Tuesday, March 27, 2018

Isang Pagninilay sa Poong Mahal

Source: YouTube

Sa gitna ng ingay nakita Kita
Duguan at pagod sa pagpapasan ng dala.
Ako ma’y banyaga, nakaramdam ng awa.
Sa kalupitang dinanas mo sa kamay ng mga may gawa.

(Source: Passion of the Christ movie)

 Nawala sa paningin ko ang imahe ng Iyong pagdurusa
Naiwan naman ang bakas ng pawis at dugo sa natuyong lupa
Sinunod ko ang kalbaryo ngunit makipot ang daang ito
Natatanging lungkot at pighati nasa puso ko.


Sino Ka at ako ay binihag Mo?
Sino ako para ako’s tawagin Mo?
Isang Hentil anupama’t wala sa lahi mo
Ngunit natali sa mga titig Mo.

Christ on the Cross by Joachim Beuckelaer

Sa tuktok ng Golgota sa ilalim ng araw
Tila naghihintay ang mga taong nakatayo sa malayo
Hindi ko maisip, di ko matanggap
Sa gitna ng ingay, tahimik Kang nakabitin, tila nagdadasal sa nagaganap.



Ang titig mo ang nangungusap ng pagibig na wagas
At sa paanan mo ang dalawang Mariang nagluluksa
Tila di batid ang gulong kabila—
Lait at poot sa mga nakapakong may sala.


Lumapit ako sa mga babaeng nagluluksa
Di upang makiramay ngunit para umusisa
Ikaw na nasa bingit ng kamatayan ay—
Magaganap ang utos ng matagal ng hinintay.


Source: YouTube

Sa isang sandal Ika’y lumingon sa ‘kin
Bumukas sa isip ko ang  propesiyang magaganap
Hindi sila, kung KAMI ang Iyong sinagip
Na sa kamatayan Mo lamang na matutupad.

Christ of St. John of the Cross by Salvador Dali

Isang malalim na buntong hininga at Ika’y napayuko
Sa kabila ng kadiliman sa puso ng lahat.
Bumukas ang telon ng langit sa mga taong marangal
Kami’y Iyong niligtas, Poong Mahal!

Tuesday, March 20, 2018

TOC Family Welcomes Final Professed Members



Seminarians from the Immaculate Conception Major Seminary (ICMAS) of the Diocese of Malolos recently participated in the ceremonies for the final profession of members and acceptance to the novitiate last March 19, 2018, Solemnity of St. Joseph, at the Carmelite Monastery of the Holy Family in Guiguinto, Bulacan. The mass was officiated by Fr. Adriand Layug, T.O.C.



Congratulations to Brothers Kirth, France and Carlo on their perpetual profession, and to all brother seminarians who have been accepted to the novitiate and aspirancy. TOC Philippines welcomes all of you.

"The scapular is a means to an end. Our end is love. Carmel is love." -Fr. Adriand Layug, T.O.C. 

May we all reach the heights of Carmel!




"Pray ye therefore the Lord of the harvest, that he send forth laborers into his harvest." (Matthew 9:38, Douay Rheims version)

Monday, March 19, 2018

St. Joseph and the Carmelite Connection


The Universal Church celebrates today the feast day of St. Joseph, foster father of our Lord Jesus Christ and Patron of the Families. Other than the Blessed Mother and our Carmelite saints, St. Joseph is the unofficial patron of the Carmelite Order.

Let us recall the devotion of St. Teresa of Avila to this illustrious saint in her Autobiography:

“I took for my advocate and lord the glorious Saint Joseph and commended myself earnestly to him; and I found that this my father and lord delivered me both from this trouble and also from other and greater troubles concerning my honor and the loss of my soul, and that he gave me greater blessings than I could ask of him. I do not remember even now that I have ever asked anything of him which he has failed to grant. I am astonished at the great favors which God has bestowed on me through this blessed saint, and at the perils from which He has freed me, both in body and in soul. To other saints the Lord seems to have given grace to succor us in some of our necessities but of this glorious saint my experience is that he succors us in them all and that the Lord wishes to teach us that as He was Himself subject to him on earth (for, being His guardian and being called His father, he could command Him) just so in Heaven He still does all that he asks. This has also been the experience of other persons whom I have advised to commend themselves to him; and even to-day there are many who have great devotion to him through having newly experienced this truth.” “I wish I could persuade everyone to be devoted to this glorious saint, for I have great experience of the blessings which he can obtain from God. I have never known anyone to be truly devoted to him and render him particular services who did not notably advance in virtue, for he gives very real help to souls who commend themselves to him. For some years now, I think, I have made some request of him every year on his festival and I have always had it granted. If my petition is in any way ill directed, he directs it aright for my greater good.”

“I only beg, for the love of God, that anyone who does not believe me will put what I say to the test, and he will see by experience what great advantages come from his commending himself to this glorious patriarch and having devotion to him. Those who practice prayer should have a special affection for him always. I do not know how anyone can think of the Queen of the Angels, during the time that she suffered so much with the Child Jesus, without giving thanks to Saint Joseph for the way he helped them. If anyone cannot find a master to teach him how to pray, let him take this glorious saint as his master and he will not go astray.” (Chapter 6).

In very much the same way, way we find the powerful protection of St. Joseph in our community and in our lives.

St. Joseph, Principal Protector of the Venerable Order of Carmel, pray for us!

Source: Catholic Spiritual Direction 

Friday, March 16, 2018

Rites of Profession and Acceptance to the Novitiate and Aspirancy


Rites for temporary professed members and acceptance to the novitiate and aspirancy were held last February 24 at the Shrine of the Sacred Heart in Makati. The rites were administered by Fr. Marlon Berredo, OCARM.



