LOVE!

"" We love because he first loved us." -

LIVE!

““Keep away from those who try to belittle your ambitions. Small people always do that, but the really great make you believe that you too can become great.”.” -

EXPLORE!..

“One measure of friendship consists not in the number of things friends can discuss, but in the number of things they need no longer mention.”

CELEBRATE!

“I tell you the truth, no one can enter the kingdom of God unless he is born of water and the Spirit. Flesh gives birth to flesh, but the Spirit gives birth to spirit."

MY MISSION, MY PASSION !!

"We are therefore Christ’s ambassadors, as though God were making his appeal through us. We implore you on Christ’s behalf: Be reconciled to God." -

Biyernes, Oktubre 19, 2012

My new found friend

I dont have any idea about this man. I heard his name so many times, but never mind knowing him or his story. I have been a volunteer catechist for children in Cubao, and often times, Father Ronald will ask those children who this man is and what are his contributions in the Catholic community.

And so tongue to tongue, he is present. As October is saying hello, his name sounded so loud that almost everybody can recognize except me. With my curiosity, I decided to stop my morning routine when I heard his name on TV. I dont know what happened but i felt like crying during that day. My nerves were so alive and wanted to know so much more about him. After that media presentation, I got my journal. I have no idea of what I was writing during that time. 

A closest friend then send me message to make an AVP about him.. Oh my!what a coincidence, sa dami ng pwede niyang lapitan bakit ako?!

And that was my starting point. We are destined to meet.

Dears, welcome my newly found friend:



The Biography of Pedro Calungsod

PEDRO CALUNGSOD was a young native of the Visayas region of the Philippines. Very little is known about him. He was just one of the boy catechists who went with some Spanish Jesuit missionaries from the Philippines to the Ladrones Islands in the western Pacific in 1668 to evangelize the Chamorros. Life in the Ladrones was hard. The provisions for the Mission did not arrive regularly; the jungles were too thick to cross; the cliffs were very stiff to climb, and the islands were frequently visited by devastating typhoons. Despite all these, the missionaries persevered, and the Mission was blessed with many conversions. Subsequently, the islands were renamed “Marianas” by the missionaries in honor of the Blessed Virgin Mary and of the Queen Regent of Spain, María Ana, who was the benefactress of that Mission.
But very soon, a Chinese quack, named Choco, envious of the prestige that the missionaries were gaining among the Chamorros, started to spread the talk that the baptismal water of the missionaries was poisonous. And since some sickly Chamorro infants who were baptized died, many believed the calumniator and eventually apostatized. The evil campaign of Choco was readily supported by the Macanjas (sorcerers) and the Urritaos (young male prostitutes) who, along with the apostates, began persecuting the missionaries.
The most unforgettable assault happened on 2 April 1672, the Saturday just before the Passion Sunday of that year. At around seven o’clock in the morning, Pedro—by then already about 17 years old—and the superior of the mission, named Padre Diego Luís de San Vitores, came to the village of Tomhom, in the Island of Guam. There, they were told that a baby girl was recently born in the village, so they went to ask the child’s father, named Matapang, to bring out the infant for baptism. Matapang was a Christian and a friend of the missionaries, but having apostatized, he angrily refused to have his baby baptized.
To give Matapang some time to cool down, Padre Diego and Pedro gathered the children and some adults of the village at the nearby shore and started chanting with them the truths of the Catholic Faith. They invited Matapang to join them, but the apostate shouted back that he was angry with God and was already fed up with the Christian teachings.
Determined to kill the missionaries, Matapang went away and tried to enlist in his cause another villager, named Hirao, who was not a Christian. At first, Hirao refused, mindful of the kindness of the missionaries towards the natives; but when Matapang branded him a coward, he got piqued and so he consented. Meanwhile, during that brief absence of Matapang from his hut, Padre Diego and Pedro took the chance of baptizing the infant, with the consent of the Christian mother.
When Matapang learned of the baptism, he became even more furious. He violently hurled spears first at Pedro. The lad skirted the darting spears with remarkable dexterity. The witnesses said that Pedro had all the chances to escape because he was very agile, but he did not want to leave Padre Diego alone. Those who knew Pedro personally believed that he would have defeated his fierce aggressors and would have freed both himself and Padre Diego if only he had some weapons because he was a very valiant boy; but Padre Diego never allowed his companions to carry arms. Finally, Pedro got hit by a spear at the chest and he fell to the ground. Hirao immediately charged towards him and finished him off with a blow of a cutlass on the head. Padre Diego gave Pedro the sacramental absolution. After that, the assassins also killed Padre Diego.
Matapang took the crucifix of Padre Diego and pounded it with a stone while blaspheming God. Then, both assassins denuded the bodies of Pedro and Padre Diego, dragged them to the edge of the shore, tied large stones to the feet of these, brought them on a proa to sea and threw them into the deep. Those remains of the martyrs were never to be found again.
When the companion missionaries of Pedro learned of his death, they exclaimed, “Fortunate youth! How well rewarded his four years of persevering service to God in the difficult Mission are: he has become the precursor of our superior, Padre Diego, in Heaven!” They remembered Pedro to be a boy with very good dispositions, a virtuous catechist, a faithful assistant, and a good Catholic whose perseverance in the Faith even to the point of martyrdom proved him to be a good soldier of Christ (cf. II Tim 2:3).
Padre Diego Luís de San Vitores was beatified in 1985. It was his beatification that brought the memory of Pedro Calungsod to our day. On 5 March 2000, Pope John Paul II beatified Pedro Calungsod at Saint Peter's Square in Rome.

http://pedrocalungsod.page.tl/Biography.htm

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I'm starting to love Him. ♥



Huwebes, Oktubre 18, 2012

IT'S More Fun in HIM


why oh why masaya sa Singles for Christ?

Uhhhh..that i, dunno!!!

 all i know is that every time I'm with the community, I feel God's LOVE..and I am always reminded how precious and loved I am..

At, at at...kinakausap na ako ni Lord..yeah..He is speaking and answering me..clearly..Binggong binggo..

Can't explain the feeling..pero masaya talaga magserve sa Kanya..at madami dami nadin ang aking mga na acquire na values.. Although my times na nakakapagod, but more fun naman ang kapalit!!

Anyway, madami pa akong gustong sabihin bakit IT'S mOre Fun In SFC, kaya lang, sayang naman ng clip na ginawa ko..



To God be the glory!!ALWAYS!!!