Thursday, August 21, 2014

Evangelizing our families


“The hardest people to evangelize are our own family members.”  That statement may not reflect a state of national calamity but I seem to be hearing it more and more frequently these days.
A nun friend embarrassingly admits that she cannot do anything to talk sense to her womanizing brother.  “When I visit the family, it’s like a family reunion, everybody seems very happy and well behaved, but behind closed doors my mother and my sister-in-law take turns in updating me about my brother’s exploits.  I try to jokingly bring this up with him, but all I’d get is ‘Huwag kang maniwala don, tsismis lang yon!’  I know it’s not mere tsismis but what else can I do to help his family when he himself doesn’t want help?”
A lector from our parish thinks she has a bigger problem: her ward, a teenage niece, still single, is openly sexually active but goes to Mass and receives communion.  “I can’t be sure but I don’t think she even goes to confession.  When I try to politely remind her to confess, and to inform her about waiting for the right man, all she says is ‘Yes, tita,’ but I know she only says that to shut me up.  She has one boyfriend after another, and one time she opened her bag in front of me, a foil-wrapped thing fell out—I know it’s not candy, it’s a condom.  Without hesitation she put it back in her bag and didn’t seem to care that I’d seen it.”
A married friend who is very active in Marriage Encounter laments that her cross is her 30-something daughter who has stopped going to church, has split up with her husband and has a daughter with her live-in boyfriend.  She says, “In all aspects she’s okay, she’s smart, enterprising, independent, but when it comes to the issue of her boyfriend she melts down, and she talks like it’s nobody’s business!  How can it not be our business when her daughter is my granddaughter?  What example is she giving to her child?  It shames me to think my husband and I are respected in our group but can’t lead our own daughter to the right path.”
From a middle-aged priest comes this expression of disappointment with his younger brother:   “He is gay and can’t help it.  I see how ‘kilig’ he gets around men, how he flirts with them with his eyes—and sometimes I suspect he fabricates reasons to visit me in the seminary because there he’ll surely see a lot of young men.  He’s 29, has never had a girlfriend and from the looks of it he’ll never want to have one.  He hangs around with his BFFs, gays who talk about their “boylets” and who idolize Vice Ganda.  Once I tried to tell him that perhaps God wishes to show him His love, for him to enjoy a chaste and celibate state even as a lay person in order to show his gay friends another way to be happy, but I gave up.  My talk was obviously way above his head.”
Another priest tells of his family’s burden, a younger brother aged 27, who has finished college but doesn’t show any ambition or aspiration to grow up and live his own life as an adult.  The family is well off—thus nobody seems to mind that he’s unemployed but just lives from day to day ”getting high” and bumming around with his friends.  “God know how else he supports his drug abuse; he has an allowance from our parents.  I dread to think he’ll grow old that way,  aimless and carefree, when our parents are gone.  Once he seemed sober, so I had the courage to ask him about his plans for his future.  He just smiled and said,  ‘Father, don’t worry about me.  Iba ka, iba ako.’  What would you have said in my place?”
It’s been said that family means being there for one another, but as these situations show, some family members may not want you to be there for them at all.  What are we to do when the concern and compassion we offer—which might be our only treasure worth sharing—is rejected by our loved ones?  Tough question, indeed.
At times we think our “God talk” is better heard by strangers than by our own families.  At such frustrating moments when we feel discouraged, angry, or impatient, and don’t know what to do, it’s good to take a deep breath and gaze at (or think of) the figure on the crucifix, and ask ourselves, “What would Love do?”  If we truly want our families to know that our God is a loving, living God, there is only one thing we can do: silently love, love again, love on, and on, and on, and on.  And that’s the truth.


Kiko and Lean

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