MONDAY OF THE TWENTY-SEVENTH WEEK IN ORDINARY TIME
SAINTS OF THE DAY ~ FEAST DAY: OCTOBER 6, 2025

MEMORIAL OF SAINT BRUNO, PRIEST AND BLESSED MARIE ROSE DUROCHER, VIRGIN | OCTOBER 6TH | https://dailyreflectionswithphilomena.com/category/saints-of-the-day
(Direct link to the detailed history of Saint Bruno and Blessed Marie Rose Durocher | https://dailyreflectionswithphilomena.com/saints-of-the-day-feast-day-october-6th/ )
Watch “Holy Mass and Holy Rosary | EWTN | October 6, 2025 | “Holy Mass from the National Shrine of the Divine Mercy” | Pray “Holy Rosary Novena From Lourdes” | Pray “The Chaplet of Divine Mercy in song from the National Shrine of the Divine Mercy” | https://dailyreflectionswithphilomena.com/catholic-daily-mass-october-6-2025/
OCTOBER IS MONTH OF THE HOLY ROSARY | THE HOLY ROSARY: WHAT IS THE HOLY ROSARY AND WHY DO WE PRAY THE HOLY ROSARY? | https://dailyreflectionswithphilomena.com/2024/11/21/the-holy-rosary-what-is-the-holy-rosary-and-why-do-we-pray-the-holy-rosary/
Memorial of Our Lady of the Rosary | October 7th
JUBILEE OF HOPE 2025: JUBILEE PRAYER | Link to the prayer of the Jubilee of Hope 2025 | https://dailyreflectionswithphilomena.com/2025/01/08/the-jubilee-prayer/
Daily Reflections with Philomena | https://dailyreflectionswithphilomena.com/
Greetings and blessings, beloved family!
Today, Monday of the Twenty-seventh Week in Ordinary Time, we joyfully thank God for the gift of life and for leading us into the new month of October. May this new month bring us God’s blessings, peace, and joy in abundance. We pray for eternal repose of our loved ones who recently passed. May this month bring peace to troubled hearts, direction to the lost, comfort to the grieving, and strength to the weary. In all things, may His will be done and His name be glorified. Amen🙏🏽
THANKING GOD FOR THE GIFT OF LIFE! | CELEBRATING LIFE; HONORING LEGACY | https://gliopiepehe.org/posts/celebrating-life-honoring-legacy
“I praise you because I am fearfully and wonderfully made; your works are wonderful, I know that full well.” ~ Psalm 139:14
“Oh give thanks to the LORD, for He is good; His love endures forever.” ~ Psalm 107:1
On this special day of mine, I thank God Almighty for the gift of life. I celebrate life while honoring the memory of my precious, elegant grandmother, MAMA WILLIANA NMEBE EYUAH, who recently passed on to eternal glory!
Lovingly known as Mama Ghana… the Iron Lady, Iron Girl, Sherry Coco!
Forever my fashionista Iron Lady, you remain in my heart. I love you deeply and will miss you always. 💕🙏🏽
Today, as I mark another year of life, I also celebrate you, my Guardian Angel.
Please take a moment to pray with me for those in need and in honor of my late grandmother. If you wish, kindly donate to any of the following charitable organizations or any charity of your choice.
