PLANNING FOR THE YEAR AHEAD By Javier Gomez/ Edmund Lim, KHS

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We Care Because We Pray Third Sunday in Ordinary Time www.ssaparish.com Forbes Park, Makati It takes a lot to handle everything going on the parish. After all, San Antonio wants to make room for everyone who wants to serve the Church and the community. Done right, the parish becomes a place where people can come and work together productively. Pope Francis has this vision for the parish as well. At an audience last year he said, The parish must work the miracle of a more communal life for the whole of society. This is what the different ministries aim to do. And everyone worked for it during the parish planning session. Even though each person had different ideas on what could be done to improve San Antonio s missionary spirit, everyone was united with a sense of identity as a Franciscan parish. St. Paul addressed this in the early Christian communities, when he wrote, For as in one body we have many members, and not all the members have the same function, so we, who are many, are one body in Christ, and individually we are members one of another. We have gifts that differ according to the grace given to us. (Romans 12: 4-6) Edmund Lim, the Parish Pastoral Council President echoed this in his closing prayer for the planning session. Reading PLANNING FOR THE YEAR AHEAD By Javier Gomez/ Edmund Lim, KHS a homily of Father Tacky, he said Is our parish a place where young and old learn to respect each other? Is our parish a place where we can grow and become adult or are we excluded if we are immature, in error or emotionally burdened? Is our parish a place where we can learn our faith, come with our questions, share our insights and learn from each other s life experiences with the Lord? Is our parish a place where we can learn to forgive, to reconcile, and to deal with differences or do we accept only those who think or pray as we do? Is our parish a place where we can come in any crisis and know that whatever we might have done, we will find a place where we can recover and restore our dignity as Christians? A parish should not be a place where we are constantly looking over our shoulders, protecting our backs, anxious about anything we might say. Our Family should not be like that and neither should our parish be like that. It is a place where we should not be ashamed of our DEVOTIONS nor ADVOCACIES that are close to our hearts. It should not be a place where we are ashamed to be Conservatives nor ashamed to be Liberals. It should be enough that we are authentically CATHOLIC CHRISTIANS and proud to be CATHOLIC. Like a family, a parish embraces many people. People from all walks of life. At its heart is one Lord, one faith, one Baptism. We thank you for all your prayers before and during our Parish Pastoral Council Planning day. It was really successful and as we prepare ourselves to our duties in serving our parish in the next two years, we hope you will be there with us, proud to be of San Antonio, proud to be CATHOLIC. As the year continues, may we serve Christ more! May God send his spirit to each of us to work for His Kingdom! Santuario de San Antonio Parish Office Tel. nos. 8438830-31

Parish Bulletin Santuario de San Antonio Parish Schedule of Liturgical Services The ABC s of Catholic Doctrine by Lianne Tiu 2 Confession Monday Wednesday Friday 7:15 am - 7:45 am 12:00 noon - 12:30 pm 5:45 pm - 6:15 pm Saturday 7:15 am - 7:45 am 12:00 noon - 12:30 pm 3:30 pm - 4:30 pm For special confession, please call the parish office. Weddings Parishioners (residents of Forbes, Dasmarinas & Urdaneta Villages) Monday Friday : 1:00 pm, 3:00 pm, 7:00 pm Saturday : 8:00 am, 10:00 am, 2:00 pm, 7:00 pm Sunday : 2:00 pm, 7:00 pm Non-Parishioners (non-residents of Forbes, Dasmarinas & Urdaneta Villages) Monday Friday : 1:00 pm, 3:00 pm, 7:00 pm Saturday : 8:00 am, 10:00 am Pre-Cana Seminar Every first Saturday of the month. Please call the parish office for more details. Counseling Please call the parish office for appointments. Weekend Masses Saturday : 6:15 am, 7:30 am (with Morning Prayers at 7:00 am), 12:15 noon Anticipated: 4:30 pm, 6:00 pm Sunday : 6:30 (Tagalog), 7:45 am, 9:00 am, 10:30 am 12:00 noon, 4:30 pm, 6:00 pm Monday - Friday : Weekday Masses 6:15 am, 7:30 am (with Morning Prayers at 7:00 am), 12:00 noon, 6:00 pm Recitation of the Holy Rosary before every Mass. Novena to St. Anthony