St. Anthony of Padua Parish Youth Ministry-Villalon Calubian Leyte

St. Anthony of Padua Parish Youth Ministry-Villalon Calubian Leyte St. Anthony of Padua Parish- Villalon Calubian Leyte_PARISH YOUTH MINISTRY

02/05/2025

Thank you so much, Ms. Mae Cator , for being our Day 1 sponsor for Flores de Mayo! We truly appreciate your support and generosity. May God bless you always!

02/04/2024

ANNOUNCEMENT!!

WHAT:
Parish Parochial General Assembly
WHERE:
St. Anthony of Padua Parish- Villalon
WHEN:
April 6, 2024, 8:00am

Happy Easter Sunday| Sugat 2024
31/03/2024

Happy Easter Sunday| Sugat 2024

THE SERVERS| Saint. Anthony Of Padua Parish - Villalon, Calubian, Leyte
30/03/2024

THE SERVERS| Saint. Anthony Of Padua Parish - Villalon, Calubian, Leyte

Black Saturday| STATIONS OF THE CROSS LED BY  PARISH YOUTH MINISTRY |Barefooted
30/03/2024

Black Saturday| STATIONS OF THE CROSS LED BY PARISH YOUTH MINISTRY |Barefooted

The SEVEN last words of JesusWhile Jesus was dying in the cross he uttered his precious last words and these are all add...
29/03/2024

The SEVEN last words of Jesus
While Jesus was dying in the cross he uttered his precious last words and these are all addressed to all of us. Let us reflect on them and be grateful to Jesus for his saving and redeeming act of love dying on the cross.

1

“Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do.” (Luke 23:34)

Christ’s first words from the Cross, in the earliest throes of His agony, are to ask God to forgive the very people who placed Him there. How many of us are lonely because of estrangement from someone once close to us whom we have refused to forgive or who has been unforgiving of us? Can we make a gesture to reach out to that person while our arms remain free to move? Even if we should be rebuffed, can we do as Christ did and pray that God will forgive that person — and us, too?

2

“Truly, I say to you, today you will be with me in Paradise.” (Luke 23:43)

The completely innocent Christ was given two criminals as His companions as He hung from the Cross. One of them railed at Him, demanding that He save them all if He truly was the Christ. The other rebuked the first for not fearing God present in Christ, who suffered the same punishment as theirs even though He was innocent.

When that “good thief” asked Jesus to remember him when He came into His kingly power, Jesus uttered His second word from the Cross: “Truly, I say to you, today you will be with me in Paradise.” These words certainly brought that thief incredible solace and joy. If we are or should become victims of severe emotional or social isolation, how might we treat those in the same boat, bearing a similar cross? Will we recognize Christ in them and treat them accordingly? Our ultimate reward will be great one day should we, too, share Paradise with Christ.

3

“Woman, behold, your son. . . .Behold, your mother.” (John 19:26–27)

Now imagine Christ’s loneliness as He looks down at His totally loving, devoted, and sinless mother, beside John, His “beloved disciple.” He knows how they share His tortures and will soon have to cope with His loss in their earthly existence, but He is anything but paralyzed by His distress. He wants those whom He loves to continue to love and care for each other in the most intimate of ways, as that between a mother and her child, a child and his mother. Of course, Jesus grants Mary as Queen of Heaven to be mother not only to John but to every man and woman on earth. She is as willing to fly to our aid today as she was to John’s on the day of Christ’s Crucifixion.

Centuries after that day, St. Thérèse of Lisieux would ponder the strength of the Blessed Mother in enduring so many sorrows, noting that, unlike all of us, Mary herself did not have a Blessed Mother to pray to (although, of course, she had her Son)! So, is there a lonely person in your life, perhaps someone bereaved of a parent, or a child, for whom you might step forward and offer love and support, as John and the Blessed Mother offered each other love and support?

4

“My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?” (Matt. 27:46; Mark 15:34)

Christ here echoes Psalm 22:1, which expresses the desolation He felt in His human nature. Here is Christ suffering. Here is another example of how we can join our suffering with Christ’s. In our loneliest hours, do we feel that we are forsaken not only by man, but by God? If so, can we still call out to God in prayer, expecting that He will hear us?

5

“I thirst.” (John 19:28)

Here is another reminder that Christ joined us in our humanity. The eternal Word who was in the beginning, who was with God, and who was God (see John 1:1) has agreed to take on the weakness, the cravings, and the gnawing of the human flesh of His creatures, for our own sake, and yet we let Him suffer.

Do we take much time to think of the lonely people in our lives for whom Christ died and of how they might thirst for attention? And we needn’t get too metaphorical, for sometimes the lonely are isolated and may experience physical thirst and hunger that we might help relieve. The Church has always recognized that we are not disembodied souls, but ensouled bodies and both elements of our unity are good and deserving of care. This is why she has long encouraged both spiritual and corporal (fleshly, bodily) works of mercy.

In fact, sometimes we spend so much time in the virtual, elec­tronic world that we forget that we all have bodies with needs we can help each other fulfill. When a text or an e-mail replaces a phone call, we have cut ourselves off from the recipient’s voice.

When a call replaces face-to-face contact, we have cut ourselves off not only from that person’s face, but from his or her body language, all those subtle ways that God has given us to communicate with one another by virtue of having bodies. When we connect only over distant airwaves, we can certainly suggest that a thirsty friend get a drink, but we are in no position to hand him one.

6

“It is finished.” (John 19:30)

What a relief Christ must have felt when His task, the most gruesome yet important task ever assigned on earth, was complete! He expressed it in these simple words: “It is finished.” Our own life task is clearly not finished.

What, then, will we do to establish new emotional and social connections and strengthen the ones we already have in our time left on earth before, God willing, we pass through the gates of heaven Christ opened for us by completing His mission on the wood of the Cross?

7

“Father, into thy hands I commit my spirit!” (Luke 23:46)

These are the very last words Jesus breathed on earth before His spirit returned to His Father. Will our focus be on God in our last moment? It is, after all, “in Him that we live and move and have our being” (Acts 17:28). Are we willing to commit our spirits to God now? Such commitment to God, who is no mere abstract power or force, let alone an uncaring ruler, but is our Father, who has given His Son for our salvation, and who gives us His Holy Spirit to dwell in the temples of our bodies, cannot help but provide relief to our deepest feelings of loneliness, and motivation to reach out with His love to the lonely around us.

Let’s ask ourselves how we might unite our sufferings with Christ’s and, despite what may befall us, resolve to trust in Him and commit our spirits to the Father’s loving hands.


VIGIL PRAYER3/28/2024
28/03/2024

VIGIL PRAYER
3/28/2024

Washing of feet
28/03/2024

Washing of feet

Because of Holy Thursday we have...a) the Holy Massb) we have PRIEST-servantsc) STANDARD in loving othersd) we can celeb...
28/03/2024

Because of Holy Thursday we have...
a) the Holy Mass
b) we have PRIEST-servants
c) STANDARD in loving others
d) we can celebrate EASTER!

BE INSPIRED!

Ingon ane to na adlaw nga nag Walk for Life ang mga Katawhan sa atong parokya gikan sa Jubay padung Villalon...
27/03/2024

Ingon ane to na adlaw nga nag Walk for Life ang mga Katawhan sa atong parokya gikan sa Jubay padung Villalon...

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