Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Obedience in Jesus is the true cult to God

Today's Gospel Reading (Luke 8:19-21)
His mother and his brothers came looking for him, but they could not get to him because of the crowd.He was told, 'Your mother and brothers are standing outside and want to see you.'But he said in answer, 'My mother and my brothers are those who hear the word of God and put it into practice.'

Obedience in Jesus is the true cult to God
Today, Christ exacts our obedience. The "letter to the Hebrews" describes Old Testament worship as a "shadow" in view of the inadequacy of animal sacrifices that God does not require and which man does not give God what He might expect from man. Authentic worship to God is to be found in a life marked by His Word and within it.

However, our obedience is always lacking. Our personal morality is not enough to properly worship God. For this reason the Son of God becomes flesh; He takes on a human body. In this way a new obedience becomes possible, an obedience that surpasses all human fulfillment of God’s Commandments. The Son becomes man and in His Body bears the whole of humanity back to God. Only the incarnate Word, whose love is fulfilled on the Cross, is perfect obedience of the Son; it is the new sacrifice.

—O Jesus, You who are God incarnate, take us all with you and offer what we could not give just by ourselves.

Monday, September 19, 2011

What is the "Social Doctrine of the Church"?

Today's Gospel Reading (Luke 8:16-18)
No one lights a lamp to cover it with a bowl or to put it under a bed. No, it is put on a lamp-stand so that people may see the light when they come in.For nothing is hidden but it will be made clear, nothing secret but it will be made known and brought to light.So take care how you listen; anyone who has, will be given more; anyone who has not, will be deprived even of what he thinks he has.'
What is the "Social Doctrine of the Church"?
Today, we remember that Jesus Christ said He was the "Light of the world". It is the mission of the "Social Doctrine of the Church" to project this light over the whole world, by effectively permeating the hearts of all men and earthly structures. This social teaching of the Church is "caritas in veritate in re sociali", the proclamation of the truth of Christ’s love in society.

This doctrine is a service to charity, but its locus is truth. Developments, social well-being, the search for a satisfactory solution to the grave socio-economic problems besetting humanity, all need this truth. The Christian faith in promoting development does not rely on privileges or positions of power, but only on Christ, to whom every authentic vocation to integral human development must be directed. The Gospel is fundamental for development because, in the Gospel, Jesus Christ fully reveals humanity to itself.

—Lord, precisely because you pronounce the biggest "Yes" to man, I cannot fail to open myself to the divine vocation to reach my full potential.

Friday, September 16, 2011

The women


Today's Gospel Reading (Luke 8:1-3)
Now it happened that after this he made his way through towns and villages preaching and proclaiming the good news of the kingdom of God. With him went the Twelve, as well as certain women who had been cured of evil spirits and ailments: Mary surnamed the Magdalene, from whom seven demons had gone out, Joanna the wife of Herod's steward Chuza, Susanna, and many others who provided for them out of their own resources.

The women
Today, Jesus walks with the twelve and some women, spreading the
Word. There is a considerable difference between the way the disciples 
follow Jesus and the way the women do. The Gospels leave us in No 
doubt that “many” women formed part of the constituency of 
believers and that they “accompanied Jesus in the faith” which was essential to being part of this community. This is clearly demonstrated later on at the foot of the Cross and at the resurrection.

In opposition to the customs of the times where women were considered
secondary citizens, Christ started a sort of female emancipation.
Femininity completes humanity as much as masculinity does but in very
different ways; Women have a special sensitivity to be able to capture
what is new, different and great, what is mysterious that appears in
Jesus Christ. He brings them into his company in a special way and from
this comes forth the "Womanly Charisma".

—Mary, you are blessed among all women and mother of the church.

Thursday, September 15, 2011

Our Lady of Sorrows


Today's Gospel Reading (Luke 2:33-35)
As the child's father and mother were wondering at the things that were being said about him, Simeon blessed them and said to Mary his mother, 'Look, he is destined for the fall and for the rise of many in Israel, destined to be a sign that is opposed- and a sword will pierce your soul too -- so that the secret thoughts of many may be laid bare.'.



Our Lady of Sorrows
Today, the Gospel not only tells us what women were next to the
Cross, but also that Jesus Christ does not leave His mother alone:
He places her in the custody of John. When St. John speaks of human
acts like this, he certainly remembers events that had actually occurred,
but he always wants to go deeper than mere facts of the past. So,
what is he trying to say?

