Holy Father's Intentions For the Month of August 2011

Sunday, February 21, 2010

SLRP Starts Its PPCRV Volunteer Recruitment

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Dateline Feb 20 - The PPC began preparations for its involvement in the forthcoming May 2010 elections with a call for volunteers for its Parish Pastoral Council for Responsible Voting (PPCRV). In all masses last weekend, including the area mass at Cruz Compound, registration lists were placed in the church entrance for parishioners to sign up for PPCRV volunteer work. In line with the parish's thrust of ensuring an honest, orderly and peaceful election, the PPC is taking its watchdog mandate seriously. As of yesterday, about forty (40) individuals signed up with half of those coming from the youth sector. The PPC is looking at getting at least 200 volunteers for election duty.

With God's grace and the generous participation of the parishioners, the PPC is hoping that the groundswell will continue and by the beginning of March, when all these volunteers are mobilized, there should be more than enough volunteers to man the 70 precincts under the responsibility of SLRP.

So if you are at least 16 years old and a parishioner of SLRP, and would like to offer your services for volunteer election duty, do send an email to slrpqc@gmail.com with your name, contact address, age, landline and/or mobile number and email address.
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Tuesday, February 16, 2010

Lay Ministers Elect New Coordinator

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In its meeting last February 13, 2010, the Extraordinary Ministers of Holy Communion (EMHC) elected its new set of officers to lead the ministry. With the appointment of Kuya Cesar Tiongson as the new PPC Coordinator, he relinquished his post as Coordinator of the EMHC which he headed for a short four months. In his place, the members, in secret balloting, unanimously elected Kuya Ed Geronimo as its new coordinator. Together with Kuya Ed, the top four nominees with the highest votes automatically became the officers of the EMHC for at least the next two years. Elected new officers of the ministry were:

Coordinator: Kuya Ed Geronimo
Asst Coordinator: Kuya Rene Arcega
Secretary: Kuya Bong Untalan
Treasurer: Kuya Peter Tamayo

In accepting his new responsibility, Kuya Ed expressed his gratitude to the body for giving him and his co-officers their trust and confidence. He also mentioned that he will continue the programs which his predecessor began, focusing on formation and strengthening the bonds of the EMHC members. In closing he asked for the support of his co-lay ministers.
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Saturday, February 13, 2010

Married Couples Given Special Honor in Today's Mass

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Dateline SLRP Feb 14 (Sun)

On this special Sunday, the feast of St. Valentine, our Parish Priest, together with the congregation, gave honor and blessings to all married couples. In his message to them, Father Luke focused on an important aspect of married life which, for many, has been a taboo.In fact, in most marriages, this is never discussed between the couple. What Father Luke focused on is the couple's need to discuss the inevitable, the time when one of the couple dies. He was espousing the couples to talk seriously of what they (the couple) would like to happen to them, for the one who dies ahead and for the one left behind. He said that although love between married couples is something that can and will endure through eternity, all should be realistic and think about the life of the spouse left behind.

Before ending, Father asked all married couples to recite a special prayer, "A Prayer For Peace" which was patterned after St. Francis of Assisi's prayer.



Happy Valentine's Day everyone.
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Tuesday, February 9, 2010

SLRP PPC Witnesses Mock Elections

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In the early morning of Saturday, February 6, 2010, Fr. Luke and some members of the PPC and SSDM trooped to New Era Elementary School in Barangay New Era to witness the mock elections. Representatives from the PPC arrived at the school a little after 7AM in time to meet with the PPCRV representative in charge of the mock election. The PPC members were accommodated inside the precinct where the "elections" were going to be held. The PPC members were allowed to check and inspect all the election paraphernalia, including the sample ballots, voters list, the PCOS machine, the backup battery and the general condition of the precinct.

At 10 minutes before 8AM, the precinct supervisor informed all those not authorized to leave the precinct in preparation for the start of the "election". All PPC members went out except Ate Heidi, who represented the PPC as observer in the election. By the time the clock ticked 8AM, all cameras were clicking and taping. Everyone had to jockey for vantage positions as observers outside the polling place. A little while later, the "voters" came in one by one, registering themselves, getting their ballots,filling them and finally feeding these into the PCOS machine. Two hours later, the mock election was closed and the vote counting began. In less than half-an-hour after the polling place closed, all the ballots were counted and Jose Rizal was declared thewinner of the presidential elections.

Overall, the mock election was fast, successful and peaceful....hopefully the real May 2010polls would be the same.

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Thursday, February 4, 2010

Catechism on Ash Wednesday

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This article is lifted from the website of the American Catholic at http://www.americancatholic.org/Newsletters.

Although Ash Wednesday is not a Catholic holy day of obligation, it is an important part of the season of Lent. The first clear evidence of Ash Wednesday is around 960, and in the 12th century people began using palm branches from the previous Palm Sunday for ashes.

