Recollection for November: COMMUNION WITH THE CHURCH

12

Translated by Fray Hubert Dunstan Decena, OAR

2 Cor. 9:6-15

Communion is not a mere theory. It must be manifested through gestures and concrete actions every day. St. Paul, conscious of being a member of the Body of Christ and living in communion with him, made a gesture of communion with the Church of Jerusalem. It is a gesture that shows how to live the communion, from mutual interest, from the profound bond in Christ, with joy and generosity, and with this gesture, allow that the communion may create a chain of blessings and graces, because when communion is given, a fruit of love, then God is present.

I prepare my heart.

We have come as brothers and sons of Mother Church to participate actively in this monthly recollection. We dispose ourselves to live with receptive attitude this encounter with God. We do some minutes of conscious breathing, being conscious of how the air enters our nose into our lungs as we inhale and how the air goes out of our nasal cavities while exhaling. As we inhale we tell the Holy Spirit: “Come Spirit of life,” and while we exhale we tell him: “dispose my heart to listen attentively.” Upon finishing the exercise of conscious respiration, we become conscious of the brothers who are with us to live this day of recollection and we thank God for the presence of each one of them and we pray that we learn to open our hearts to encounter him. We also thank God for the gift of being members of the Church, Mother and Teacher. We say to the Holy Spirit:

         Come, Holy Spirit, by whom every devout soul, who believes in Christ, is

         sanctified to become a citizen of the City of God! (en. Ps. 45:8) Come, Holy

         Spirit, grant that we receive the motions of God, put in us your flame,

         enlighten us and raise us up to God (s. 128,4).

I open my heart.

With heart well disposed, with serenity, I read slowly the following words, savoring them and allowing myself to be touched by them.

         6 Consider this: whoever sows sparingly will reap sparingly, and whoever sows bountifully will also reap bountifully. 7 Each must do as already determined, without sadness or compulsion, for God loves a cheerful giver. 8 Moreover, God is able to make every grace abundant for you, so that in all things, always having all you need, you may have an abundance for every good work. 9 As it is written:

“He scatters abroad, he gives to the poor; his righteousness endures forever.”

10 The one who supplies seed to the sower and bread for food will supply and multiply your seed and increase the harvest of your righteousness. 11 You are being enriched in every way for all generosity, which through us produces thanksgiving to God, 12 for the administration of this public service is not only supplying the needs of the holy ones but is also overflowing in many acts of thanksgiving to God. 13 Through the evidence of this service, you are glorifying God for your obedient confession of the Gospel of Christ and the generosity of your contribution to them and to all others, 14 while in prayer on your behalf they long for you, because of the surpassing grace of God upon you. 15 Thanks be to God for his indescribable gift!

I return to my heart.

Biblical Keys.

In the time of the Emperor Claudius, about 57 A.D., there was a great economic crisis in Judea and Paul appealed to the communities of Galatia and Macedonia that in their generosity they may help the community of Jerusalem organizing a big collection (1 Cor. 16:1-13; Acts 11:29-30).

In the 2 Cor., chapters 8& 9 seem to transmit to us two distinct moments in which Paul treat of this theme. Without any redactional connection, the scholars think that actually there are two different occasions that have been joined together in the same letter by the final redactor.

The text that we now read correspond to the second note concerning the collection with some new elements in its argumentation. It begins in v.6 with and expression that bridges what was said before and the motivation that follows. “Consider:” (9:7).

The Apostle uses a comparison taken from the farmer’s world to motivate the generosity of the addressees of the letter, i.e., the members of the Christian community in Corinth. He speaks of a spiritual sowing that will be reflected in the final harvest. The sower sows seed of good quality and abundant to obtain a good harvest. This will happen to the one who participates cheerfully in the collection (v.10).

On the other hand, Paul appeals to the conscience of each one and respects what his heart decides, whoever may make donation, so that he may do it freely and with the assurance that it gives glory to God through solidarity and generosity. In their turn, the needy brothers in Jerusalem will repay with their prayer and affection (v.14).