The first clue comes from his form of address to Mary: "Woman".
Jesus had used this same form of address at the marriage feast of Cana,
anticipation of the definitive marriage feast, of the "new wine" that the
Lord wanted to bestow. What had then been merely a prophetic sign
now becomes a reality. Second, the Church has not had any difficulty
to recognize in the "Woman", on the one hand, Mary herself, and,
on the other hand —transcending time— the "Church", bride and
Mother, in which the mystery of Mary spreads out into history.

—O Jesus, I wish to receive Mary as a person (our Mother!) in my
own personal existence and as a Church, thus fulfilling your last will,
as St. John also did.

Wednesday, September 14, 2011

The Exaltation of the Holy Cross


Today's Gospel Reading (John3:13-17)
No one has gone up to heaven except the one who came down from heaven, the Son of man; as Moses lifted up the snake in the desert, so must the Son of man be lifted up so that everyone who believes may have eternal life in him. For this is how God loved the world: he gave his only Son, so that everyone who believes in him may not perish but may have eternal life.For God sent his Son into the world not to judge the world, but so that through him the world might be saved.
The Exaltation of the Holy Cross
Today, Nicodemus, who "took out the nails" from Jesus Christ, receives
an anticipated revelation: the Son of man will be "ex-alted" (high and lifted
up from the Earth) and will draw all men unto Himself. The emerging
Church, under the guidance of the Holy Spirit, was slowly getting deeper
into this truth. One thing was clear from the onset: with the Cross of Christ,
the ancient sacrifices of the temple were definitely outdone. Something new
had happened!

God did not want to be glorified by sacrificing bulls and rams, whose blood
cannot purify man nor atone for him. The new desired cult, but still undefined
until then, had become a reality. In the Cross of Jesus it had been verified what
in vain had been attempted with animal sacrifices: Christ has occupied their
place. The temple was still a venerable place of prayer and announcement.
Its sacrifices, on the other hand, were no longer binding upon Christians.

—We adore you, Oh Christ!, and we bless you, because with your Holy Cross
you redeemed the world.

Tuesday, September 13, 2011

The greatness of humanity depends on its relation with the sufferer


Today's Gospel Reading (Luke 7:11-17)
It happened that soon afterwards he went to a town called Nain, 
accompanied by his disciples and a great number of people. Now 
when he was near the gate of the town there was a dead man being 
carried out, the only son of his mother, and she was a widow. And a 
considerable number of the townspeople was with her. When 
the Lord saw her he felt sorry for her and said to her, 'Don't cry.' Then 
he went up and touched the bier and the bearers stood still, and he said, 
'Young man, I tell you: get up.' And the dead man sat up and began to 
talk, and Jesus gave him to his mother. Everyone was filled with awe 
and glorified God saying, 'A great prophet has risen up among us; God 
has visited his people.' And this view of him spread throughout Judaea 
and all over the countryside



The greatness of humanity depends on its relation 
with the sufferer
Today, the mercy of God towards the needy is highlighted. The true
measure of humanity is essentially determined in relationship to
suffering and to the sufferer. This holds true both for the individual and
for society.

A society unable to accept its suffering members and incapable of
helping to share their suffering and to bear it inwardly through "com-
passion" is a cruel and inhuman society. Yet society cannot accept its
suffering members unless individuals are capable of doing so
themselves; moreover, the individual cannot accept another’s suffering
unless he personally is able to find meaning in suffering, a path of
purification and growth in maturity, a journey of hope.

—O Jesus, help me to welcome the sufferer by taking up his suffering,
so it becomes also mine. Then, this shared suffering will be penetrated
by the light of love and we will experience the joy of consolation:
both of us —united in suffering— will find You, Who suffered on the
cross for us.

