Sunday, August 30, 2009

"Year of the Priests" - Prayers for Priests

Prayers for Priests
Father Kevin Scallon C.M.

You came from among us to be, for us, one who serves. We thank you for ministering Christ to us and helping us minister Christ to each other.

We are grateful for the many gifts you bring to our community: for drawing us together in worship, for visiting us in our homes, for comforting us in sickness, for showing us compassion, for blessing our marriage, for baptizing our children, for confirming us in our calling, for supporting us in bereavement, for helping us to grow in faith, for encouraging us to take the initiative, for helping the whole community realize God's presence among us.

For our part, we pray that we may always be attentive to your needs and never take you for granted. You, like us, need friendship and love,welcome and a sense of belonging, kind words and acts of thoughtfulness.

We pray, also, for the priests who have wounded priesthood. May we be willing to forgive and may they be open to healing. Let us support one another during times of crisis.

God our Father, we ask you to bless our priests and confirm them in their calling. Give them the gifts they needto respond with generosity and a joyful heart. We offer this prayer for our priest, Who is our brother and friend, Amen

Saturday, August 29, 2009

Pilipino/English Mass

Tomorrow, August 30 at 5:00 p.m. is the Pilipino/English Mass at St. Vincent de Paul Catholic Church, located at 1010 Columbia St. NE, Salem, Oregon. Celebrant is Rev. Father Henry Rufo.

We will have a visiting guest nun from the Philippines, Sister Isabela Alontaga. We will also have guests representatives from the National Catholic Society of Foresters: Paul & Kathleese Mastroieni & children, along with Paul & Georganna Pfnister.

Rosary & Divine Mercy prayers starts at 4:00 p.m. Mass at 5:00 p.m. and Fellowship/Potluck at 6:00 p.m. Hope to see you all. Bring your children, friends, and relatives. Join us in community worship of Jesus Christ.

UPDATE CALENDAR:
Please note that the September 27, 2009 St. Vincent Pilipino/English bilingual Mass is canceled to coordinate other Filipino Catholic Community Mass and celebrations during the month of September. The community celebration of the Feast of San Lorenzo Ruiz is scheduled on September 27 in Portland. The Filipino Catholic Community of Oregon calendar can be found at: http://filcomevents.blogspot.com/2009/08/feast-of-san-lorenzo-ruiz-de-manila.html

Friday, August 28, 2009

BOSES - Eugene Film Festival

The film I submitted to the Eugene Celebration Film Festival, BOSES, will show in the DIVA CENTER on Saturday, September 5th, 5:30 pm.

The organizers are already inquiring about the possibility of an extended showing, as it's already getting rave reviews from the white community!

see:
http://boses-newyorkpremier2009.blogspot.com/
;) Dolly

Monday, August 24, 2009

Gratitude from Fr. Cary Reniva

To the Filipino Faith Community:

Allow me to begin this email by asking for my sincerest apology for sending this “thank you” letter quite late. I have planned to do this before I even went back to the Philippines for my Thanksgiving Mass but due to unforeseen schedules it took me almost forever to finally sit and write this email. I would like to express my profoundest gratitude to all of you who have helped in one way or another during my priestly ordination and my Thanksgiving Mass at St. Cecilia. I cannot express enough how appreciative I am for your efforts and presence during those special days. You have taught me in a deeper way what ministry and collaboration are all about in concrete and powerful terms. I know that all the assistance and support that you have extended not just during the ordination days but also during my seminary years were sincere gestures of care and encouragement. They also inspired me to take good care of my vocation and strive to be a good and holy priest. Though it gave me a lot of pride to be showered by your generosity and goodness, it has also humbled me in many ways because I know that the priesthood is truly a gift from the people in as much as it is a gift of God. If there is something that I can boast of about my priesthood it is the fact that I share and live it with you, mindful that we are in the same boat in our service for the Lord. My family too especially my Mom wants to express their gratitude for everything that you have done to make the ordination and Thanksgiving Mass extra special. Every time I call my Mom she always reminds me to be thankful especially to the Filipino community and to really serve the Church with utmost compassion and simplicity.