Arlington Life Homeless Shelter (USA) | https://arlingtonlifeshelter.org
Divine Providence Orphanage, Monaya, Ogoja, Cross River State, Nigeria
Sir G.L.I Opiepe’s Health and Education Foundation.Okpoma-Yala, Cross River State, Nigeria | https://gliopiepehe.org
“WHOEVER IS KIND TO THE POOR IS LENDING TO THE LORD THE BENEFIT OF HIS GIFT WILL RETURN TO HIM IN ABUNDANCE” AMEN! ~ PSALM 19:17
For Daily Reflections Visit: | https://dailyreflectionswithphilomena.com
Lord Almighty, we lift our hearts in gratitude for Your unfailing love, protection, and mercy that carried us through the past month. As we begin this new month, we entrust every day into Your hands, asking for Your blessings, guidance, and peace in our lives and families. May October be for us a season of renewed faith, deeper hope, and overflowing joy. We pray especially for all families, for children, parents, and teachers, that they may be strengthened and protected. Bless those who will celebrate birthdays, anniversaries, new opportunities, and milestones this month, and comfort those who enter October with heavy hearts or struggles. Lord, go before us, walk beside us, and remain with us always, now and forever. Amen🙏🏽
On this special feast day, through the intercession of the Saint(s) we celebrate today, we humbly pray for the poor, abandoned, and those in need, for all those who are marginalized in our society. For those who are imprisoned, especially those who are unjustly imprisoned. We pray for charitable organizations, asking God’s blessing upon their mission and we lift our prayers for peace, love, justice and unity in our families, marriages and our world. May God protect us all and keep us safe and united in peace, love and faith. Amen 🙏🏽
Through the intercession of our Blessed Mother Mary on this special Feast day, we lift our prayers for the protection, safety and well-being of missionaries, pilots, and all travelers. We ask for healing for the sick and dying, especially those who are suffering from cancers and other terminal diseases, strength for the weary, peace in troubled homes, and provision for all in need. Guide our steps in righteousness, protect us from harm, and fill our hearts with faith, joy, and gratitude. May this month draw us closer to Your will, and may every day be a testimony of Your goodness and mercy in our lives. We begin this month with trust in Your unfailing love, Lord, and we surrender all that lies ahead into Your hands. Amen 🙏🏾
We continue to pray for the Church, the Clergy, our Holy Father, Pope Leo XIV, the Cardinals, Bishops, all Priests, that they be sanctified in their ministry to God’s people. We pray for persecuted Christians, for the conversion of sinners, and Christians all over the world suffering from political and religious unrest.
Through the intercession of St. Joseph, we pray for all fathers, mothers, workers, and all those who labor in this world. May the Lord bless the work of their hands, and may God’s grace and mercy be with us all during this season of Ordinary Time. Wishing us all and our loved ones a joyful, peaceful, and grace-filled month of October. 🙏🏽
We remember in prayer all who began this journey of life with us but are no longer here. We pray for the gentle repose of the souls of our loved ones who recently passed away, and we continue to pray for the souls in Purgatory; lost souls. For the repose of the souls of all the faithful departed, may the Lord receive them into the light of Eternal Kingdom.
“Blessed are those who mourn, for they shall be comforted” ~ Matthew 5:4
PRAYER FOR THE DEAD: In your hands, O Lord, we humbly entrust our brothers and sisters. In this life, you embraced them with your tender love; deliver them now from every evil, and bid them eternal rest. The old order has passed away: welcome them into paradise, where there will be no sorrow, no weeping or pain, but fullness of peace and joy with your Son and the Holy Spirit forever and ever. Amen🙏🏽
“Precious in the sight of the LORD is the death of His Saints.” ~ Psalm 116:15
Eternal rest grant unto them, O Lord. And let perpetual light shine upon them. May their gentle souls through the mercy of God rest in perfect peace with our Lord Jesus Christ… Amen 🙏🏽 ✝️🕯✝️🕯✝️🕯
LIST OF ALL NOVENAS | Month of October | https://dailyreflectionswithphilomena.com/list-of-all-novenas-october/
COMMON CATHOLIC PRAYERS | https://dailyreflectionswithphilomena.com/common-catholic-prayers/
SCRIPTURE REFLECTIONS:
Bible Readings for today’s Holy Mass, Monday of the Twenty-seventh Week in Ordinary Time | USCCB | https://bible.usccb.org/daily-bible-reading
Today’s Bible Readings: Monday of the Twenty-seventh Week in Ordinary Time | October 6, 2025
Reading 1: Jonah 1:1–2:1-2, 11
Responsorial Psalm: Jonah 2:3, 4, 5, 8
Gospel: Luke 10:25–37
Gospel Reading ~ Luke 10:25–37
“Who is my neighbor?; You shall love the Lord, your God, with all your heart, with all your being, with all your strength, and with all your mind, and your neighbor as yourself.’