after all masses on Tuesday. Novena to Our Lady of Perpetual Help every Wednesday at 8:00 am and after 6:00 pm Mass Novena to the Sacred Heart of Jesus every Friday after the 6:00 pm Mass First Friday Holy Hour: 8:00 am, 11:45 am and after the 6:00 pm Mass Baptism Saturday & Sunday (Parish provides Priest) 1:30 pm, 12:15 nn, 3:00 pm, 3:45 pm Monday to Friday (Pls. provide your own Priest) 10:15 am, 11:00 am, 2:15 pm, 3:00 pm, 3:45 pm For the Sick Please call the parish office for anointing of the sick or the Health Care Ministry Office when a parishioner is bedridden and wishes to receive communion. Parish Center Social Hall Please call the parish office for reservations. Crypts/Niches Please call the parish office for availability. Multi-Purpose Hall/Viewing Chapels Reservations for Capilla del Senior, Capilla dela Virgen or Capilla de San Francisco is on a first come, first served basis. Please call the parish office for more details. Parish Bulletin Advertisement Please call the parish office for details. LET US GET THE LOAD OFF OUR CHESTS! Is there something in our past that is bothering us? Maybe we have stolen a large sum of money, masterminded a murder, cheated on our spouse, or killed our own child in the womb? Maybe we have regretted our past but we have turned away from God. In the Year of Mercy, Pope Francis reminds us that we have a God of mercy who is slow to anger as He patiently waits for us to repent. He invites us to enter the door of mercy in confession where we can have a direct experience of His mercy. Our God is full of compassion; and He will bend down to us who are weak, always ready to welcome, to understand and to forgive. He is like a mother who takes her child in her arms, desiring only to love, protect, help and who is ready to give everything, even herself. Our God is never tired of forgiving. Nothing can stop His mercy not even sin. Saint Augustine says: It is easier for God to hold back anger than mercy. Let us be sorry for our sins and not be afraid to receive the sacrament of Penance. We will need a lot of courage as we shamefully tell all our grave sins to the priest (who represents God). The great number of our sins, accumulated over many years, can be shocking, too. And although God rejects our sins, He will never reject us, sinners. His forgiveness knows no bounds. In confession, we can imagine God like the father in the parable of the prodigal son. Once we return to Him, He runs to meet and embrace us because he is full of love and joy for having found us again. In confession, God forgives all our sins, which He completely blots out. In this special Year of Mercy, let us take this opportunity to change our lives! We acknowledge our sins and be sorry for them. We can be sure of the relief from the heavy burden of sins as we experience the immense joy of being loved by our merciful God! References: Nothing can stop God s mercy not even sin, Pope says by Elise Harris (CNA); Christ, the face of the Father s Mercy - Pastoral Letter of His Beatitude Fouad Twal (Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem) Santuario de San Antonio Pastoral Team Fr. Baltazar Obico, OFM Parochial Vicar, Guardian Fr. Reu Jose C. Galoy, OFM Vicar Provincial, Parish Priest, Vicar and Busar Fr. Efren Jimenez, OFM - Guest Master Fr. Jesus Galindo, OFM Makati Medical Center Chaplain Fr. Serge Santos, OFM - Resident Friar Fr. Laurian Janicki, OFM - Resident Friar RDIP - PB Editorial Team & General Information Suzette H. Gatmaitan Head, RDIP-PB Marilou Consing Editor in Chief Javier Luis Gomez - Assistant Editor Earl Leonard Sebastian - Assistant Editor Hannah Roa - Assistant Editor Jonathan Cruz - Assistant Editor Marie Tycangco - Assistant Editor Jeannie Bitanga Website Administrator Jojo Avila Montenegro Art & Design Colorplus Production Group Corp. Production Santuario de San Antonio Parish Center Office Tel. nos. 8438830-31 Email: ssap_info@yahoo.com Website: www.ssaparish.com Website email: webi@ssaparish.com Foundation website: www.santuariodesanantonio.org Parish Pastoral Council Edmund Lim, KHS President Cristina Teehankee Vice President Suzette H. Gatmaitan Secretary 3