As some of you might have known already, I am presently assigned at Sacred Heart Parish in Medford. It’s a wonderful parish and the people are very supportive. It’s very vibrant and we have a growing Spanish community just like in most parishes in the Archdiocese. Life here is quite busy. We have two daily masses and nine masses during the weekends. But I cant really complain because we have all the help that we need. At the start, the parish was a little confused with their priests. My pastor’s name is Father Liam Cary, so people got mixed up many times whenever they try to call the office and ask for a priest. The secretary has always to ask which Father Cary are they looking for. But other than that my two months as priest has been fun and great with all its challenges and difficulties. If ever you find yourself driving to California, please do not hesitate to drop by the parish. I will be more than happy to have you here. The parish is just five minutes away from the freeway exit.

Thanks so much again and hope to see you some time. Please continue to pray for me as I always do for our community.

One with you in the service of the Lord,
Cary

Thursday, August 20, 2009

Healing Mass at Holy Trinity Parish



HEALING MASS

WHEN: Tuesday, August 25, 2009
Time: 7:00 PM
Where: Holy Trinity Parish
13715 SW Walker Road
Beaverton, OR 97005
Celebrant: Fr. Efren (Momoy) Borromeo
Fr. Efren (Momoy) Borromeo is from the diocese of St. Gregory the Great in Legazpi, Albay, Philippines. Since he has a special ministry of SOLT, healing takes him twice a month to Manila for which he was granted to celebrate Mass by Bishop Honesto Ongtioco. We invite you to experience the healing power of the Holy Spirit.
ALL ARE WELCOME! Come, join and pray with us!

Please pass along this information to your families and friends especially to those who are interested with this special ministry.

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

The Poem

The Poem
I knelt to pray but not for long, I had too much to do.
I had to hurry and get to work for bills would soon be due.
So I knelt and said a hurried prayer, and jumped up off my knees.
My Christian duty was now done my soul could rest at ease.....
All day long I had no time to spread a word of cheer
No time to speak of Christ to friends, they'd laugh at me I'd fear.
No time, no time, too much to do, that was my constant cry,
No time to give to souls in need but at last the time, the time to die
I went before the Lord, I came, I stood with downcast eyes.
For in his hands God held a book; It was the book of life.
God looked into his book and said 'Your name I cannot find
I once was going to write it down... But never found the time'
If God brings you to it, He will bring you through it.
Happy moments, praise God.
Difficult moments, seek God.
Quiet moments, worship God.
Painful moments, trust God.

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

Donna Cori Gibson in Concert

Donna Cori Gibson in concert
"Our Catholic Faith" in Scripture, Song & Prayer
An awesome faith, a beautiful voice, brought together to draw you closer to God. Come and sing and "pray twice" with Donna on
Sunday, October 4TH with a FREE concert at 3:00PM at
St. Stephen Catholic Church,
1112 SE 41ST Ave., Portland, OR 97214
For more info: (503)234-5019

Thanks in advance and God Bless!Veronikka

Feast of Our Lady of Penafrancia


Feast of San Lorenzo Ruiz de Manila


Thursday, August 6, 2009

Little League Softball World Series

Here is the info for inclusion in the CFAA announcement:

NAME OF EVENT: Little League Softball World Series

DATE/TIME: August 13 to 19

HOSTED BY: The players from Guam (their first time) are hosted by the members and friends of Fil Am Friendship Club.
The 10 to 12 year old girls from the Philippines had won the Asia Pacific League from 1994 to 2008.

LOCATION: Alpenrose on SW Shattuck Road, Raleigh Hills

COST: FREE ADMISSION

CONTACT: Diana Duenas 503 318 7676 or email guam@comcast.net

GAMES INFO: http://www.softballworldseries.com/ - more info: main website

http://www.softballworldseries.com/results.htm - game schedules

Thu 8/13 - EMEA vs AsiaPac
GAME 3 5:30 PM East
Fri 8/14 - West vs AsiaPac
GAME 6 5:00PM Main
Sat 8/15 - OregonD4-bye / AsiaPac-bye

Sun 8/16 - Central vs AsiaPac
GAME 16 5:00PM Main Mon 8/17 - SoEast vs AsiaPac
GAME 17 2:00PM Main GAMES on Tue 8/18 and Wed 8/19 will depend on the results on previous games- will find out the day before.

