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Reading List

January 10, 2009 Ralph Leave a comment

In his blog, Stephen Altrogge asks his readers what books are on their reading list. Aside from a mountain of Supreme Court cases and a slew of boring codals which I’m required to read for my classes (try reading the National Internal Revenue Code, and I’m sure you’d be lost in the maze of long articles with long enumerations, and with little regard for rules on antecedents), here are the books which I am reading or planning to read:

1. Fatelessness by Imre Kertesz. I’m halfway through it already. Very good thus far.
2. Crime and Punishment by Fyodor Dostoevsky. I have picked up and put down this one for a very long time. I got the book more than 5 years ago. I really hope to finish it this time.
3. A Severe Mercy by Sheldon Vanauken
4. Abolition of Man by C.S. Lewis. This is to satisfy the C.S. Lewis fan in me.
5. 12 Ordinary Men by John Macarthur. I saw this book on Booksale for 60 pesos. I bought it without second thoughts.

Any recommendations?

That I may always have a sense

December 1, 2008 Ralph 1 comment

I’m grateful that today is a holiday, so instead of going to school very early in the morning, I got to spend a lot of time reading my Bible, and a good book called, Why I am a Christian, written by John Stott.

Earlier, I meditated on Acts 17: 26-27, and was reminded of God’s sovereignty. Although the immediate context speaks of God’s control over the length of our lives and the places of our birth, I think the verses could be extended to include God’s sovereignty over everything. (Anyway, the Bible is full of instances showing that God is indeed in control of everything—the experiences of Job, for example). That someone wiser, holier, more loving and more powerful than I am is in control of everything brings me much comfort, especially during times when I struggle with sin.

John Stott’s book is likewise an encouragement as it points the reader constantly back to Christ. I haven’t finished the book yet, but let me share one very good quote. On the question of why God does not simply forgive us without the necessity of the cross, Stott says:

It is when we begin to see the gravity of sin and the majesty of God that our questions change. No longer do we ask why God finds it difficult to forgive sins, but how he finds it possible.

That I may always have a sense of God’s greatness and sin’s utter horribleness!

I could never have known

November 21, 2008 Ralph Leave a comment

night-2

Elie Wiesel, to my mind, has caricatured best the horrible massacre of people, of humanity, and of faith during the holocaust in his memoir, Night. (Although he might have the “best” retelling of the story, the story itself is worse than “worst.”) In a hundred pages or so, Wiesel is able to recount in vivid detail and in the simplest of language how families are separated from each other forever; how a single soldier, by merely pointing his finger to a man, woman or child can so easily decide his death; how prisoners had to do hard labor with nothing but crumbs of bread in their stomachs and in between lashings of a whip; how prisoners morph into helpless animals, and their captors into brutal beasts in a single day; how men who used to believe that God is as real as the next breathing person across the room soon find themselves echoing Nietzche: God is dead.

It is in the simplicity of the retelling that it is most haunting. But no matter how depressing the atrocities are, I know that’s all anyone who has never been in that concentration camp can ever do: be depressed, be disgusted, be enraged, take pity, vomit. Reading through the story I could feel in my bones the crushing defeat of Elie as he looked on a young boy (as young as he) suspended between heaven and earth in a rope, his tongue lolling as he desperately pants for breath, wanting to die but never quite dying yet. I could feel, but I could never have known.

And I hope I never would. I hope no one ever would.

And then I remembered the story of Job, and how he has suffered, too. How his wealth and kin disappear in a snap of a finger; how he is told the news that his properties are all gone; and how, no sooner than he learned of this, without even a chance to recover from a terrible blow, he is told again that all of his children are dead. So I am amazed when Job is able to declare: The Lord gave and the Lord has taken away. May the name of the Lord be praised.

From where did this faith come? This faith that would set aside the sharp and piercing claws of suffering to focus more on praising God? This, indeed, is grace. Purely grace.

(Photo credit: Lance)

Sneaking Around

November 14, 2008 Ralph Leave a comment

It’s the first week of classes, and the cases that I have to master are piling up in my desk, threatening to drown me in a sea of white sheets if I don’t start reading. I, however, couldn’t resist the urge to sneak around during my free time to read a non-law related book. I’m talking about Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird. This is a very good book that I immensely enjoyed, and which made me wonder why my cases in corporation law couldn’t be this interesting.

By the way, I take back what I said earlier. I didn’t sneak around to read some book unrelated to my course. When you take into consideration the fact that Atticus Finch is a lawyer, and the story involves the trial of Tim Robinson, then I guess that qualifies the book as “law related.” So, I was really studying all along.

Okay, I’m being a lawyer. I’m making excuses. I have to study now.

Book review soon.

