Welcome to our website
"A dynamic and participative parish, relevant to the times and responsive to the needs of all sectors of a community, that is both evangelized and evangelizing, living the gospel values and working together with renewed hope for the kingdom of God."
News and Events
Search
Catholic Articles
Testimonials

Matthew 7:7 | 7 “Ask and it will be given to you; seek and you will find;
knock and the door will be opened to you. 8 For everyone who asks receives;
the one who seeks finds; and to the one who knocks, the door will be opened.
-
2026 Happy Easter!
-
SVD PHC STATEMENT ON CORRUPTION CRISIS
-
May Pamisa Ka Ba?
-
Ask and You Shall Receive.
-
No To Divorce!
-
Confession Guide for Adults
-
SVD: The Love of God Impels us...
-
LIVE >> Adoration
-
Join our Online Mass
-
Pray the Holy Rosary @ 9PM
-
You are called...
-
Prayer & Fasting
-
What is Confession?
-
St. Jacinta's vision of Hell changed her life
-
The Holy Sacraments
-
Peace be with you!
-
Jesus is Pro-Life
-
Wedding Req'ts. in Saint Jude Shrine
Apr. 8, 2026
Gospel Reflection: Our Hidden Lord Revealed
Wednesday in the Octave of Easter
That very day, the first day of the week, two of Jesus’ disciples were going to a village seven miles from Jerusalem called Emmaus, and they were conversing about all the things that had occurred. And it happened that while they were conversing and debating, Jesus himself drew near and walked with them, but their eyes were prevented from recognizing him. Luke 24:13–16
Why were these two disciples prevented from recognizing Jesus when He appeared to them on Easter Sunday? Earlier that morning, as Luke recounts (Luke 24:1–12), Mary Magdalene, Joanna, Mary—the mother of James—and other unnamed disciples found the tomb empty. While they were there, “two men in dazzling garments appeared to them” proclaiming that Jesus had risen. When the women told the rest of the disciples, their story “seemed like nonsense, and they did not believe them.” Surprisingly, for some of the disciples, Jesus’ Resurrection was not immediately a cause for rejoicing—it was a cause for uncertainty and, sadly, disbelief.
Today’s Gospel recounts what happened later that day when two disciples who had heard the women’s testimony took a seven-mile walk from Jerusalem to Emmaus. In John’s Gospel, when Jesus appeared to Mary Magdalene, she didn’t recognize Him until He said her name, “Mary!” (John 20:16). By speaking her name, Jesus not only showed He knew her but also revealed His resurrected presence to her.
When Jesus appeared to the two disciples walking to Emmaus, He revealed Himself in a different way. He walked with them, allowed them to express their confusion and even doubt, and then interpreted the Scriptures to them, beginning with Moses, so they understood how the Scriptures pointed to Him as the Messiah.
So back to our original question: Why were the eyes of these two disciples prevented from recognizing Jesus when He appeared to them? Because faith in the Resurrection doesn’t come from physical sight alone; it comes by hearing and understanding the Word of God, which opens our hearts to believe. Jesus preached the Gospel to these two disciples, and through that preaching, they came to believe.
The story of Emmaus not only recounts an encounter with the risen Christ but also offers a model for our own encounter with Him in the Mass. First, the Word of God is read and preached. Then, the bread and wine are consecrated into the True Presence of Jesus, which we consume. In the story of Emmaus, Jesus’ preaching inspired faith in these disciples. Once they understood and believed, Jesus “took bread, said the blessing, broke it, and gave it to them. With that, their eyes were opened and they recognized him, but he vanished from their sight” (Luke 24:30–31). In this breaking of the bread, they recognized Him. Jesus had given them faith through the Word of God and nourished that faith with the Eucharist.
Why did Jesus vanish at that moment? Because He now dwelled within their souls—a presence sustained each time we receive Him in the Eucharist, His True Presence entering our own hearts and lives. His bodily presence was no longer necessary for them; they now carried Him within. The Word of God instills faith, preparing our hearts, and the Eucharist brings us into intimate union with our Lord, who dwells within us.
Reflect today on how you encounter Jesus in the Mass. At Mass, Jesus appears to us in the exact way we need Him, through Word and Sacrament. When we listen to the Word of God, internalize it, and let it spark deeper faith in our hearts, we have truly met our Lord. When we kneel before the Eucharist and consume Him in Holy Communion, Jesus is even more intimately present to us than if He were physically before us. Each Communion infinitely blesses our souls, for through this gift, Jesus enters and makes our souls His sanctuary.
My Eucharistic Lord, You truly come to us every time we participate in the Mass. Please help me to make my participation in the Mass a reflection of the encounter of these two disciples on the way to Emmaus. Open my mind to the gift of faith as I hear Your Word proclaimed and preached. With faith, may I then receive You openly in Holy Communion, so that my soul will become a sanctuary in which Your resurrected presence may dwell. Jesus, I trust in You and welcome You with all my heart.
Audio recording: https://youtu.be/99W0EnO2CJw?si=1bC58L2EbvyL-vEn
eBulletin Board
Contact Parish Office: (632)87356408 | 09457533713 (SMS/Viber)

NEW The 3 o'clock Prayer to the Divine Mercy & (click here)
The Chaplet of the Divine Mercy (click here)
Let’s Pray for our PRIESTS!(click here)
__________________________________________________
Call the Parish Office for more inquiries (632)-87356408 or 09457533713 (SMS/Viber)
Email at This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Ut In Omnibus Glorificatus Deus | U.I.O.G.D. | That In All Things God May Be Glorified!
(c) Copyright 2007-2025 | National Shrine Of Saint Jude Thaddeus | Manila, Philippines
