The girls from Guam are:
Leandra Castro and Destiny CastroJolene Escobar and Audrey GeorgeCeleene Mendiola and Britney BlauLiberty Tajalle and Brittney TenorioMeagan Maratita and Kaelissa GuzmanAlexis Aguero, Justine Cruz and Maryjo Mafnas

FILIPINO CATHOLICS FROM THE EYES OF A FOREIGNER

Filipino Catholics

Here's something very positive written by a foreigner named Steve Ray, about Filipinos. Steve Ray authored many best-selling books, among which are, Crossing The Tiber (his conversion story), Upon This Rock (on the papacy), and just recently John's Gospel (a comprehensive bible study guide and commentary).

STEVE RAY'S OPEN LETTER TO THE FILIPINO CATHOLICS:

We stepped into the church and it was old and a bit dark. Mass had just begun and we sat toward the front.. We didn't know what to expect here in Istanbul , Turkey. I guess we expected it to be a sombre Mass but quiet and sombre it was not - I thought I heard angels joyously singing behind me.

The voices were rich, melodic and beautiful. What I discovered as I spun around to look did not surprise me because I had seen and heard the same thing in other churches around the world. It was not a choir of angels with feathered wings and halos but a group of delightful Filipino Catholics with smiles of delight and joy on their faces as they worshiped God and sang His praises. I had seen this many times before in Rome, in Israel, in the United States and other countries.

Filipinos have special traits and they are beautifully expressed as I gazed at the happy throng giving thanks to God.

What are the special traits which characterize these happy people?

I will share a few that I have noticed- personal observations - as I have travelled around the world, including visits to the Philippines.

FIRST, there is a sense of community, of family. These Filipino Christians did not sit apart from each other in different isles. They sat together, closely. They did not just sing quietly, mumbling, or simply mouthing the words. No, they raised their voices in harmony together as though they enjoyed the sense of unity and communion among them. They are family even if they are not related.

SECOND, they have an inner peace and joy which is rare in the world today. When most of the world's citizens are worried and fretful, I have found Filipinos to have joy and peace - a deep sense of God's love that over shadows them. They have problems too, and many in the Philippines have less material goods than others in the world, yet there is still a sense of happy trust in God and love of neighbour.

THIRD, there is a love for God and for his Son Jesus that is almost synonymous with the word Filipino. There is also something that Filipinos are famous for around the world - their love for the Blessed Mother. Among the many Filipinos I have met, the affectionate title for Mary I always hear from their lips is "Mama Mary." For these gentle folks Mary is not just a theological idea, a historical person, or a statue in a church - Mary is the mother of their Lord and their mother as well, their "mama."

The Philippines is a Catholic nation-the only such nation in Asia -and this wonderful country exports missionaries around the world. They are not hired to be missionaries, not official workers of the church. No, they are workers and educators, doctors, nurses and housekeepers that go to other lands and travel to the far reaches of the earth, and everywhere they go they take the joyous gospel of Jesus with them. They make a sombre Mass joyful when they burst into song. They convict the pagan of sin as they always keep the love of Jesus and the Eucharist central in their lives.

My hope and prayer, while I am here in the Philippines sharing my conversion story from Baptist Protestant to Roman Catholic, is that the Filipino people will continue to keep these precious qualities... I pray that they will continue loving their families, loving the Catholic Church, reading the Bible, loving Jesus, His Mother and the Eucharist. As many other religions and sects try to persuade them to leave the Church, may God give the wisdom to defend the Catholic faith. As the world tempts them to sin and seek only money and fame and power, may God grant them the serenity to always remember that obedience to Christ and love for God is far more important than all the riches the world can offer.

May the wonderful Filipino people continue to be a light of the Gospel to the whole world!

Be a proud Filipino!