Monday, September 12, 2011

Religion, "laïcité positive" and "secularism"


Today's Gospel Reading (Luke 7:1-10)
When he had come to the end of all he wanted the people to hear, 
he went into Capernaum. A centurion there had a servant, a favourite 
of his, who was sick and near death. Having heard about Jesus he sent 
some Jewish elders to him to ask him to come and heal his servant. 
When they came to Jesus they pleaded earnestly with him saying, 
'He deserves this of you, because he is well disposed towards our people;
he built us our synagogue himself.' So Jesus went with them, and was 
not very far from the house when the centurion sent word to him by 
some friends to say to him, 'Sir, do not put yourself to any trouble 
because I am not worthy to have you under my roof; and that is why I
did not presume to come to you myself; let my boy be cured by your 
giving the word. For I am under authority myself, and have soldiers 
under me; and I say to one man, "Go," and he goes; to another, "Come 
here," and he comes; to my servant, "Do this," and he does it.' When
Jesus heard these words he was astonished at him and, turning round, 
said to the crowd following him, 'I tell you, not even in Israel have 
I found faith as great as this.' And when the messengers got back to 
the house they found the servant in perfect health.


Religion, "laïcité positive" and "secularism"
Today, this scene plunges us in a social atmosphere of
"endearing humanity": a centurion —a foreigner— is concerned about
one of his servants; he sends some elders of the Jews to plead with Jesus
to heal his servant who is seriously ill… There is an element that brings
them together: "he has built our synagogue". In their multifaceted
diversity (origin, culture, social position… even religion), they are united
by their respect to "religiosity".

"Laïcité positive" seeks a fair political autonomy: it avoids the
"confessional"State, but assumes the deep human fact of the religiosity
("secularism"rejects it). It is essential to insist on the distinction between
"politics" and"religion” to protect as much the religious freedom of all
citizens as the State responsibility for them. On the other hand, we
should become more aware of the irreplaceable role of religion for the
formation of consciences and the contribution which it can bring to
—among other things— the creation of a basic ethical consensus within
society.

—O Lord, we adore You and we pray to you for our authorities.

Friday, September 9, 2011

The "blindness" of relativism - Love of God is certain and undeniable


Today's Gospel Reading (Luke 6:39-42)
He also told them a parable, 'Can one blind person guide another? 
Surely both will fall into a pit? Disciple is not superior to teacher; 
but fully trained disciple will be like teacher. 
Why do you observe the splinter in your brother's eye and 
never notice the great log in your own? 
How can you say to your brother, "Brother, let me take out that 
splinter in your eye," when you cannot see the great log in 
your own? Hypocrite! Take the log out of your own eye first,
and then you will see clearly enough to take out the splinter in 
your brother's eyes



The "blindness" of relativism
Today, it turns out to be very much in progress the description
made by St. Paul about "nonage" in the faith: to be tossed back
and forth by the waves and being blown here and there by every
wind of teaching. How many "winds" of doctrine have we known
these recent decades! From Marxism to Liberalism, even to
Libertinism; from collectivism to radical individualism; from
atheism to a vague religious mysticism... and so forth. This is the
worst blindness, because one does not know to which place one is
going or where should one go.

Having a clear Faith, based on the Creed of the Church, is often
labeled today as a fundamentalism. Whereas, relativism —the
"blindness" of thinking according to "what is in fashion"— looks
like the only attitude acceptable to today’s standards. We are
moving towards a dictatorship of relativism which does not
recognize anything as certain and which has as its highest goal one’s
own ego and one’s own desires.

—Our friendship with you, O Jesus, is our "measure": the measure
of true humanism. Your friendship gives us the criterion to discern
between veracity and falsehood, between deception and truth...

Thursday, September 8, 2011

Birth of Mary - God's work in secret


Today's Gospel Reading (Matthew 1: 1-16.18-23)
Roll of the genealogy of Jesus Christ, son of David, son of Abraham: Abraham fathered Isaac, Isaac fathered Jacob, Jacob fathered Judah and his brothers, Judah fathered Perez and Zerah, whose mother was Tamar, Perez fathered Hezron, Hezron fathered Ram, Ram fathered Amminadab, Amminadab fathered Nahshon, Nahshon fathered Salmon, Salmon fathered Boaz, whose mother was Rahab, Boaz fathered Obed, whose mother was Ruth, Obed fathered Jesse; and Jesse fathered King David. David fathered Solomon, whose mother had been Uriah's wife, Solomon fathered Rehoboam, Rehoboam fathered Abijah, Abijah fathered Asa, Asa fathered Jehoshaphat, Jehoshaphat fathered Joram, Joram fathered Uzziah, Uzziah fathered Jotham, Jotham fathered Ahaz, Ahaz fathered Hezekiah, Hezekiah fathered Manasseh, Manasseh fathered Amon, Amon fathered Josiah;and Josiah fathered Jechoniah and his brothers. Then the deportation to Babylon took place. 

