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  1. #381

    Default Re: We can learn from the Saints!


    Quote Originally Posted by koralstratz View Post
    Ang mga relics bro sa True Cross is somewhere in Rome...dili lang ko sure kun unsa nga religious congregation ang nag keep ani pero naa gihapon hangtod karon. Other religious congregations even outside Rome had even requested and acquired pieces (small portions) of it for VENERATION purposes only.

    Murag si bro libraun maka tubag siguro tu sya og mas detalye kay super kaayo to sya maka venerate ug holy relics

    Bro libraun?? paging...paging



    @moonglow: St. Francis and St. Clare ...yes sila tong duha sa Brother Sun and Sister Moon nga movie

    Brother sun, sister moon Part 1 - YouTube
    Hello bro, nabusy jud ko gamay, hehe. Anyways, there is a relic for the true cross of Jesus Christ and even the whole Passion of Christ. There's a book titled "Relics" by Joan Cruz. You can read there relics not oonly of saints but also of Jesus Christ and Mother Mary. If you want to venerate relics, there's a chapel here in Cebu where you can venerate relics of saints.

  2. #382

    Default Re: We can learn from the Saints!

    Koral, Wenlove and Petite fleur, please check your inbox i have PM sa inyo. I need your inputs guys.

  3. #383
    Elite Member wenlove24's Avatar
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    Default Re: We can learn from the Saints!

    Quote Originally Posted by MoonGlow View Post
    Perhaps you can help out there in the Depression/Suicidal thread at the Fitness and Health section. thanks.
    naa diay? sige I'll check it out if naa koy taas2x nga time..wa ko kabantay da..thanks MoonGlow!

  4. #384
    Elite Member wenlove24's Avatar
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    Default Re: We can learn from the Saints!

    “Hope has two beautiful daughters: Courage and Anger. Anger at the way things are and courage to make them the way they ought to be.” - Saint Augustine

  5. #385

    Default Re: We can learn from the Saints!

    St. John Eudes
    (Feast Day Aug 19 )


    John Eudes was born at Ri, Normandy, France, on November 14, 1601, the son of a farmer. He went to the Jesuit college at Caen when he was 14, and despite his parents' wish that he marry, joined the Congregation of the Oratory of France in 1623. He studied at Paris and at Aubervilliers, was ordained in 1625, and worked as a volunteer, caring for the victims of the plagues that struck Normandy in 1625 and 1631, and spent the next decade giving Missions, building a reputation as an outstanding preacher and confessor and for his opposition to Jansenism. He became interested in helping fallen women, and in 1641, with Madeleine Lamy, founded a refuge for them in Caen under the direction of the Visitandines. He resigned from the Oratorians in 1643 and founded the Congregation of Jesus and Mary (the Eudists) at Caen, composed of secular priests not bound by vows but dedicated to upgrading the clergy by establishing effective seminaries and to preaching missions. His foundation was opposed by the Oratorians and the Jansenists, and he was unable to obtain Papal approval for it, but in 1650, the Bishop of Coutances invited him to establish a seminary in that diocese. The same year the sisters at his refuge in Caen left the Visitandines and were recognized by the Bishop of Bayeux as a new congregation under the name of Sisters of Our Lady of Charity of the Refuge.

    John founded seminaries at Lisieux in 1653 and Rouen in 1659 and was unsuccessful in another attempt to secure Papal approval of his congregation, but in 1666 the Refuge sisters received Pope Alexander III's approval as an institute to reclaim and care for penitent wayward women. John continued giving missions and established new seminaries at Evreux in 1666 and Rennes in 1670. He shared with St. Mary Margaret Alacoque the honor of initiating devotion to the Sacred Heart of Jesus (he composed the Mass for the Sacred Heart in 166 and the Holy Heart of Mary, popularizing the devotions with his "The Devotion to the Adorable Heart of Jesus" (1670) and "The Admirable Heart of the Most Holy Mother of God", which he finished a month before his death at Caen on August 19th.

