First and Final Profession of Vows

Today, on May 13, 2015, the following members of the Philippine Region and Vietnamese District: Ronald M. Basco (PHI), Sergio Shoiti Matumoto (PHI) and Dinh Van Nguyen (VIE) made their Final Profession of Vows: Chastity, Poverty and Obedience in the Congregation of the Priests of the Sacred Heart of Jesus.

During the same celebration three (3) Novices: Rene Boy Soccoro (PHI), Dinh Nguyen (VIE) and Son Nguyen (VIE) professed their first vows of Chastity, Poverty and Chastity.

The vows were accepted by Fr. Franciszek Pupkowski, superior of the Philippine Region. The ceremony was held at the church of St. Isidro Parish in Dumalinao and was witnessed by SCJs coming from different communities, religious sisters, families and friends of the professes.

Priesthood and Religious Life Anniversaries

On June 13, 2015, Fr. Janusz Burzawa, scj will celebrate his 25th Anniversary of Ordination to the Priesthood and on July 20, 2015, Fr. Robertus Sutopo, scj his 25th Anniversary of Religious Life.

Using the opportunity of being together for the monthly meeting, the profession of vows and ordination to the diaconate, the Philippine Region organized a simple celebration of Thanksgiving to God for the gift of their vocations. Fr. Janusz was the main celebrant and Fr. Robertus delivered the homily. The celebration took place in the Novitiate Fr. Dehon in Lower Lucoban, Dumalinao on the Eve of the Final Vows of three (3) SCJs and First Vows of three (3) Novices on May 12, 2015.

Acceptance to the Novitiate

Today, on May 11, 2015, seven Postulants: two (2) Filipinos and five (5) Vietnamese were accepted to the Novitiate. The ceremony took place at the Novitiate Fr. Dehon in Lower Lucoban, Dumalinao, Zamboanga del Sur during the Holy Eucharist. The new Novices will be accompanied in their fourteen month journey by their Novice Master Fr. Indra Pamungkas, who also started his office with the “Profession of Faith”. The ceremony was presided by the Regional Superior Fr. Francis Pupkowski, scj.

PRAYER FOR THE XXIII GENERAL CHAPTER

 

General Chapter Logo«MERCIFUL, IN COMMUNITY, WITH THE POOR»

Thank you Father, rich in mercy,
for the love that we experience
in your Son, Jesus Christ,
who “emptied himself” (Phil 2:6) to live among us.

Guide us and enlighten us with your Holy Spirit,
that we may always thank you
for the gift of faith and the vocation
we live in the Congregation of the
Priests of the Sacred Heart of Jesus.

Give us the ability to share
your gift of grace
in our community service
to all the brethren, and especially
to the poor, the young and the marginalized.

Mary, our Mother,
model and protector of all
be with us and support us
that we may be faithful
in every experience of life,
and may announce the Kingdom of Your Son,
to each brother and sister awaiting
salvation and joy.

Heart of Jesus,
source of salvation and eternal joy
reign in our hearts.
Amen.

Jubilee of Mercy – Description of the logo

Official logo for the Holy Year of Mercy. (CNS/courtesy Pontifical Council for Promoting New Evangelization)The logo and the motto together provide a fitting summary of what the Jubilee Year is all about. The motto Merciful Like the Father (taken from the Gospel of Luke, 6:36) serves as an invitation to follow the merciful example of the Father who asks us not to judge or condemn but to forgive and to give love and forgiveness without measure (cfr. Lk 6:37-38). The logo – the work of Jesuit Father Marko I. Rupnik – presents a small summa theologiae of the theme of mercy. In fact, it represents an image quite important to the early Church: that of the Son having taken upon his shoulders the lost soul demonstrating that it is the love of Christ that brings to completion the mystery of his incarnation culminating in redemption. The logo has been designed in such a way so as to express the profound way in which the Good Shepherd touches the flesh of humanity and does so with a love with the power to change one’s life. One particular feature worthy of note is that while the Good Shepherd, in his great mercy, takes humanity upon himself, his eyes are merged with those of man. Christ sees with the eyes of Adam, and Adam with the eyes of Christ. Every person discovers in Christ, the new Adam, one’s own humanity and the future that lies ahead, contemplating, in his gaze, the love of the Father.

The scene is captured within the so called mandorla (the shape of an almond), a figure quite important in early and medieval iconography, for it calls to mind the two natures of Christ, divine and human. The three concentric ovals, with colors progressively lighter as we move outward, suggest the movement of Christ who carries humanity out of the night of sin and death. Conversely, the depth of the darker color suggests the impenetrability of the love of the Father who forgives all.

By scjphil Posted in Church