After the deportation to Babylon: Jechoniah fathered Shealtiel, Shealtiel fathered Zerubbabel, Zerubbabel fathered Abiud, Abiud fathered Eliakim, Eliakim fathered Azor, Azor fathered Zadok, Zadok fathered Achim, Achim fathered Eliud, Eliud fathered Eleazar, Eleazar fathered Matthan, Matthan fathered Jacob; and Jacob fathered Joseph the husband of Mary; of her was born Jesus who is called Christ. 

This is how Jesus Christ came to be born. His mother Mary was betrothed to Joseph; but before they came to live together she was found to be with child through the Holy Spirit. Her husband Joseph, being an upright man and wanting to spare her disgrace, decided to divorce her informally. He had made up his mind to do this when suddenly the angel of the Lord appeared to him in a dream and said, 'Joseph son of David, do not be afraid to take Mary home as your wife, because she has conceived what is in her by the Holy Spirit. She will give birth to a son and you must name him Jesus, because he is the one who is to save his people from their sins.' Now all this took place to fulfil what the Lord had spoken through the prophet: Look! the virgin is with child and will give birth to a son whom they will call Immanuel, a name which means 'God-is-with-us'.
Birth of Mary
Today, Jesus' genealogy, the Saviour that had to come and be born
of Mary, shows us how the work of God is interwoven into human
history, and how God acts in the secret and silence of every single day.
At the same time, we can see his reliability to accomplish his promises.

The Holy Spirit, that mysteriously had to incarnate the Son in Mary,
entered, therefore, in our history since a long time before, and traced
a path leading to the Virgin Mary of Nazareth and, through her,
to her Son Jesus. In this work, everything bring us to contemplate,
 admire and worship, through prayer, the greatness, the generosity
and the simplicity of the divine action, that will extol and rescue
our human lineage through our Lord’s personal involvement.

—This girl, virgin and Jesus' mother, had to be also our mother.
Who could ever imagine God to be so great and so simple as to so
intimately bind himself to us?

Wednesday, September 7, 2011

The "Beatitudes", the Christian’s paradoxes - Christ set of values rather than of the world.

Today's Gospel Reading (Luke 6,20-26)

Then fixing his eyes on his disciples he said: 
How blessed are you who are poor: the kingdom of God is yours 
Blessed are you who are hungry now: you shall have your fill. 
Blessed are you who are weeping now: you shall laugh. 
'Blessed are you when people hate you, drive you out, abuse you, 
denounce your name as criminal, on account of the Son of man. 
Rejoice when that day comes and dance for joy, look!
-your reward will be great in heaven. 
This was the way their ancestors treated the prophets 
But alas for you who are rich: you are having your consolation now.
 Alas for you who have plenty to eat now: you shall go hungry. 
Alas for you who are laughing now: you shall mourn and weep. '
Alas for you when everyone speaks well of you! 
This was the way their ancestors treated the false prophets.

The "Beatitudes", the Christian’s paradoxes
Today, Jesus repeatedly calls "blessed" to his disciples.
The "Beatitudes" are words of promise that work at
the same time as moral guidance.
Each "beatitude" describes, so to speak,
the realistic condition of the disciples of Christ:
they are poor, they are hungry, they cry, they are hated,
 persecuted... The beatitudes are like practical "qualifications",
but also like theological-moral indications.

Despite the threatening situation in which Jesus considers
his disciples, this situation becomes a promise when
regarded in the light coming from the Father.
For the disciple, the "Beatitudes" are a paradox:
the standards of the world are turned upside down
when you just look at things from God’s scale of values.
The "Beatitudes" are promises resplendent with the
new image of the world and of the man inaugurated by Jesus,
His "transformation of values ".

—When I "look" through you, O Lord, then,
I live with new standards, I begin to "feel" something of what is
yet to come (Heaven) and joy enters in my tribulation.

Monday, September 5, 2011

The Church: the ministerial priesthood and the Hierarchy - Even Christ seek counsel from the Father, what more we the mere mortal


Today's Gospel Reading (Luke 6,6-11)
Jesus went out into the hills to pray; and he spent the whole night
in prayer to God. When day came he summoned his disciples and
picked out twelve of them; he called them ‘apostles’
: Simon whom he called Peter, and his brother Andrew;
James, John, Philip, Bartholomew, Matthew, Thomas,
 James son of Alphaeus, Simon called the Zealot,
Judas son of James, and Judas Iscariot who became a traitor.

