SUNDAY OF THE TWENTY-EIGHTH WEEK IN ORDINARY TIME (YEAR C)

SAINTS OF THE DAY ~ FEAST DAY: OCTOBER 12, 2025

MEMORIAL OF SAINT FELIX IV, POPE; SAINT WILFRID, BISHOP; BLESSED JEANNE LE BER, RECLUSE AND SAINT CARLO ACUTIS | OCTOBER 12TH | https://dailyreflectionswithphilomena.com/category/saints-of-the-day

(Direct link to the detailed history of Saint Felix IV, Saint Wilfrid, Blessed Jeanne Le Ber, and Saint Carlo Acutis | https://dailyreflectionswithphilomena.com/saints-of-the-day-feast-day-october-12th/)

Watch “Holy Mass with Angelus Presided by Pope Leo XIV | Jubilee of Marian Spirituality | LIVE from the Vatican | October 12, 2025 | https://dailyreflectionswithphilomena.com/catholic-daily-mass-october-12-2025/

LIVE From St. Peter’s Square, Holy Mass of Pope Leo XIV on the occasion of the Jubilee of Marian Spirituality. Afterwards, the recitation of the Angelus.

Watch “Holy Mass and Holy Rosary | EWTN | October 12, 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-12-2025/

GENERAL PRAYERS AND INTENTIONS | PRAYERS FOR PEACE | https://dailyreflectionswithphilomena.com/general-prayers-and-intentions/

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/

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, Sunday of the Twenty-eighth Week in Ordinary Time, we joyfully thank God for the gift of life and for leading us into the month of October. May this 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🙏🏽

Lord Almighty, we lift our hearts in gratitude for Your unfailing love, protection, and mercy that carried us through the past 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🙏🏽

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, Sunday of the Twenty-eighth Week in Ordinary Time | USCCB | https://bible.usccb.org/daily-bible-reading

Today’s Bible Readings: Twenty-eighth Sunday in Ordinary Time | Sunday, October 12, 2025
Reading 1:
2 Kings 5:14–17
Responsorial Psalm: Psalm 98:1, 2–3, 3–4
Reading 2: 2 Timothy 2:8–13
Gospel: Luke 17:11–19

Gospel Reading ~ Luke 17:11–19

“None but this foreigner has returned to give thanks to God; Stand up and go; your faith has saved you.”

“As Jesus continued His journey to Jerusalem, He traveled through Samaria and Galilee. As He was entering a village, ten lepers met Him. They stood at a distance from Him and raised their voices, saying, “Jesus, Master! Have pity on us!” And when He saw them, He said, “Go show yourselves to the priests.” As they were going they were cleansed. And one of them, realizing he had been healed, returned, glorifying God in a loud voice; and he fell at the feet of Jesus and thanked Him. He was a Samaritan. Jesus said in reply, “Ten were cleansed, were they not? Where are the other nine? Has none but this foreigner returned to give thanks to God?” Then He said to him, “Stand up and go; your faith has saved you.”

In today’s Gospel reading, both the prayer of petition and the prayer of thanksgiving are presented to us. Ten lepers approach Jesus and they petition Him, ‘Jesus! Master! Take pity on us’. They had a disease (leprosy) which left them on the margins of society and they desperately wanted their situation to be changed. The Lord responded to their prayer of petition, not by healing them there and then, but by telling them to go to the priests whose role it was to authorize that those who had leprosy were now free of it. Perhaps they were disappointed that Jesus did not heal them there and then, but they did what Jesus asked. They went on their way towards the priests, and along the way they were healed. Reflecting on this, the Lord does not always answer our prayer of petition in the manner or in the time we had hoped, but our prayer does not go unanswered either. If we come before the Lord in our need, He will always respond to us, even if it is not in the way we had hoped. No prayer of petition goes completely unanswered. As Jesus says in the Gospels, ‘Ask and you will receive, seek and you will find, knock and the door will be opened to you’.