Tuesday, August 4, 2009

Prayer Power (Reflection by Cory Aquino)

NEVER HUNGER, NEVER THIRST (John 6:24-35): 02 August 2009 (Eighteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time) - pins of light - a bible blog

Johnny C GO, SJ (http://frjg.multiply.com/)
Today's Gospel Reading is about Jesus the Bread of Life, who promises that "whoever comes to me will never hunger and whoever believes in me will never thirst." These days we are grieving our loss of President Corazon Aquino, as though we have lost a family member. No one can give a better reflection on the Scripture today than her, who "never hungered, never thirsted" even in the worst of famines and droughts because of her strong faith in the Lord.

Prayer Power (Reflection by Cory Aquino)
Delivered at the UNIV Conference, Rome, Italy
April 5, 1993


I was asked in a small gathering of university students recently what of my life as president I would like to see continued. Without hesitation, I answered the habit of prayer.
By prayer, one acknowledges the weakness of the human person, no matter how high the office he or she may hold and how great the authority they wield. The higher the office, the greater the power, the more one should pray.

I can see the smiles on some faces. Yet, without going into the question of whether there is anyone up there listening to our prayers, a person who prays shows wisdom. By praying he admits his weakness and fallibility; and thereby shows his fitness for command in an important respect. If anyone, it is Europeans who should appreciate the value of humility in high places. For they have suffered more that any people from the sense of self-importance of those whose limitations were only too evident. A European has only to remember the pride and vaunted knowledge of those who lost so many men in Gallipoli, the Somme and Caporetto.

An English king boasted to his men before battle that the fewer of them there were, the greater share of glory would go to each. Yet when he learned he had won against overwhelming odds, he fell on his knees and said: “Praised be God and not our strength, for it.” The effect of prayer is to add wisdom to daring.

The great of the world should pray, if only for the sake of those who must endure their greater capacity for tragic errors. What more the small who must suffer them?

Prayer upheld me in power. It was prayer that sustained my husband in prison. There he was reduced to nothing. Like Thomas More, his books were taken from him. He was denied even pen and paper on which to write. He was denied the company of friends; and the love and solace of his family, who were also barred from seeing him.

Indeed he was stripped down to his underpants and thrown into a windowless cell. He feared that one night he would be taken from his cell to dig his own grave in the dark – as so many critics of the government before him.

Yet, it was when he had lost everything that he found it all, through a door that opened to a wider world than he had been shut from.

Prayer was that door, a tiny one. In his youth, he would have overlooked it. For he was riding then on the crest of an enormous popularity as the youngest and most accomplished politician of the age and the most likely successor to the man who would throw him in prison, cast him into exile, and cut him down in the prime of his life, the president and dictator.

In the loneliness of his prison cell, it was natural that he should come to see the extreme vulnerability of man. In the solitariness of his protest against the dictatorship, it was inevitable that he should realize the brittleness of popular support and the fleetingness of glory.

It would have been something if prayer rather than adversity had opened his eyes, while he was yet riding high in the politics of his country. But he realized the weakness and loneliness of man, only when his followers had deserted him; and the fickleness of fortune, when the wheel had already turned.

Prayer might have revealed these truths to him about the futility of building a fortress out of sand or erecting a perdurable power from achievements of the moment. But these truths were not revealed to him until he had lost everything, and the four blank walls of his cell were all he had left to look at.

So when prayer came, it was not to teach him humility. Adversity had already imparted that. It came to lift his spirits and fill him with a holy pride. It did not come to prove yet again the insufficiency of human power, but to reveal a greater power yet to be found in the most extreme condition of weakness.

Just when he had lost everything, he told me, he found it all. Prayer gave it to him.

And I think, the proof of this new-found power was that, while he thought of giving up in the first year of prison, he fought on for seven years after finding strength through prayer. He never complained about the sacrifices he was making. For just when he thought that he must be the sorriest of men, prayer showed him that he was imitating the greatest of them.

He who follows me can never walk in darkness, says Christ. Indeed, said Thomas a Kempis, “if we want to see our way truly, with never a trace of blindness left in our hearts, it is his life, his character that we must take for our model.” So when he went on a hunger strike to protest his trial by a military tribunal, he stopped only on the 40th day because his friends implored him not to outdo our Savior’s fast in the desert. Prayer had given him such strength.

