terrible!

That night we went to bed again. And again, at 2:30 in the morning, I woke up coughing. As I coughed, I looked across the aisle and there was the old man and he was trying to get out of bed again. I knew now what was happening. But I did the same thing that many of you would, I began to reason. This was not my responsibility. Why don't the Indians take care of themselves? Let the Indians take care of themselves! Besides, where are the nurses? Where are the doctors? How come they're not taking care of this old man? But he was still trying to get out of bed to go to the toilet and nobody was helping him and I remembered a verse.

I memorized it a year before, "He that knows the right thing to do and does not do it to him it is sin." And so I knew I had to do something, reluctantly, not with any joy, I walked across to the other side of the room, he'd already laid back in bed and he was crying. He knew what was going to happen and I tap him on the shoulder and his eyes came to open and with fear and I said something you know, I smiled at him and I just put this arm under his back and this arm under his legs and I picked him up. I was weak but I was not weak like him. And I stumbled down the hallway and into the corner and to this filthy, filthy toilet. And then, I'm sensitive to bad smells and filthy and I held him and he relieved himself. And when he finished, I picked him up and took him into my arms again and took him back to his bed and as I lay him down on his bed, my face was near his and he kissed right here, kissed me right there. He said something in Maliala that I didn't understand.

I went back to my bed and collapsed with fatigue and immediately went to sleep. About 5:00 in the morning, I felt a tap on my shoulder and I opened my eyes and there was a man with a cup of steaming hot chai. I thought, what is this? Breakfast in bed? He gave me the tea and stepped back and opened his hands like a book. He indicated he wanted a gospel tract. Now, isn't that something? The day before they're tearing it up, now, they're coming to my bed with tea and asking for a gospel tract. Wow, I wonder what happened? And I gave him a gospel tract, I was so excited.

About a few minutes later, another patient came to my bed, and another patient, and another patient. By 10:00 that day, 350 patients either came to my bed asking for my tract or sending someone else to get one for them. And for the next several weeks or months, I'm not sure how many of those people turn from sin to the Savior because of the gospel. But you know what opened the door? Something that any of you could have done, simply taking an old man to the bathroom, open the door to all these people to come to a saving knowledge of Jesus Christ and you could do the very same thing.

15 January 2011

Borrowed story: Doug Nichols in Greenhills

Doug Nichols showed me the value of kindness in a harsh world. This is his story:

I had to have a load more time put time on my phone and I was over at Greenhills shopping mall. I asked someone and said, "Go there."

So I walked up to one of the counters to have your load put on your phone. As I walked up, they saw this tall old missionary walk up to them. Evidently they did not like Americanos. They started calling me names. "What do you want you ugly Americano?" "Where did you get that nose? Looks like a saging, a banana nose" and they started saying things, and they laughing and making fun of me and my looks.

So they started putting the load on my phone and one of them started some very shameful things to me, very cruel and foul and using sexual terms and just is terrible. And I was so embarrassed, so embarrassed I found myself getting red with embarrassment. I was so ashamed that people would even talk to anybody like that. So I paid for my phone and I turned and as I walked away they said some terrible things to me, very bad things, couldn’t even repeat them.

One hour later, I’m walking, still in Greenhills, I finished all my appointments and walking back to my car and I passed Krispy Kreme donuts. Oh I shouldn’t say Krispy Kreme donuts today, should I? But I was on the other side. You know I do not like Krispy Kreme donuts because you just walk by the place you gain 5 pounds. And so, they were baking some fresh donuts and you could smell the bread, you could smell the donuts. As I smell the bread, I’m walking towards my car I’m still feeling so badly about what happened an hour before and then all of a sudden I remembered the verse "Pray for those who despitefully use you and say all manner of evil against you. Pray for them, be exceedingly glad."

