Sunday, December 20, 2009

Keeping Christmas! A Christmas Greeting From Us

We wish to extend a very merry and blessed Christmas to all !

Please pray for the success of our Divine Mercy Christmas project under the Archdiocese of Cebu, the Bundle of Joy project which will be done tomorrow Dec 22, 2009. May more families enjoy a happier and more spiritual Christmas through the kindness of those who helped in cash, kind and deed and helped pray for this project.

We also appeal for more prayers for our brothers and sisters in Bicol who are under the threat of the Mayon volcano erupting. May they be embraced by God's mercy especially at this time of year.

- Divine Mercy Family

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KEEPING CHRISTMAS

by Henry Van Dyke


There is a better thing than the observance of Christmas day, and that is, keeping Christmas.

Are you willing...

  • to forget what you have done for other people, and to remember what other people have done for you;

  • to ignore what the world owes you, and to think what you owe the world;

  • to put your rights in the background, and your duties in the middle distance, and your chances to do a little more than your duty in the foreground;

  • to see that men and women are just as real as you are, and try to look behind their faces to their hearts, hungry for joy;

  • to own up to the fact that probably the only good reason for your existence is not what you are going to get out of life, but what you are going to give to life;

  • to close your book of complaints against the management of the universe, and look around you for a place where you can sow a few seeds of happiness.

Are you willing to do these things even for a day? Then you can keep Christmas.

Are you willing...

  • to stoop down and consider the needs and desires of little children;

  • to remember the weakness and loneliness of people growing old;

  • to stop asking how much your friends love you, and ask yourself whether you love them enough;

  • to bear in mind the things that other people have to bear in their hearts;

  • to try to understand what those who live in the same home with you really want, without waiting for them to tell you;

  • to trim your lamp so that it will give more light and less smoke, and to carry it in front so that your shadow will fall behind you;

  • to make a grave for your ugly thoughts, and a garden for your kindly feelings, with the gate open—

Are you willing to do these things, even for a day? Then you can keep Christmas.

Are you willing...

  • to believe that love is the strongest thing in the world—

  • stronger than hate, stronger than evil, stronger than death—

  • and that the blessed life which began in Bethlehem nineteen hundred years ago is the image and brightness of the Eternal Love?

Then you can keep Christmas.

And if you can keep it for a day, why not always?

But you can never keep it alone.

Thursday, December 10, 2009

Christmas Message from Fr. John Corapi

A CHRISTMAS MESSAGE FROM FR. CORAPI

Christmas is one of the greatest of our religious feasts in the Catholic and Christian world. It is, in itself, a most beautiful and joyous time. Existentially, it is a paradox, however, because large numbers of people suffer terribly at this time of year. Why? I suppose there are a lot of reasons, but one is that depression - one of the Enemy's greatest weapons - gets the better of many of us. The world can be a cold place, and rejection and isolation in their various forms take a terrible toll on humanity.

This Christmas, make it a goal to educate yourself and your family on the weapons of the Enemy. The effects of Immortal Combat are perhaps even more evident during this season, as the opportunistic Enemy exploits the weeknesses of the lonely and depressed. Learn how to combat the Enemy with love. Go out of your way to radiate God's love to someone who is most in need of it. Love is like fire. It illuminates the darkness and transmits heat to those around it.
God bless you and yours this Christmas, and forever,

Fr. John Corapi

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Open Dates for Divine Mercy Mission Schedule in Manila - January 4-31, 2010

The following dates are now open for Metro Manila and nearby provinces for Divine Mercy. For scheduling kindly contact us.

Dates:    January 4-31, 2010

Contact Us:
Jen  -  09278281333   /  09278281119
Tricia -   09178158001                  
Lea -     09277070937

Also we would like to appeal to your kindness for the Bundle of Joy project of the Archiocese of Cebu. If you would like to help out providing basic packages for the poorest of the poor this Christmas season, please let us know. As little help as a few hundreds makes a difference for one family.



My God, grant that I may not be enslaved by my feelings but rather give me an interior vision which will detect sin in all its disguises. Bestow on me courage to resist evil, patience to go on doing what is right, and endurance to continue doing my best. Amen ( From My Daily Bread)

Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Wednesday, November 4, 2009

In the adversities that I experience, I remind myself that the time for doing battle has not yet come to an end. I arm myself with patience, and in this way I defeat my assailant.....When my intentions are not recognized, but rather condemned, I am not too much surprised, for I know that it is only God who scrutinizes my heart. Truth will not die; the wounded heart will regain peace in due time and my spirit is strengthened through adversities. I do not always listen to what my heart tells me, but I keep asking God for light..... - St. Faustina

Suffering is the greatest treasure on earth; it purifies the soul. In suffering, we learn who our true friend is.....Jesus, I thank you for the little daily crosses, for opposition to my endeavors, for the hardships of communal life, for the misinterpretation of my intentions, for humiliation at the hands of others, for the harsh way in which we are treated, for false suspicions, for poor health and loss of strength, for self denial, for dying to myself, for lack of recognition in everything, for the upsetting of all my plans. - St. Faustina

Contact Person for Northern California Divine Mercy Mission Sked for Nov 9-22, 2009

Bro. Stanley will be in the Northern California area from November 9 to November 22, 2009. The contact person for schedules is Sis. Nona Cornejo @ 925-565-8024. God bless you!

-Raymund Roxas

Bro. Stanley will be in the Northern California area from November 9 to November 22, 2009. The contact person for schedules is Sis. Nona Cornejo @ 925-565-8024. God bless you!

Tuesday, November 3, 2009

Pray Hope and Dont Worry Newsletter Issue 35 April 2008

This newsletter is an apt and precise reminder that our world today operates on double standards and the lack of appreciation for the graces received during mass and confession. Padre Pio reminds us always to remain grounded and humbled in thinking. Without God's grace, we can do nothing. Padre Pio is a saint that valued the unfathomable depths of God's Divine Mercy. 

God bless! =)



Father James DeVita, SDB, was born and raised in San Giovanni Rotondo, the town where Padre Pio lived for almost 50 years. Padre Pio's name was a household word in the DeVita family. Fr. DeVita's mother, Agnes, was a member of the 3rd Order of St. Francis. Padre Pio often encouraged people to join the 3rd Order of St. Francis, calling it a "school of holiness." As a young woman, Agnes used to bake pizza and take it to the monastery for the Capuchins to enjoy for dinner.

 When Fr. DeVita was a teenager, he used to walk with his boyhood friends to the monastery to attend Padre Pio's Mass. On one occasion, he was the altar server for Padre Pio's Mass. It lasted almost two hours with long periods of silent prayer throughout. Padre Pio often lost track of time during the Mass. But as a restless teenager, James DeVita did not lose track of time and to him Padre Pio's Mass was just too long for comfort.

Fr. DeVita also made his confession to Padre Pio on a number of occasions. At that time, the men's confessions were held in the sacristy of the church. Confessions were face to face and neither a screen nor a curtain was provided for privacy. The line formed about four feet away from where the penitent was making his confession. The person kneeling before Padre Pio seemed so exposed. Although nobody was trying to listen, one could practically hear the words being spoken. Waiting in line to make one's confession to Padre Pio could be a nerve-wracking experience. One could easily observe the expression on Padre Pio's face while hearing confessions. When people confessed that they had missed Sunday Mass, Padre Pio became visibly upset. He was extremely strict in this regard. Unless one was sick, missing Mass on Sunday was a grave omission. As a teenager, James DeVita would miss Mass from time to time due to his own negligence. When this occurred, he did not have the courage to make his confession to Padre Pio. He would choose another priest.

According to the general opinion, making one's confession to Padre Pio was of inestimable help in the spiritual life. It was true. God gave Padre Pio extraordinary gifts and graces for his priestly work as a confessor. In his lifetime, he reconciled thousands of people back to their faith. He once said that if he had the choice between losing his eyesight or his sense of hearing, he would prefer to lose his eyesight. "Why is that?" someone asked. "It is because with my hearing intact I would still be able to hear confessions," he answered. And hear confessions he did, often more than twelve hours a day. On the last day of his life, although weak and very ill, he heard a number of confessions. Pope Pius XII called him, "The confessor of Europe."

Padre Pio saw his priestly role as confessor as a great responsibility and he always prayed for God's help. "Without the grace of God, we can do nothing," he said. People often came to Padre Pio asking him for advice as to whether certain actions in their daily living experiences were right or wrong. He usually saw questions of right verses wrong in simple, black and white terms. He was able to counsel people in a way that left no doubt in the person's mind regarding the right course to take. He was never tempted to tell people what they wanted to hear. His desire was to tell people the truth.

Padre Pio made no distinction between venial sins and mortal sins. He spoke simply of sin. For Padre Pio, sin was something serious, something terrible. There was to be no compromise with sin. It had to be avoided at all costs. "We will never know what it means to rebel against God," he once said.

Padre Pio said that he had only one fear, that of offending God. He once said, "I would rather undergo death an infinite number of times, rather than openly offend the Lord." On one occasion a person told Padre Pio that he had lied. He explained that it was a very small lie, a white lie. It was of no consequence. "But Jesus died to defend the truth," Padre Pio answered. "A small lie is a sin that offends God," he said. And he went further. He did not condone exaggeration either, even to the smallest degree.