“There was a scholar of the law who stood up to test Jesus and said, “Teacher, what must I do to inherit eternal life?” Jesus said to him, “What is written in the law? How do you read it?” He said in reply, “You shall love the Lord, your God, with all your heart, with all your being, with all your strength, and with all your mind, and your neighbor as yourself.” He replied to him, “You have answered correctly; do this and you will live.” But because he wished to justify himself, he said to Jesus, “And who is my neighbor?” Jesus replied, “A man fell victim to robbers as he went down from Jerusalem to Jericho. They stripped and beat him and went off leaving him half-dead. A priest happened to be going down that road, but when he saw him, he passed by on the opposite side. Likewise a Levite came to the place, and when he saw him, he passed by on the opposite side. But a Samaritan traveler who came upon him was moved with compassion at the sight. He approached the victim, poured oil and wine over his wounds and bandaged them. Then he lifted him up on his own animal, took him to an inn, and cared for him. The next day he took out two silver coins and gave them to the innkeeper with the instruction, ‘Take care of him. If you spend more than what I have given you, I shall repay you on my way back.’ Which of these three, in your opinion, was neighbor to the robbers’ victim?” He answered, “The one who treated him with mercy.” Jesus said to him, “Go and do likewise.”
In today’s Gospel reading, a lawyer asks Jesus two very important questions. He first asked Jesus, ‘What must I do to inherit eternal life?’ He then went on to ask Him, ‘Who is my neighbor?’ It was in response to that second question that Jesus tells the parable of the good Samaritan. Yet, that parable doesn’t really answer the question, ‘Who is my neighbor?’ It answers another question, the question Jesus asks at the end of the parable, ‘Which of these three proved himself a neighbor?’ Jesus is suggesting that it is more important to be a neighbor to others than to be trying to work out ‘who is my neighbor?’ The answer to the lawyer’s first question, ‘What must I do to inherit eternal life?’ is ‘Be a neighbor’. The true neighbour does not ask the question ‘Who is my neighbor?’ The priest and Levite represent religious indifference, they see suffering but pass by. The Samaritan didn’t ask whether the broken man by the roadside was a Jew or a Samaritan or a pagan; he was a fellow human being in need, and that was all that mattered. The Samaritan, moved with mercy, crosses boundaries of prejudice and inconvenience to care for a stranger. His love is not theoretical; it is practical and sacrificial.
The Samaritan is a Jesus-figure. Jesus revealed God’s compassionate love to all in need, whether they were Jews, Samaritans or Gentiles. When Jesus says at the end of the parable, ‘Go and do likewise’, He is calling on us to become His compassionate presence to others, especially to those most in need, regardless of who they are.
Jesus teaches us that eternal life is found in loving God with all our being and loving others as ourselves. True discipleship is measured not by religious status or ritual, but by mercy shown to those in need. To love as Jesus loves is to see the suffering of others and to respond with compassion, even when it costs us something. “Go and do likewise” is a call to live mercy daily, to bind wounds, offer kindness, and make space for the stranger.
Reflecting deeper on the Gospel reading, ‘What does it mean to be a neighbor?’ That was the question Jesus Himself asked at the end of the parable, ‘Which of these three proved Himself a neighbor?’ Jesus implies that it is more important to be a neighbor than to ask ‘Who is my neighbor?’ The real neighbor doesn’t draw a distinction between those who are neighbors and those who are not. The real neighbor treats everyone in need as a neighbor, regardless of who they are, just as the Samaritan treated the broken traveller who was presumably a Jew as his neighbor. The lawyer was anxious to draw distinctions, ‘Who is my neighbor and who is not?’ Jesus, like the Samaritan, did not draw distinctions. He gave Himself equally to all, whether they were Jews, Samaritans or pagans. He calls on His followers to do the same. We are to give expression to God’s compassionate presence to everyone without discrimination. In telling this story, Jesus was showing us that the path to life is to give life to others, including those we would normally regard as alien and hostile. He was also suggesting that it is often those we might dismiss, for whatever reason, who can reveal His own life-giving presence most powerfully.
In the first reading, Jonah’s story reminds us of the futility of running away from God’s call. When Jonah flees, a storm arises, revealing that disobedience disrupts not only our peace but the peace of others around us. Yet, even in Jonah’s failure, God’s mercy prevails. The great fish that swallows Jonah is not punishment, but a place of transformation, a womb of grace where Jonah’s heart begins to change. In the depths of despair, Jonah remembers the Lord and prays, and God delivers him. This reading teaches that no matter how far we drift or resist God’s will, His mercy still pursues us. When life’s storms surround us, God’s hand is not far. Like Jonah, we are invited to trust His plan and rise again to fulfill our mission.
Reflecting on the Responsorial Psalm, “You will rescue my life from the pit, O Lord.” The psalm is a song of deliverance, a confession that God’s mercy rescues us from despair. In moments when we feel overwhelmed by life’s currents, our prayers still reach God’s holy temple. He listens from the depths, turning our cries into praise. The psalm teaches us that prayer offered from the heart, even from the darkest places, is never in vain. God always hears, and in His time, He rescues.