After seven years in prison, he went into exile. But returned three years later, when the danger to him was greatest. As many of you know, he was assassinated at the airport – a bullet in the back of the head delivered by his military escort, as part of a military operation that involved 2,000 men.

On the plane, he told journalists of his premonition of death. He advised them to be especially attentive, for when it came, it would go fast.

When the military escort entered the plane cabin, he stood up to identify himself and went with them. One of them was the gunman.

Prayer gave him the equanimity to describe the manner of his own death, and the courage to rise and meet it.

Prayer gave me the strength to hold myself together when the news reached me. I had to, for his sake, for the sake of our children. Most of all for the sake of what he believed in, which my behavior would reflect upon.

From that moment, I depended more than ever on prayer. I had relied on it to see me through his unjust imprisonment. I used it to fill the hours, days and weeks between the occasional visits the military would permit me. I prayed not be embittered by the mockery of his trial. I prayed not to be too deeply affected by the humiliation I endured – the body searches, the TV camera in the room, and having to plead for things we take for granted as our right.

But I needed prayer more than ever to live through the brazenness of the assassination, and the shamelessness of the government’s attempt to blame it on a man who was already dead before my husband arrived. I needed prayer to be able to contemplate the final victory of evil without losing hope. I needed prayer not to fall into the last temptation of despair.

At times, I was not sure what I was praying for. I could not pray for my husband’s safety, for he was beyond harm. I could not pray to show my love, for he was cradled in a greater love. So, I suppose, I prayed because that was all that was left to me. I was beyond human power to help.
On reflection, I think I finally prayed for just the strength to accept God’s will, which was moving in ways very hard to take.

I received that strength, and something more besides. I would not admit it, even to myself, but the human side of me craved for some tangible expression of support, some evidence that my husband had not died in vain. God heard that spoken prayer, too.

Two million people, all told, attended the funeral of Ninoy Aquino – the greatest funeral since Gandhi’s. It was the first and greatest outpouring of sympathy and support that any person or cause had ever gotten in any nation’s history at a single moment.

It was not the end of the dictatorship; but it might be the beginning of the end. What was clear was that it was the start of something new. It would be called People Power.

It would redefine the standards and practices of politics as we had always known them. It would set the pattern of freedom movements throughout Eastern Europe. It would culminate in the people power demonstration that stopped the coup in Moscow and shamed the government in China. It would define the new and higher aim of politics: the empowerment of the people for the attainment of their goals.

It was certainly the agency that restored freedom to my country, and faith in the power of prayer to my people.

Prayer and the leadership of the Catholic Church emboldened millions to stand up to the dictatorship, to vote in overwhelming numbers against it, and to denounce its fraud.
If one cannot suspend one’s disbelief in miracles, can one deny the testimonies of millions throughout the world who saw on television a people praying and the tanks that stopped right in front of them. Before the famous newsphoto of the Chinese man with a briefcase holding up a column of tanks going to Tienanmen Square, there were the images of Filipinos kneeling directly in their path.

So I had lost my husband; I led an uphill fight against an entrenched dictatorship; and I ran in an election riddled with massive fraud; yet in the end I won.

I assumed the powers of the dictatorship, but only long enough to abolish it. I dissolved the dictator’s puppet parliament, I banished the judges of his corrupt courts, I abolished the dictatorial constitution whereby they were able to commit abuses under the color of legality, and installed a democratic government in its place.

I had absolute power, yet ruled with restraint. I created independent courts to question my absolute power, and finally a legislature to take it from me.

I implemented painful and unpopular reforms, while having to beat down repeated attempts by rightist officers to overthrow the government. When the presidential palace came under air attack, I refused to leave it, firmly convinced that the issue rested entirely with God. In the last election in my country, I defeated a restoration attempt by elements of the former dictatorship.
I survived and did more than the experts thought was possible. All these things I owe to the power of prayer and the special protection of Our Lady.