Ash Wednesday
Our Shifting Understanding of Lent

Those who work with liturgy in parishes know that some of the largest crowds in the year will show up to receive ashes on Ash Wednesday. Though this is not a holy day of obligation in our tradition, many people would not think of letting Ash Wednesday go by without a trip to church to be marked with an ashen cross on their foreheads. Even people who seldom come to Church for the rest of the year may make a concerted effort to come for ashes.

How did this practice become such an important part of the lives of so many believers? Who came up with the idea for this rather odd ritual? How do we explain the popularity of smudging our foreheads with ashes and then walking around all day with dirty faces? Those who do not share our customs often make a point of telling us that we have something on our foreheads, assuming we would want to wash it off, but many Catholics wear that smudge faithfully all day.

Ashes in the Bible

The origin of the custom of using ashes in religious ritual is lost in the mists of pre-history, but we find references to the practice in our own religious tradition in the Old Testament. The prophet Jeremiah, for example, calls for repentance this way: "O daughter of my people, gird on sackcloth, roll in the ashes" (Jer 6:26).

The prophet Isaiah, on the other hand, critiques the use of sackcloth and ashes as inadequate to please God, but in the process he indicates that this practice was well-known in Israel: "Is this the manner of fasting I wish, of keeping a day of penance: that a man bow his head like a reed, and lie in sackcloth and ashes? Do you call this a fast, a day acceptable to the Lord?" (Is 58:5).

The prophet Daniel pleaded for God to rescue Israel with sackcloth and ashes as a sign of Israel's repentance: "I turned to the Lord God, pleading in earnest prayer, with fasting, sackcloth and ashes" (Dn 9:3).

Perhaps the best known example of repentance in the Old Testament also involves sackcloth and ashes. When the prophet Jonah finally obeyed God's command and preached in the great city of Nineveh, his preaching was amazingly effective. Word of his message was carried to the king of Nineveh. "When the news reached the king of Nineveh, he rose from his throne, laid aside his robe, covered himself with sackcloth, and sat in the ashes" (Jon 3:6).

In the book of Judith, we find acts of repentance that specify that the ashes were put on people's heads: "And all the Israelite men, women and children who lived in Jerusalem prostrated themselves in front of the temple building, with ashes strewn on their heads, displaying their sackcloth covering before the Lord" (Jdt 4:11; see also 4:15 and 9:1).

Just prior to the New Testament period, the rebels fighting for Jewish independence, the Maccabees, prepared for battle using ashes: "That day they fasted and wore sackcloth; they sprinkled ashes on their heads and tore their clothes" (1 Mc 3:47; see also 4:39).

In the New Testament, Jesus refers to the use of sackcloth and ashes as signs of repentance: "Woe to you, Chorazin! Woe to you, Bethsaida! For if the mighty deeds done in your midst had been done in Tyre and Sidon, they would long ago have repented in sackcloth and ashes" (Mt 11:21, Lk 10:13).

Ashes in the History of the Church

Despite all these references in Scripture, the use of ashes in the Church left only a few records in the first millennium of Church history. Thomas Talley, an expert on the history of the liturgical year, says that the first clearly datable liturgy for Ash Wednesday that provides for sprinkling ashes is in the Romano-Germanic pontifical of 960. Before that time, ashes had been used as a sign of admission to the Order of Penitents. As early as the sixth century, the Spanish Mozarabic rite calls for signing the forehead with ashes when admitting a gravely ill person to the Order of Penitents. At the beginning of the 11th century, Abbot Aelfric notes that it was customary for all the faithful to take part in a ceremony on the Wednesday before Lent that included the imposition of ashes. Near the end of that century, Pope Urban II called for the general use of ashes on that day. Only later did this day come to be called Ash Wednesday.

At first, clerics and men had ashes sprinkled on their heads, while women had the sign of the cross made with ashes on their foreheads. Eventually, of course, the ritual used with women came to be used for men as well.

In the 12th century the rule developed that the ashes were to be created by burning palm branches from the previous Palm Sunday. Many parishes today invite parishioners to bring such palms to church before Lent begins and have a ritual burning of the palms after Mass.

The Order of Penitents

It seems, then, that our use of ashes at the beginning of Lent is an extension of the use of ashes with those entering the Order of Penitents. This discipline was the way the Sacrament of Penance was celebrated through most of the first millennium of Church history. Those who had committed serious sins confessed their sins to the bishop or his representative and were assigned a penance that was to be carried out over a period of time. After completing their penance, they were reconciled by the bishop with a prayer of absolution offered in the midst of the community.

During the time they worked out their penances, the penitents often had special places in church and wore special garments to indicate their status. Like the catechumens who were preparing for Baptism, they were often dismissed from the Sunday assembly after the Liturgy of the Word.

