Saturday, May 21, 2022

choose life: the JP II story

https://www.facebook.com/AugustineMarioNnaji

THE POPE THAT WOULD HAVE BEEN ABORTED

John Paul II’s mom chose life after her doctor advised an abortion
Over one hundred years ago on May 18, Emilia Wojtyla gave birth to her second son, Karol, after a difficult and life-threatening pregnancy. The child would grow up to be St. John Paul II.
She had to choose between her own life and that of the baby she was carrying, but her deep faith did not allow Emilia to choose abortion.
Deep in her heart she had to be ready to make this sacrifice for the baby she was carrying.
Emilia Wojtyla was depressed by the insistence of her first doctor, Dr. Jan Moskała, that she have an abortion.
Emilia and Karol Wojtyla made a bold decision that, regardless of everything, their conceived baby was to be born. And so they started looking for another doctor.
They ultimately chose Dr. Samuel Taub, a Jewish doctor from Krakow, who had moved to Wadowice after the First World War. The doctor confirmed that there was a risk of complications during childbirth, including Emilia's death. However, he did not suggest an abortion.
Emilia had a bad pregnancy: she spent most of her time lying down.
On the day of the birth, May 18, 1920, Emilia lay in her apartment in Kościelna street, in the living room … in the presence of a midwife.
At the same time Karol Sr. and their 13-year-old son Edmund had gone out around 5 p.m. to participate in the prayer of the Divine Office in the parish church across the street where they sang the Litany of Loreto.
Emilia asked the midwife to open the window: she wanted the first sound her son could hear to be a song in honor of Mary. In short, Emilia Wojtyla gave birth to her son, listening to the song of the Litany of Loreto.
St. John Paul II also told his personal secretary Stanislaw Dziwisz that he was born to the litany in honor of the Mother of God, she said, adding that he was elected pope at the same time of day that he was born.
Excerpts from CNA and author Milena Kindziuk
It was quiet a touching story of beloved Pope John Paul II who’s now a Saint. Both his life and that of his mother is worthy of emulation.
Happy Billeted Birthday Pope Saint John Paul II
Long Live the Church!
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venerable teofilo camomot of cebu 2022 may 21

 

https://www.facebook.com/sugboanongsimbahan/photos/a.104011008389773/355720636552141

Great News | THE VENERABLE TEOFILO BASTIDA CAMOMOT
Titular Archbishop of Clysma
Founder of the Congregation of Santa Teresa
(1914-1988)
On May 21, 2022 the Holy Father Pope Francis authorized Marcello Cardinal Semeraro, Prefect of the Congregation of the Causes of Saints in the Vatican, to promulgate a decree on the heroic virtues of the Servant of God Archbishop Teofilo Bastide Camomot, granting him the title of Venerable.
Archbishop Teofilo Camomot was born on March 3, 1914 in Carcar, Cebu. He was ordained to the priesthood on December 15, 1941. He was nominated Auxiliary Bishop of Archbishop Jose Cuenco of Jaro. The episcopal consecration took place at the Metropolitan Cathedral of Cebu on March 26, 1955. Three years after, on June 10, 1958, he was appointed Coadjutor Archbishop of Archbishop James Hayes of Cagayan de Oro. He founded the Carmelite Tertiaries of the Blessed Eucharist in Misamis Occidental in November 1959. This would later become the Congregation of Santa Teresa. After staying for 12 years in Cagayan de Oro, he resigned as Coadjutor Archbishop and returned to Cebu in 1970. He died in a vehicular accident on September 27, 1988. He was then 74 years old. His dedication to the poor and detachment from material possessions were the trademarks of his ministry.
Known for his fame of sanctity during his life, his death and after his death, the diocesan process of the cause of his beatification and canonization was opened for the first time in the archdiocese of Cebu on December 27, 2010 during the incumbency of Ricardo Cardinal Vidal. Upon the advise of the Congregation of the Causes of Saints, Archbishop Jose Palma authorized the reopening of the diocesan process on the life, virtues and fame of sanctity of the Servant of God Archbishop Teofilo Camomot. The process started on January 5, 2016 until March 2, 2017. In the course of this process, 45 witnesses who knew him personally were interviewed. The Congregation of the Causes of Saints granted the Decree of Validity of the Diocesan Process on November 19, 2015. The “Positio” on the life, virtues and fame of sanctity of Archbishop Camomot was submitted to the Congregation in 2020. The Special Congress composed of 9 Theological Consultants gave their unanimous approval on the heroic virtues of Camomot on October 21, 2021. The Cardinals and Bishops in the Ordinary Session of May 3, 2022, chaired by Marcello Cardinal Semeraro, have affirmed that the Servant of God exercised the theological, cardinal and concomitant virtues to a heroic degree.
After the presentation of these facts to the Supreme Pontiff Francis through an accurate report of Marcello Cardinal Semeraro, on May 21, 2022 His Holiness, having accepted and approved the decision of the Congregation for the Causes of Saints, ordered that the Decree to this effect be made public and placed among the Acts of the Congregation for the Causes of Saints.
Salamat sa Dios!



Friday, May 20, 2022

fr leo anthony hofstee, op (+1986): the sunshine of tala

 


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_ObJxmh3lgc









Monday, May 2, 2022

thank you st joseph the worker 2022 may 1

 

THANK YOU, ST. JOSEPH THE WORKER for sending kuya bob to help us fix the burst old pipes (most probably the old metal pipes subject to rusting, including PVCs) replaced by new PPR prior to, during, & after your feastday of may 1, 2022! 