Parish Bulletin 4 ST. SIMEON STYLITES First of the Pillar Ascetics 390 459 A.D. Fest Day: January 5 Simeon was born in Sis, Cilicia on the border of Syria (now part of Yugoslavia), no exact date of his birth date was given except the year 390. He was the son of well-to do shepherd peasants who let their son take care of part of their flock. A devout boy he read the Bible daily as he did his job. He first heard Mass when he was 13 years old and learned then about the Beatitudes from the Sermon on the Mount and was awe- struck and moved by its message. Puzzled by the meaning of the words, he consulted an elderly hermit about how he might achieve the happiness they promised. He was told that continual prayer, watching, fasting, weeping, humiliation and the patient suffering of persecution was the road to true happiness. The best way to be able to do this was by living a solitary life. His Vision As he contemplated on what the old man told him he fell asleep and RANDOM THOUGHTS Voices from yesterday and today By: Peachy Maramba had a vision. It seemed as if he was digging for the foundation of a house. Each time he paused for breath he was instructed to dig deeper. This happened until he was finally told to desist. He felt that the vision was foretelling of his future. Inspired by his vision, he joined a monastery at the age of 15 and there learned the Psalter by heart. He was well liked by the monks because of his humility and charity but remained there for only two years to seek a stricter monastic life. Increases Self-Mortification He found this at the monastery of Heliodorus. Simeon greatly believe that the intense suffering of selfimposed austerities was an effective way of achieving proper penance for one s sins and the sins of others. It was at this monastery that he greatly increased his mortifications. The more severe the self-mortification, the better. These extreme austerities and his unwillingness to curb these practices became the reasons for his dismissal from the monastery. Begins Pillar Asceticism He sought refuge in a hermitage at the foot of Mount Telesnissae near Antioch where he continued his practices. After three years, he moved to the top of the mountains where he built himself a roofless cell of stones. People hearing about this eccentric holy man began coming first in trickles and then in droves and Simeon grew in fame across the world. Earns His Name of Stylites By this time, he had altogether lost the solitude, peace and quiet needed for his prayers and meditation. To regain them against the crowds, Simeon built a tall pillar on which he lived and worshipped, thereby earning his name of Stylites from the Greek word stylos meaning pillar. His pillars rose as high 60 feet! Simeon spent a total of 37 years on the unsheltered pillars and spent his days in prayer. Why Crowds Came Simeon Stylites was noted during this period not only for his peculiarity but, more importantly, for his holiness, wisdom, sympathy and practical advice. He became the advisor and counsel of many, including, kings and emperors. He eventually built a rope ladder for those seeking his counsel but maintained stern rules such as no woman was allowed to see him (including his own mother) and that he only counseled in the afternoon. He also preached to the people twice a day and spoke most often against swearing and usury. He urged them to pray for the salvation of souls, including their own, and to observe strict justice and earnest piety, and not to cheat on God. Founder of Pillar Asceticism While he never asked the people to imitate his mortifications, a few did. Simeon Stylite became known as the founder of Pillar Asceticism. Among his known followers were Daniel the Stylite and Simeon Stylite, the Younger. His Death No details were given about his death except that he died on his pillar in 459 A.D. at the age of 69. It is said that many bishops and faithful accompanied his body at his burial in Antioch. SOURCES: Butler s Lives of the Saints Vol. I pp 34 37; The Illustrated World Encyclopedia of Saints p. 115; The Book of Saints p. 15; and others. THE YEAR OF THE EUCHARIST AND THE FAMILY: A CALL TO KNEELING By Jonathan Cruz The Catholic Bishop s Conference of the Philippines (CBCP) has called 2016 the Year of the Eucharist and the Family. The theme is part of a nine-year preparation period for the Jubilee of 2021. We shall then celebrate the 500th anniversary of the first Mass on Limasawa, which also witnessed the first Filipino baptism of Rajah Humabon and his wife. Begun in 2013, each year called us to focus on one of the Nine Pastoral Priorities of the Church in the Philippines for the New Evangelization. For this year, the focus is on the Eucharist and family. In a CBCP Pastoral Exhortation