All of a sudden I remember those people in that phone shop and I knew what God was leading me to do. So I walked over across the street to Krispy Kreme. I ordered 6 donuts, when they gave me the bill I said, "I just want to buy donuts, I don’t want to buy the store." They put them in a bag and I put some gospel tracts in the bag, about 50 of them. And then I walked back over to that where that phone shop was and as I walked up they saw me and they began to say the bad words again but when I got up to the counter I put the Krispy Kreme donuts and I said, "Para sa iyo" and they all asked "Sir, what is this?"

"Oh, it’s 3 o’ clock. It’s merienda time. This is for you. I want to bless you in Jesus’ name."

And then they changed totally, completely. I took out the gospel tracks and I gave to them. "This is how to tell you how you can turn from sin to the Savior." And then I turned and I walked away and as I walked away do you what they said? "Thanks mister for talking to us. Thanks mister for coming here today."

13 January 2011

Borrowed story: Doug Nichols in a restaurant

I borrow this story from missionary Doug Nichols:

Several years ago, when I had cancer, 2 friends took me to a special breakfast. Breakfast is my favorite meal, the doctor said that I was going to be dying in several months, so my friends wanted to buy me a special breakfast. I guess you can call it the "last breakfast."

So we went into the restaurant and it was very crowded. There must have been a convention going on. Everybody was there and they didn't have enough servers and waiters. So finally, the waitress came over and gave us our coffee and then rushed away saying, "I will be back in a few moments to take your order."

So she rushes away, few minutes later and one of my friends said, "I wonder if that waitress who's waiting on us…I wonder if she's a believer. I wonder if she's a Christian."

I looked at her and there was nothing attractive about her. Hindi maganda, she wasn't attractive. She's kind of pumpy and her dress has kind of food all over it, her hair is all mess up and but there was something about her countenance and the way she waited on people and the way she went about her job and so when she comes over I will try to find out if she's a believer.

So when she came over, she said, "May I have your order please?" and I said, "Ma'am, I know this may not be the best time but may I ask you a question? The doctors tell me that I'm dying in about 3 months with cancer. Can you tell a man who is dying of cancer how to go to heaven?"

She did not miss a beat. She looked at me and said, "Certainly I can. Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and you will be saved."

Whoa. I fell back in my chair. I said, "That is wonderful. Then you must know John 14:6."

She said, "Certainly. Jesus said, 'I am the Way, the Truth and the Life. No one comes to the Father but by Me.' Now, may I have your order?"

Doug Nichols explained: You know, that's the type of person you and I should be. To immediately point to people and say to people and even if it's inconvenient. That's not the right time, we're rushed. People may even be embarrassed but immediately be able to say, "Jesus said, 'I am the Way,' without the way there's no going, 'I am the truth,' without the truth, there's no knowing. 'I am the Life,' without the life there is no living, believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and you will be saved.

12 January 2011

Borrowed story: Doug Nichols on a plane

Doug Nichols was at church last Sunday and he told us this story...

I was riding in a plane with a man recently, several years ago and he said. He was trying to talk to me and I’m deaf in my right ear and I couldn’t quite hear him and I was going over my notes for my message that night and I was nervous because the plane was late. And finally he said, "You’re a Christian, aren’t you?"

I looked at him and I said, "Yes, I am."

He says, "I could tell by the words on your paper. I’m a Muslim."

I said, "Yes, I know."

"How do you know?"

"Well, you look like a Muslim."

"You know," he said, "I have so much trouble going through airport security. I don’t think that’s right. I don’t think that’s fair."

I said, "Hey wait, you look like a terrorist. You know, how do you expect people to treat you?"

"What do I do?" he asked.

So I began to explain to him how to go through airport security. You take off your coat. You take off your belt. You take off your shoes. You take all the heavy items out of your pocket. You take off your watch. You try to be polite. You open your bag, You don’t cause trouble to the security people or they will treat you badly. As I was giving him these instructions, he said, "You like Muslims, don’t you?"

And I said, "Well, yes I do. We pray for you all the time."

