Friday, August 16, 2019

Will our Descendants be Gypsies Some Day?


Philipose Vaidyar

Gypsies are nomadic people groups who wandered and settled in different parts of India; some of them continue to roam seasonally or regularly in search of livelihood.

Gypsies around the world are said to be originated from Central India:
The Romani (also spelled Romany /ˈroÊŠmÉ™ni//ˈrÉ’-/), colloquially known as Gypsies or Roma, are an Indo-Aryan ethnic group, traditionally itinerant, living mostly in Europe and the Americas and originating from the northern Indian subcontinent,[57][58][59] from the RajasthanHaryana, and Punjab regions of modern-day India.[58][59]
Genetic findings appear to confirm that the Romani "came from a single group that left northwestern India about 1,500 years ago".[60] Genetic research published in the European Journal of Human Genetics "revealed that over 70% of males belong to a single lineage that appears unique to the Roma".[61] They are a dispersed people, but their most concentrated populations are located in Europe, especially CentralEastern and Southern Europe (including TurkeySpain and Southern France). The Romani originated in northern India and arrived in Mid-West Asia and Europe around 1,000 years ago.[62] They have been associated with another Indo-Aryan group, the Dom people: the two groups have been said to have separated from each other or, at least, to share a similar history.[63]Specifically, the ancestors of both the Romani and the Dom left North India sometime between the 6th and 11th century.[62]                         https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Romani_people

There are several gypsy communities in India, the Raj Gonds, Banjaras, and Narikkuravar are a few to mention.  

A few hundred years ago, when we did not have enough roads or railway several people from different countries had come to our nation many of them also went to other parts of the world. They came not to settle down here for a better life, but that we will have a better life!  Most of them traveled on bullock carts and on horseback to give us education, health care, give us the written Word and to lead us from darkness to light.   Many of them did not even return to their own countries, died and buried here. Now having all these, it’s our turn to help; to go and settle in their countries to serve them! None of us (exemptions are there) want to go to any African countries to minister or to settle as no Africans came to help us. Word or deed, let our children prosper in lands that have honey and money and a bit of snow on top!

There, will our descendants be called gypsies, some day?

Monday, July 29, 2019

A Life can be Lost for want of a Love


For want of a nail, the shoe was lost

For want of a shoe, the horse was lost

For want of a horse, the rider was lost

For want of a rider, a message was lost

For want of a message, a battle was lost

For want of a battle, a kingdom was lost

And all for want of a horse nail. 


Quoted
Anything that is born will have a natural death but its life is much more important. Unless a kernel of wheat falls to the ground, it will be only a single grain. But if it falls, it will die and will multiply to several folds. The falling is for the seed but not for us. You don’t have to fall for someone to grow spiritually. You can be humble but don’t have to embrace humiliation yourself without self-control. They say, “Pride goes before a fall”.

You can be a leader, but if you have undue love for one of your staff more than others, you may be on the way to your own destruction. You may be a professional counselor and spent all your life counseling people to build families, but your love for women outside your family can defame you easily and destruct several more families.  Teachers and preachers are human beings, but the moment you are able to appreciate other women’s dress and express that you like their behavior very much; you are probably trekking the path of your fall.  

If you have fallen, confess your sins, get reconciled with people, and work out your restoration. When you are proud, you will only cover yourselves up until you are fallen or caught up red-handed. Defaming others whom you think, have exposed your folly; will never cover up your sins! You can be a motivational speaker or an author, and can earn a Ph.D; but if you are perverted, what is the use of all your messages and your books? Your PHD is worse than Permanent Head Damage and your MTH is equal to ‘eMTy Head’! Changing your name, adding a new name to the one you have, and defaming someone else will not build up your broken life either.  