 For those who were sincerely seeking to move forward on the spiritual path, confession to Padre Pio was a great blessing. But for the insincere and those who came simply out of curiosity to Padre Pio's confessional, his spiritual direction was described as "demanding, disturbing, and uncomfortable."

Time and space and distance did not seem to be a barrier in Padre Pio's ministry to souls. On one occasion, one of the Capuchins was just about to knock on the door of Padre Pio's cell when he heard Padre Pio talking to someone inside. He decided not to disturb them but he waited at the door anyway. Soon Padre Pio opened the door but there was no one else inside his cell. "I heard you talking to someone but there is no one there," the Capuchin said. "Oh, I was hearing someone's confession," Padre Pio replied. Through the extraordinary gift of bilocation, Padre Pio was able to be present to people, often great distances away, who were in need of his help.

Padre Pio went to confession frequently and he encouraged others to do the same. When some protested that they did not need to go to confession since they had nothing of consequence to confess, Padre Pio used a simple analogy. "Even if a room is very clean and the door is closed so that no one can enter, the dust will nevertheless collect there and it will require dusting," he said. Once Padre Pio made his confession to Padre Eusebio Notte and afterward he began to cry. Padre Eusebio was perplexed. He told Padre Pio that the sins that he confessed were indeed very small and insignificant. There was certainly no reason to cry. But Padre Pio did not see it that way. He had a horror of offending God, even in small matters. He was always truly sorry for his sins.

When Fr. DeVita was a teenager, he used to take part as an actor in the religious plays that were performed in San Giovanni Rotondo. The plays included the life of St. Cecilia, St. Agnes, St. Peter and more. Padre Pio and the other Capuchins frequently attended the performances and enjoyed them immensely. Rehearsals were held at Mary Pyle's home. Fr. DeVita had a great admiration for Mary Pyle. She was often known simply as, "Padre Pio's American secretary." "Mary was a person of great holiness," said Fr. DeVita. "Her love for God and her great willingness to serve Padre Pio's work was truly amazing."

Mary Pyle was an American heiress who had been born into a very socially prominent and wealthy Protestant family and raised in New York's high society. She had become accustomed to every luxury from her earliest years and had traveled extensively throughout the world. When Mary was 35 years old, she accepted an invitation from a girlfriend to visit Padre Pio's monastery and attend his Mass. During the visit, she was able to speak to Padre Pio briefly. She found her life transformed by the encounter and soon decided to move to San Giovanni Rotondo permanently. She built a house right below the monastery. It was one of the first houses in the area.

 Mary joined the 3rd Order of St. Francis and began to lead a simple and austere life, totally consecrated to God. Her workload continually increased through the years but she was always ready and willing to do more to assist Padre Pio. Mary had the heart of a mother, and the charity of a saint. She lived in San Giovanni Rotondo for 45 years until her death in 1968. Her cause for canonization is presently being considered by the Church.

The Capuchins in San Giovanni Rotondo set aside time every day for a period of recreation. For Padre Pio, this time was usually spent in the garden of the monastery, enjoying fellowship with his brothers in religion. As the time drew closer to his ordination day, James DeVita was allowed to visit Padre Pio in the monastery garden anytime he wished. He recalls that Padre Pio delighted in telling funny stories and making everyone laugh. "Padre Pio had a wonderful sense of humor," Fr. DeVita said. "He was a simple man. He was not an intellectual. He was a man of prayer, a man who loved God above all things."

Padre Pio wore brown half gloves to cover the wounds of the stigmata. He would always remove the gloves before the celebration of Mass. On several occasions, Fr. DeVita was able to kiss the stigmata on Padre Pio's hand when his gloves were removed. It was a grace-filled experience and yet it was not something that was easy to do. Fr. DeVita would close his eyes tightly and with trepidation, kiss the wound on Padre Pio's hand.

Because of the inadequate health care in San Giovanni Rotondo in the early years, many of the people in the area died an untimely death. Padre Pio felt compelled to remedy this situation. He worked tirelessly to make the Home for the Relief of Suffering a reality. Fr. DeVita saw first hand, the great blessings of Padre Pio's hospital. Not only did it save the lives of many of the sick and infirm, it was also of great benefit to the poor. San Giovanni Rotondo was an economically depressed region and many of its citizens struggled to find work. The Home for the Relief of Suffering provided much needed jobs for many of the families in the town. Fr. DeVita's own sister Raffaella felt very fortunate to be employed at the hospital.

Fr. DeVita became a patient at the Home for the Relief of Suffering shortly after it opened its doors. He contracted typhoid fever and remained in a coma for four days. A rumor went around San Giovanni Rotondo that James had passed away, but Padre Pio set the record straight. He said, "Do not worry. James has not passed away. He is going to recover."

In 1957, James DeVita was ordained into the Salesian Order, founded by St. John Bosco. Mary Pyle and the ladies choir that she directed, and that sang for all of Padre Pio's Masses, came to the parish of San Onofrio in San Giovanni Rotondo to provide the music for James' ordination Mass. When Fr. DeVita celebrated his first Mass, he had the great joy to wear one of Padre Pio's priestly stoles.

Before he moved to the United States, Fr. DeVita went to Padre Pio to say goodbye. "But there is so much work for priests to do here in Italy," Padre Pio said to him. "Why do you have to move so far away?" Fr. DeVita explained that he wanted to be closer to his family who had emigrated to Canada.

June 29, 2007 marked Fr. James DeVita's golden jubilee anniversary of fifty years in the priesthood. Most of his priestly ministry has been spent serving parishes in New York and New Jersey. Today he is retired and living in Florida where he also assists at a parish. Looking back on his life, Fr. DeVita is very grateful to have grown up in San Giovanni Rotondo and to have had a saint as his role model. Fr. DeVita said that the beautiful words spoken by Pope Paul VI on the life and spirituality of Padre Pio, echo his own sentiments in a profound way. In speaking of Padre Pio, Pope Paul VI said, "What fame he had. How many followers from around the world. Why? Was it because he was a philosopher, a scholar, or because he had means at his disposal? No, it was because he said Mass humbly, heard confessions from morning until night and was a marked representative of the stigmata of Our Lord. He was truly a man of prayer and suffering."

___________________

Recently, while visiting some people on the East Coast who had known Padre Pio personally, we learned about Pasquale D'Andrea. Pasquale, who currently lives in Bayside, New York had a beautiful story to share with us.

Pasquale D'Andrea grew up in Pietrelcina, Italy. His father, Cosimo owned a piece of land in Pietrelcina and earned his living by growing tobacco. One day Padre Pio approached Cosimo and said to him, "You do not go to Mass on Sunday, but you go to the town square." Cosimo was shocked that Padre Pio knew that he did not attend Sunday Mass. He had never discussed it with anyone. He explained to Padre Pio that he had to spend his Sundays working in the fields to earn his living and support his family. But Cosimo was well-aware that his explanation was unsatisfactory to Padre Pio. From that day forward, he never again missed attending Sunday Mass.

Pasquale's wife, Giovannina, also had the greatest respect for Padre Pio. On one occasion she had an important decision to make regarding a personal matter. She felt that she needed to seek advice from Padre Pio at once. She went to the church to speak to him, but realized that it would be impossible. On that particular day there was a continuous crowd of people around him. However, Padre Pio answered the questions in her heart in a unique way. At three different times that morning, he fixed his eyes on Giovannina. With a penetrating gaze and a serious expression on his face, he slowly moved his head from side to side, indicating "no." Without saying a word, Padre Pio had given Giovannina the answer she needed. She felt completely satisfied.

Before leaving Italy in 1955 to make his home in New York, Pasquale went to San Giovanni Rotondo to say good bye to Padre Pio and ask for his blessing. Padre Pio was always very friendly and approachable. He simply said to Pasquale, "There will be three days of storms on your journey, and after that smooth sailing!" Once again, his words proved true.

___________________

 Ellie Hunt was one of the pilgrims who we met while traveling with the Padre Pio Foundation of America to the canonization of Padre Pio in Rome. We have remained friends with Ellie ever since. This is her story.

Padre Pio has been a part of Ellie Hunt's family ever since she can remember. Ellie's father, James Rummo as well as her maternal and paternal grandparents lived in Pietrelcina, Padre Pio's hometown. It was a small and close-knit farming town where everybody knew everybody else. Francesco Forgione (Padre Pio) would eventually become Pietrelcina's most famous citizen, although no one ever imagined it at the time.

Ellie's maternal grandmother, Anna Maria Scocco was the same age as Padre Pio and knew him as a child. Anna Maria's family owned a farm in the countryside of Pietrelcina, an area called Piana Romana. Padre Pio's family, the Forgione's, also had a small landholding in Piana Romana as well as a vineyard. As a youngster, Padre Pio tended the family's sheep.

Anna Maria recalled that Padre Pio was very pious as a young boy and always carried a devotional book with him. He was a quiet child and quite shy. Anna Maria once asked him why he was always reading books. Instead of answering, he asked Anna Maria why she didn't attend school. She told him that it was because her father wanted her to stay home and learn how to cook, clean and sew. At the time, education was not mandatory in southern Italy.

