Wednesday, May 28, 2014

Separation of Church and Workplace

Mulling over the truth behind current and hottest issues reflected in news headlines, does anyone notice the cause-and-effect connection between religious beliefs and work ethics?  The two cannot and must not be separated if we hope to live a life God has meant us to live.  Why have we been inundated for months now with “Napoles headlines” to the extent that people—nearly lost in a profusion of side issues like her health condition and details about a private surgery performed on her—no longer know whom or what to believe?

We are where we are, a perennially poor nation becoming even poorer despite the government’s claims of economic growth.  Much of it is because, bottom line, certain people create their own moral standards when it comes to work.  For these “newsmakers”, getting their way takes precedence over obedience to God’s laws in their manner of “earning a living”.  If some people believe in the separation of Church and State, there are also those who insist, unfortunately, on the separation of Church and Workplace.  Our religious beliefs to a great extent determine the quality of our work performance.  You can be sure that anybody who leaves his religion behind in the church on Sundays will be susceptible to corruption at work from Mondays through Saturdays.  
Even if we are not typically pious, religious, or “saradong Katoliko”, we can find sustenance of spirit from day to day in Jesus’ words in His priestly prayer in Chapter 17 of St. John’s Gospel.  A moving prayer where Jesus talks to the Father and intercedes for His disciples who were with Him, it has the power to lodge itself like a seed in the darkness of our heart.  It is not something reason can grasp but if we just allow Jesus’ words to play over and over again like background music inside our head, it will change many things about ourselves.

Allow me to dare ask people whose reputations have been tarnished by news involving them in corruption and public scandal: Are you brave?  Then I invite you to a “seeding experiment”.  Today, set aside your daily woes, “waste” some time, take a bible, and read John 17 over and over again.  Don’t try to understand it; just go on reading until your eyes get tired you’ll want to close them.  With eyes shut, let the words carry you afloat.  Keep the “experiment” a secret, and repeat it any day, any time, as often as you possibly can or want.  This private exercise is not seen by others but will make the “seed” in your heart germinate and in God’s time bear fruit, affecting all aspects of your being.

Things done in secret, good or bad, do not remain a secret for long.  They mold our being and deeply influence our attitudes and way of relating to others.  Just like harmful bacteria that hide in our blood stream, work secretly, and manifest themselves in bodily illness in due time, your hidden “seeding experiment” with our Lord Jesus’ words in John 17 (done in a spirit of surrender to His will) can result in good works that will benefit yourself and all others in God’s time.  Your co-workers, superiors, clients, customers, constituents, people who are with you most of the day—may notice changes in you even before you even do.  All because in pondering His words in your heart you have been guided in conversation with Him, and have been moved to want to belong to Him alone!  Then you will realize that you have gone further out in the background, removed from common things, and finding yourself in God’s plan for us have learned to intercede for others as well.  What a glorious realization this is, to recognize that it is the Holy Spirit working in you from the Father through the Son who was sent to live among us to reveal this truth!  What a turnaround from selfishness to selflessness!

       Imagine how this kind of conversion in those accused of corruption can affect the future of this impoverished nation!  We who take pride in being the “first and biggest Christian nation in Asia” can still count on a “leader”—Jesus, our true shepherd who will never abandon us.  It’s about time we dumped our “public servants” who have one set of rules for worship and another for the workplace, whether that workplace be a legislative building or a palace.  And that’s the truth. 

Kiko and Lean

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