Be open to taking some bold steps to rectify things before it is too late. 
Love your wife and keep your commitments to her:
You must have got married to a person whom you loved. But if you lost your first love, that is the beginning of your fall. If you are a “he-man with she-weakness”, work on it and discuss it with your wife instead of other women. She can deliver you or probably help you better than anybody else. You should develop the art of loving your wife at least for the sake of the oath you did in the name of God and before the public. Keep your commitment to her. It is worth living a life for a promise you made to a woman before God and people. Keep your communication live and intimate with your wife, even when you are traveling or away from home. Let your wife be your best friend. Cherish her, appreciate her and take care of her. May your fountain be blessed, and may you rejoice in the wife of your youth (Proverbs 5:18).

Watch your Words and Actions:
You cannot prevent temptations and feelings that come on your way, but you can prevent your indirect words and suggestive actions. If you are able to appreciate the delicious cooking of other women too much and appreciate the dress they wear, know for sure that you may be morally weak.  You are probably potential of committing adultery with words.  Be mindful of what you speak and communicate. Avoid coarse joking and double-meaning words. If you still have to talk to some woman personally,  do it in the presence of your wife or her husband! So also for a woman to talk to a man. These are not rules but this standard can help you. 

Keep your Distance from Other genders:
It can save you a hard-earned job, the toils of a ministry, and the sacrifices you made in forming a congregation and the organization you probably built up over many years. Let your wife know about your woman friends if at all you have someone for a reason. If the women of the church have to do some cooking, better you don’t go to supervise them or assist them by peeling onions and mincing ginger. “I like ginger curry so much” comment by a leader in such a situation led to his own fall and the fall of a wonderful ministry built up by several saints. You can be an eloquent speaker on radio or TV but your secret weakness with regard to women can spoil your life and destroy several lives and families. Changing your name doesn’t really build up your broken life. God can forgive you but people hardly, so watch out.  The chances to repent can be thinner since you want to cover up your crime and build your image! No one is trying to defame you, but you trying to defame the one who really tried to help you, would be like your attempts to close the hole with darkness. Don’t try to put off the candle someone lit, rather use it to do the repairs.  

When people have become famous several of them have fallen prey to perversions. Satan can tempt you more since that is his job. But taking the armor of God and resisting him is your job and mine.  Resist the devil, he will flee from you. If you are married, let your spouse share your vision. Never marry an organization, a job, or someone because of a job.  
Pursue your vision along with your life partner. Don’t lose your battle and your privilege to enter into the Kingdom of God, that is in store!  

Remove the rust that needs to be removed; Repair what is broken and fix what is lost however small it is. 


Drink water from your own cistern, and running water from your own well. Should your springs overflow in the streets, your streams of water in the public squares? (Proverbs 5:15-16, NIV). For more blessings, read the entire chapter.

Monday, May 20, 2019

How Biblical is our Harvest Festivals ?



Philipose Vaidyar

Is Harvest Festival Biblical? 

We would examine this with an open attitude of knowing the truth. 
Since Auctioneers in the Church justify their actions of auctions in the name of the Old Testament, we would start on the topic with the Old Testament.

Festival of Harvest in the Old Testament
Our Biblical ancestors were food gatherers first and farmers later. They were nomadic and had animals as their property and wealth that they could carry along. Bible time Patriarchs depended on Egypt when they faced famines in their land. They became slave workers in the land where they once went to buy grains. They were never farmers but must have worked on farms of Egyptians or at least used a straw to make and bake bricks! They learned agriculture from Canaanites and they were prepared by God during the Exodus for future farming they would do and were given various commandments including use of land, cultivation, and harvest.  
In an agrarian society, they were to have a human response to God for their incomes from sowing and reaping. Offerings came from the fullness of one's harvest (Exodus 22:29). They were given three annual feasts to observe, of which two festivals focused on the harvest. (Exodus 23: 14-20). The Festival of Harvest or First-Fruits came in the spring, fifty days after Passover (Exodus 23:16). The Festival of Booths fell at the end of harvest in the fall.
The first fruits came to the priest, who would offer them to the Lord. If a person brought them, then the Lord might accept them (Lev 23:10-11), an acceptance perhaps reflected in the successful completion of the harvest in the fall, a "blessing" (Deut 24:19Psalm 107:37-38). Some of the harvests remained in the fields for the sustenance of the poor (Lev 19:923:22 ).
Please see the Bible references:
  • Exodus 23:16: “Celebrate the Festival of Harvest with the first fruits of the crops you sow in your field. “Celebrate the Festival of Ingathering at the end of the year, when you gather in your crops from the field. (Dt 16:10-20)
  • Exodus 34:22: “Celebrate the Festival of Weeks with the first fruits of the wheat harvest, and the Festival of Ingathering at the turn of the year.
  • Deuteronomy 16:15: For seven days celebrate the festival to the Lord your God at the place the Lord will choose. For the Lord, your God will bless you in all your harvest and in all the work of your hands, and your joy will be complete.