Padre Pio's health, which was never good, began to deteriorate during his time in the Capuchin seminary. Doctors were never able to successfully diagnose and treat the mysterious illnesses that continually wracked his body. The distressing symptoms of his ailments would come and go with no apparent reason. Padre Pio was forced to interrupt his studies for the priesthood and move back to the family home. For the better part of 7 years, from 1909 until 1916, he remained in Pietrelcina. He spent much of his time in prayer and solitude and did his best to regain his health. It was one of the few times of relative quiet and peace in his life. During this period, his prayer life grew in intensity. It is thought that the 7 years he spent in his hometown were almost like an extended retreat, arranged by Divine Providence, to prepare him spiritually for the great mission that was just up ahead.

It was during the time of his long convalescence in Pietrelcina that Ellie's father James came in contact with Padre Pio. James' grandmother, Saveria, would send him with fresh eggs to deliver to Padre Pio. The hope was that the eggs would build up his strength. Everyone in the community knew of his illness and hoped for his recovery. Even in his youth, the townspeople held him in the highest esteem.

It was difficult to make a living in Pietrelcina and for this reason, Ellie's father, grandparents, and other relatives eventually moved to New York. Once in New York, the men joined the "Pietrelcina Society," which sent regular financial help to those who had stayed behind.

Alfred, one of Ellie's cousins, made yearly visits back to Pietrelcina all through the 1950's. He noticed that St. Anne's parish, where Padre Pio had celebrated Mass for a number of years, was in a great state of disrepair. "Someday people from all over the world will be coming to our town," he said to his relatives in Pietrelcina. "They will want to see Padre Pio's birthplace and the parish of his youth. The church must be kept clean at all times. It must be swept and dusted daily. It cannot be neglected like this!" he said emphatically.

In the 1950's when Alfred spoke these words, Padre Pio was almost completely unknown throughout the world. The tiny, impoverished town of Pietrelcina was even more unknown. It could barely be found on a map. Many of its residents had long since moved away. But Alfred was convinced that the saintly priest from Pietrelcina would one day become world-famous and that people would be interested in seeing his hometown. His words proved to be prophetic. Gradually people from all parts of the world began to learn about Padre Pio. Today, the pilgrims who annually visit the town of Padre Pio's birth and pray in the rustic church of St. Anne's, number in the thousands. The increase in visitors has been so dramatic that the town is hard-pressed to accommodate the crowds.

All through Ellie's growing up years, she heard the family reminisce about Padre Pio but she was never very interested in these stories from the "old country." All that changed however due to an incident that happened in 1960, when Ellie was 31 years old. That was the year that her grandfather, Jack Crafa became gravely ill. Ellie and her parents lived close to his home in Flushing, New York and during his illness, the family stayed by his side. When Jack fell into a coma, everyone knew his end was near. One day while Ellie and her parents were at her grandfather's bedside, a stranger knocked at the door. It was a Capuchin monk dressed in a dark brown habit. Ellie was surprised to see that he was wearing sandals without any socks for it was a particularly cold day and there was snow on the ground outside. He said he had come to pray for her grandfather.

Ellie was perplexed. There were not any Capuchin monks in residence at their parish in Flushing or in any other parish in the area for that matter. Ellie was also annoyed. It should have been the parish priest to come to pray for her grandfather and not a complete stranger. But she was impressed by the kindness and compassion of the young religious. He went in the bedroom and blessed Jack Crafa. He told the family to pray the Rosary while sitting at Jack's side and to pray the Hail Mary close to his ear. He had the sense that Jack was still able to hear. After the monk said that, Ellie was surprised to find that when she took her grandfather's hand in hers, she felt a very slight response from him, a very slight squeeze from his hand.

The young monk gave Ellie's grandfather the Last Rites, he blessed the family and then bid them goodbye. As he walked out the front door, Ellie's father, James, observed that there was no car waiting for him outside. James watched him as he walked up the street until he disappeared in the darkness. It was that very night that Jack Crafa passed away. He had been in a coma for nine days.

After the monk left, James became pale and appeared quite shaken. Ellie's mother Lucy, asked him for the reason."Don't you know who that was?"James replied. "It was Padre Pio. He came in bilocation to give the Last Rites to your father. He looked exactly like I remember him when I used to deliver eggs to him in Pietrelcina."

Ellie believed her father's explanation and she was aware of Padre Pio's gift of bilocation. Her grandfather, Jack Crafa had been one of Padre Pio's spiritual sons from Pietrelcina. But Ellie was confused about one thing. The black and white photos she had seen of Padre Pio showed him as having very dark hair, almost black. This monk had sandy colored hair. Later when Ellie read a biography of Padre Pio, the author described Padre Pio's hair as a dark sandy color. It confirmed her own observation.

Padre Pio had always said that the people of Pietrelcina held a very special place in his heart. Ellie's mother had a cousin named Rose from Pietrelcina. She was very devoted to Padre Pio. Rose heard that Padre Pio enjoyed American coffee. She used to regularly send packages to her aunt who lived in San Giovanni Rotondo. The packages always included coffee with instructions to take it to the monastery and give it to Padre Pio.

Rose was finally able to make a trip to San Giovanni Rotondo. One afternoon, she was standing among a large crowd of people who were gathered outside the monastery waving to Padre Pio. He was standing at a window, waving a handkerchief in greeting to the crowd below. As he looked at the large gathering of people, he pointed out Rose to one of the Capuchins. The next thing she knew, one of the Capuchins approached her and told her that Padre Pio wanted to speak to her. Rose was escorted inside the monastery and asked to wait. After awhile the Capuchin returned. He apologized to Rose. He said that Padre Pio wanted to come down and personally thank her for the coffee she had been sending to him but he was unable to do so. In that large crowd of people he picked out one of his fellow citizens of Pietrelcina to give a special word of thanks to. He had never seen Rose before nor had she ever seen him. He loved Pietrelcina and he loved his spiritual children from Pietrelcina. Padre Pio once said, "In my lifetime I have made San Giovanni Rotondo known but after my death I will make Pietrelcina known."

"Be of good cheer; abandon yourselves to the Sacred Heart of Jesus and let Him take care of everything." - St. Pio of Pietrelcina

Thursday, October 29, 2009

Former Abortionist Now a Witness to Mercy

http://www.marian.org/divinemercy/story.php?NID=3066
He used to perform abortions. Then he returned to his Catholic faith. Now, Dr. John Bruchalski's mission is to help spread the message of Divine Mercy through his medical practice. His powerful conversion story is why planners for the upcoming North American Congress on Mercy have invited him to give his witness for the historic Nov. 14-15 event.

First, he founded the Tepeyac Family Center in 1994. The obstetrical and gynecological facility in Fairfax, Va., combines the best of modern medicine with the healing presence of Jesus Christ. Then, in 2000, he founded Divine Mercy Care, a non-profit organization performing spiritual and corporal works of mercy.

Dr. John Bruchalski shares with us how he got to where he is today:

Updated Divine Mercy Mission Schedule for New York- from Cenacle World Prayer Group

Click the Source :  http://www.cenacleworldprayergroup.com/prayer-meetings.html



DIVINE MERCY CRUSADE
"TESTIMONY AND SHARING BY BROTHER STANLEY VILLAVICENCIO"
Meeting Schedule in New York

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OCTOBER 30, 2009, FRIDAY, 7:30 PM        
ST. ALOYSIUS CHURCH                                
592 MIDDLE NECK ROAD                             
GREAT NECK, NY 11023 (516) 851-7178    

OCTOBER 31, 2009, SATURDAY, 7 PM
OUR LADY OF SOLACE SHRINE
2866 WEST 17TH STREET
BROOKLYN, NY 11224 (718) 266-1612

NOVEMBER 1, 2009, SUNDAY, 1:30 PM
HOLY MASS, FOLLOWED BY TALK
HOLY INNOCENTS CHURCH
W. 37TH ST. AND BROADWAY, NYC
(212) 279-5861 (718) 381-4419

NOVEMBER 2, 2009, MONDAY, 7:30 PM
CURE OF ARS CHURCH
2323 MERRICK AVENUE, MERRICK, NY 11566
(516) 623-1400 (718) 381-4419

NOVEMBER 3, 2009, TUESDAY, 7:00 PM
HOLY REDEEMER CHURCH
37 SOUTH OCEAN AVENUE, FREEPORT, NY 11520
(516) 378-0665 (718) 381-4419
NOVEMBER 4, 2006, WEDNESDAY, 7:00 PM
HOLY SPIRIT CHURCH
1355 HATCH ROAD WEBSTER, NY 14580
(585) 671-6534

NOVEMBER 5, 2009, THURSDAY, 7:30 PM
HOLY MASS AND TALK
ST. ROCH'S CHURCH, 602 PORT RICHMOND AVENUE
STATEN ISLAND, NY 10302
(718)381-4419 (718) 442-4755

NOVEMBER 6, 2009, FRIDAY, 7:00 PM
OUR LADY OF THE SNOWS CHURCH
25815 80TH AVENUE, FLORAL PARK, NY
(917) 930-1599 (718) 381-4419

NOVEMBER 7, 2009, SATURDAY, 7:00 PM
ST. GERARD MAJELLA CHURCH
188-16 91 AVENUE, HOLLIS, NY 11423
(718) 291-0761 (718) 381-4419

NOVEMBER 8, 2009, SUNDAY, 3:30 PM
ST. THOMAS CHURCH 6097 AMBOY ROAD
STATEN ISLAND, NY 10309
(718) 381-4419 (718) 356-0294
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CARDINAL RICARDO J. VIDAL OF THE ARCHDIOCESE OF CEBU, VISAYAS, PHILIPPINES, TOGETHER WITH MONSIGNOR CRIS GARCIA, HAVE GIVEN PERMISSION TO BROTHER STANLEY VILLAVICENCIO TO SPREAD THE DEVOTION TO JESUS, DIVINE MERCY THROUGH THE TESTIMONY AND SHARING OF BRO. STANLEY, WHICH HAS TOUCHED MANY ACROSS THE GLOBE AND HAVE BROUGHT MILLIONS BACK TO THE LORD AND THE SACRAMENTS.