It wasn’t all prayers of course. Grace needs good works to work redemption. But if I were to list what else I want continued from my presidency, they would sort of things that flow naturally from prayer: such as sincerity, integrity, the solidarity reflected in communal character of worship, and the necessary universality of prayer. For we should not pray for things we don’t want others to have as well – such as power we will not share, rights only for ourselves, and advantages that would be meaningless if everyone enjoyed them.

Being sincere is to be simple. It is the same with sincerity in power: be yourself completely.
It is to be truthful, not least about one’s own limitations, so that you know how far to trust yourself with the fate of others. It is, of course, to be truthful about others.

I have always found it difficult to relate with people who trifle with the truth, even in the smallest particular. The habit of lying is like a snowball. It grows as it rolls.

While in the opposition, I tore into the lies of the dictatorship. In government, I demanded openness in official acts, full disclosure of government transactions, and transparency, especially in anything and everything to do with money.

I distanced myself from those with a hidden agenda, however winning were their ways. I defended those whose first priority and greatest concern was for the public interest, however unpopular the duties they must carry out. From everyone in government, I asked, if not consistently successful performance, a total commitment and a genuine effort to give the best of oneself.

Principles impart coherence to a man’s life, they give it structure. Without them, one is just a bundle of desires and dislikes. Compromise on principle, and there is no halting the slide to unbridled opportunism.

So it is with the body politic. Principles give coherence to a government; they are the reference point for all the people’s relations with their government. The lack of them aptly defines a government or an official as unprincipled, a word that says it all.

Without principles, the ethical framework for decision-making disintegrates; actions spill out, and seek, like water, the lowest level.

A government without principles ends up pursuing peace without justice, merely to maintain stability while it commits abuses. Merely for political addition, it will seek a reconciliation between the people and those who had hurt the country when they were in power, without asking for restitution. More than the commission of wrongs, it is the deliberate refusal to punish them that tears most at a nation’s moral fabric.

No one, of course, should be self-righteous. Who can say she is beyond reproach? God knows, we have all made mistakes. The morals of a saint should be, but in the nature of things, cannot serve as a qualification for public service. Yet we should not lose the sense of right and wrong, or push and pull the moral code to squeeze in a useful political alliance. Convenience must finally yield to the right, whereon a person or a government must stand and be willing to fall.
Government is not just about getting things done, whatever they are. They are about getting the right things done, for the right reasons and with the right people. The first virtue of political institutions is justice, not convenience.

When I was campaigning, the dictator accused me of something I had never thought was a crime. He said I was just a housewife and unfit to govern a country. Yet I must say that I never ran up a twenty-six billion dollar bill in all the years I shopped for the household, nor did I pocket money intended for something else, nor, I might add, did I shoot the bill collector.
Yet, to humor him, I said I should have no problem finding 50 competent and dedicated people to help me run the government when he stepped down.

I found the 50. Indeed, there were more volunteers than I could count after I became a president. But I found that competence and dedication were not enough. Team work too was important. As no single individual could carry the whole burden of government by himself, it was important that the great number required to do it must be able to work harmoniously together.
The ability to work well with others, to listen to different points of view, to credit such views with a sincerity equal to one’s own, and to have the flexibility to accommodate the valid concerns of others: this is an important quality for anyone who wishes to serve the people. It is an expression of the spirit of service. Indeed, how can anyone claim to have a genuine spirit of solidarity with the people in general, if he is incapable of an operational solidarity with those he must work closely with?

The seven years of my husband’s incarceration had been difficult, made more so by the feeling that we were so few carrying on so great a struggle. After my husband’s assassination, it became clear that we were far from alone: there were multitudes who held the same ideals just as passionately. There were legions who grieved as deeply over the condition of our country. More importantly, they were prepared to do something about it, at whatever cost. The funeral of Ninoy Aquino established the national character of the struggle. The outpouring of sympathy in the last stages of the struggle against the dictatorship, from peoples and governments all over the world, established its universality. Courage, said Malraux, is a second fatherland, where all the brave feel they belong.

For four days in February, when the Filipino people faced the tanks with nothing in their hands, all the brave throughout the world were Filipinos. Ich bin ein Berliner, Kennedy said at the Wall. We are all diminished by the suppression of anyone, all exalted by the courage of someone, somewhere, making a stand for freedom.

