‘Tilacharon’ best for Lenten diet
Having a hard time avoiding your craving for “chicharon” (pork skin crackling) this Lenten season?
Having a hard time avoiding your craving for “chicharon” (pork skin crackling) this Lenten season?
Kristo Manila, the annual Lenten art exhibit, is now on its ninth year.
The “pabasa,” or the chanting of the passion, death and resurrection of Jesus Christ—which has been feature of the annual Lenten TV program “Siete Palabras” since 2012—is a notable community practice of Filipinos across the centuries.
One could tell that half of the selfies that will flood the Internet on Visita Iglesia this Holy Week will be taken in the renovated Manila Cathedral-Basilica of the Immaculate Conception.
Now that the Lenten season is here, those who abstain from meat on Fridays for religious reasons may once again be looking for new ways to serve seafood and vegetables.
Leon Gallery will hold its first auction this year, Glorious Easter Auction, on March 22, training the spotlight on antique sacred art objects as the Catholic world observes Lent.
Don’t fast and abstain to be sexy and slim. Don’t do charity for the sake of popularity.
Live simply and do works of mercy this Lenten season.
Animal agriculture makes a 40-percent greater contribution to global warming than all transportation in the world combined; it is the No. 1 cause of climate change.”
A key Lenten program on Philippine TV, “Siete Palabras”—the communal recitation of the Seven Last Words of Jesus Christ, which are accompanied by reflections from priests and testimonies from lay people—is an experience Filipinos overseas surely miss during the Holy Week, said a Dominican priest who had directed the program for half a decade now.
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