last November 29, 2015, CBCP President and Archbishop of Lingayen Dagupan Socrates Villegas called us to reflect on the coming year through the act of kneeling. He explained that during this year, we are invited to kneel down to bring renewal to the family. We kneel to serve like the Lord. We envision every Filipino Catholic family to be missionary disciples of the Eucharist. Our generation seems to have lost the religious gesture of kneeling; we have become more a clapping generation. We seem to have compromised the virtue of humility with a culture of self-security and independence. Our throw away consumerist culture can hardly imagine kneeling down before one another, like the Lord who washed the feet of His beloved ones If we want renewal, let us learn to kneel again in body, in heart and attitude. Finally, Socrates called everyone to kneel as one family. The family that prays together stays together. The family that kneels together will be refreshed and renewed together. The family that kneels together will remain young and fresh and new. Kneeling empowers families to stand up against the storms of life. Kneeling is strength. Aside from 2016 being the Year of the Eucharist and the Family, the Church is also observing this year as a Jubilee Year of Mercy as decreed by Pope Francis in the papal bull Misericordiae Vultus and Cebu shall be host to the 51st International Eucharistic Congress this January 24-31, 2016. In this year of Mercy, Eucharist, and Family, let us find again that humility of service and that centeredness on Christ in our hearts and with those most in them. References: Nothing can stop God s mercy not even sin, Pope says by Elise Harris (CNA); Christ, the face of the Father s Mercy - Pastoral Letter of His Beatitude Fouad Twal (Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem) 5

Parish Bulletin Meldy Cojuangco Connie Gomez Marilou Arteficio Ma. Pilar Oledan Iggy Clavecilla Africa and Cecile Reynoso Maxima Amah Sy Aurora Gonzalez Tommy Dy Buncio Naning Bagabaldo Remedios Maceda Berris Cedric Castro Pilar del Gallego Nena Jalandoni Victoriano Chung Erlinda Miranda-Oledan Zwei Lopez Gadi Shallouh Bancil Swinnerton Francisco Tankiang Cynthia Arms Felicisimo Alcantara Rosario de Leon Tobias Gloria Syjuco Raffy Chan Edric Co Please Pray for the Sick Peter Soo Chito San Jose Nancy Imperial Johnny Lopez Lisa Alvendia Letty Ligon Norma J. Carlos Sony Lopez Gonzalez Shaina Budhrani Gia Gonzalez Orlando Bernardo Rolando Sotaso Cecilio Hidalgo Victorina Leus Iya Ocampo Bernadette Gozali Guillermo Profeta Dra. Ofelia Adapon Soledad T. Consing David Lu Fr. Hugh Zurat OFM If you want a name added or deleted, contact Bernadette at the Parish office tel. nos. 8438830-32. Our Latest Chapel, Crematorium and Columbary in Commonwealth Avenue, Quezon City LEASE / SALE FORBES DASMA URDA SAN LO BEL AIR MAGA CONNIE PERIQUET GATMAITAN CYNTHIA GATMAITAN MENCHACA TELS.: 8130875 8672227 CELL (0917)8109379 3/F SEDCCO BLDG., RADA ST., LEGASPI VILL., MAKATI CITY CALENDAR OF MINISTRIES FOR THE WEEK SUNDAY - JAN. 24 * 9:00AM - CCD Sunday Religion Class * 4:00PM - CORO Practice MONDAY - JAN. 25 Program at St. Francis Friendship Home * 3:00PM - OFS Formation TUESDAY - JAN. 26 Program at St. Francis Friendship Home * 9:00AM - CWL FREE Breakfast & Clinic * 9:00AM - JPIC Hospital Ministry PGH Visitation * 2:00PM - Health Care Ministry Dancercise Open to All Parishioners * 4:00PM - Marian Cenacle Group Prayer Meeting WEDNESDAY - JAN. 27 * 4:00PM - CCD Religion Class THURSDAY - JAN. 28 * 9:00AM - Health Care Ministry Visitation at Rizal Medical Center, Pasig City * 7:00PM - SYA Prayer Meeting FRIDAY - JAN. 29 * 8:00AM - Antioch weekend * 2:00AM - Health Care Ministry Dancercise Open to All Parishioners * 7:00PM - Household Help Charismatic Prayer Meeting * 9:00PM - Tig-Awit Choir Practice SATURDAY - JAN.30 * 8:00AM - Antioch Weekend * 4:00PM - VOSA Choir * 4:00PM - LUKE 18 Prayer Meeting 6 7

PARISH ANNOUNCEMENTS Scheduled every first Saturday of the month, the next seminar will be on Saturday, February 6, 2016 from 8AM to 7PM. Online registration is now available at www.ssaparish.com or register with Susan at the Parish Office, 843-8830 to 31. Married couples who would like to volunteer and inspire engaged couples at any of our seminars may contact Family and Life Ministry at 0916-4402829. We invite all parishioners and their families to join the devotion to the Most Holy Rosary before our weekday masses.