  He then came down with them and stopped at a piece of level ground 
where there was a large gathering of his disciples with a great crowd 
of people from all parts of Judaea and from Jerusalem and from the 
coastal region of Tyre and Sidon who had come to hear him and 
to be cured of their diseases. 
People tormented by unclean spirits were also cured, and everyone 
in the crowd was trying to touch him because power came out of him 
that cured them all.


The Church: the ministerial priesthood and the Hierarchy
Today, we remember Christ while praying all night before choosing
—from his disciples— the twelve Apostles.
They —who never cease to be the people of God—
will have a "mission within the mission" of the Church:
to nurture, to encourage and to sustain the sanctity of all the faithful.

Some are called by God to the "ministerial priesthood":
they are the "ordained faithful".
A power has been bestowed upon them;
but this is a "sacred power" to dispense the Bread
and to preach the Word: a power to serve.
They form the "Hierarchy", something which today sounds badly
because it is seen with worldly eyes.
In the Church the hierarchical element is not a privileged "status"
but a "functional element", whose radical aim is to serve our brothers.
"Ministry" exactly means service. The Pope’s title, precisely, is
"The Servant of the Servants of God".

—O Jesus, we request from You pastors with a heart like Yours.
You, Who came not to be served but to serve.

Without Jesus the Redeemer it is inevitable to "harden the heart" - Without Christ, we are nothing

Today's Gospel Reading (Luke 6,6-11)
On the sabbath Jesus went into the synagogue and began to teach, 
and a man was there whose right hand was withered. 
The scribes and the Pharisees were watching him to see if he would cure a man 
on the sabbath, hoping to find something to use against him. 
But he knew their thoughts; and he said to the man with the withered hand, 
‘Stand up! Come out into the middle.’ And he came out and stood there. 
Then Jesus said to them, ‘I put it to you: is it against the law on the sabbath 
to do good, or to do evil; to save life, or to destroy it?’ 
Then he looked round at them all and said to the man, 
‘Stretch out your hand.’ He did so, and his hand was better. 
But they were furious, and began to discuss the best way of dealing with Jesus.


Without Jesus the Redeemer it is inevitable to 
"harden the heart"
Today, we all —Jews and non-Jews— must make a firm resolution:
we have to "die to ourselves" and recognize Jesus the Redeemer.
Without God man does not explain himself and falls into absurdity
and contradictions. It is then inevitable to "harden the heart",
rejecting any self-knowledge and denying our own guilt,
unless there is "Someone" who also carries this guilt, who "develops" it
and who forgives it.

There occurs a reciprocity here: without the idea of the Redeemer —
who does not conceal His guilt, but suffers it— we cannot bear the truth
of our own guilt and we appeal to the first deception:
our blind obstinacy in front of this guilt, from which all other deceptions
are born, to end up with our total incapacity to face the truth.
And conversely: it is not possible to know the Redeemer and
believe in Him without the courage to be honest with ourselves.

—O Lord, I ask you the grace of the "confession" to recognize the truth:
yours (I need You!) and mine (I am not "God", but a weak creature!).

23rd Sunday in Ordinary Time

First Reading         Ez     33:7-9
Psalm                       Ps     95 : 1-2. 6-7 . 8-9(8)
Second Reading    Rom 13:8-10
Gospel                      Mt    18:15-20

In today's first reading is a reminder of God's call to all His people, a most profound and yet challenging ones - to be a prophet to the sinful and ignorant.

In second reading, the most important God has for us is to LOVE one another like yourself. It is further connected into the gospel where we have to constantly remind and bring those who did something wrong back to the arm fold of God. It is easy to be said than done. The nature of human kind is individualism, we can not see out of our own perspective and often reject others.

God asked us to go private for the first approach to them and try to point out and assist them out of their blind spot. If this don't work out, do not give up on him. Bring the community along to counsel them to repent and conversion of heart. The last resort if the matters is too serious and could be detrimental to the Church only shall we bring this to her hierarchy.

We are hold accountable for any soul that is lost knowing that they are swaying away from the path set by God. If we do our best to guide them back to the right track and yet unsuccessful, we are righteously His sons and daughters. He'll take care of the rest.

Commentary and excerpt from Fr. Edmund Woon's homily on 04/09/11

Friday, September 2, 2011

New Covenant - The underlying meaning is more important than the act.

Today's Gospel Reading (Luke 5,33-39)


33 They said to him, “John’s disciples often fast and pray, and so do the disciples of the Pharisees, but yours go on eating and drinking.”
 34 Jesus answered, “Can you make the friends of the bridegroom fast while he is with them? 35 But the time will come when the bridegroom will be taken from them; in those days they will fast.”
 36 He told them this parable: “No one tears a piece out of a new garment to patch an old one. Otherwise, they will have torn the new garment, and the patch from the new will not match the old. 37And no one pours new wine into old wineskins. Otherwise, the new wine will burst the skins; the wine will run out and the wineskins will be ruined. 38 No, new wine must be poured into new wineskins. 39And no one after drinking old wine wants the new, for they say, ‘The old is better.’”
The "New Covenant"
Today, facing the Pharisaic ritualism, the "new wine" brings us
to the panorama of the "renewed" Covenant of God with men.
Before Israel’s disloyalty, God reiterated the "Covenant", and finally,
Christ sealed it in its "new" and "definitive" form.
The Sinai Covenant was centered on two elements:
1. the "Blood Covenant" (the sacrificial blood from animals
was sprinkled on the altar —God’s symbol— and on the people);
2. God’s word and the promise of Israel’s obedience.

This promise was broken by Israel’s "idolatry" and a number of
repeated noncompliances, as shown in the Old Testament.
The rupture seemed unavoidable when God sent His people i
nto exile and the Temple was thrown open for destruction.
But then, the hope of the "New Covenant" emerged,
not based on the always fragile human loyalty,
but on an inviolable obedience: that of the Son of God, Jesus Christ.

—O Jesus, as a servant, You assume my disobedience in your
"obedience unto death". Give me a "new" heart!

Thursday, September 1, 2011

A call to mission - Be the fishers of men.

Today's Gospel Reading (Luke 5,1-11)

1 Now it happened that he was standing one day by the Lake of Gennesaret, with the crowd pressing round him listening to the word of God,
2 when he caught sight of two boats at the water's edge. The fishermen had got out of them and were washing their nets.
3 He got into one of the boats -- it was Simon's -- and asked him to put out a little from the shore. Then he sat down and taught the crowds from the boat.
4 When he had finished speaking he said to Simon, 'Put out into deep water and pay out your nets for a catch.'
5 Simon replied, 'Master, we worked hard all night long and caught nothing, but if you say so, I will pay out the nets.'
6 And when they had done this they netted such a huge number of fish that their nets began to tear,
7 so they signalled to their companions in the other boat to come and help them; when these came, they filled both boats to sinking point.
8 When Simon Peter saw this he fell at the knees of Jesus saying, 'Leave me, Lord; I am a sinful man.'
9 For he and all his companions were completely awestruck at the catch they had made;
10 so also were James and John, sons of Zebedee, who were Simon's partners. But Jesussaid to Simon, 'Do not be afraid; from now on it is people you will be catching.'
11 Then, bringing their boats back to land they left everything and followed him.

The Church as “Missionary” 

Today, we discover the "missionary imprint" which is present in the Church 
since its early foundation: the very Roman Pontiff is a "Fisher of men". 
Simon was called one day, just like any other, while he was washing his nets. 
The Master saw at the water’s edge two boats and boarded one of the boats,
 the one belonging to Simon, and asked him to put out a little from shore. 
Then, He sat down and taught the people from the boat: 
thus, Peter’s boat became the chair of Jesus Christ.

When He was over, 
He asked Simon to put out into the deep and let down the nets for a catch. 
Jesus was a carpenter, not a fisherman. 
However, "Simon, the fisherman" trusted him. 
His response to the miraculous catch was shuddering. 
Jesus reacted by encouraging him to have confidence and open himself to a project 
that exceeded all expectations: "To fish for people”. 
Peter could not imagine that one day he would arrive in Rome to become there 
a true "Fisher of men" for God.

—O Lord, with Peter, we feel we are "sent" by God to carry your Gospel to all souls.