PLEASE COME, LISTEN AND BE TOUCHED TO THESE 10 DAYS OF CRUSADE FOR OUR LORD, THE DIVINE MERCY!!!

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

cancaonova.net :: Catholic Website!

http://www.cancaonova.net/
Where you can find beautiful and uplifting messages for the soul from Fr. Jonas Abib, Luzia Santiago and Ricardo Sa!

The Conversion of Carlo Campanini - from the Padre Pio Newsletters

This is an inspiring story of conversion of a man who lived for the world and by the world's standards despite the many blessings he had been given. Through God's grace and mercy, he found his way back to Jesus through the beautiful graces received behind the confessional. I love stories that show how deep God's Divine Mercy is for us and that the confession is one place that is immersed in that goodness. 

By the way, Nov. 1 and 2 is fast approaching. The days offer plenary indulgence (usual requirements apply after visiting our beloved dead). Let us remember and pray for our beloved family and friends who await our prayers and await us in heaven.


God bless !



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Brothers and sisters, we are ambassadors for Christ,
as if God were pleading through us. We implore you on behalf of Christ,
be reconciled to God. . .For he says, 'In an acceptable time I heard you,
and on the day of salvation I helped you.' Behold, now is a very
acceptable time; behold, now is the day of salvation.
- 2 Corinthians 5:20,6:2
 

The Conversion of Carlo Campanini

from Volume 1 Issue 19, April 2005 Pray Hope and Dont Worry Newsletter 

Carlo Campanini took several detours on his journey back to God. When he met his spiritual father, Padre Pio, he began to see the right direction for his life. Padre Pio lead him with wisdom, love and sometimes humor. The following is his story.

My conversion experience took place in 1950, but Padre Pio had patiently kept his eye on me for eleven years. When I visited him for the first time in 1939, I did so for selfish reasons. I thought he was some kind of magician or fortune teller, and I hoped to make some money by visiting him. As an actor, I toured the world. It was a hard life. I traveled all year long and lived like a gypsy. I was married and had three children. Since the work I was doing didn't allow me to have a permanent residence, no one wanted to rent me a house. My wife worked with me, and we had to leave our children with a sister-in-law.

This kind of lifestyle was hard on me. I really wanted to find a job that would allow me to be with my children. I came from a very poor family and only went to school until the sixth grade. All that time I was in a school run by the Christian Brothers, and we were forced to go to Mass every morning before classes. This bothered me so much that I never set foot in a church again after I left school.

One day in 1939, when I was talking to a colleague, Mario Amendola, I told him, "Once it was easy to believe in God. There were great saints like St. Francis, St. Anthony, and St. John Bosco, who performed miracles. Saints no longer exist, and there aren't miracles anymore." Amendola told me that it wasn't true. "There's a holy monk in Puglia who does extraordinary things," he said. Amendola told me about an incident that had happened to his cousin a few years before.

"He was poor and out of work. Just to do something, he volunteered to fight in the civil war in Spain. When he returned, his wife told him, "If you've made it back alive, it's because Padre Pio prayed for you. I made a vow to him that you would go and thank him.' My cousin went to San Giovanni Rotondo and told Padre Pio about his difficult situation. Padre Pio gave him some very precise direction, "Go to Falconara."

"I can't," my cousin answered. "At least I have friends in Rome who'll help me. I'd die of hunger in Falconara." "Go to Falconara," Padre Pio repeated. My cousin moved there with his wife and children. He found his mother there. A few months before, she had left Rome so that she wouldn't be a burden on him. Now she was trying to survive by begging outside the door of the church. Together, they went through two months of incredibly hard times.

One morning a man came from Ancona looking for my cousin. He said to him, "I'm here on an assignment for the head of a union. He would like to see you tomorrow morning at his office." My cousin went to his office, and was offered a contract on the spot for three thousand lire a month. At that time people felt they were living well when they made one thousand lire a month.

Amendola's cousin's experience made a deep impression on me. It also made me think.

During Holy Week, I was in Bari with a theater company. They gave us two days off. "San Giovanni Rotondo is somewhere around here," I told Amendola. "Why don't we visit that holy monk?"

We left on Thursday morning. San Giovanni Rotondo was poor and almost deserted. We looked for Padre Pio's church. "He can't see you," we were told. "His wounds are very painful. Even though they usually bleed all year long, during Holy Week they leave him in a pitiful state. For this reason he is unable to see anyone." Nonetheless, we protested, "But we're actors. We've come from far away. We only have these two days free. We have to see him."

We decided to stay and walk around the monastery, hoping to run into Padre Pio. Since I was rather frivolous and could only think about making people laugh, I was even cracking jokes in the monastery. That Thursday afternoon, while Amendola and I were making a lot of noise, a friar who looked like a giant walked out of the church and complained, "So, you won't even let me pray these days. What do you want?" (It was Padre Pio.)

"Father, we're two poor actors."

"We're all poor," he replied.

"We want to go to confession to you," I added, trying to justify our presence. "Go prepare yourselves," Padre Pio replied. "I'll hear your confession tomorrow morning after Mass."

I remember that Mass as being a nightmare. It never ended. I had to stay on my knees the whole time. Otherwise those behind me couldn't see. The pain from kneeling was unbearable. When Mass was over, I went to confession. Padre Pio wouldn't let me speak. Yet he knew everything about me. He made me promise that I would change my life, and then gave me absolution. I didn't have the courage to ask him for anything. But inside me I kept repeating to myself, "Father, help me to find a job near home, even as a shopkeeper, so that I might live together with my children."

I went back to Bari and then I went to Rome. They were beginning to make a new film, Addio Giovinezza. There were four famous actors who were candidates for the role of Leone in that film. I was totally unknown in those circles, but for some reason that I'll never figure out, the part was given to me. But that wasn't the end of it. Since that time I've made 106 films, one after another. Now I'm rich and famous. I was able to buy a house and live with my children, just as I had wanted.

I was leading a dissolute life. I was involved in illicit relationships. I wasn't going to Mass, and I didn't want to hear anything about prayer. Yet, I felt guilty. Padre Pio had answered my prayer, but I had deceived him. For this reason, I didn't want to go back to see him.

This was the situation I was in at the end of 1949. I was at the height of my fame. I had a custom-made American car. Newspapers wrote extensively about me because I was appearing in every film. I didn't lack anything. But morally I was destroyed, empty, tired, demoralized, and tremendously unhappy. I even envied those people who were brave enough to commit suicide.

One evening I returned home and my wife said to me, "The assistant priest at the parish dropped by and asked us to consecrate our house to the Sacred Heart. The ceremony is set for January 8. He suggested that we prepare ourselves spiritually because he would like us all to receive Communion." This made me uneasy. I couldn't receive Communion given the life I was living. My wife and even my little daughter were insistent that we do this and I couldn't think of an excuse to make up. While I was walking around Rome restless and unhappy, I happened to go into St. Anthony's Church. The church was crowded and some people were standing in line to go to confession. A lot of people recognized me and were watching me out of curiosity. A man at the front of the line turned to me and said, "Go ahead, sir." I found myself kneeling in the confessional.

I left a half-hour later with tears streaming down my face. I felt like a new man. We celebrated as a family. Joyfully I participated in the consecration of our home to the Sacred Heart and went to Communion. I decided to visit Padre Pio and let him know that my life had changed. Since I had already confessed my past sins, I didn't need to tell him what they were. But when I entered his confessional he said to me, "Begin in 1936." "I just went to confession a few days ago," I protested. "I told you to begin in 1936," Padre Pio said in a thundering voice. He told me that I was a coward if I was ashamed to confess my sins when I wasn't ashamed to offend Jesus.

That confession changed my life completely. When I finished, Padre Pio hugged me and kissed me. He gave me a rosary, urging me to pray the rosary often. Then he added, "I'll always be at your side." It wasn't easy to keep my promise, but I worked hard at it. I haven't missed daily Mass since then. I consider Padre Pio to be my protector. I feel him by me every moment of the day, in every situation, especially in the midst of difficulties.

Padre Pio liked to tell jokes. He had a knack for being concise and for knowing the right thing to say at the right time. One of my friends from the theater was being treated by a famous doctor in Florence. One day my friend told his doctor, "Tomorrow I won't be here for my usual treatment because I'm going to see Padre Pio." The doctor asked him, "Why are you going to see that hysterical old man? That's what science would call him. Why, he caused the stigmata to appear simply by thinking so much about Jesus on the cross." When my friend visited Padre Pio and finished his confession, he told Padre Pio what his doctor had said. "When you see him," Padre Pio replied, "tell him to think intensely about being an ox. Let's see if he grows horns."

