Saturday, December 27, 2008

My Christmas Musings

I have not blogged for some 3 weeks now but it's not because I haven't had much to write about. On the contrary, so many things are happening that I'm literally spoilt for choice..... However, I think I shall let those thoughts stay afloat somewhere while I draw upon Christmas celebrated in a Catholic church.

To me, Christmas has evolved over the years at different phases of my life. As a teenager, it was about parties, presents and meeting people. As a young adult, it was about more parties, more presents and meeting more people. Then in the 90s, attending Christmas musicals, Christmas dramas, Singing-Christmas-Trees and hyped up Christmas services became the rage for any believer worth his salt. But sadly, none of these brought Christ into Christmas for me.

This year, I attended my first Christmas Eve Mass as a Catholic. As with all Masses, it was a liturgical celebration and solemn in its own right. There were no techni-colour musical drama, no special effects and no charismatic preacher jumping up and down to make his point. In other words, no frills.

But the church was packed to the gills with nary a standing room. People came 2 hours early to await the celebration of our Lord's birth. Why would people wait up to 2 hours for an hour's Mass without fanfare? What is it about the Catholic celebration that draws parishioners even without the aplomb?

Day of Obligation aside, I believe it's because Christ is revered as the centre of the Mass. He is the focus of our celebration; not the choir, not the drama, not the songs, not the church decorations and not even the preacher.

The homily of this particular Christmas Eve Mass strikes a chord with me. It talks about how Jesus is born 5 times during the Mass. Firstly in the placing of the symbolic baby in the crib, secondly in the exaltation of the songs, thirdly in the gospel reading, fourthly in the transubstantiation of the bread and wine, finally and most importantly, in our partaking of the Eucharist. Taking the bread which has become the body of Christ is truly God's grace for us to live in communion with Him and our neighbour. We thus bring Jesus away to our home, our workplace and into our relationship with the world.

I would not call myself 'godly' by any standards. No, not by a long shot. I still have a very long way on this straight and narrow path. I have fallen many times. I have given in to temptations at the drop of a hat. I have hurt others either wittingly or unwittingly. I have failed myself and God all too often.

But I am comforted that I can take Jesus away with me through this Sacrament of the Holy Eucharist. It is a grace bestowed upon us freely and abundantly........one which we do not deserve but receive only because of love.

And that, to me, is the reason of Christmas.

Wednesday, December 03, 2008

Hazing at JC

My colleague's daughter has been accepted into a prestigious JC of her choice. While the mood at home has been celebratory, the mother is now worried about the culture at junior colleges after the fiasco of hazing at ACJC.

Maybe I'm really getting older....or perhaps youngsters these days are really taking it to the max. A popular student at her JC, this girl was hazed & ragged on her birthday by friends who threw cake, milk and water at her face; followed by a birthday song. Duh??

Eons ago, I was just as bright-eyed and enthusiastic to embrace JC life as it signified 'coming-of-age' and breaking away from highly structured secondary school life. Stressful it might be academically; the independence, freedom and wide array of activities could really bowl one over.

For a 'sua-ku' like me, JC life really opened a world of fun moments in school with friends and even teachers. I remember my teachers as friends and had lunch with them occasionally. The best part was that we were old enough to be treated like young adults but young enough to get away with most pranks..........definitely more interesting than life in the university.

There was an incident which, as I recall now, am awfully glad did not take place. I shudder to imagine the implications and consequences if we had gone ahead with our ill-conceived plan that night.

An active committee member of my school's Interact Club, we organised a lot of intercollegiate events among the participating JCs and sometimes with the Rotary Club. My school had to play host to one such event, a 2-day camp at our school compound one weekend. Touted as a teambuilding activity, it was an overnight stay with Interact Club members and teachers from CJC and ACJC as well.

You can imagine the ruckus and brouhaha created by a bunch of active, exuberant, fun-loving teenagers - not from 1 JC but 3! It was generally good, clean and youthful fun. Teachers who facilitated the event did not have much to worry about; until night fell and part of the agenda was to visit a cemetery.....

Many students were raring to go but some of us had our reservations. Yes, I was very worried because it just did not seem right. But I was a teenager then, eager to fit in and belong; never wanting to seem a prude. Did I raise my objections? No, I just kept quiet and hoped God would be with us!

By His grace, we did not go through with the plan. For that, I heaved a sigh of relief that night. Now, after so many years and knowing all the possible implications, I really thank God for his hand on this bunch of naive teenagers even then. To this day, I still feel the sting of being a coward.

Being a JC student is indeed fun but one has to know his limits. Throwing a surprise birthday party is great but to subject the person to such pranks is contradicting the word 'celebrate'. In a birthday context, 'celebrate' means to make merry, toast, hold festivities so the person feels happy.

From the article and pictures, the girl was neither laughing nor enjoying it. I think it is a celebration taken too far. And this opinion is coming from someone who had thoroughly enjoyed her JC life.