We are all Filipinos, said the friends of democracy everywhere – as the drama of the people-powered revolution unfolded.

And when the pattern was repeated all over Eastern Europe, we joined the free and brave everywhere who cried: We are Berliners, we are Czechs, we are Poles and Hungarians, we are Russians on the steps of the Russian White House, we are Chinese students at Tienanmen Square. We are of the family of freedom, and the fraternity of the brave. We belong to a single world, and share the responsibility to make it better – as much for others, be they Africans or the people of Myanmar, as for ourselves.

The sense of universality enters also into this: they will govern well who ask no more for themselves than they will give to others. The universal maxim, the golden rule. It is an infallible guide for official decisions – to impose no hardship one is not prepared to bear; to exact no sacrifice one is not prepared to make. In brief, to lead by example – first into the fray, and last out of it. It is the best way to achieve results and gain respect.

The spirit of universality has redefined politics, and lifted it from the machinations of a few for their own advantage, to the struggle of the people for their own empowerment and the general welfare. And that requires a qualitative improvement in the character and skills of the people. The multiplication of hands does not result in the improvement of production. It is the enhancement of skills that achieves that. The counting of heads does not enhance the quality of political decisions, it is the illumination of the popular mind that will produce that.

The universality principle requires improving the people’s capacity – in the spiritual and intellectual sense – to govern themselves, for themselves. Without the right values in the people, a democracy is only a confederacy of fools.

If I were to be asked what of my presidency I would want to continue: it is these intangibles more than any policy I think, at the moment, is correct for the country. Circumstances change and international trends can shift direction; new approaches may serve the country’s interests better than those I laid down.

But what doesn’t change are the elements that go to make up good decisions and right policies: sincerity, integrity, solidarity, universality, and of course – in recognition of the historic verity that man proposes and God disposes – prayer.

Prayer, whereby the great make themselves humble and fitter to govern men. Prayer, which gives strength to the weak and pride to the humble. There are languages that are said to be better suited than others for certain things. English for law and banking, French for diplomacy, Italian for poetry, Spanish for piety, German for technology, Japanese for trade, and Chinese – it is said – for everything in the future. Yet there is only one language for accessing the greater reality behind this one. It is prayer, for speaking to God. It comes in any of the languages I have mentioned, because it has less to do with the sound of the voice than with a habit of the heart and a posture of the spirit. It is the thing that prepares you for any eventuality, and enables you to cope with whatever might take you unpleasantly by surprise. It is the first thing you learn after you’ve come into the world, and the last you will say when you leave it. It may seem like a trifle, at this moment when you find support in being over a thousand strong in this hall. But each of you will find himself alone at critical moments, as I did. Yet, with nothing in your hands, you will find it full with prayer.

Corazon Cojuangco Aquino (1933 - 2009)

Saturday, August 1, 2009

Peter Herbeck's Talk




Dear Parish Community:

For immediate release in church bulletin and parish announcements:


KBVM Catholic Radio is sponsoring a free event open to the public on Sunday, August 16th featuring Peter Herbeck of Renewal Ministries at Resurrection Catholic Church in Tualatin from 3 – 6 pm with doors open at 2:30 pm.

The theme of Peter Herbeck’s talk is: “The New Evangelization: the power of the Holy Spirit and intercessory prayer in our daily lives.”

A free will offering will be taken. Refreshments will follow in the Parish hall.

The Church of the Resurrection is at: 21060 SW Stafford Rd, Tualatin, OR 97062. For details: 503-285-5200 ext 105 or http://www.kbvm.fm/

###

More about Peter Herbeck:

Peter Herbeck is the Vice President and Director of Missions for Renewal Ministries based in Ann Arbor, Michigan and heard regularly on the Catholic Radio program: FIRE ON THE EARTH each Monday through Friday at 6:30 am and 4:30 pm and EWTN’s: CROSSING THE GOAL program on Fridays at 6 pm. He is the author of: “When the Spirit Comes in Power”, and “When the Spirit Speaks.” www.renewalministries.net