"You pray for Muslims? What do you pray about?"

"I pray that when you die you go to heaven."

"You don’t think we’re going to heaven?"

I said, "Hey. I know you’re not going to heaven."

"Why do you say that?"

I asked him back, "Do you know you’re going to heaven?"

He said, "No, not really."

I said, "Why not?"

"Well, I don’t know if I have enough good works." He then turned to me and said, "Are you going to heaven?"

I said, "Yeah I’m going to heaven."

"How are you going to heaven?"

I said, "I’m going to heaven on good works."

He said, "What?! How do you know you have enough good works?"

I said, "See, that’s the difference. You’re trying to go to heaven on your good works and you’ll never have enough good works. I’m going to heaven on the good works of another, Jesus Christ the Son of God who God sent to this earth, who lived the perfect life, who died on the cross in my place for my sins. I’m going to heaven on the good works of Jesus Christ the Son of God who love me and gave Himself for me."

He said, "I didn’t know that. Nobody has ever told me that before."

(Whenever I read that part I weep. "Nobody has ever told me that before.")

Doug Nichols continues with his story: So the plane was landing and I gave him a gospel track. I said, "You take this, you read it and it will tell you on how you will turn from sin and to the Savior."

He said, "We’re not there yet. Let’s read it together." So we’re getting our bags reading the gospel at the aisle of our train reading the gospel track and as he left that day he said, "Thank you, sir, for talking to me. Thank you for talking."

09 January 2011

There's something about Starbucks

How many of you, when you need to finish an important project, go to a cafe? When you need some writing space and can't stand your desk anymore, is the nearest Starbucks the first refuge that comes to mind?

Starbucks isn't exactly private. It is a public place available to anyone. It's a meeting place, a hang-out. You can also people-watch in Starbucks. But I have, many times when I'm out of sorts, entered a Starbucks, ordered a short coffee of the day, found a secluded spot, plop myself on desk, open my notebook and write. I usually remember the coffee only hours later when it's already cold and no longer tasty. Lost in my writing, I find myself again.

I know I'm not alone. I know others do their work in cafes too. I know there's a lot of you readers out there who suddenly find their productive/prolific selves when they're at a cafe. Is it the unobtrusive jazz music? Is it the smell of caffeine in the air? Is it the lighting? Is it the round table and wooden chairs? I really don't know. But many a poem or novel has been begun at or finished in a cafe.

Right now I want to run from my office desk and to the Starbucks downstairs. The temperature there is not freezing like here in the office. And no one seems to mind you because they've either buried their noses on their laptop screens, or are busy reading the newspaper while chatting with their friends. There is something about how cafes are made that puts me into a good working mood.

So this is my proposition to those wanting to start their own companies. If you want to make your employees happy and productive, do not seat them side-by-side in computer cubicles or stations. Scratch off those swivel office chairs from your budget list. Don't worry about what color paint you'll use on the walls.

Instead, set up a counter of sorts where coffee or frap and some pastries are readily available upon order. Put up a condiments area where there's cinnamon and chocolate sprinkles in glass bottles. Add a hefty stash of coffee stirrers and napkins and muscovado sugar in packets. Don't forget the thermos for milk.

Get round wooden tables and surround each with at two to three wooden chairs. Set up a laptop per table. This will be the employees' work station. Each employee will get one table of his own each, and they have to be comfortably apart.

Glass walls are a must. So are high ceilings. The lighting should not be flourescent, and not too bright. You've the option of wall-to-wall carpeting or polished wood floors. Hang some neglectable paintings. They don't have to be about coffee. And oh! Clean restrooms, too, with soap and giant tissue paper rolls!

Each time a worker arrives on time, he gets a stamp on his card. When he has collected enough stamps, he gets something special.

I assure you, your employees will be happily reporting to work each morning. Productivity, too, will rise. Your business goals will be met. And when your people call in sick, they won't be lying.