Over and above the situation of need of the community in Jerusalem and the generosity of many communities in Macedonia (2 Cor. 8:1-3), one must see how in chapter 9 Paul exhorts that to help those in need is a service (2 Cor. 9:1.13) by which glory is given to God.

Communion in the Church does not refer only to professing the same faith or sharing the same norms of conduct. Communion is also sharing the material goods with those in need; thus, the Word invites us to it with the concrete example of the first Christian communities.

Augustinian Keys.

St. Augustine could be considered the great apostle of the communion. His ecclesial thought and his theology are marked by the spirituality of communion, since we all form the Body of Christ, we are his members, and, therefore, we are intimately united with each other.

Confronting regionalism and social classification, St. Augustine always advocated universalism and communion in all levels. Face to face with Donatism which is a local, national reductionism, and with a marked pride that contradicts sanctity, St. Augustine reminds us that the Church is Catholic, is universal, precisely because it is in communion with all churches of the world, not only with the churches of north Africa that spoke the local language of that region. Thus he ironically and sarcastically presented the pretensions of the Donatists by comparing them to frogs in a well, and they believed that that well was the whole Church, not acknowledging that there are rivers, lakes and an extensive ocean, that represent the whole universal Church:

Tremble in his presence all the earth; tell all the peoples: The Lord has reigned from the timber. He founded the orb of the earth, that will not be moved. What such relevant testimonies over the construction of the house of God! The clouds in the sky thunder to the four corners that have to build the house of the Lord through the whole world, and the frogs croak from the marshes, saying: “We alone are Christians” (en. Ps. 95:11).

(Translator’s note:  The way I understand this quote is that it is sarcastic statement against the Donatist.)

On the other hand, the Donatists refused to live in communion with the whole Church because of a wrong reading of history. They believe that they are the only saints, those who did not give up the sacred books during the persecutions of Diocletian. St. Augustine will also make them see that they are wrong on this matter. The Church is a mystery of communion, but it is also a mystery of the mixture of the good and the bad until the end of time. Not because there bad Christians in a determined community should one cut off the bond of communion and charity. One must maintain unity for charity, despite the presence of the darnel within the Church and within our communities, with the hope that the darnel can be converted by the patience and the charity of those who want to be the wheat of God. Basic is to love the unity in order not to destroy the community, which is the Temple of  God and the Body of Christ:

If you belong to the members of Christ, enter inside, unite yourself to the Head. If you are  wheat, be patient with the darnel; if you are wheat, tolerate the chaff; if you are good, tolerate the bad fishes that are inside the net (en. Ps.40:8).

The Augustinian spirituality of communion should make us think of the new donatism, those who believe that communion has very concrete boundaries, because it is circumscribed in a people, in one ethnic group, in one language, a country or a determined religious province. The neodonatisms are as dangerous and anti-evangelical as the donatists against whom St. Augustine fought. Communion cannot be only a local phenomenon, of a group or a tribe. The communion if it is not Catholic, i.e., universal, is not Communion at all:

Not all heretics are found in the whole world, but there are heretics in the whole earth (…) one mother begot all of them: pride, just as in the same way one only Mother, the Catholic, has begotten the faithful Christians scattered throughout the world (s. 46,18).

Thus the example and the spirituality of St. Augustine invites us to overcome human barriers that we may have created, to truly live the mystery of universal communion; in the first place, with the whole Church, because she is the Spouse of Christ, she is the Body of Christ.

It is true that the Body of Christ that is the Church, is also my community, while on pilgrim way, is not totally holy; she is like the spouse in the Song of Songs, to which St. Augustine refers, because she is black but beautiful (Sg. 1:5); black by our sins who form her; beautiful by the grace of God and the action of the Holy Spirit:

I am black but beautiful like the houses of Cedar, like the tapestry of Solomon (Sg 1:5; LXX). She does not say, “I was” like the houses of Cedar, and “I am” beautiful like the tapestry of Solomon; but simultaneously the one and the other, because of the unity that in the time they constitute the good and the bad fishes inside the one same net (doctr. chr. 3, 45).