Metaphorical Usage:
Metaphorical usage of harvest takes on a positive sense when Jeremiah refers to Israel as God's fruit-fruits of harvest (Jeremiah 2:3).
God stands in control of the harvest time; it is part of his work (Jer 5:24; Amos 4:7 ).
Feast of Harvest and Church
If a church wants to teach its members to observe the Harvest Festival, why should it ignore other festivals and commandments and sacrificial observances given along? Even if one wants to observe the festival of harvest, then it should be done in accordance with the Bible and not in accordance with pagan practices.
A sincere reader of the Bible can know that Harvest Festival is mentioned in the Old Testament as the following:
1.       Harvest Festival was meant for an agrarian society.
2.       For the first fruits of the crops they sow in the field
3.       It should be at the end of the year when gathering from the field (not the market)
4.       Festival of weeks talks about the first fruits of the wheat harvest.
5.       The first fruits came to the priest
6.       The three similar festivals mentioned are for feasting, not for selling and fundraising, capitalizing on the ego and pride of people. 

Harvest and New Testament

The Harvest and the imagery of harvest are used by Jesus to refer to the gospel and judgment. (Matt 9:38). In the New Testament, believers may sow and reap a spiritual harvest of righteousness (2 Cor 9:10).  Jesus described the last judgment in a parable about harvest (Matthew 13:30; Matthew 13:39). The Jews of his day understood the connection of harvest and judgment.  Judgment is the focus again in the words of the angel in Revelation 14:15.

Harvest Festival and Auctions in the Church

1. The Harvest festival we talk about and do in some of our parishes is nowhere near to the teachings, ordinances, and practices we see in the Old Testament. (Cf. Harvest Festival, Festival of booths, and Festival of Firstfruits).

2. Conducting auctions in the Church, selling items that people bring, or buying and bringing them to Church for a fundraising event is an unbiblical, unchristian, and pagan practice. I have seen this practice among people of other faith in the Malappuram area, in the 60s and 70s that they had already stopped.  I hear and observe this same practice in Chennai in the local festival of temples on every street, exactly as we do auctions in our churches after the service.

3. I had talked this over to several priests and pastors of our churches, who agree to it but say, to raise the money really works better. I have encouraged priests to preach for mobilization of resources during those seasons, using good teachings on giving, already available in the Bible by prophets and Apostles. 

4. Sacrificial giving can be encouraged and motivated scripturally. It is un-Christian to address the ego of people by creating a competitive setting in the church to raise funds for an activity. None of the evangelical Christian ministries in India do it, so where have we copied this model from?

5. Jesus rebuked selling and buying in the Church and according to Him, the House of prayer should be kept in its dignity. 
 
When leaders lose vision, people do perish. When teachers use Bible verses selectively, to fit into their human reasons, such teachings are non-biblical and an abuse of the Word.  I request Church leadership to look into this creatively and spiritually and ban the non-scriptural and pagan practices; repent and turn to God following His Word not by letters (selected) but by its Spirit. If one is ignorant on how to get people to give to Church and would like to know how to mobilize resources for a Biblical or Christian cause, it can be another topic for our discussion.