As we reflect and meditate on the words of the Sacred Scriptures today, we might ask ourselves, Do I see my neighbor in the wounded and forgotten, or do I pass by like the priest and Levite? Have I ever resisted God’s call like Jonah, trying to flee from responsibility or compassion? When life’s storms arise, do I remember to call on the Lord, trusting that His mercy will lift me from the pit? Am I willing to love others with mercy even when it interrupts my plans or challenges my comfort? Beloved in Christ, today’s readings call us to a faith that is both obedient and compassionate, a faith that listens to God’s call like Jonah, trusts His mercy in the storm, and lives out love through concrete acts of kindness. The parable of the Good Samaritan reminds us that true religion is not confined to words or rituals but revealed in mercy and service. Every encounter with a person in need is an invitation to encounter Christ Himself. Let us not turn away from the wounded we meet each day in our homes, communities, and workplaces, but respond with the same compassion that moved the Samaritan. May we allow God’s mercy to transform our hearts so that, strengthened by faith and guided by love, we may “go and do likewise,” bringing healing, hope, and light to a hurting world. May God in His infinite grace and mercy, grant us His grace as we remain steadfast in faith and continue to serve Him in spirit and in truth.🙏🏽
Loving Father, You call us to love You with all our hearts and to love our neighbor without condition. Give us hearts like the Good Samaritan, compassionate, courageous, and ready to act. When we are tempted to turn away from those in need, stir within us the grace to serve with mercy. Rescue us, Lord, when we fall into selfishness or fear, and renew our faith like Jonah’s, trusting Your mercy even in the storm. May Your Spirit guide our hearts to see You in every person we meet. Through Christ our Lord. Amen. 🙏🏽
MEMORIAL OF SAINT BRUNO, PRIEST; AND BLESSED MARIE ROSE DUROCHER, VIRGIN ~ FEAST DAY: OCTOBER 6TH: Today, the Church honors two humble and luminous witnesses of Christ: Saint Bruno, Priest (Founder of the Carthusian Order and Patron against diabolic possession), and Blessed Marie Rose Durocher, Virgin (Foundress of the Sisters of the Holy Names of Jesus and Mary, Patron of bodily ills, loss of parents, and frail health). Their lives remind us of the power of prayer, humility, and steadfast devotion to God’s will. Through their intercession, and with the help of our Blessed Mother Mary, we lift our hearts to God in prayer, for the sick and dying, especially those battling cancer, mental illness, and terminal diseases; for the poor, widows, and orphans; for the souls in Purgatory and the faithful departed; for peace and unity in families and in our world. We pray for the Holy Father, Pope Leo XIV, for bishops, priests, and all consecrated religious, asking for an increase in holy vocations and fidelity to God’s call. We also remember persecuted Christians, the conversion of sinners, and all who seek God’s mercy and grace. Amen. 🙏🏾
Saints of the Day with Daily Reflections | October 6th https://dailyreflectionswithphilomena.com
(Direct link to the detailed history of Saint Bruno and Blessed Marie Rose Durocher | https://dailyreflectionswithphilomena.com/saints-of-the-day-feast-day-october-6th/ )
SAINT BRUNO, PRIEST (1030–1101): Saint Bruno of Cologne was born into a noble family in Germany around the year 1030. A brilliant scholar, philosopher, and theologian, he became head of the cathedral school of Reims, where he trained many future leaders of the Church, including Pope Urban II. Yet, despite his success, Bruno longed for a deeper communion with God in silence and solitude. Around 1084, he withdrew with six companions into the remote Chartreuse Mountains in France, where he founded the Carthusian Order a community blending the solitude of hermits with the shared rhythm of monastic prayer. Bruno’s life was marked by humility, austerity, and wisdom. Even when called from solitude by Pope Urban II to serve as his counselor during a time of great turmoil, Bruno obeyed with humility but refused high ecclesiastical honors, including an offer to become bishop. He later founded another monastery at La Torre in Calabria, Italy, where he lived out his final years in prayer and penance.