A lot of people complained that Padre Pio was rough on sinners and often sent them away. One day I said to him, "Did you know that Fr. Leopoldo of Padova spent sixteen hours a day in the confessional and never turned anyone away?" "I know," Padre Pio answered. "In fact, he sends the worst ones to me." Then I added, "But you're taking a big responsibility on your shoulders by sending people away without absolution. What happens if they die after they leave the church?" Padre Pio said, "If I've made a mistake, do you think God would make a mistake? God will take care of things."

Condensed from Padre Pio, Man of Hope by R. Allegri


Testimonial

Don Nello Castello, a diocesan priest from Padua, Italy left this testimony:

"I went to confession to Padre Pio at least a hundred times. I recall the first time, his words both jolted and enlightened me. The counsels he gave me reflected exact knowledge of my whole life both past and future. At times he would surprise me with suggestions unconnected with the sins confessed. But later events made it clear that his counsels had been prophetic. In one confession during 1957, he spoke five times with insistence on the same question, using different words, and reminded me of an ugly fault of impatience. Furthermore, he enlightened me on the underlying causes that provoked the impatience. He described to me the behavior I should follow to avoid impatience in the future. This happened without my having said a word about the problem. Thus, he knew my problems better than I did and advised me how to correct them."


_________________________

Padre Pio's Words of Counsel

"Take heart because the Lord is with you; He suffers with you, groans with you, and is pleased with you. . .Don't you yearn to love Him forever? Therefore, have no fear."

"Even if you were to have committed all the sins of this world, Jesus tells you, "Your sins, which were many, have been forgiven; hence you have shown great love." But then you will say to me, what is the reason for this trial of abandonment of my poor soul? It is the trial of heavenly love. "I have come into deep waters, and the flood sweeps over me."

"This is the trial of souls who are particularly loved by that Jesus who was pleased to experience all the fear of that moral tempest in the desert, the garden, and Calvary. Every soul that wants to be saved must undergo something of that mysterious storm because every predestined soul must resemble Jesus. Well then, haven't you chosen Jesus as your portion? Therefore, let him treat you as he pleases."


"When you pass through the waters, I will be with you; and when you pass through the rivers, they shall not overflow..."
- Isaiah 43:2

"I have come into the deep waters; and the flood sweeps over me. But I pray to you, Lord, for the time of your favor. God in your great kindness answer me with your constant help... Do not let the floodwaters overwhelm me..."
- Psalm 69:2,14,16

_________________________

Memories of Padre Pio

Overwhelmed with sorrow at the impending death of a loved one, a man once approached Padre Pio. He asked Padre Pio why the Lord would be so cruel as to take his dear one from the family. Weeping, he aid, "Padre, he is an angel. He is so good, so honest. Our Lord could give him the grace of a longer life. Why does he want to snatch him away from his loved ones?"

With immense gentleness, Padre Pio said to the man, "But certainly you, my son, if you had the possibility, you would buy at the market the products of the highest quality so that your table would be spread with the very best. In the same way, our Lord collects on earth, all the most beautiful flowers so that they bud better in the gardens of Heaven."

Padre Pio embraced the man, encouraging him to resign himself to the will of God. The man felt great consolation at the words given to him and was much more resigned that a child, dear to Jesus, was in Heaven.

"Our compassionate Lord comes lovingly to my aide when the trial is greatest and like the Loving Father that He is, consoles me and encourages me to walk always more and more along the Way of the Cross." St. Pio of Pietrelcina

"Pray, pray to the Lord with me, because the whole world needs prayer. And every day, when your heart especially feels the loneliness of life, pray. Pray to the Lord, because even God needs our prayers." — St. Pio of Pietrelcina

The Battle Between Good and Evil: an Update from Fr. Corapi

The Battle Between Good and Evil: an Update from Fr. Corapi

As Halloween approaches, we are surrounded by themes of the occult, ghosts, demons, curses, and hauntings. Demonic and occult themes permeate the media at this time of year. Most of this material is pure fiction, yet the part that is not fiction is an acknowledgment that angels and demons exist.

One cannot understand reality if one brackets out a large portion of reality - the preternatural order (angels and demons). If you try to arrive at valid conclusions concerning reality, but have left out a good part of that reality you are engaged in an exercise in futility. So many things today can only be understood in the light of this spiritual reality. Have you ever wondered why so many apparently educated and intelligent people just don't get it, especially with respect to such life and death matters as abortion?

There is a battle that goes on in the spiritual order between the forces of God and the forces of Satan, "the adversary." This battle between cosmic good and evil, between angels and demons, has man caught in the crosshairs. Man is an active player in his own salvation. We need the help of our allies the angels. To fail to enlist their help is reckless. To fail to realize the reality of the enemy forces, the demonic legions, can be ultimately and eternally fatal.

We are at war and our battle is not against flesh and blood, as St. Paul warns us in Ephesians 6. The battle between good and evil, truth and lies, life and death involves these angelic legions - good and evil. We are soldiers in God's army, like it or not, believe it or not. We must be aware of these fundamental teachings, learn them, and live in accordance with them.


God bless you,

Fr. John Corapi

Sunday, October 25, 2009

Friday, October 9, 2009

Padre Pio showed, during his Mass, that Jesus was present, real and living in him. Jesus must live in us too. How? St. Pio practiced in a heroic way what he preached 1. Pray, hope and do not worry 2. Without the Mass our lives are empty 3. We leave concern for the future to the providence of God. 4. We must obey the Pope 5. Begin to form prayer groups in your community 6. Recognize Jesus in the person who is sick 7. Avoid gossip at all costs 8. Criticize only yourself, not others 9. There are many souls to be saved 10. Raise your voice a little bit to defend God. Fr. Louis Solcia, C.R.S.P.

An Encounter with Padre Pio - taken from Pray, Hope, and Dont Worry January 2000

Today, I had some time to spare reading through my Padre Pio newsletters and really, they have brought so much inspiration to me. I remember my grandfather who had such love for Padre Pio and now I am beginning to understand more why people were drawn to him. This particular piece brought me tears  because it hit close to home- during the days that we questioned our faith, when we intellectualized and rationalized rather than trust and have faith. I hope it will also inspire you as it did me. - TKMR


An Encounter with Padre Pio
as told by Alfredo Lapertina

The year was 1950. I had always heard talk about the friar with the stigmata and I wanted to go and see him. I am a Catholic but as regards my faith, I am not an emotional character nor am I easily roused to enthusiasm. My visit to San Giovanni Rotondo was not so much one of faith but rather one of curiosity.

I knew also that the friary was a continual goal of pilgrims who came from all over the world, so in the hope of being able to see and observe Padre Pio more closely and carefully, I made the trip. It was almost midday when I arrived. In the friary square I noticed a booth where a Capuchin friar was making the bookings of those who wanted to go to confession to Padre Pio. I too booked and was told that the wait would be about one week. I was curious to see for myself this extraordinary friar whom I had seen so many times in newspapers and magazines. I went into the church and waited in the sacristy but the crowds were so great that we were squashed one on top of the other.

When Padre Pio entered the sacristy, I was only just able to see him. He was accompanied by two friars to protect him from the crowd, and they were only just able to get him to the confessional. Around 5:00 p.m., Padre Pio came down for Vespers, and this time I was able to observe him well and from close up. I received such an impression that, still to this day, after having got to know him very well from many visits, am unable to describe. He was a figure, dare I say, indefinable. He was fatherly, austere, sullen, happy, sarcastic, ironic. His eyes scrutinized you as if they wanted to penetrate your very flesh and they forced you to lower your eyes.

That day I saw something which seemed to me rather strange. When Padre Pio entered the sacristy, he politely greeted a man by my side, who as soon as he saw Padre Pio, knelt and kissed his hand. Then Padre Pio washed his fingers that protruded from his brown mittens because he was going to celebrate Vespers. The man he had spoken to handed him a white handkerchief to dry his hands. When Padre Pio was going into the church, I saw this man fold the handkerchief and put it in his wallet. Seeing my curiosity, he said to me, "As soon as Vespers is over I will explain to you why I did that." I thanked him and we went into the church.

When Vespers ended we went out into the square and the man came up to me and said, "So now I will satisfy your curiosity about Padre Pio and the handkerchief," and he began his story:

"I have been coming to San Giovanni Rotondo every week for the last six months" the man told me, "and shall continue to do so until Padre Pio's hospital is finished, and then I will never leave again. I live in Rome where I practice as a doctor. My parents are no longer alive. My father was a doctor like myself and with great humanity. He taught me the importance of unconditionally helping others who are suffering whether materially or morally. Like myself, my father did not have any religious faith but my mother and my sister were fervent Catholics. I always admired my sister's discretion of never discussing religion with me.

About eight months ago, Massimo, my sister's son, a student in his third year of medicine, began to complain of strong pains in his head. I prescribed some pain killers for him but the pain would not go away. I had him undergo many tests, including a brain scan, and we discovered to our horror that he had a tumor on his brain.

Shaken by this terrible diagnosis, I took Massimo first to Switzerland where I knew an excellent doctor who unfortunately confirmed the diagnosis. Still not happy, I took him to London to a great luminary of medicine, who after having made a few tests and an x-ray, told me that Massimo had no more than three of four months to live. He added that it was impossible to operate because to remove the tumor would mean cutting into the brain and this would cause total paralysis and then very probably, death.