Read more on what others say about Auctions in the church at Harvest Festival

A friend of mine sent me what he had written to the Bishop of his Church against the unBiblical practice of auctioning in churches in the name of Harvest Festival.  https://pvarticles.blogspot.com/2020/02/auctioneering-in-church.html?m=1



Thursday, October 4, 2018

Karedu is Calling



The Sun is becoming hotter. Herdsmen and women are moving out of the village with their flocks – sheep, goats and buffaloes. Lunch pack and a bottle of water hang on the tip of the bamboo rod balanced on their shoulder. They are gone for a day in search of greeneries in spite of the failing monsoon, to graze their animals. These are Yadava people, one of the 12 people groups who live in Karedu.


Karedu is a Panchayath in Olavapadu Mandal (block) of Prakasham District of Andhra Pradesh.  It is 5 km away, east of the Nellore - Ongole Highway.  The nine major villages of Karedu is closer to the Bay of Bengal with about 15,000 households.  

The People
The fishermen are called Machikarulu, both the Tamil speakers who are about 300 families and the Telugu speakers who will come to over 1,000 households. Yenadi and Yerukula are tribesmen who live in 7 villages and one village respectively. Mathikas and Malas are part of Scheduled castes; Yadavas, Pathmasali, Gowdas, and Chakili are considered to be backward classes. They are the working class and labourers. Reddys and Komutulu (Vaisya) are well-to-do families. Reddys are landowners and agriculturists while Komutulus are the business people. Brahmins are called Archakulu and constitute about 50 families only. Though each of them has a traditional job of their own, most of the BC and SC people are wage earners.

Literacy
There a few who are educated and employed but most of the older people are illiterate or uneducated. Education is free in Andhra Pradesh by the government which will pay full scholarship of the fee for all those who obtain an income certificate. Getting an income certificate is not difficult in AP! Though children go to school the educational standard is too poor.  I met a young boy and asked him,
“What is your name?”
“My name is Varun”, he responded. Varun was studying in class five.
I opened a simple text file on my mobile and asked him to read; he could not. I typed his answer “My name is Varun” on the text space for him to read. He could make out only m- y and nothing more!


Fishermen Folks
I thought about making a quick visit to Pattappupalem in Karedu, the fishermen village. The road is almost like an embankment, on the left, barren sandy land and on the right the habitats of the fishermen folk, mostly concrete houses, said to be rebuilt after the Tsunami. There are foot paths and vehicle wheel tracks leading to the beach which is about 500 meters away. The beach looked serene and without any living creatures around except the sand crabs chasing to their holes population as you walk through the beach. There are a few motor fixed fiber boats resting on the shore. A bit far away, there were three men struggling with their nets. The catch was not encouraging; they were picking away a few of the tiny fishes got hooked on to the net. Many fishermen go over to Chennai (300 km away) to join boats that go for deep sea fishing.

The sun is setting and the view from the beach is awesome! It is time for me to move on. The herdsmen and women are returning with their flock. Empty lunch boxes and water bottles were still hanging from the bamboo rod on their shoulders.
Kindling Lives in Karedu
The people of Karedu need to be enlightened before darkness pervade the villages. Like Karedu, there are many more villages on the coast as well as inland. The monsoon had failed here for the last five years in a row, say the people. There is almost no agricultural activity here, leaving no labour opportunities for the poor.  Many families have moved out of the region in search of job elsewhere.





The view of the sunset from Karedu beach is awesome! The people of Karedu need to be enlightened before darkness pervades the villages. They should become literate and delivered from poverty and superstitions.  Their living conditions can be improved.  How beautiful it would be if some of these herdsmen also become shepherds of people!? Can some of their fishermen also become fishers of men?

 - Philipose Vaidyar

https://sites.google.com/view/philipose-vaidyar



Friday, July 6, 2018

Have you Ever Hugged a Policeman?

I have; on the last weekend evening. He probably must be a bit older than my son.  I have not had such an encounter with any policeman like this before. I have noticed many policemen who stop two wheeler riders and look for defaults to show of writing a bill and take money and never write bill or hand it over; or talk about a heavy fine for a silly matter and bargain for a bribe to let go off the fine; I have seen cops, taking away apples and pomegranates filling into their plastic carry bags for penalizing the poor men and women sitting’ illegally’ on the road side of Thirumangalam - Ambattur road in Chennai; or taking even a twenty rupees note from an auto rickshaw driver who pause before the hospital on the Poonamalee High road a few meters away from the Kilpauk traffic police station.

