Showing posts with label Church. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Church. Show all posts

Sunday, April 21, 2019

Sri Lanka orders curfew after deadly blasts


COLOMBO, Sri Lanka — Sri Lanka's defense ministry has ordered a night-time curfew after eight blasts targeting churches and hotels killed nearly 160 people across the country on Sunday.

The curfew will begin on Sunday night at 6:00pm local time (1230 GMT) and run until 6:00am local time (0030 GMT), the ministry said.

Police said an eighth blast hit the suburb of Orugodawatta in the north of the capital, but there were no further details on what was targeted.

Nearly 160 people have been confirmed dead so far in the string of attacks targeting hotels and churches.

source: philstar.com

Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Pope may change conclave rules before abdication - Vatican


Pope Benedict may change Church rules governing the conclave where cardinals from around the world will meet next month to secretly elect his successor, the Vatican said on Wednesday.

Benedict was studying the possibility of making changes to laws established by his predecessor Pope John Paul before he abdicates on February 28, a spokesman said.

The changes may affect the timing of the start of the conclave. Current Church rules call for the conclave to start around March 15 but there have been indications that it could be held earlier if the rules are changed.

source: interaksyon.com

Sunday, October 21, 2012

Saint Pedro Calungsod, our model of faith and witness


Martyrs are those who stand witness for their beliefs and who give testimony to their faith.  Since the early years of the Church, there have been thousands of martyrs; people who never feared, or even if they did, stood their ground for the sake of the principles they espoused and the faith that they lived by and lived for.

Martyrs therefore are the models of the faith, especially those who believed and followed Jesus, the Christ and in effect, were persecuted, imprisoned, tortured and killed.  Martyrs did not renounce their faith and remained true to their beliefs even if the consequence meant death.

Today, October 21, 2012, the Catholic Church and all Filipinos worldwide are one in thanking the Lord for the gift of faith and witness of one of our very own.  As  Christians and as Catholics, we  joyfully celebrate the life and faith  of Blessed Pedro Calungsod and six others who will be elevated to the altar of God and will be known as “holy men and women” of  the Church and in the world.  They will be canonized by His Holiness Pope Benedict XVI and will be declared  and given the title fitting to them. As they are declared Saints (or Holy Men and Holy Women), they  can now be publicly venerated by the  Church.

Saint Pedro Calungsod was a Visayan who joined the missions in the Marianas in the 17th century.  He was a lay young man who worked in the evangelization and proclamation of the gospel to the Chamorros, the indigenous people who lived at that time in islands of the Marianas.  He helped and assisted Blessed Diego de Sanvitores, a Spanish Jesuit in work of catechesis and in the delivery of the   sacraments to  the people.

This young man who made a decision to be a missionary gives us an idea of who he is.  A person with a certain level of maturity in his faith so that he committed himself to join the mission and dedicated his life in the following of Jesus in his capacity a lay young man.   He was not only willing to go but made himself available for others as well.  He was a catechist as he taught to the people the Story of Jesus and his saving message  of love.  We know in history that during those times, going to missions was very hard and it was possible that one would not be able to return.  It was really a decision of faith and loving service that he made for the sake of the gospel.

At 17, San Pedro Calungsod was killed  on April 2, 1672 in Tumon, Guam together with Blessed Diego de Sanvitores when they were suspected by some villagers that  the water used in baptism has poison.  Their stories never ended after they died because their lives were the very witness of faith. After 340 years, that young Visayan martyr is recognized by the Church as a “Beloved of Christ” and worthy recipient of the crown of sainthood.

May Saint Pedro Calungsod be our model of faith, of witness, of service.  He is not only a model for the young people but for all of us who want to share God’s good news to everyone.  May we also follow Jesus and be His witness, like the young martyr named Pedro Calungsod, for at 17 he made a difference in his life and faith.

Saint Pedro Calungsod, pray for us and be our model faith and witness.

source: interaksyon.com

Thursday, October 18, 2012

Pilgrim image of Blessed Pedro Calungsod now in Rome


CEBU CITY -- The pilgrim image of Blessed Pedro Calungsod arrived in Rome, Italy at about 8 a.m. Wednesday, according to Fr. Mhar Balili, a member of the liturgical committee for the Calungsod canonization in Rome.

Calungsod’s canonization, the Philippines’ second saint and the first Visayan martyr of the Catholic Church, is set on Sunday, Oct. 21.

Calungsod’s image was accompanied by Fr. Charles Jayme, the custodian of the image, aboard a Cathay Pacific flight.


The Cathay Pacific aircraft carrying the image took off from the Mactan Cebu International Airport at 12:56 p.m. Tuesday.

It arrived in Hong Kong at 3:15 p.m. and left at midnight for Rome.

The image occupied a passenger seat next to Father Jayme.

Jayme said being the custodian of the image is “a once-in-a-lifetime experience.”

An estimated 20,000 people in the cities of Cebu, Mandaue and Lapu-Lapu went out to the streets waving palm leaves, small flags and Calungsod’s pictures Tuesday morning to send off the image of the teenaged martyr.

A convoy of nearly 100 vehicles accompanied the red pickup that carried the three-foot-tall image from Cebu City to Mandaue City and then to the Mactan airport.

More than 200 pilgrims were on the same flight with the pilgrim image of Blessed Pedro Calungsod.

A teenaged catechist, Calungsod was part of a Jesuit mission sent to teach catechism at the Ladrones Islands or the Marianas Islands in the late 1600s.

He served as the "sacristan" of Blessed Diego Luis de San Vitores. They were killed when they tried to baptize one of the natives.

Calungsod was beatified by Blessed Pope John Paul II in March 2000.

source: interaksyon.com