My nephew was forced to abandon his studies. He became very weak and had to spend most of his time in bed. Little by little, he began to lose his sight as the tumor pressed on his optic nerve. I went to see him every day and tried to raise his morale. As my nephew's condition grew worse, my sister began to despair.

I had to go away to a medical conference in Milan and during my absence my nephew got suddenly worse with insupportable, stabbing pains. My sister called a colleague of mine, an excellent doctor who was young and very religious. After he had seen the boy, the x-rays and tests, he at once understood the gravity of the case.

He told my sister that no better medicines existed than those already perscribed and added that this was a desperate case before which science was powerless. He said that it was necessary to hope for a miracle. He also said that he always saw my sister and her husband in church on Sunday and that she should pray because her son needed prayers more than medicines.

One evening when I went to visit Massimo, I witnessed a scene that, at the time, I considered to be terrible fanaticism. At my sister's home there were gathered about ten family friends. All of them were very respectable people whom I admired, however all were fanatical Catholics. The most fanatical one of all was a retired military colonel. Even so, he was a dear person. He was a close friend of the family and also a spiritual son of Padre Pio. They had formed a circle in Massimo's bedroom and, in the center, kneeling on a cushion, they had placed the poor boy. To hold him up, they had to put a chair next to him. They were all praying the Rosary.

Seeing this, I went into the studio cursing at my sister and her husband who, because of selfishness would not even let their son die in peace. I continued to curse at them but on hearing me they raised their voices and continued their prayers. The Rosary ended and the colonel said, " Now we will say a special prayer to Padre Pio so that he intercede with our Lord and assist me in what I am about to do. I have a handkerchief with which, that holy friar, a while ago, dried his hands. With this handkerchief, I will cover the head of Massimo and God will do the rest.

Hearing these words, I entered the room like a madman. I said to the colonel, who in that moment was about to place the handkerchief on the boy's head, that if it wasn't for the respect I had for him and his age, I would have beaten him up and Padre Pio as well.

I had not even finished the last word when Massimo cried out, "Mother, father, I can see!" and he staggered to his feet. I took him under his arms and placed him on his bed. With all the color drained from my face and my energy drained from my body, I collapsed in a chair. After awhile, Massimo, who had not eaten for several days, asked for something to eat. My sister, crying with joy, rushed to prepare some food for him. The days went by and the boy got better and better before our very eyes. We took him back to the doctor where all the x-rays and tests were repeated. Not a sign of the tumor on his brain could be found.

In my soul there was no longer any trace of atheism. The change to the Christian creed was so rapid and radical that I was not even aware of it. It seemed as if I had always been a Catholic.

About a month after this extraordinary event, one night in a dream, I heard someone call me by my baptismal name. I woke up with a start. I was still troubled by the extraordinary events that had taken place and I was frightened. I thought I had heard the voice of my sister's husband. Instead after an instant, and I was perfectly awake, the same voice, which however was not of my sister's husband, said to me, "Do not forget I am waiting for you because you promised to beat me up!" I understood at once then that it was Padre Pio. That same night (it must have been about 2:00 am) I got dressed quickly and took a taxi to the train station.

Around midday I arrived in San Giovanni Rotondo and was in the church that afternoon when Padre Pio came down to hear the confessions of the men. I could see he was going to be passing right by the place where I was standing. Bear in mind that he could not have known me because I had never been to San Giovanni before. But as he came by me he took me firmly by the arm and led me to the confessional. In the confessional I fell on my knees and he said to me, "Here I am, I am all yours!" I cried for a long time in his lap but he comforted me and said, "Don't torment yourself because you have time before you to make up for it, but be tranquil because you are neither the worst nor the last. I can give you good news. Your father who was also like you, is now well and is with your mother. The mercy of God is so great that he abandons no one."

Padre Pio added, "Now here we are building a hospital to relieve the suffering of so many poor people, and as you are a doctor, I would be happy if you worked in this hospital." I answered, "Padre Pio, I will never leave this place for any reason and will stay here until I die and you can do with me whatever you like."

 

This was the beautiful story the doctor related to me during my first visit to San Giovanni Rotondo. I do have some experiences of my own to relate as to my meeting with Padre Pio. The crowds were so great at the friary that whoever wanted to go to confession to Padre Pio could do so only by booking. I did this and was told that it would be a wait of one week. When my turn for confession finally came up, I was a little uneasy, especially after hearing the story that the doctor had told me.

The first thing I experienced when I was in Padre Pio's presence, was a marvelous perfume which seemed to me to be the fragrance of violets. The perfume was so strong that it almost made me faint. However, after my confession, I asked for his blessing for myself and all of my family. He placed his hands on my head and said, "This is also for your family. Young man, always be good." I kissed his hand and left.

On several other occasions I went to San Giovanni Rotondo with my wife. Often we went to confession to Padre Pio. Both of us experienced a beautiful perfume when we were near him. I can say that I am truly devoted to Padre Pio and to his heroic and exceptional life.

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

Miracle Divine Mercy Picture - email from Mr. Yann Equant (coordinator for Thailand)




---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: yann equant <leq_9@hotmail.com>
Date: Wed, Oct 7, 2009 at 1:29 PM

Subject: Miracle Divine Mercy Picture
To: Tricia Roxas DM_Philippines <ourdivinemercyfamily@gmail.com>, lea santillan <learat25@yahoo.com>








Dears Tricia and Lea,
 

Enclosed please find the image taken from the sign language teacher's cellphone during Bro.Stanley's talk at the Holy Redeemer Hall on the 2nd of August 2009 in the afternoon. His name is Hugo Narong Thanomlek who was acting as a sign translator for the deaf-mute group during the testimony of Bro. Stanley. Would you please transfer this miracle image to Bro. Stanley so that he could see the marvellous sign of JESUS not only to the deaf-mute but also to all of us who were present during his testimony. The message I got from this miracle picture taken by a sign translator is conveyed to all of us, and especially me, who are deaf-mute spiritually: we did not listen to His Words and we did not proclaim His Words.


 

There were great blessings to many people who have had a chance to listen to the testimonies of Bro. Stanley. The movement of Divine Mercy in Thailand has a new impulse from Jesus in the mission of the proclamation of the Divine Mercy messages. Many priests, according to Mr Peter Larsen (Chairman of Divine Mercy Thailand) have dedicated more to the Divine Mercy missions... So many great blessings from JESUS. Therefore, we have to ask JESUS to send again Bro. Stanley to Thailand soon.


 

God bless us all to continue to proclaim His Divine Mercy messages.

 

Yann


Achetez un nouveau PC et bénéficiez de Windows 7 dès sa sortie ! En savoir plus


Attachment: Miracle-Image.pdf

Friday, September 25, 2009

Spirit-Led or Purpose Driven ?

http://www.crossroad.to/articles2/2003/1-purpose.htm
Here is a link to provide some information about the questions raised about the book Purpose Driven Life as to its alleged fallacies or legitimacy and its being alluded or regarded to as being 'new age'. I decided to share this link as there seems to be a lot of cause to raise this for clarification.

This is not to endorse in particular the writings or insights from the link but to create an awareness of the ongoing debates about the writings and allow readers, Catholics and non-catholics alike, the benefit of more informed decisions before reading it or giving it as gifts to others. Of all links, I found this one to be most insightful and comprehensive.

On a personal measure, we recommend conservative prudence so as not to unduly confuse or expose our faith.

About the Divine Mercy Family - Being Found, Our Story

This is an article that I have written for our company's newsletter in November 2000, very very soon after I have learned about the Divine Mercy through the personal testimony of Stanley Villavicencio. This is is how it began for me. I never really thought I was that lost. Maybe inconsistent and loitering is more apt a description. Ultimately, looking back and looking at where it has brought me, I was happy to find God in all those circumstances that led me to being finally found and bound to the Divine Mercy.

Many say that we judge by the fruits. If that were the measure, then I am thankful for our harvest. Since the day my husband and I met Stanley and learned about the Divine Mercy, our life has never been the same. We have been tested, challenged, fallen and gotten up- but through it all we have been sustained. Our family, my children in particular, I consider wonderfully embraced and held by the Divine Mercy (That’s a whole other story to tell).

From this experience we learned that the grace of being able to trust and entrust all to Jesus is a wonderful gift that is to be nourished and cherished. We may fail. We may falter. But we must always rise up and give back our unconditional trust to Him whose mercy awaits and is truly immeasurable. We are living testaments that in all our needs, God watches, God waits and God always provides, oftentimes beyond the measure of our trust and faith. We just have to do our part and He will do the rest.

Everyday there are miracles waiting to be found. We just don’t see them yet. We just don’t appreciate them yet. But if you keep your eyes open, your hearts unhardened, your will unconquered by self- I am almost too certain that the miracles will find you.


-----------------------------------------------------------------

Do you know Stanley?

Re-edited version taken from MV Bridges Newsletter November 2000 issue.

Perhaps the name Stanley Villavicencio doesn’t ring a bell to you. Chances are if you are from Manila, you would not know him at all. If you are from Cebu and certain portions of the Visayas and Mindanao, you might have heard of him. Perhaps on the onset of this article, you couldn’t even care less about this Stanley….after all, he is a stranger, almost a nobody.