To live the communion with the whole Church means to come to feel as one’s own the needs and sufferings, the anxieties and labors of the Universal Church. To say it in three words: sentire cum ecclesia. Not only this, but also to live a functioning communion, i.e., to do something to express my communion with the whole Church, as St. Paul did in the text we are meditating on in this recollection day (2 Cor. 9:6-15).

But there is another danger. St. Augustine also went out to face Pelagianism. Independently of the theological statements it departs from, Pelagianism was a movement that sought to form an “aristocracy of the spirit,” fundamentally for the social level where it flourished –the highest classes of the society of that epoch-, as well as being a movement with marked monastic touches, or with followers within the monasteries, principally of the Gauls.

What is the danger? It is that the communion with the whole Church becomes impeded by pride, because we, the religious, can come to believe that we have the monopoly of sanctity, that we alone can do well the things within the Church, and thus we close the door to the rest of the people of God, not only in the apostolic work, but also in the mission, where more than ever before in certain fields, should be a mission shared with the laity.

To live the communion means to acknowledge that we are all members of the Body of Christ; that from baptism we have all received the same mission of proclaiming the Gospel and giving witness to Christ; certainly each one according to the gift received from God, and according to the position he occupies in the Body of Christ. But the communion includes knowing to recognize the dignity, the mission and the capabilities of the laity, and learn to create with them bonds of communion and fraternity, conscious that today in the Church we are called to build the communion in all levels.

St. Augustine was fully conscious of this more than a thousand years ago. He knew what was his function as episcopus, but he also knew that there were many places and many functions that he could not perform, and for that he relied on the laity. An eloquent and admirable example, among others, is that St. Augustine formed lay people to confront one of the terrible social disgrace of his time: the trafficking of slaves. In this way, when he was absent and the traffickers of slaves came to Hippo, the lay people did not have to wait for the orders nor the instructions of St. Augustine. They were formed and they knew what to do, and what an admirable thing they did:

The action followed: when I was absent, our lay people freed almost a hundred twenty men (slaves), one part taking them out of the ships where they had been embarked and another part … from the place where they had been hidden (by the slave traffickers) to later ship them out (ep. 10*, 7).

Today we live the great challenge of communion in a world that emphasizes accidental elements, because it has forgotten the essential ones. Today we are invited to be capable of overcoming the neo-donatisms (national, cultural, linguistic, provincial), as well as the neo-pelagian sentiment of being an “aristocracy of the spirit,” that can depreciate those who have not received the priestly ministry nor the vocation to the religious life. We are called to be creators of communion in a Church that is in itself mystery of communion.

Questions for communitarian dialogue.

  1. The mystery of communion demands that we live a communion in all levels and without frontiers. How can you live the full communion in your own community?
  2. The communion demands “sentire cum ecclesia.” How is this reality lived in your community? Does a specific gesture or action exist to manifest the communion with the whole Order-Church?
  3. We the religious are part of the Church, and of the Body of Christ, we are not an “aristocracy of the spirit.” In your community, how is the mission shared with the laity being lived? What can be done to live it better?

I lift up my heart.

We give thanks to God for the gifts, the strength and the enlightenment he has granted us on this day of recollection. For this the following words of St. Augustine can serve us:

Walk on the road of all nations, walk on the road of all peoples, oh sons of  peace, oh sons of an only Catholic Church; walk on the road; sing while walking. Travelers do this as relief from work. Sing on this road, I beg of you for the same road; sing on this road. Sing a new song; no one here sings ancient songs. The road is new, traveler is new; therefore, sing a new song (en. Ps. 66:6).

“There were thousands of souls, they loved each other, and though many they were one. They loved God with the fire of charity, and from the multitude they arrived at the beauty of unity” (symb. Cat. 2,4).+

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Fray Dunstan Huberto Decena, OAR

Fray Hubert Dunstan Decena, OAR

Priest/Religious/Bible Professor of the Order of Augustinian Recollects in the Province of St. Ezekiel Moreno.

