Friday, February 24, 2006

For Our Beloved Country


These days, our thoughts travel back to memory lane to reminisce the first EDSA which happened 20 years ago. There has been efforts by various people to retell the story of EDSA from the point of view of those who really made it possible, the countless and nameless ordinary people who trooped to EDSA, unmindful of the real possibility of being machine-gunned by the military men deployed by the dictator. They are the real heroes of EDSA. Them we salute and for the future generations of Filipinos, we continue to renew, even if only in our hearts, the spirit of EDSA.

The readings at Mass for Sunday, Feb. 26, answers the question raised by many people after having observed how our beloved country hasn't seem to have moved forward after the first EDSA? Where have we gone wrong? What should we do/ have to be able to move on? The readings tell us: consistency, accountability, Christocentricity.

Consistency: The Gospel suggests that if you have a new wine, you put in new wineskins. If you have a new element, you put it in a new container as well. The product and its environment should be new, too. Internally and externally, there should be renewal. This did not happen in our case. After a few months or years after EDSA, people of the old regime were back in power. Corruption and nepotism have stayed. The change was only on the outside, not in the inside. Or inside, but not the outside. There has to be consistency.

Accountability: The first reading tells us how Yahweh plans to lead Israel to the wilderness and there to speak to her. In the context of Israel's story, this means starting with the relationship all over again, but not without testing and purifying, not without making Israel responsible and accountable for her sins and crimes. The same thing should happen to our country. It's not enough to be sorry and to apologize. One has to take responsibility for one's wrongs and crimes. Wrongdoers have to answer for their misdeeds, which is not happening in this country.

Christocentricity: This seems like a pious word without social import. This is not about more rosaries or more novenas or processions. This means centering one's life on Christ, and in the process imbibing his worldview and values: one that stands for fairness and justice, one that cringes at the sight of hungry and sick people, one that is angered at hypocrisy and pure showmanship. To be Christ-centered is to think and act like Christ. While the Philippines is predominantly Catholic, it is a stinging irony that we are in the list of most corrupt countries.

May this 20th year of EDSA be an opportunity to rekindle love for our country, especially among young people. As Rizal, through Padre Florentino, exclaims in El Filibusterismo:

“where are the youths who will dedicate their innocence, their idealism, their enthusiasm to the good of the country? Where are they who will give generously of their blood to wash away so much shame, crime and abomination? Pure and immaculate must the victim be for the sacrifice to be acceptable. Where are you, young men and women, who are to embody in yourselves the life-force that has been drained from our veins, the pure ideals that grown stained in our minds, the fiery enthusiasm that has been quenched in our hearts? We await you, come for we await you!”

1 comment:

VDJblog said...

I read this too. Nice brief reflection. Hey, soon you will be able to publish a book or a booklet!

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