Stanley Villavicencio is a simple man, 50 years of age, father of 13 children (plus three more adopted) who resides in Cebu. Known to many as simply Stanley or Bro. Stanley, he has been a full time missionary propagating the Divine Mercy and the blessings of the Jubilee Year indulgence for the last 11 years, unknown to most of us. I’ve had the pleasure of meeting him together with some parishioners from Alabang and Makati where he recently had his talk on the Divine Mercy and the jubilee year’s plenary indulgence. He is such a simple, humble and unassuming person yet he clearly and unmistakeably has an immeasurable depth of faith. One can’t help but feel that indeed, he is close to holy, if not holy himself.

And this is how I can best recount his narration:

That fateful day of March 2, 1993, Stanley had a near death experience after convulsing and vomiting massive amounts of blood early morning in his house. He was brought to a Cebu Hospital and due to the massive loss of blood and organ failures, he was rendered and declared clinically dead. For three days he was in a state of coma, and during this time, he recounted his experience when he had a conversation with Our Lord Jesus and a glimpse of heaven and eternity.

Stanley described how Jesus showed him his life laid out on a very large video screen marked with all the dates and exact time to the minute and even the seconds. In fact, he was shown the film of his life three times. On the screen, his sins were magnified and ran in slow motion (especially what he referred to as his mortal sins) while his good deeds were shown in a fast phase. Each time he was doing a good deed, he felt his body enveloped in what he described to be complete joy and a state of elation. He also described heaven to be a garden full of big fresh and fragrant flora and fauna where the air is fresh and cool ( likening it to an airconditioned room).

Jesus, he described to be taller than him, handsome and fair, hair - wavy and long, lips- red, eyes- blue, teeth- perfect and straight and be-dimpled when He smiles. He also said that he realized HOW HUMBLE OUR LORD IS as with each conversation, He would always say “please”

He said he realized that you cannot totally describe the feeling or the satistaction  and emotion of seeing God and being in front of our Lord. He reckons than heaven indeed is not only a place. It is heaven itself to be in the presence of our Lord.

He continued that Jesus gave him the mission to spread the devotion to the Divine Mercy, including the names of the people who will help him as he had no personal means to spread the devotion on his own.  Soon after, Stanley suddenly came out of coma after exactly 3 days. As he became aware of the tubes connected through his mouth, nose and all over his body, he personally took out the life support system himself. The nurse, in shock, ran away and broke the heel of her shoe. The attending resident doctor who was equally surprised repeatedly examined Stanley many times. The doctor was so overwhelmed by this miracle that he exclaimed that “science cannot do anything against the mercy of God”, soon after entered the seminary, and is now a Jesuit Priest!

In the same encounter, Jesus told him, “Go back to the world because you still have many things to do. If I have any message for you, I will just appear to you in a dream.”

The manifestations and messages of Jesus in this encounter  was later on confirmed to be a mission for spreading the Divine Mercy to all. Among those who pursued the review of his case was Archbishop Ricardo Cardinal Vidal and theologian doctors sent by the Divine Mercy Institute of Pope John Paul II in Stockbridge Masachussette, USA. The recognition and confirmation of both parties have been instrumental in helping Stanley bring his mission to others within the Philippines and around the world, including the Vatican. The church endorsements and support has introduced and enabled him to bring his experience to the public both to Catholics and non-Catholics. Even the selection of his spiritual director was with providential guidance. He dreamt of priests in numbers and in each succeeding dream, the number of priests would diminish until only one was left- Msgr. Cris Garcia.

Msgr. Cris Garcia also has a gift- the gift of internal locution. Everytime Stanley would encounter Jesus in a dream, Msgr Cris would also confirm the message through his locution. Stanley, since has encountered Jesus many times and conveyed many messages regarding the Jubilee Year, our holy sacraments, perseverance in prayer and the trust and devotion to the Divine Mercy. Now, Stanley is being invited all over the nation to share his personal experience with the Jesus Christ with others and encourage people to trust in our Living God.

More pictures from the 4th Annual Divine Mercy Conference, Saturday March 7, 2009




4th Annual Divine Mercy Conference, Saturday March 7, 2009 at Cardinal Spellman HS, Bronx, NY.

Divine Mercy: Unique Hope for the World
Hosted by the Marian Fathers of the Immaculate Conception, Divine Mercy Apostolate of the Diocese of Brooklyn, and the Franciscan Friars of the Renewal.
Keynote speakers included Fr. Seraphin Michalenko, Msgr. James Lisante, Fr. Benedict Groeschel, Fr. Frank Pavone, Br. Stanley Villavicencio and Melissa Lucanie. More than 700 people were in attendance for the day which also included Confession, Adoration and Holy Mass.
Tremendous day - powerful witnesses to the faith.

Source: http://www.catholicphotographer.com/Global-Events/Divine-Mercy-Conference-Mar-7/7585275_2rGQZ#490374252_dMNQq

Thursday, September 24, 2009

Gospel simplicity (defined) is the gift of an undivided heart. =) (read this in one of the articles i read in www.marian.org)

Bro Stanley in Sydney Part 1




Here's a video link for part 1 of 10 videos Mr. Henry Valenzuela took during SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA mission last August 2009.

Bro Stanley in Sydney Part 2




Stanley Villavicencio Talk Part 1/3




Part 1 of 3 taken of Bro. Stanley Villavicencio's actual testimony in the USA.

Updated USA DIVINE MERCY MISSION SCHEDULE (w/ attachment)

I just received this file from my brother in law Raymund Roxas.

Please find the details of the US MISSION schedule as detailed. Will keep you posted for more updates.

Meantime, for direct clarification as this schedule may change, please email Roxas001@msn.com =)

Please HELP BRING THE DIVINE MERCY to more people so that more people can TRUST in God's goodness !  Pass the info and share!

God bless!


Wednesday, September 23, 2009

Pro-Life Philippines will hold a youth congress on the demerits of the Reproductive Health Bill « Monk’s Hobbit

http://monkshobbit.wordpress.com/2009/09/24/pro-life-philippines-will-hold-a-youth-congress-on-the-demerits-of-the-reproductive-health-bill/
An open invitation to all those who wish to join the crusade in preserving the sanctity of life.

God bless!

Peace is not what we find in a place that is free of noise, problems and hardwork. Peace is what allows us to preserve the calm in our hearts even in the most adverse situations.

Updates on USA Divine Mercy Mission Schedule

As of latest, the overview of the schedule is as follows:

Present - Los Angeles

Sept 26 onwards to mid December, the slated itinerary shall be as follows:

- Missouri
- Virginia
- Spokane
- Sacramento
- Colorado
- Nebraska
- New Jersey
- New York
- San Francisco

For details, please contact US schedule coordinator Raymund Roxas through
Roxas001@msn.com

You may also join the Divine Mercy MERCYNARIES yahoo group which they facilitate.

God bless! =)



Divine Mercy mission is now ongoing in the US. Pls contact US coordinator Raymund Roxas for schedule details thru Roxas001@msn.com Pls help spread Divine Mercy to more people! God bless!

Monday, August 17, 2009

Latest Melbourne, Australia Mission Schedule

Coordinator / Contact Person:

Tony Murnane will be handling his visit in Melbourne, on behalf of Divine Mercy Publications.

Contact number is 03 9842 5637
Cell number is +61412702671

Please share information to friends and family.

God bless!


Attachment: MelbourneIT.doc

Saturday, August 1, 2009

August 2 Feast of St. Mary of the Angels offers plenary indugence

Sharing another great blessing to family and friends,

August 2, 2009 Sunday,  Feast of St. Mary of the Angels offers plenary indulgence (complete remission of sins including punishment) to the faithful who will receive holy communion in state of grace (no mortal sin)  at tomorrow's mass celebration.  Plenary indulgence is granted to the faithful who will hear mass at franciscan churches and this according to Fr. Dennis is also extended to  our community's own parish churches.

Please offer 1 our father 1 hail mary 1 glory be for the intentions of the Holy Father and lets us pray to our guardian angels and Mama Mary for our own intentions as well and in thanksgiving for this grace. 

Please share and avail.

Thank you Lea for the information! Incidentally, the Year of the Priest as declared by the vatican have also plenary indulgences attached on certain days particularly 1st thurday of each month. Please visit www.ourdivinemercy.multiply.com for details.

God bless !





Our Lady, Queen of Angels


A Little History of This Popular, Traditional Devotion

Excerpt adapted from an article of the same title that appeared in  the July-August, 1994 issue of THE CATHOLIC HEARTH,
written by Diana Serra Cary:


In Franciscan annals August 2 is one of the most important days of the year, for it is the Feast of St. Mary of the Angels, the anniversary of the dedication of the birthplace of the Franciscan Order, the day of a special Indulgence, the Portiuncula Indulgence . We have extracted from the author's article the portion relating the story of St. Francis of Assisi and Our Lady, Queen of Angels.

. . . No subject was more popular at that time than that of Our Lady's death, Assumption, and Coronation. At Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris three large carvings are dedicated to the Coronation of Our Lady in Heaven, while no less than five great sculptured groups commemorate her death and Assumption. In an exquisitely beautiful stone sculpture at the Cathedral, the Virgin is assumed into Heaven, standing with folded hands inside a fluted shell or aureole of glory, which is itself borne upward by a multitude of Angels.