1 Comment

  1. Rene Bascos Sarabia Jr. on October 24, 2019 at 2:12 am

    Profound Theology and exegesis! You can’t spell Augustinian without August.

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< 2023 >
March
SMTuWThFS
   1
  • All day
    March 1, 2023

    CLOSING OF THE MEETING OF THE LOCAL PROCURATORS

    WITH THE PROVINCIAL PROCURATOR

    CELEBRATIONS OF THE 151ST ANNIVERSARY OF THE FIRST MASS OF ST. EZEKIEL MORENO IN PUERTO PRINCESA
    Inclusive Dates: March 1-10, 2023

    BIRTHDAY

    Sr. Constancia Buchan, AR
    Sr. Jamaikha Acle, AR
    Sis. Marissa Molina, SAR (Talisay Chapter)
    Khia Queen Taiza (RAY-Calubang)

    DEATH ANNIVERSARY

    +Sr. Ma. Teresa de Jesus, AR
    +Sis. Susan Bermil, SAR (Talisay Chapter)

2
  • All day
    March 2, 2023

    PROVINCE-WIDE VIRTUAL CONFERENCE on “Policies and Procedures on [Cases of] Sexual Abuse Against Minors and Vulnerable Adults” / 9:00 a.m.

    BIRTHDAY

    Sr. Charina Mae Ogario, AR
    Sis. Merlinda Buada, SAR (Baguio Chapter)
    Karl Canaria (RAY-Talisay)

    DEATH ANNIVERSARY

    +Bro. Luis Clauor Jr., SAR (Bacolod Chapter)
    +Bro. Gabino Jabutay, SAR (Cebu Chapter)

3
  • All day
    March 3, 2023

    BIRTHDAY

    Fray Emeterio Buñao
    Fray Andrie Pugate
    Sr. Felisa Ampasin, AR
    Sr. Josephine Facinabao, AR
    Sis. Marina Yang, SAR (Miranila Chapter)
    Sis. Dolores Villas, SAR (Tondo Chapter)
    Sis. Amparo Ortega (Tondo Chapter / Trial)

    DEATH ANNIVERSARY

    +Sr. Teodora de la Natividad, AR
    +Sis. Angelita Quero, SAR (Antipolo Chapter)

4
  • All day
    March 4, 2023

    PRAYER INTENTION: FOR VOCATIONS

    CLOSING OF THE 150TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE ESTABLISHMENT OF PUERTO PRINCESA
    Mass Presider & Homilist: Fray Bernard Amparado, OAR
    Immaculate Conception Cathedral, Puerto Princesa City

    BIRTHDAY

    Br. Mark Evan Taliquig (aspirant)
    Sis. Rosita Viray, SAR (Provincialate Chapter)
    Sis. Jasmin Reyes, SAR (Manila Chapter)
    Sis. Thelma Geroy, SAR (Tondo Chapter)

    DEATH ANNIVERSARY

    +Sr. Ma. Celina Magcauas, AR
    +Sis. Josefina Cedeño, SAR (Cebu Chapter)
    +Sis. Esperanza Bacus, SAR (Cebu Chapter)

     

5
  • All day
    March 5, 2023

    SECOND SUNDAY OF LENT

    BIRTHDAY

    Sis. Nelly Marfil, SAR (Talisay Chapter)

    DEATH ANNIVERSARY

    +Sr. Teodorica de Natividad, AR
    +Ma. Alma Limotlimot, AR
    +Sis. Francisca Tamara, SAR (Cebu Chapter)

6
  • All day
    March 6, 2023

    BIRTHDAY

    Fray Randolph Castulo Castillo, Jr.
    Sr. Rosalia Aparece, AR
    Sr. Ma. Corazon Caberte, AR
    Sr. Ridelia Tinga, AR
    Sis. Marybeth Publico, SAR (Miranila Chapter)
    Sis. Rosalina Toledo, SAR (Antipolo Chapter)

    DEATH ANNIVERSARY

    +Sr. Josefina Rodriguez, AR
    +Sis. Rosemary Delapaz, SAR (Antipolo Chapter)
    +Mrs. Leonila Dosado (Sister General of the Order)