Saint Bruno’s legacy endures through the Carthusian Order—renowned for its silence, simplicity, and complete devotion to God. The monks’ lives of hidden prayer and sacrifice continue to be a spiritual powerhouse for the Church. Bruno’s motto, “Stat crux dum volvitur orbis” (“The Cross stands firm while the world turns”), reflects his enduring witness: that amid the chaos of the world, Christ’s Cross remains our unshakable center. He died peacefully on October 6, 1101, at the age of seventy-one, and his holiness was formally recognized by the Church in 1514.
QUOTES OF SAINT BRUNO
☆”By your work you show what you love and what you know.”
☆”The cross is steady while the world is turning.” “While the world changes, the cross stands firm.”
☆”For when the unclean spirit is gone out of a man, he walketh through places without water, seeking rest; and not finding. . .”
☆”For the devil may tempt the good, but he cannot find rest in them; for he is shaken violently, and upset, and driven out, now by their prayers, now by their tears of repentance, and now by their almsgiving and similar good works.”
PRAYER: O God, You called Saint Bruno to serve You in solitude and contemplation. Through his intercession, grant that amidst the noise and distractions of our world, we may find time to listen to Your voice in silence and live faithfully in Your presence. Through Christ our Lord. Amen. 🙏🏾
BLESSED MARIE ROSE DUROCHER, VIRGIN (1811–1849): Blessed Marie Rose, born Eulalie Durocher in Quebec, Canada, on October 6, 1811, was the tenth of eleven children in a devout Catholic family. Though drawn to religious life from an early age, her fragile health prevented her from joining an established order. Instead, she devoted herself to parish work, serving as housekeeper to her priest-brother and forming a sodality for young women to nurture their faith. In 1843, inspired by Bishop Ignace Bourget, she founded the Sisters of the Holy Names of Jesus and Mary, a congregation dedicated to the Christian education of youth, especially the poor and neglected. Despite immense hardship, poverty, and misunderstanding, she remained steadfast in her mission, guiding her community with wisdom, gentleness, and unwavering trust in God.
Blessed Marie Rose’s compassion flowed from deep prayer and a burning love for the Eucharist. Her short life—only thirty-eight years, was spent entirely for the glory of God and the good of souls. She once said, “Let us pray, let us suffer, and let us trust.” Those words summarize her saintly spirit—a woman of endurance, serenity, and deep faith. Beatified by Pope John Paul II in 1982, she continues to inspire educators, caregivers, and all who serve in love.
QUOTES OF BLESSED MARIE ROSE DUROCHER
☆”Let us pray, let us suffer and let us trust”
☆”To a novice leaving religious life, Marie-Rose said: “Do not imitate those persons who, after having spent a few months as postulant or novice in a community, dress differently, even ludicrously. You are returning to the secular state. My advice is, follow the styles of the day, but from afar, as it were.”
PRAYER: O Lord, You enkindled in the heart of Blessed Marie Rose Durocher a flame of ardent charity and a deep desire to educate Your children in faith. Grant, through her intercession, that we may be filled with that same charity and zeal to lead others to the joy of eternal life. Through Christ our Lord. Amen. 🙏🏾
Our Blessed Mother Mary, Saint Bruno, and Blessed Marie Rose Durocher ~ Pray for us. 🙏🏾
GENERAL PRAYERS AND INTENTIONS | https://dailyreflectionswithphilomena.com/general-prayers-and-intentions/
Please find below links to the websites for Daily Reflections, Foundation, and interesting topics and articles about our Catholic faith and doctrines | https://dailyreflectionswithphilomena.com/2025/01/30/daily-reflections-and-prayer-links/
THE POPE’S MONTHLY INTENTIONS FOR 2025: FOR THE MONTH OF OCTOBER: For collaboration between different religious traditions. Let us pray that believers in different religious traditions might work together to defend and promote peace, justice and human fraternity.
(https://popesprayerusa.net/popes-intentions/)
DEVOTION OF THE MONTH OF OCTOBER | MONTH OF THE HOLY ROSARY: October is dedicated to the Most Holy Rosary, a powerful prayer that draws us into the heart of the Gospel through the eyes of Mary. The Rosary is more than repetition, it is a meditation on the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ, united with the loving presence of His Blessed Mother. As Pope St. John Paul II reminded us, the Rosary is “a compendium of the Gospel,” helping us to contemplate Christ’s face with Mary.