I dare not to list any more for I may ultimately forget talking about this strange policeman whom I met for the first time on a Friday evening in Nellore RTC bus stand, on my way back from work, heading towards our ‘temporary’ home in Chennai.  He was indifferently different, decent and calm without much emotional expressions on his face!


It was a very quick to respond time. And I noticed him quite cool for more than an hour and a half when we had to travel together. Before he could leave me, I opened my mobile phone and asked him to dial his number, gave him a ring and then saved it. Soon after I jumped into the Thiruppathi-born coloured APSRTC bus where we both got down, I sent him a message on to his mobile. I wished I had taken a picture of him; he had already taken mine. When I checked on WhatsAap,  I could locate him and see his picture! This is what I scribbled on my phone quickly and sent him:  
 "My dear Sir, Hats off to you! I should not wait too long to thank you for your great help. You turned to be an angel to me this evening. I could not reward you more than anything that of a hug. I would ever be grateful to you and to God for you, your parents, and your leaders who trained you up. I have a story to tell of this experience and your timely help. Almighty God bless you, your career and your family. See you soon sometime. Your dear friend, Philipose Vaidyar".

You may be wondering what really happened!  It was about 6:35 pm when reached the bus stand to get back home for the weekend. Bus route number ‘103’, painted with green stripes was obviously to Chennai. I could read the bus board in Tamil as I always loved other languages especially Tamil even many years before I came to Chennai and someone told me, Tamil is supposed to be the mother of all languages!. Usually buses from Nellore to Chennai will have English board as well. The short, bus conductor in strange dark kakhi uniform was around though the bus was almost empty. I asked him, "Does this bus go by 7:00 pm? I knew there was a bus to Chennai by that time. He said, “yes”, and I had enough time to get small parcel for food. I rushed to the restaurant, and ordered a parcel of idlies, the tiffin available any time anywhere the region. It was not because I loved idly all the time. The journey is almost four and half hours and the operators were fond of a regular stoppage where idlies did not seem that safer food next to the maida made chappattis that did prefer either. For me, when I eat, was more important  than what I should eat.  

I had 20 minutes of time unlike last time when I preferred to buy a packet of biscuits and a tetra pack fruit juice. This time I thought a couple of idlis will do good for my stomach though I do not really eat for mouth. As I prefer to eat to live, other than living to eat, it did not matter me much. But guy at the restaurant took much time to deliver it to me but I still had 15 minutes. I was telling him, that I need to go by bus.  Now when I turned back I could see new green LED lights  glowing ‘Chennai’  and it is on the next bus, same green. My bus was gone. But what is there to worry about a bus just missed !? I came running, enquired about the other bus to the conductor I saw earlier in blue dark and light uniform. He coolly said, “the bus left, it was the 6:45 bus!” He tells me, it was his bus that would leave by 7:00 pm.  Why should I worry so much? My cabin sized suitcase, with my lap top, good working though nine years old, enough stuff for a week's travel, and a backpack with full of personal documents and original ID cards were inside the bus!. I ran out to the direction the bus would have gone. 
I did not speak much Telugu, as it was just less than two months in this location. I saw a bike coming out of the bus stand. I stopped him and asked if he could help me follow the bus. He advised me in Telugu to take an auto and follow as I can catch it before it will reach the highway. I found yet another bus of Andhra Pradesh leaving and I thought the police man who was getting inside could help me somehow. Probably by calling the cops on duty at some traffic signal point and stop the bus. The old policeman responded something that I really did not follow. I understood one thing, he sounded helpless and he was asking me how he could help me. If I knew that I would not have run to him.
It was getting late. I knew I cannot waste time now. I saw one more young police man getting into the bus that would leave soon. I decided to run back to the spot. There was yet another policeman with a Walkie-talkie in his back pocket, boarding the 7:00 pm bus. I called him for help:  he was quite calm. I spoke to him in the Tamil I was I heard many people in Nellore follow Tamil. But knowing me he responded in English. But it was very slowly and just few words. I wanted to know what he could do to retrieve my baggage. But I dared not. I was praying within watching carefully his responses.  He came down and checked with the conductor if he could get the phone number of the one who left. I thought the conductor felt it too silly.