Friday, March 18, 2022

daily act of consecration to st joseph by fr dan calloway, MIC

 “St. Joseph, spouse of Mary, virginal father of Jesus, and my SPIRITUAL FATHER,

I CONSECRATE myself entirely to you. I lovingly embrace your FATHERHOOD

& take refuge under your PATERNAL CLOAK. Help me to pray & be virtuous today.

Instruct me in the wisdom of the saints, PROTECT me from the snares of the enemy, & keep me from sinning. 

Should I take my last breath today, be by my side, & take me to heaven to be with Jesus & Mary. Amen.”

 

Sunday, March 13, 2022

st josef freinademetz' first & last parish assignment in austria (now part of italy)

 





source: fr sherwin aromin, svd (2022 March) FB post




Saturday, January 29, 2022

dominican spirituality

 


st josef freinademetz (29 jan)

 ST. JOSEPH FREINADEMETZ , SVD ( April 15, 1852 - January 28, 1908). MIssionary to China

Feastday: January 29
Joseph was born on April 15, 1852, the fourth child of Giovanmattia and Anna Maria Freinademetz. The family eked out a living on their poor and small farm as did their neighbors. Years later, the little farm house and quiet hamlet of Oies in the Gader Valley changed when Joseph Freinademetz, SVD, was beatified in 1975 by Pope Paul VI and then canonized a saint in the Roman Catholic Church on October 5, 2003, by Pope John Paul II in Rome.
Joseph’s early years were uneventful. He helped in the farm chores, attended daily Mass at his local parish and, on the advice of the parish priest, attended a school some eleven hours walk from his home. He eventually entered the major seminary and was ordained a priest for the Brixon Diocese in 1875. His initial assignment was to be a teacher. But soon an article in the local diocesan newsletter about the new Mission House at Steyl, Holland, founded by Fr. Arnold Janssen caught his attention. Joseph went to visit the Mission House. The visit was enough to convince Joseph that this was where he could follow his vocation to be a missionary priest. He joined the fledgling group at Steyl in 1878, and barely a year later he received his mission cross along with Fr. John Baptist Anzer, SVD. He had one more brief visit to his family home to say goodbye for the last time, as he would never return to his homeland again. He was to be a missionary in China. In 1881, the Mission House had received its own mission territory, the Province of Shandong. Joseph was so devoted to his mission that, except to recover from an illness, he never left Shandong.
As so many missionaries have discovered, the foundation of their mission work is first and foremost a STRONG PERSONAL PRAYER LIFE. Joseph had promoted this amongst the clergy along with the words, “Do you imagine you can become holy without meditation, something no saint was able to do? Without meditation life is lost.” He said his daily Mass and prayed his Divine Office with the same intense dedication as he did with his missionary work. Joseph had unwavering hope and belief in the power of God and the sacraments. During such difficult times as the Boxer Rebellion in which two young Divine Word Missionaries were martyred, he remained at his mission post. Well before his death, the Chinese people and others with whom he worked recognized him as a saintly man for his humility, for his FIRM YET GENTLE approach to his work, and for his total love of his people. Toward the end of his all-too-few years, he was appointed the Provincial for the Society of the Divine Word, a post he held until his death from tuberculosis in 1908 at age 46.
He was beatified on October 19, 1975 by Pope Paul VI and canonized on October 5, 2003 with Arnold Janssen by the same pope.

https://www.facebook.com/groups/849413028449725/?hoisted_section_header_type=recently_seen&multi_permalinks=4916102291780758

Thursday, January 27, 2022

sto tomas de aquino (jan 28)

 https://www.facebook.com/groups/849413028449725/?hoisted_section_header_type=recently_seen&multi_permalinks=4911295512261436

ST.THOMAS AQUINAS. (1225 – March 7, 1274). wrote theSumma Theologica. He is the preeminent spokesman of the Catholic tradition of reason and of divine revelation. He is one of the great teachers of the medieval Catholic Church, honored with the titles Doctor of the Church and Angelic Doctor.

Feastday: January 28
Thomas, ay age five, was given to the Benedictine monastery at Monte Cassino in his parents’ hopes that he would choose that way of life and eventually became abbot. In 1239, he was sent to Naples to complete his studies. It was here that he was first attracted to Aristotle’s philosophy.
By 1243, Thomas abandoned his family’s plans for him and joined the Dominicans, much to his mother’s dismay. On her order, Thomas was captured by his brother and kept at home for over a year.
Once free, he went to Paris and then to Cologne, where he finished his studies with Albert the Great. He held two professorships at Paris, lived at the court of Pope Urban IV, directed the Dominican schools at Rome and Viterbo, combated adversaries of the mendicants, as well as the Averroists, and argued with some Franciscans about Aristotelianism.
His greatest contribution to the Catholic Church is his writings. The unity, harmony, and continuity of faith and reason, of revealed and natural human knowledge, pervades his writings. One might expect Thomas, as a man of the gospel, to be an ardent defender of revealed truth. But he was broad enough, deep enough, to see the whole natural order as coming from God the Creator, and to see reason as a divine gift to be highly cherished.
The Summa Theologiae, his last and, unfortunately, uncompleted work, deals with the whole of Catholic theology. He stopped work on it after celebrating Mass on December 6, 1273. When asked why he stopped writing, he replied, “I cannot go on…. All that I have written seems to me like so much straw compared to what I have seen and what has been revealed to me.” He died March 7, 1274.

Monday, January 10, 2022

servant of god archbishop teofilo camomot of carcar, cebu

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_RSIqlfnoDM&t=224s

https://www.archbishopcamomot.ph/biography/

https://www.archbishopcamomot.ph/blog/


https://www.archbishopcamomot.ph/camomot-papers-to-reach-vatican/

NB: his remains have recently decomposed but his clothes & the tomb remained intact without smell or odor of decay or insect infestation