The twenty mysteries of the Rosary, Joyful, Sorrowful, Glorious, and Luminous, invite us to journey with Christ from His Incarnation to His Passion and His triumph over death. Each mystery opens us to God’s saving love, strengthens our faith, and leads us to imitate the virtues of Jesus and Mary in our daily lives. This month, the Church invites us to renew our devotion to the Rosary by praying it daily, whether alone, in families, or in community. Through it, we find peace in times of trial, strength against temptation, and deeper trust in God’s providence. Mary, Queen of the Holy Rosary, intercedes for us and leads us always to her Son.
“O Mary, our Blessed Mother and Queen of the Most Holy Rosary, teach us to pray with a pure heart and a steadfast spirit. As we meditate on the mysteries of Christ, help us to grow in faith, hope, and love. Intercede for us before your Son, that our families, our Church, and our world may be filled with peace and the light of the Gospel. Amen.” 🙏🏽
https://www.catholicculture.org/culture/library/view.cfm?recnum=12540
THE HOLY ROSARY: WHAT IS THE HOLY ROSARY AND WHY DO WE PRAY THE HOLY ROSARY? | https://dailyreflectionswithphilomena.com/2024/11/21/the-holy-rosary-what-is-the-holy-rosary-and-why-do-we-pray-the-holy-rosary/
PRAYER INTENTIONS: As we reflect on the story of Jonah’s call to conversion and the parable of the Good Samaritan, we are reminded that God’s mercy knows no bounds and that love of neighbor is the true measure of faith. Through the intercession of Saint Bruno, who sought silence and contemplation to deepen his union with God, and Blessed Marie Rose Durocher, who dedicated her life to Christian education and service to the poor, we pray for hearts that are open to God’s will and ready to act with compassion. We pray for those who feel lost, disobedient, or far from God’s mercy, that they may find the courage to turn back to Him. We remember the poor, the sick, the lonely, and all who suffer injustice or neglect. We pray for educators and spiritual leaders who guide others in faith, that their example may inspire generosity and holiness. We lift up our Holy Father, Pope Leo XIV, all bishops, priests, and religious, that they may serve with wisdom and humility. May peace reign in our homes, our Church, and our world, and may we never pass by a suffering neighbor without offering love and help. Amen. 🙏🏾
LET US PRAY:
My deep and wise Lord, You and You alone have every answer to life. You and You alone can reveal to me all that I need to know in life so as to achieve holiness and fulfillment. Please open my heart so that I can come to You with humility and sincerity, open to all that You wish to reveal to me. Jesus, I trust in You. Amen🙏🏽
Loving and Merciful God, You call us to love You with all our heart and to love our neighbor as ourselves. Strengthen in us the spirit of mercy and compassion, that we may not turn away from those in need but serve them with joyful hearts. Through the quiet faith of Saint Bruno and the charitable zeal of Blessed Marie Rose Durocher, teach us to unite prayer with action, contemplation with service, and love with sacrifice. Help us to seek Your presence in silence, to listen to Your voice in our hearts, and to reflect Your goodness in our daily lives. We ask this through Christ our Lord. Amen. 🙏🏾
Save Us, Savior of the World. Our Blessed Saint Bruno, and Blessed Marie Rose Durocher ~ Pray for us 🙏🏾
Sacred Heart of Jesus, I place all my trust in you. Immaculate Heart of Mary, Pray for us. Amen 🙏🏽
Thanking God for the precious gift of this new day, and during this gentle rhythm of Ordinary Time, may our hearts remain open to the quiet working of the Holy Spirit who continues to guide, renew, and strengthen us each day. As we begin this new month of October, we lift our hearts in gratitude for the blessings of the past and entrust the days ahead into God’s loving hands. May this month be filled with hope, safety, and the quiet joy that comes from knowing that Christ walks with us always. Alleluia! Have a blessed, safe, grace-filled and fruitful Monday, and a fulfilling month of October. 🙏🏽
Blessings and Love always, Philomena 💖
Daily Reflections with Philomena | https://dailyreflectionswithphilomena.com/
Sir G.L.I Opiepe’s Health and Education Foundation | https://gliopiepehe.org
Sir G.L.I Opiepe’s Health and Education Foundation | Global Missions Now Awards |
https://youtu.be/gB31nuOFx0A?si=mSoZs-wiByhGs
North Texas Catholic Magazine | Dr. Philomena Ikowe – Life on Purpose (pages 44-45) | https://www.flipsnack.com/A9DFE877C6F/north-texas-catholic-magazine-mar-apr-issue-2025/full-view.html