I expected the police would take his walkie-talkie and call some police on the way to stop the bus. But he took his mobile phone and whispered something to someone. I was curious to know his strategy but kept watching him. He asked me to follow him. He negotiated with the driver of the Thirupathi bus already began to move. Finally, he asked me get in and he got in too. The bus was full, but the conductor helped sit on the tiny foldable seat near the doorway. The policeman also had got a regular seat in the front. I continued to search on my mobile for contact numbers of the bus depot at Ponneri, where the bus had belong as told by the other conductor.  But it was in vein. The policeman responded to me after my long wait, “We can get the bags. I will ask my friend to collect it from the bus. But it will be after an hour!” My God, one hour ? What all can happen to the bag on the seat?

By the time the policeman asking me details about the bags. The suit case was grey-black, and on the luggage spot just above the seat. The back-pack too was grey in colour and it was left on the second row of the seats on the window side, behind the doorway.  He kept scribbling on his phone. He then said, he will take a picture too for the one who collect the bags to recognize me. In the meantime there arose an argument between the bus operators and a passenger. It seemed that the passenger had requested a concession for which he had to show an ID proof. He had one, issued by the government on some service scheme. But the driver insister that he should have   an Aadhar card. Unlike in Kerala or Tamil Nadu, here the driver was acting more authoritative. They did not bunch even a little and finally the passenger alighted. The conductor asked me to go and sit on that seat. I said I will stand. But the policeman advised me to go over and sit as it would take certainly more than one hour. He told me, “I have asked someone to collect the bags at the toll plaza”. Hesitantly I went behind and sat. A little while the conductor had come and issued me ticket for Rs.95 to Naidupetta and collected the 100 rupee note. The idly packet is swinging from my hand as I was holding to the cross bar in front of me. Everything, because of this idly, I thought. But I was praying as the bus was in full speed on the highway. Almost 45 minutes gone, you won’t know how I could sit in the bus calmly. The policeman is calmly watching the TV behind the driver’s cabin.

There comes the toll plaza. I went up to the front, ready to get out. But the police friend told me, “not this, the next toll plaza”. I had to sit again. It was one hour by now. The second toll plaza had come, and I am there near the policeman. He told me, “the bags are collected but I asked him to stay after the toll plaza on the highway”.
By now I had gained strength to ask him, “Sir, will you have to go all the way back?”
“No, I have to attend a meeting here on the way at Ozli. My duty is there and it still belonged to the Nellore Police station area!”.

 I had gone back to my seat. I had finally decided to call my wife and inform what had happened expecting her too to pray, though I had the faith deep down in my heart that I will not miss the baggage. Ozli was approaching. Now he turned back to me and nodded, no way I could miss noticing him. The bus was approaching a bus stop on the highway. It was a small junction. There in the headlight of the bus I could see a young man holding my grey backpack and the suitcase beside him. Mr. D.S. Vijay Kumar, the police constable had also advised to check the bag for my belongings. The bus stopped and both of us were soon out on the road. I shook the hand of the young man who was holding my bag, quickly opened the front of the hag and pushed the packet of idlies and looked for my hand bag with all my ids in the main section. It is there! “Shall I continue on the same bus?”, I asked him. “Yah, better not to lose time” he suggested.  I had no words of gratitude to express. I flung my arms wide and gave him a tight hug before I could get back on board.

As I was thinking on, seated in the bus, how difficult it would have been if otherwise, the policeman texts me back, “Thank you for providing me a chance to serve”.

Was he not really an angel to me at that point of time send in by the Lord Almighty? How could I meet him on that moment when he was boarding a bus? Was it not a perfect timing ordained by the good Lord? Can I also consider this as a greater reward, as promised by the Lord, “You will be given by the same measure you use; hard pressed and overflowing?
philjy@gmail.com