When the Mother of God is seated at last on her throne beside her Divine Son, most artists envisioned an Angel placing the crown upon her brow while Christ raises His Hand in blessing.

The original pattern, both artistically and devotionally, for the title "Queen of Angels" combined elements from the traditional version of the Assumption, with the impressive imagery used by St. John the Evangelist in his deeply mystical Apocalypse. In it he describes "a woman clothed with the sun, the head a crown of twelve stars." Still later, St. Michael and his Angels do battle with the seven-headed dragon seeking to destroy the woman and devour her son. "And the dragon and his Angels battled and they prevailed not, nor was their place found any more in Heaven."

From this description of "The Woman," artists and writers of the Church drew inspiration.

When the Franciscan Order became the special defender of the doctrine of Mary's Immaculate Conception, this image of the woman clothed in the sun, with the moon beneath her feet, became the symbol and banner of their crusade. There is a remote possibility that the inclusion of these symbols came directly from St. Francis himself.

Shortly after Francis had given up his worldly life and began to live for God, he came upon the ruined chapel in the district around Assisi which had been given the name Santa Maria degli Angelis, or "Our Lady of the Angels." Entering the little tumble-down church, which was almost hidden under a tangle of flowering vines, the Saint beheld what he thought, in the golden half-light of late afternoon, must be a vision of the Queen of Heaven. It proved to be an old, old fresco which some long-dead artist had painted on the wall above the main altar. The subject is thought to be the Virgin being assumed into Heaven, accompanied by a court of Angels. This picture would coincide with the name of the chapel.

Long before the time of St. Francis the Benedictines had established a monastery near Assisi. It is possible that this chapel was in existence before the Benedictines came. On the other hand, it may have been built by them. Nevertheless, the Benedictines also owned a small plot of ground to support them which was called "the little portion" or, in Italian, Portiuncula. There for several hundred years the Benedictines remained, and probably the fresco of the Assumption on the wall of the tiny chapel was the work of one of these dedicated and talented monks.

Finally, conditions in this isolated forest spot became so unsettled it was dangerous for the monks to remain; so they moved away and sought the safety of the fortified Benedictine monastery on the nearby slopes of Mount Subasio. When St. Francis came upon the chapel, it was but a charming ruin amidst underbush.

As in the church of San Damiano, where the Lord chose to speak to Francis through an ancient Crucifix so God and His Mother made the little chapel of Our Lady of the Angels a place of inspiration and visions for the poor man of Assisi. On his first recorded visit there, a stranger is said to have come upon him wandering through the chapel, sighing and weeping. Touched by his apparent grief, the man asked what caused him to sorrow. Francis replied, "I am weeping over the sufferings of my Lord Jesus Christ, and I will not be ashamed to wander around the whole world to weep over them." The passerby was so overcome by this answer that he burst into tears and wept with Francis!
 
The origin of the Portiuncula Indulgence has been lost in the haze of centuries just as the origin of the chapel itself. The first written document we have regarding this Indulgence is dated October 31, 1277, some sixty years after the Indulgence is said to have been granted. As a result, many different accounts have come down to us purporting to relate the vision of St. Francis and the way in which the Pope consented to grant this Indulgence. Each author seems to relate a different version that St. Francis beheld. However, although the accounts differ in details, in substance they are the same. The one we present here is the one accepted by Joergensen in his Life of St. Francis.


One time when Francis was kneeling in prayer before the image of Our Lady, he seemed to behold men and women from every corner of the world converging upon this obscure little chapel in the Umbrian forest. He had been praying for the forgiveness of the sins of mankind when suddenly the dark interior seemed illumined by the light of a million candles. Jesus and Mary appeared in the midst of a dazzling cloud of Angels, and he heard a voice that fell like music on his soul, "What do you wish me to do to help poor sinners?" Francis hardly knew how to answer, but suddenly the words carne tumbling out and he asked the Lord to grant a full pardon to all who came to visit the church of Portiuncula and made a good confession. It then seemed that Jesus was in favor of this. He turned smilingly to His Mother and she, in turn, nodded to St. Francis and smiled.

Typical of the Saint's impetuosity and generosity of soul, he marched off to see the Pope and beg from him the coveted Indulgence. The reigning Holy Father, Honorius III, was literally dumbfounded at the request to grant such a generous Indulgence. At that time, the summer of 1216, plenary Indulgences were rarely granted by the Church. The plenary Indulgences that had been granted were given to those fighting men who took up the cross and the sword and went as crusaders to the Holy Land. Later, this hard won Indulgence was extended to those who remained at home but helped the Crusaders in supplying men and alms.

Francis, however, was not to be refused. The Lord Himself had promised Him, and the Roman Curia was bound to relent! The Pope finally yielded and left it to the astonished cardinals to limit the application of the new Indulgence. The date set was from vespers of the first of August until sundown on the second. It is said that Francis chose this date because the Feast of the Chains of St. Peter (his release from prison) is celebrated on the first of August, and Francis felt that sinners should also be freed from the chains of their sins on the day following this great Feast. Furthermore, this date was the anniversary of the consecration of the Portiuncula chapel.


As Francis took his leave of the Holy Father, after obtaining the unprecedented privilege, the Pope is said to have asked if he did not wish some document to prove that his request had been officially granted. With characteristic Franciscan light-heartedness came the Saint's reply: "I need nothing more than your word. Our Lady is the parchment, Christ the notary, and the Angels our witnesses!"


When the first great August first arrived, seven bishops gathered in the little chapel of Our Lady of the Angels to dedicate it as "Our Lady of the Angels of the Portiuncula." And St. Francis, overjoyed, cried out to the crowd that overflowed the narrow building, "I want to make all of you go to Heaven!"

But at the time there seemed something almost scandalous in this Indulgence, and conservative prelates did little to make it known. In St. Francis' own lifetime the Portiuncula Indulgence was enjoyed by comparatively few Christians. Travel and communications were slow, and not even such good news as a plenary Indulgence could travel swiftly over the mud-choked trails that passed for roads in thirteenth-century Europe. Later, of course, the Indulgence was extended to all Franciscan churches on August first and second.

This chapel was the Saint's favorite spot on earth. It was here he heard the Gospel that caused him to establish his First Order, following the command of Christ to go into the world and preach and Baptize all men, taking neither gold nor script nor an extra cloak for the journey. Here Francis received his first brothers, and from here he sent them into the world. In this chapel, St. Clare knelt before the image of Our Lady of the Angels, and on the floor her golden tresses fell beneath the scissors plied by Francis himself. Indeed, Francis placed such a high value on this chapel, which he had rebuilt with his own hands, that he wrote a special rule just for "Portiuncula."

It was scarcely two centuries and a half later that an Italian Third Order member, recently named the Admiral of the Ocean Seas by the King and Queen of Spain, spent the entire night of August second, 1492, in prayer in a chapel dedicated to Our Lady in the port town of Palos on the coast of Spain. On the morning of the third, he and his cockleshell fleet of three caravels sailed down the golden tide of the Rio Tinto, past the Franciscan monastery of Our Lady of the Angels of La Rabida. Here good friends were chanting the hour of prime-----friars who had gone to court for the Admiral, Christopher Columbus, had cared for his son, Diego, and who would now be praying to Our Lady of the Angels to watch over the precarious enterprise which was launched on such a great Franciscan Feast day. Every man aboard the fleet had confessed his sins and received Holy Communion, and thanks to the plenary Indulgence obtained by St. Francis (now extended to all Franciscan churches as well as the chapel of the Portiuncula), some of those men who would not return from that perilous voyage were able at last to make the port of Heaven.

The sons of Francis followed quickly in the wake of the Santa Maria, the Pinta, and the Nina, and soon hundreds of grey, brown, and blue-robed friars were working in the newly discovered regions. With them went the ancient devotion to Our Lady of the Angels. Mexico abounded with chapels dedicated to her. In our own state of New Mexico, a mission outpost in the Indian village of Pecos, not far from Santa Fe, was given her name as early as 1617. In 1769, the Spanish expedition to Upper California, under the command of Gaspar de Portola, arrived at a great plain, well watered by a fine river, on the second of August of that year. For this reason the river was given the name of the Rio Porciuncula (the Spanish spelling). Later, on September 4, 1781, when some forty-eight soldiers and settlers founded a town on this one-time camping site, they gave it the name El Puebla de Nuestra Senora, la Reina de los Angeles del Rio de Porciuncula, (The Town of Our Lady, Queen of Angels of the River of Portiuncula).



There was little to recommend the poverty-stricken village in those days, and it could hardly live up to such an impressively long title. Gradually it was shortened to the simpler "Los Angeles," and still later in our own time-conscious age to the initials, "L.A."

But the church in the old plaza, facing the Union Station, is a worthy successor to the original chapel of Our Lady of the Angels. The Blessed Sacrament is exposed twenty-four hours a day. Worshipers of many nationalities crowd the chapel for 'round-the-clock adoration of their Lord. The real patroness of this great city of six million souls is still she who has Angels wherever she goes, the woman clothed in the sun, with the moon beneath her feet.

No one has ever better described the full significance of this devotion to Mary than St. Francis himself when he said to Pope Honorius: "I need nothing more than your word. Our Lady is the parchment, Christ the notary, and the Angels our witnesses!"

Source:
http://www.catholictradition.org/Angels/guardians19.htm