  6. #386

    Default Re: We can learn from the Saints!


  7. #387

    Default Re: We can learn from the Saints!

    St. Bernard of Clairvaux
    (Feast Day Aug 20 )



    The Young Abbot

    Bernard, the founding abbot of Clairvaux Abbey in Burgundy, was one of the most commanding Church leaders in the first half of the twelfth century as well as one of the greatest spiritual masters of all times and the most powerful propagator of the Cistercian reform. He was born in Fontaines-les-Dijon in 1090 and entered the Abbey of Citeaux in 1112, bringing thirty of his relatives with him, including five of his brothers-- his youngest brother and his widowed father followed later. After receiving a monastic formation from St. Stephen Harding, he was sent in 1115 to begin a new monastery near Aube: Clairvaux, the Valley of Light. As a young abbot he published a series of sermons on the Annunciation. These marked him not only as a most gifted spiritual writer but also as the "cithara of Mary," especially noted for his development of Mary's mediatorial role.

    The Peacemaker

    Bernard's spiritual writing as well as his extraordinary personal magnetism began to attract many to Clairvaux and the other Cistercian monasteries, leading to many new foundations. He was drawn into the controversy developing between the new monastic movement which he preeminently represented and the established Cluniac order, a branch of the Benedictines. This led to one of his most controversial and most popular works, his Apologia. Bernard's dynamism soon reached far beyond monastic circles. He was sought as an advisor and mediator by the ruling powers of his age. More than any other he helped to bring about the healing of the papal schism which arose in 1130 with the election of the antipope Anacletus II. It cost Bernard eight years of laborious travel and skillful mediation. At the same time he labored for peace and reconciliation between England and France and among many lesser nobles. His influence mounted when his spiritual son was elected pope in 1145. At Eugene III's command he preached the Second Crusade and sent vast armies on the road toward Jerusalem. In his last years he rose from his sickbed and went into the Rhineland to defend the Jews against a savage persecution.

    The Writer

    Although he suffered from constant physical debility and had to govern a monastery that soon housed several hundred monks and was sending forth groups regularly to begin new monasteries (he personally saw to the establishment of sixty-five of the three hundred Cistercian monasteries founded during his thirty-eight years as abbot), he yet found time to compose many and varied spiritual works that still speak to us today. He laid out a solid foundation for the spiritual life in his works on grace and free will, humility and love. His gifts as a theologian were called upon to respond to the dangerous teachings of the scintillating Peter Abelard, of Gilbert de la Porree and of Arnold of Brescia. His masterpiece, his Sermons on the Song of Songs, was begun in 1136 and was still in composition at the time of his death. With great simplicity and poetic grace Bernard writes of the deepest experiences of the mystical life in ways that became normative for all succeeding writers. For Pope Eugene he wrote Five Books on Consideration, the bedside reading of Pope John XXIII and many other pontiffs through the centuries.

    Doctor of the Church

    Bernard died at Clairvaux on 20 August 1153. He was canonized by Pope Alexander III on 18 January 1174. Pope Pius VII declared him a Doctor of the Church in 1830.

  8. #388

    Default Re: We can learn from the Saints!





    "I would like to persuade spiritual persons that the way to perfection does not consist of many methods nor much thinking, but in denying oneself in everything and suffering for the love of Jesus Christ."

    (St. John of the Cross)

  9. #389

    Default Re: We can learn from the Saints!

    Quote Originally Posted by koralstratz View Post




    "I would like to persuade spiritual persons that the way to perfection does not consist of many methods nor much thinking, but in denying oneself in everything and suffering for the love of Jesus Christ."

    (St. John of the Cross)
    The Original... Juan de la Cruz!

  10. #390
    Elite Member wenlove24's Avatar
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    Default Re: We can learn from the Saints!

    "A good conscience is a treasury of riches. Indeed, what greater riches can there be - or what can be sweeter - than a good conscience?" - St. Bernard of Clairvaux

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