7
  • All day
    March 7, 2023

    BIRTHDAY

    Br. Dorin James Igsoc (aspirant)
    Bro. John Eduard Nebre, SAR (Provincialate Chapter)
    Bro. Feliciano Nario Jr., SAR (Baguio Chapter)

8
  • All day
    March 8, 2023

    BIRTHDAY

    Bro. Marco Quimod, SAR (San Carlos Chapter)
    Sis. Beata Oida, SAR (Miranila Chapter)
    Roceline Bernal (RAY-Cavite)
    Paula Nicole Bautista (RAY-Cavite)
    James Ynnoh Molina (RAY-Miranila

    D
    EATH ANNIVERSARY

    +Sr. Ma. Rita de la Cruz, AR
    +Sr. Ma. Guadalupe Siroy, AR
    +Sr. Ma. Natalia Oliver, AR
    +Sr. Alfonsa Canon, AR

9
  • All day
    March 9, 2023

    BIRTHDAY

    Sr. Loreto Manigos, AR
    Sr. Merlyn Pelarion, AR

    DEATH ANNIVERSARY

    +Sr. Faustina Nirza, AR
    +Sis. Rufa Pepito, SAR (Cebu Chapter)

     

10
  • All day
    March 10, 2023

    CLOSING OF THE 150TH ANNIVERSARY (March 10, 1872) OF THE FIRST MASS OF ST. EZEKIEL MORENO IN PUERTO PRINCESA

    BIRTHDAY

    Fray Keneth Pahamutang
    Fray Ifeanyichukwu Maximillian Omem
    Sis. Elenita Atienza, SAR (Antipolo Chapter)
    Sis. Ma. Theresa Aquino, SAR (Baguio Chapter)
    Sis. Ma. Lourdes Espinos, SAR (Talisay Chapter)
    Sis. Lydia Escario, SAR (San Carlos Chapter)

    DEATH ANNIVERSARY

    +Sis. Choleta Jalandra, SAR (Talisay Chapter)

11
  • All day
    March 11, 2023

    FORSOAR STAR WEEKEND
    March 11-12, 2022 / Talavera House of Prayer-Recoletos, Cebu City

    BIRTHDAY

    Sr. Briggitte Parba, AR
    Sr. Maria Jasmin Lumanog, AR

12
  • All day
    March 12, 2023

    THIRD SUNDAY OF LENT

    BIRTHDAY

    Sr. Marisa Bernasor, AR
    Mo. Dionisia Talangapaz (Foundress of the AR Sisters)

    DEATH ANNIVERSARY

    +Sr. Inocencia Beringuel, AR
    +Sis. Fe Zamora, SAR (Manila Chapter)
    +Sis. Valentina Talledo, SAR (Cebu Chapter)

     

13
  • All day
    March 13, 2023

    10TH ANNIVERSARY (2013-2023) OF THE ELECTION OF POPE FRANCIS

    BIRTHDAY

    Sr. Ma. Digna Araña, AR
    Sr. Ma. Nicelina Rodriguez, AR
    Bro. Romeo Estanislao, SAR (Antipolo Chapter)
    Sis. Adelina Belandres, SAR (Cebu Chapter)
    Sis. Estrella Nuque, SAR (Manila Chapter)
    Sis. Patricia Tario, SAR (Cebu Chapter)
    Cyrine Julianne Singson (RAY-Cavite)
    Aaron Kristopher Lim (RAY-San Carlos)
    Kiarah Fatima Guillen (RAY-Provincialate)

14
  • All day
    March 14, 2023

    REAP: SHARING OF ACTIVITIES AND PROGRAMS (NEGROS CLUSTER GENERAL ASSEMBLY)

    BIRTHDAY

    Most Rev. Patricio Buzon, SDB, DD (Diocese of Bacolod)
    Br. Christopher Digal (postulant)
    Sr. Ma. Clara Flores, AR
    Sis. Teotila Torrefiel, SAR (Cebu Chapter)