This whole process was modeled on the conversion journey of the catechumens, because the Church saw falling into serious sin after Baptism as an indication that a person had not really been converted. Penance was a second attempt to foster that conversion. Early Church fathers even called Penance a "second Baptism."

Lent developed in the Church as the whole community prayed and fasted for the catechumens who were preparing for Baptism. At the same time, those members of the community who were already baptized prepared to renew their baptismal promises at Easter, thus joining the catechumens in seeking to deepen their own conversion. It was natural, then, that the Order of Penitents also focused on Lent, with reconciliation often being celebrated on Holy Thursday so that the newly reconciled could share in the liturgies of the Triduum. With Lent clearly a season focused on Baptism, Penance found a home there as well.

Shifting Understanding of Lent

With the disappearance of the catechumenate from the Church's life, people's understanding of the season of Lent changed. By the Middle Ages, the emphasis was no longer clearly baptismal. Instead, the main emphasis shifted to the passion and death of Christ. Medieval art reflected this increased focus on the suffering Savior; so did popular piety. Lent came to be seen as a time to acknowledge our guilt for the sins that led to Christ's passion and death. Repentance was then seen as a way to avoid punishment for sin more than as a way to renew our baptismal commitment.

With the gradual disappearance of the Order of Penitents, the use of ashes became detached from its original context. The focus on personal penance and the Sacrament of Penance continued in Lent, but the connection to Baptism was no longer obvious to most people. This is reflected in the formula that came to be associated with the distribution of ashes: "Remember that you are dust and to dust you will return." This text focuses on our mortality, as an incentive to take seriously the call to repentance, but there is little hint here of any baptismal meaning. This emphasis on mortality fit well with the medieval experience of life, when the threat of death was always at hand. Many people died very young, and the societal devastation of the plague made death even more prevalent.

Ash Wednesday After Vatican II

The Second Vatican Council (1962-65) called for the renewal of Lent, recovering its ancient baptismal character. This recovery was significantly advanced by the restoration of the catechumenate mandated by the Rite of Christian Initiation of Adults (1972). As Catholics have increasingly interacted with catechumens in the final stage of their preparation for Baptism, they have begun to understand Lent as a season of baptismal preparation and baptismal renewal.

Since Ash Wednesday marks the beginning of Lent, it naturally is also beginning to recover a baptismal focus. One hint of this is the second formula that is offered for the imposition of ashes: "Turn away from sin and be faithful to the gospel." Though it doesn't explicitly mention Baptism, it recalls our baptismal promises to reject sin and profess our faith. It is a clear call to conversion, to that movement away from sin and toward Christ that we have to embrace over and over again through our lives.

As the beginning of Lent, Ash Wednesday calls us to the conversion journey that marks the season. As the catechumens enter the final stage of their preparation for the Easter sacraments, we are all called to walk with them so that we will be prepared to renew our baptismal promises when Easter arrives.

The Readings for Ash Wednesday

The readings assigned to Ash Wednesday highlight this call to conversion. The first reading from the prophet Joel is a clarion call to return to the Lord "with fasting, and weeping and mourning." Joel reminds us that our God is "gracious and merciful...slow to anger, rich in kindness and relenting in punishment," thus inviting us to trust in God's love as we seek to renew our life with God. It is important to note that Joel does not call only for individual conversion. His appeal is to the whole people, so he commands: "Blow the trumpet in Zion, proclaim a fast, call an assembly; gather the people, notify the congregation; assemble the elders, gather the children and the infants at the breast." As we enter this season of renewal, we are united with all of God's people, for we all share the need for continued conversion and we are called to support one another on the journey. Imitating those who joined the Order of Penitents in ages past, we all become a community of penitents seeking to grow closer to God through repentance and renewal.

With a different tone but no less urgency, St. Paul implores us in the second reading to "be reconciled to God." "Now," he insists, "is a very acceptable time; behold, now is the day of salvation." The time to return to the Lord is now, this holy season, this very day.

The Gospel for Ash Wednesday gives us good advice on how we are to act during Lent. Jesus speaks of the three main disciplines of the season: giving alms, praying and fasting. All of these spiritual activities, Jesus teaches us, are to be done without any desire for recognition by others. The point is not that we should only pray alone and not in community, for example, but that we should not pray in order to be seen as holy. The same is true of fasting and works of charity; they do not need to be hidden but they are to be done out of love of God and neighbor, not in order to be seen by others.

There is a certain irony that we use this Gospel, which tells us to wash our faces so that we do not appear to be doing penance on the day that we go around with "dirt" on our foreheads. This is just another way Jesus is telling us not to perform religious acts for public recognition. We don't wear the ashes to proclaim our holiness but to acknowledge that we are a community of sinners in need of repentance and renewal.