They Began as Children

November 7, 2008 Ralph Leave a comment

lord-of-the-flies1The Lord of the Flies tells the story of people–young and seemingly innocent boys who could not probably even spell their own names correctly–who fell prey to the curse of human depravity. The book opens with the main character, Ralph, making sense of his surroundings that is vastly different from the England that he is used to. He discovers that he is in an uninhabited island, along with an unaccounted number of children. There are no adults with them, so they decide to form their own little society–with Ralph as chief, with a set of rules, with attendant duties and obligations. They are a bunch of happy kids until Jack Merridew decides that he couldn’t stomach taking orders from Ralph anymore. Jack and his companions begin with hunting wild animals. They ended up killing other children–first, Simon, who was “batty” and different than the rest of them; and then Piggy, the fat, awkward, bespectacled, asthmatic kid who stood up against them, and who had more sense than any of these boys.

Author Williman Golding said of his book:

The theme is an attempt to trace the defects of society back to the defects of human nature. The moral is that the shape of a society must depend on the ethical nature of the individual and not on any political system however apparently logical or respectable.

The Lord of the Flies is symbolic of human society. Yet, I believe it is also symbolic of the total depravity of man. In this book, even children are portrayed as capable of much evil.

Indeed, they began as children. They ended up as savages.

The Best Line from “The Lord of the Flies”

November 7, 2008 Ralph Leave a comment

And in the middle of them, with filthy body, Ralph wept for the end of innocence, the darkness of man’s heart, and the fall through the air of the true, wise friend called Piggy.

Book review to follow.

Four Months of Nothing

November 18, 2007 Ralph 2 comments

Four months. No updates, no nothing.

I have been on a hiatus that long in terms of writing and blogging. Though in the intergalactic universe (where time is reckoned in light years), four months is nothing but one bat of an eyelash, or perhaps a single beat of the heart; in the blogging world, four months without updating is like Rip van Winkle taking what should have been a nap, and waking up twenty years later.

I could justify these momentary gaps in my updates by saying that I had been busy, and that I couldn’t find the time and the occasion to write, but my busyness has only partly to do with it. Mostly, I got stuck in the rumination of the circumstances that my Lord wisely allows me to undergo, that I thought it best to concentrate first on the “ruminating,” and leave the writing for later. By “later”, I meant either of two things: one, at some indefinite time in the future; or two, not at all.

After poring over several chapters of C.S. Lewis’ Surprised by Joy, and after several bouts with the will-I-write-or-will-I-not-write attitude, it seems now that I meant the first one—the” indefinite time in the future” being the day I borrowed my friend’s laptop for the umpteenth instance, hurriedly composed my thoughts, and finally began to write. That is today.

I guess I am what you call an avid fan of Lewis. I read several of his books. I would giggle like a schoolboy upon the mere sight of his works displayed in a friend’s library, while wishing that my friend would notice the giggle and, in pity, give me his copy. Of course, this does not happen (either because he has enough sense not to mind my giggling, or because my giggles are just too far from being pitiful.)

I am encouraged not only by Lewis’ writing, but also by his life. Surprised by Joy is his autobiography, an honest caricature of his quest for Joy which he found only in Christ. I think everyone is in a similar pursuit. I have been. I still am. And like Lewis, I found it (and continually finding it) in Christ, who “for the joy set before him endured the cross, scorning its shame, and sat down at right hand of the throne of God.” I guess this is what I share with Lewis, although the paths that led us there, and the circumstances that God uses to keep us there may be different.

Because of Lewis’ writing, I am also encouraged to write. Though my attempts at chronicling this quest may obviously fall far behind his standards in terms of technique, literary-ness, and even content; yet, just as he was able to encourage me, so I pray that I would be able to encourage others as well. And just as he was able to point me to Christ through his book, so it is my prayer that others may be pointed to Christ as well through this blog.

Several years ago, when I first started this blog, I wrote under the title “Meta-Preface (or Preface to the Preface to the Word Factory)”—a title which I used to think (underscore “used to”) as a cute deconstruction of William Wordsworth’s Preface to the Lyrical Ballads—that I’m thinking of setting some map, as I called it, or a guide and a vision for this blog. I never came around to writing it. Not until now.

Indeed, if there is anything I desire to accomplish in my life, it is to point people to Christ. I must be quick to confess, however, that many times I am unfaithful to this calling. I falter and I stumble. In fact, my legs are too weak to carry me though in this endeavor. It is only by God’s unfailing grace, His steadfast love that never gives up on me that I am able to accomplish what I desire to do.

If truth be told, I write not only with the desire to minister to others, but I write for myself. I write so that the things that I have written might become for me “pillars of stones in the Jordan River,” as the book of Joshua would call it. I write that I might be reminded always of God’s faithfulness, love, grace and favor in my life.

Soli Deo Gloria!