    DEATH ANNIVERSARY

    +Sis. Lucia Ruiz, SAR (Cebu Chapter)
    +Sis. Leonila Buhain, SAR (Cavite Chapter)

15
  • All day
    March 15, 2023

    BIRTHDAY

    Fray Lauro Larlar
    Fray Giovanni Gil Magbojos
    Br. Juan Carlo Macalalag (aspirant)
    Sr. Rosielyn Hijastro, AR
    Sis. Marlyn Opu-an, SAR (Talisay Chapter)
    Sis. Milagros Calipay, SAR (Cebu Chapter)
    Enrique Jerome Garcia (RAY-Cavite)

    DEATH ANNIVERSARY

    +Sr. Visitacion B. Visitacion, AR
    +Sis. Lourdes Luna, SAR (Provincialate Chapter)
    +Sis. Ma. Carmeta Suiza, SAR (Antipolo Chapter)

16
  • All day
    March 16, 2023

    REAP: DISCUSSION AND DELIBERATION OF STRUCTURES, PLANS, AND PROGRAMS

    DEATH ANNIVERSARY

    +Sis. Maria Carmeta Suiza, SAR (Antipolo Chapter)

    BIRTHDAY

    Sis. Hernane Francisco, SAR (Manila Chapter)

17
  • All day
    March 17, 2023

    REAP: LENTEN RECOLLECTION

    DEATH ANNIVERSARY

    +Sr. Ma. Jesus Lastimado, AR
    +Sis. Obdulia Torres, SAR (Cebu Chapter)

18
  • All day
    March 18, 2023

    BIRTHDAY

    Sis. Eduarda Reynes, SAR (Cebu Chapter)

19
  • All day
    March 19, 2023

    FOURTH SUNDAY OF LENT

    PRAYER INTENTION: FOR THE SICK

    10TH ANNIVERSARY (2013-2023) OF THE INSTALLATION OF POPE FRANCIS

    BIRTHDAY

    Archbp. Jose Palma, D.D. (Archbishop of Cebu)
    Sis. Eleanor Almenanza, SAR (Cavite Chapter)
    Sis. Jessica Bacaltos, SAR (Puerto Princesa Chapter)
    Sis. Beatriz Hermoso, SAR (Provincialate Chapter)
    Marian Sigrid Escobar (RAY-Bacolod)

    DEATH ANNIVERSARY

    +Sr. Trinidad de la Purisima Concepcion, AR
    +Sis. Enriquieta Oamilda, SAR (Cebu Chapter)
    +Bro. Gonzalo Pañares, SAR (Cebu Chapter)
    +Sis. Anunciacion Mendez, SAR (Cebu Chapter)

20
  • All day
    March 20, 2023

    FEAST OF ST. JOSEPH, PATRON OF THE ORDER

    USJ-R (Cebu & Balamban) PATRONAL FIESTA OF ST. JOSEPH

    BIRTHDAY

    Fray Roweno Eugenio Hamo
    Sis. Josefina Guevarra, SAR (Cavite Chapter)
    Sis. Salvacion Manalon, SAR (Inagawan Chapter)
    Sis. Nenita Ursais, SAR (Baguio Chapter)
    Earl Vincent Blaza (RAY-Miranila)

21
  • All day
    March 21, 2023

    START OF GENERAL COUNCIL MEETING (Rome)
    Inclusive Dates: March 21-25

    BIRTHDAY

    Fray Mark Rochelle Renacia
    Sis. Corazon Yanga, SAR (Tondo Chapter)

22
  • All day
    March 22, 2023

    BIRTHDAY

    Sis. Grace Katada, SAR (Puerto Princesa Chapter)
    Sis. Rose Mary Chua, SAR (Talisay Chapter)

    DEATH ANNIVERSARY

    +Sis. Felicitas Aquino, SAR (Cebu Chapter)
    +Sis. Lina Ferrer, SAR

     

23
  • All day
    March 23, 2023

    BIRTHDAY

    Fray Teodulo Hayahay
    Sis. Milagros Renes, SAR (Provincialate Chapter)
    Sis. Fe Josefa Asuncion, SAR (Antipolo Chapter)
    Sis. Ma. Luisa Salvador (San Carlos Chapter / Trial)
    Nichole Cabamo (RAY-Laray)

    DEATH ANNIVERSARY

    +Sr. Ma. Cecilia Salgado, AR
    +Sr. Concepcion Reston, AR

24
  • All day
    March 24, 2023

    BIRTHDAY

    Fray Christopher Gaspar
    Sis. Clemencia Luces, SAR (Tondo Chapter)
    Sis. Elpidia Abasolo, SAR (Cebu Chapter)
    Sis. Nelida Mendoza (Miranila Chapter / Trial)
    Sis. Hedelita Diaz, SAR (Provincialate Chapter)

    DEATH ANNIVERSARY

    +Sis. Lydia Rivera, SAR (Tondo Chapter)
    +Sis. Adela Jaca, SAR (Cebu Chapter)

25
  • All day
    March 25, 2023

    EARTH HOUR: 8:30 – 9:30 p.m.

    BIRTHDAY

    Sis. Anunciacion Yballe, SAR (Cebu Chapter)
    Sis. Ann Marjorie Ricarte, SAR (Cebu Chapter)
    Sis. Lourdes Serrano, SAR (Manila Chapter)

    DEATH ANNIVERSARY

    +Sr. Purificacion del Espiritu Santo, AR
    +Sr. Magdalena Salgado, AR

26
  • All day
    March 26, 2023

    FIFTH SUNDAY OF LENT

    BIRTHDAY

    Sis. Gloria Mempin, SAR (San Carlos Chapter)

    DEATH ANNIVERSARY

    +Sis. Felicitas Calopez, SAR (Talisay Chapter)
    +Sis. Alice Banares, SAR (Tondo Chapter)

27
  • All day
    March 27, 2023

    BIRTHDAY

    Bro. Edward de Silva, SAR (Baguio Chapter)
    Sis. Josefina Magalit, SAR (Miranila Chapter)
    Sis. Alberta Lastimado, SAR (Cebu Chapter)
    Bro. Samuel Celerino Favila (Puerto Princesa Chapter / Trial)
    Aira Joy Legaspi (RAY-Talisay)

28
  • All day
    March 28, 2023

    PRAYER INTENTION: FOR THE MISSIONS

    BIRTHDAY

    Sr. Agustina Santos, AR Sr. Dorothy Aguila, AR
    Sis. Virginia Lazaro, SAR (Tondo Chapter)
    Bro. Reynaldo Aparicio, SAR (Cebu Chapter)
    Sis. Lilibeth Fuertes, SAR (San Carlos Chapter)
    Sis. Brenda Villafuerte, SAR (Antipolo Chapter)

    DEATH ANNIVERSARY

    +Sr. Gregoria de San Jose, AR
    + Sis. Rufina Jadraque, SAR (Antipolo Chapter)

29
  • All day
    March 29, 2023

    BIRTHDAY

    Ma. Katrina Rodriguez (RAY-Miranila)

    PRESBYTERAL ANNIVERSARY

    (2008-2023)

    Fray William Cordero, Jr.
    Fray Roderick Deguit

    DEATH ANNIVERSARY

    +Bro. Crispin Balingit, SAR (Antipolo Chapter)

30
  • All day
    March 30, 2023

    GENERALATE: ONLINE MEETING OF THE COMMISSION ON THE PROTECTION OF MINORS & VULNERABLE ADULTS

    BIRTHDAY

    Mo. Maxima Pelaez, AR
    Sis. Juanita Pajarillaga, SAR (Miranila Chapter)
    Sis. Jelly Masongsong, SAR (San Carlos Chapter)

    DEATH ANNIVERSARY

    +Sis. Roberta Panoncillo, SAR (San Carlos Chapter)

31
  • All day
    March 31, 2023

    BIRTHDAY

    Br. John Reynan Rosie (aspirant)
    Sr. Anastacia Fangon, AR

 

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