Temporary Professed Members
  • Cecilia Campos (Sacred Heart of Jesus, Makati City)
  • Adolfo Bacud (Our Lady of Mt. Carmel, Project 6)
  • Marilou Escobar (Flos Carmeli, Bacoor, Cavite)
  • Marilu Louella Cabotan (Flos Carmeli, Bacoor, Cavite)
Temporary professed members

New Novices


  • Rosebelle Caragay (Our Lady of Mt. Carmel, Project 6)
  • Denver Daradar (Our Lady of the Pillar, Pilar, Las Piñas)
  • Mary Iphigene Daradar (Our Lady of the Pillar, Pilar, Las Piñas)
  • Rebecca de Dios-Valdez (Our Lady of the Pillar, Pilar, Las Piñas)
  • Maria Sulaila Song Medina-Babijes (Flos Carmeli, Bacoor, Cavite)
  • Marivic Navea (Our Lady of the Pillar, Pilar, Las Piñas)

  • Fr. Berredo reciting the acceptance for novices

    New Aspirants

    New aspirants coming from Project 6, San Marcelino and Baliuag communities receiving their blessing

    Blessing of the Brown Scapulars


    Sister Cecilia signs her certificate



    All hearts are turned to Christ....
    Members from Pilar and Bacoor communities

    We wish to congratulate all members and their families who took part in the rites and encourage everyone to continue their journey to Carmel.


    Saturday, March 10, 2018

    A Highlight on the Women Saints of Carmel


    In commemoration of the International Women’s Day that was recently celebrated last March 8, we praise and thank God for having been blessed with a number of women saints of Mt. Carmel, with two of them given the distinction as Doctors of the Church.  

    St. Teresa of Avila (28 March 1515 - 4 October 1582)



    Known for her strong character and extroversion, she was 14 when she lost her mother and took on the Blessed Virgin Mary as her mother. She entered the Carmelite convent in Avila after miraculously recovering from a long illness. Displeased with the seeming laxity displayed by the other sisters in the cloister, she introduced many reforms and established the Order of Discalced Carmelites. She would later be joined by another spiritual giant, St. John of the Cross. Aside from establishing several convents in Spain, she also wrote her mystical experiences and difficulties in her autobiography. She was a mater theologian of her time, her written works include the Interior Castle and The Way of Perfection. She was canonized on March 12, 1622 and was declared a Doctor of the Church in 1970--the first woman doctor of the Catholic Church.

    St. Mary Magdalene de Pazzi (2 April 1566 - 25 May 1607)



    A contemporary of St. Teresa of Avila who was also a mystic, St. Mary Magdalene was a young child when she experienced her first mystical experience. Born to a wealthy family in Florence, Italy, she chose to enter the Carmelite monastery against her father’s wishes. Known for her austere life, she experienced raptures and ecstasies as well as long periods of spiritual dryness. She had a deep longing for reform of the Church during the tumultuous period of the Reformation. She was canonized on May 25, 1670.

    St. Therese of Lisieux (2 January 1873 - 30 September 1897) 



    Perhaps the most known of all the Carmelite saints, St. Therese was the youngest child of Zelie and Louis Martin (both of whom have been jointly declared saints in 2015). As a young child, she was temperamental and stubborn and suffered a nervous breakdown after the death of her mother. She recovered from this illness after the statue of Mother Mary smiled at her; but her complete conversion happened in Christmas 1886. By a special dispensation of the pope she entered the Carmelite monastery in Lisieux at 15. Her autobiography, The Story of a Soul, gave a rich account of her spiritual life, her desire for the missions, her vocation of Love, and the Little Way—a way of spiritual childhood. Canonized on 17 Mary 1925, St. Therese is the co-patroness of the missions together with Saint Francis Xavier and co-patroness of France after St. Joan of Arc. She was proclaimed a Doctor of the Church by St. Pope John Paul II on October 19, 1997.

    St. Teresa Benedicta of the Cross (12 October 1891 - 9 August 1942)



    Born in Breslau, Poland to strict Jewish parents, Edith Stein was a brilliant student who became an Atheist during her teens. She finished her doctoral degree in Philosophy during a time when female students were rare. During her studies she met prominent philosopher Edmund Husserl and eventually became his assistant. Reading the autobiography of St. Teresa of Avila and underdoing a series of events led to her conversion to Catholicism and subsequent entry to the Carmelite monastery in Cologne in 1933. She took on the name Teresa Benedicta of the Cross and quickly rose to spiritual heights, ending in Auschwitz in August 1942. Among her written works include the Science of the Cross and the Finite and Eternal Being. She was canonized on 11 October 1998.

    St. Elizabeth of the Holy Trinity (18 July 1880 - 9 November 1906)




    Another mystic, St. Elizabeth was a gifted pianist when she entered the cloister of Mt. Carmel in Dijon, France in 1901. Called to religious life even at a young age, she was inclined towards contemplative prayer and composed the famous prayer "O My God, Trinity Whom I Adore". She was greatly influenced by another French contemporary, St. Therese of Lisieux (The Little Flower), whose autobiography she had read. She wrote several other works before succumbing to Addison's disease in 1906 at the age of 26. She was canonized on October 16, 2016.

    A growing Carmelite family

    With the blessing and guidance of the Holy Spirit and the protection of Our Blessed Mother, the whole Carmelite family continues to grow--in number and in holiness.

    Sources: