<body> With the Holy Spirit
...PROFILE

Pauline Elaine Teo
Child of God

...Prayers

1) For love and happiness for everone in 2010

2) For those who are the destitute, homeless, suffering, lonely, hungry, angry...

3) Selfless in my love for everyone, especially to my special one

4) For grace to persevere and be faithful in my vocation

...Time


...TAGBOARD



...LINKS

Amelia
Angele
Clement
Chris
Evelyn
Fr. Aloysius
Fei Ting
Ferdinand
Fonz
Felicia
Gavin
Holly
Jac
Kelly
Kuzzin
Leann
Lloyd
Marcus
Mark Sebastian
Monkey Marion
Nicole
Paul
Petrina
Phae-1
Pris
Sury
Shelly


...ARCHIVES
  • December 2005
  • January 2006
  • February 2006
  • March 2006
  • April 2006
  • May 2006
  • June 2006
  • July 2006
  • August 2006
  • September 2006
  • October 2006
  • November 2006
  • December 2006
  • January 2007
  • March 2007
  • April 2007
  • May 2007
  • June 2007
  • July 2007
  • August 2007
  • September 2007
  • October 2007
  • November 2007
  • December 2007
  • January 2008
  • February 2008
  • March 2008
  • April 2008
  • June 2008
  • August 2008
  • September 2008
  • January 2009
  • February 2009
  • March 2009
  • April 2009
  • May 2009
  • January 2010
  • March 2010
  • July 2010
  • August 2010
  • October 2010

  • ...CREDITS
    Blogskins
    Virtual Library
    OLPS homepage
    SACCRE Youth
    Online Bible

    Tuesday, March 31, 2009


    I could not help but be filled with tears when I read the news (below). It saddened me of how we humans are so weak in will, to turn our backs against the God who has created us. Vividly, it reminded me of how the people turned their back against Jesus and condemned him to be crucified. It is almost a replicate of history now, as one by one, atheists and secularists seek to turn the faithful against their God. A modern replica of Lent aka the crucifixion of Jesus.

    I wonder how sad and heartbroken God feels, to know that He is rejected by his own people. Imagine if your child disowns you as their father/mother, how would you feel?

    As a convert, finding my faith in God has indeed strengthened my belief in the existence of God. However, it wasn't easy because the search to fill the emptiness I had, was wrought with many trials, until miracle after miracle happened with conversion of my hardened heart. Eventually, I was utterly convinced that a God does exist to love me like no other.

    As a convert, it is easy to say that cradle catholics take their faith for granted, and so easily have their faith waver at the slightest adversities. Yet, trying to put my shoes in the latter, I realise that without experience of God and the conversion of hearts, it is of no wonder that some Catholics feel that they were given the grace of baptism out of no choice.

    Oh God, have mercy on your children. Holy Spirit Come!!! May there be a new Pentecost to renew the faith of your people.

    LONDON (AFP) - - More than 100,000 Britons have recently downloaded "certificates of de-baptism" from the Internet to renounce their Christian faith.

    The initiative launched by a group called the National Secular Society (NSS) follows atheist campaigns here and elsewhere, including a London bus poster which triggered protests by proclaiming "There's probably no God."

    "We now produce a certificate on parchment and we have sold 1,500 units at three pounds (4.35 dollars, 3.20 euros) a pop," said NSS president Terry Sanderson, 58.

    John Hunt, a 58-year-old from London and one of the first to try to be "de-baptised," held that he was too young to make any decision when he was christened at five months old.

    The male nurse said he approached the Church of England to ask it to remove his name. "They said they had sought legal advice and that I should place an announcement in the London Gazette," said Hunt, referring to one of the official journals of record of the British government.

    So that's what he did -- his notice of renouncement was published in the Gazette in May 2008 and other Britons have followed suit.

    Michael Evans, 66, branded baptising children as "a form of child abuse" -- and said that when he complained to the church where he was christened he was told to contact the European Court of Human Rights.

    The Church of England said its official position was not to amend its records. "Renouncing baptism is a matter between the individual and God," a Church spokesman told AFP.

    "We are not a 'membership' church, and do not keep a running total of the number of baptised people in the Church of England, and such totals do not feature in the statistics that we regularly publish," he added.

    De-baptism organisers say the initiative is a response to what they see as increasing stridency from churches -- the latest last week when Pope Benedict XVI stirred global controversy on a trip to AIDS-ravaged Africa by saying condom use could further spread of the disease.

    "The Catholic Church is so politically active at the moment that I think that is where the hostility is coming from," said Sanderson. "In Catholic countries there is a very strong feeling of wanting to punish the church by leaving it."

    In Britain, where government figures say nearly 72 percent of the population list themselves as Christian, Sanderson feels this "hostility" is fuelling the de-baptism movement.

    Theologian Paul Murray at Durham University disagrees. "That is not my experience," he said, but concedes that change is in the air.

    "We are in an interesting climate where Catholicism and other belief systems have moved into the public, pluralist arena, alongside secularists," he said.

    De-baptism movements have already sprung up in other countries.

    In Spain, the high court ruled in favour of a man from Valencia, Manuel Blat, saying that under data protection laws he could have the record of his baptism erased, according to a report in the International Herald Tribune.

    Similarly, the Italian Union of Rationalists and Agnostics (UAAR) won a legal battle over the right to file for de-baptism in 2002, according to media reports. The group's website carries a "de-baptism" form to facilitate matters.

    According to UAAR secretary Raffaele Carcano, more than 60,000 of these forms have been downloaded in the past four years and continue to be downloaded at a rate of about 2,000 per month. Another 1,000 were downloaded in one day when the group held its first national de-baptism day last October 25.

    Elsewhere, an Argentinian secularist movement is running a "Collective Apostasy" campaign, using the slogan "Not in my name" (No en mi nombre).

    Sanderson hopes rulings in other European countries will pave the way for legal action in Britain, since European Union directives require a level of parity among member states' legislation.

    "That would be a good precedent for us to say to the British Information Commissioner: Come on, what's your excuse?" said Sanderson.

    The bus-side posters that hit London in January sported the message: "There's probably no God. Now stop worrying and enjoy your life."

    The scheme was in response to pro-Christian adverts on buses directing passers-by to a website warning those who did not accept Jesus would suffer for eternity in hell.

    Comedy writer Ariane Sherine, mastermind of the British bus campaign that saw a copycat version in Barcelona and other cities, said she backs the "de-baptism" movement but insisted the two initiatives were separate.

    Sanderson meanwhile remains resolute. "The fact that people are willing to pay for the parchments shows how seriously they are taking them," he said.

     -Yours truly ;

    Tuesday, March 17, 2009


    Could it be that I have too many burdens that I do not think that there is anyone out there who can ever help me bear them???

    I don't believe in sharing burdens anymore...only to God.

    Perhaps it is because there is so much in me, that no longer do I want to share with anyone or anybody anymore, cuz I realized that the pain I carry is too heavy and too much too bear for anyone but Jesus. Maybe I'm disillusioned, but I really don't believe anymore that there is anyone who is willing to be there for the better or the worse. Yes, it is true. People will always say, "I'm here. You can share your burdens on me and count on me". Oh, but the spirit is willing yet the flesh is weak. No one can ever bear the entire burdens of an individual. No one.

    Lent period is when I realise how terrible I have been. I never knew that I had so many sins on my back. The best thing that can happen is that I had my sins told in my face. And the reason for that is because I shared my burdens, and the burdens were too heavy to bear.

    Sometimes, I understand why people say that they do not want to be a burden to anyone. Simply because a "burden", rightly so, cannot be shared as no pillar is so strong that it will never crumble, save for the only one firm foundation of cornerstone.

     -Yours truly ;

    Wednesday, March 04, 2009


    Shortlisted Singaporean candidates who made it top 50 out of thousands of entries for the best job in the world!!!

    From CNS: "The successful candidate will be paid US$100,000 for six months to enjoy the sun, sea and sand and report his experiences via blogs, photos and video diaries."

    Who don't want? I also want leh!!!

    These 2 guys really make us Singaporeans proud with their innovative videos. Check it out! They're really gutsy I must say...haha!



     -Yours truly ;