From Ashes to the Font

The call to continuing conversion reflected in these readings is also the message of the ashes. We move through Lent from ashes to the baptismal font. We dirty our faces on Ash Wednesday and are cleansed in the waters of the font. More profoundly, we embrace the need to die to sin and selfishness at the beginning of Lent so that we can come to fuller life in the Risen One at Easter.

When we receive ashes on our foreheads, we remember who we are. We remember that we are creatures of the earth ("Remember that you are dust"). We remember that we are mortal beings ("and to dust you will return"). We remember that we are baptized. We remember that we are people on a journey of conversion ("Turn away from sin and be faithful to the gospel"). We remember that we are members of the body of Christ (and that smudge on our foreheads will proclaim that identity to others, too).

Renewing our sense of who we really are before God is the core of the Lenten experience. It is so easy to forget, and thus we fall into habits of sin, ways of thinking and living that are contrary to God's will. In this we are like the Ninevites in the story of Jonah. It was "their wickedness" that caused God to send Jonah to preach to them. Jonah resisted that mission and found himself in deep water. Rescued by a large fish, Jonah finally did God's bidding and began to preach in Nineveh. His preaching obviously fell on open ears and hearts, for in one day he prompted the conversion of the whole city.

From the very beginning of Lent, God's word calls us to conversion. If we open our ears and hearts to that word, we will be like the Ninevites not only in their sinfulness but also in their conversion to the Lord. That, simply put, is the point of Ash Wednesday!

A Prayer for Ash Wednesday

Blessed are you, O Lord our God, the all-holy one, who gives us life and all things. As we go about our lives, the press of our duties and activities often leads us to forget your presence and your love. We fall into sin and fail to live out the responsibilities that you have entrusted to those who were baptized into your Son.

In this holy season, help us to turn our minds and hearts back to you. Lead us into sincere repentance and renew our lives with your grace. Help us to remember that we are sinners, but even more, help us to remember your loving mercy.

As we live through this Ash Wednesday, may the crosses of ashes that mark our foreheads be a reminder to us and to those we meet that we belong to your Son. May our worship and prayer and penitence this day be sustained throughout these 40 days of Lent. Bring us refreshed and renewed to the celebration of Christ’s resurrection at Easter.

We ask this through your Son, Jesus Christ, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit for ever and ever. Amen.



Lawrence E. Mick is a priest of the Archdiocese of Cincinnati. He holds a master's degree in liturgical studies from the University of Notre Dame. He is author of over 500 articles in various publications. His latest books are Forming the Assembly to Celebrate Eucharist and Forming the Assembly to Celebrate Sacraments (Liturgy Training Publications).
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PPC Has New Chaircouple

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In a meeting last February 3 called by our parish priest Fr. Luke Dobles, he announced the appointment of the new PPC Chaircouple. Accepting their new responsibility are Kuya Cesar and Ate Mayette Tiongson, both pastoral workers of SLRP. They will now head the pastoral council for the next two years. In announcing the appointment of the Tiongson couple, Fr. Luke, together with the PPC Core, witnessed the turnover of responsibilities from the outgoing PPC Coordinator, Kuya Toti Mangubat, to the new Chaircouple.

In their first message to the council as its new head, Kuya Cesar and Ate Mayette laid out their personal thoughts on their new role, especially on their apprehensions about the work at hand and on their being neophytes in pastoral supervision. They however pledged that with their acceptance of the position, they will be committed to give their best for the glory of God and for a better SLRP.

On his part, Kuya Toti related his challenges in leading the PPC the past two years, the role of the PPC head in running the affairs of the parish as well as in liaising with the vicariate and diocesan lay councils. He wished the best for Kuya Cesar and Ate Mayette as they take on their new role in the parish leadership.

Father Luke then gave his thoughts on the road ahead for the PPC and himself particularly in challenging the parish leadership to make it its mission of providing a better environment for succeeding parish leaders.

Kuya Cesar is the current head of the Extra-ordinary Ministers of Holy Communion while Ate Mayette is a member of the Mother Butler Guild. Both are also active in the Parish Renewal Experience program of the SLRP.

A few days after, in its first meeting of the new PPC, Father Luke also announced that Ate Josie Cruz and Kuya Peter Tamayo have accepted the posts of Asst PPC Coordinator and PPC Auditor, resepctively. These appointments complete the PPC Executive Committee with the following officers serving for the next two years:

Chaircouple : Kuya Cesar and Ate Mayette Tiongson
Asst Coordinator : Ate Josie Cruz
Secretary : Ate Bel Geronimo
Treasurer : Ate Shirley Ruiz
Asst Treasurer : Ate Elsa Maskarino
Auditor : Kuya Buddy Lising
Asst Auditor : Kuya Peter Tamayo
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