According to the Gospel, of the ten lepers, nine of them kept on going after they were healed, probably to head back to their families and friends. Only one of them was so filled with gratitude for the blessing he had received that he ‘turned back praising God at the top of his voice’ and then ‘threw himself at the feet of Jesus and thanked Him’. The other nine must have been absolutely delighted at this wonderful gift of healing that would transform their lives. However, only one of them went beyond the gift to the Giver. Only one of them recognized that the source of this gift was God who had been working powerfully through Jesus to heal them all. That is why he immediately praised God and then went on to thank Jesus. His desperate prayer of petition gave way to a heartfelt prayer of thanksgiving. All ten were people of faith. Otherwise, they would not have approached Jesus for healing, but only one of the ten expressed his faith in the prayer of praise and thanksgiving. According to the Gospel, he was a Samaritan. Even cured of his leprosy, he would still have been considered an outsider. Jews regarded Samaritans as heretics and had great animosity towards them. The least likely person, who was despised even when healthy, was the one who seemed to have a more mature faith than the others. It is often the way that the deepest faith can be found in the most unexpected people. Jesus was clearly disappointed that only one returned to give praise to God. ‘The other nine, where are they? It seems that no one has come back to give praise to God, except this foreigner’.
Clearly Jesus hoped that the blessing all ten received would have brought them closer to God. However, it seems that the great gift they had been given only brought one of them closer to God. Only one of them moved beyond the gift to the Giver. That is what today’s Gospel reading invites us all to do. We can take our blessings for granted and fail to see the presence of the Lord in them. So much of what we value most in life is gift. We don’t earn it or work for it; it is given to us – the beauty of nature, our capacity to see and hear, to walk and speak, the people who enter our lives and grace us in some way. All are gift. We have so much to give thanks for, even when life is a struggle. Whenever we give thanks and praise to the Lord, we grow in our relationship with him and allow ourselves to come closer to the one who is always close to us, who, in the words of today’s second reading, ‘is always faithful’.

Today’s Gospel reveals the transforming power of gratitude and faith. When the Ten lepers were healed, only one, an outsider, a Samaritan, returned to thank Jesus. His gratitude became the gateway to a deeper healing, the healing of his soul. While the other nine received physical restoration, only this grateful man received the fullness of salvation. Gratitude, then, is more than good manners it is a profound act of faith. To thank God is to recognize His mercy, His presence, and His constant love at work in our lives. The Lord desires that we not only receive His blessings but return to Him with thankful hearts, acknowledging that every gift flows from His grace. The Gospel reminds us that faith and gratitude are inseparable. When we remember what God has done for us, our faith deepens. When we give thanks even in trials, our hearts stay open to His saving power. The Samaritan teaches us that no blessing should ever be taken for granted. Every answered prayer, every mercy, every breath is a reason to glorify God. Jesus’ words “Your faith has saved you” invite us to live in constant awareness that salvation itself is God’s greatest gift. We are called to grow into the same vision of faith, exemplified by the Samaritan leper in today’s Gospel reading. It is good to take time to name the ways we have been graced through life, to recognize God as the source of all these gifts, and to lift up our hearts in praise and thanksgiving to God. Our presence at Holy Mass is a wonderful opportunity to do just that. The word ‘Eucharist’ comes from the Greek word for ‘thanksgiving’. At Mass we enter into Jesus’ own prayer of praise and thanksgiving to God. We are caught up into the prayer of the risen Lord. Through Him, with Him and in Him we return thanks to God for all we receive.

In the first reading, Naaman’s story mirrors this theme of humble gratitude. After being healed of leprosy, Naaman acknowledges the true God of Israel and refuses to offer sacrifice to any other. Healing brings him to conversion a new heart that worships God alone. True thanksgiving moves beyond words to a transformed life. Like Naaman, we are called to recognize God’s hand in our renewal and to let our gratitude shape how we live.

The Responsorial Psalm joyfully declares, “The Lord has revealed to the nations His saving power.” It invites us to sing a new song of praise, remembering that God’s faithfulness endures for all generations. Gratitude turns our hearts into instruments of worship, proclaiming God’s glory through our words, actions, and attitudes.

In the second reading, St. Paul reminds Timothy and all of us that even when life brings suffering, “the Word of God is not chained.” Faithfulness in hardship is, in itself, an act of thanksgiving. Paul endures imprisonment with a grateful heart, knowing that Christ’s victory is already won. Gratitude does not deny pain; it redeems it by seeing God’s presence within it.

Beloved in Christ, today’s readings invite us to live with hearts full of gratitude. When we pause to thank God for His countless mercies, we open ourselves to receive even more of His grace. Gratitude transforms ordinary moments into encounters with divine love. Let us not be among the nine who forget, but among the one who remembers, returns, and worships.

As we reflect and meditate on the words of the Sacred Scriptures today, let us ask ourselves: Am I quick to thank God, or do I often take His blessings for granted? Do I allow gratitude to deepen my faith and renew my joy? In moments of trial, can I still see reasons to give thanks? May our hearts, like that of the healed Samaritan, overflow with gratitude that glorifies God and witnesses to His mercy in our lives. May God in His infinite grace and mercy, grant us His grace as we remain steadfast in faith and gratitude and continue to serve Him in spirit and in truth. 🙏🏽

Heavenly Father, we thank You for the gift of life, faith, and healing. Teach us to be like the grateful Samaritan, quick to recognize Your mercy and to return thanks with joyful hearts. Help us never to take Your blessings for granted but to live each day in gratitude and praise. May our thankfulness draw us closer to You and inspire others to glorify Your holy name. Through Christ our Lord. Amen. 🙏🏽

MEMORIAL OF SAINT FELIX IV, POPE; SAINT WILFRID, BISHOP; BLESSED JEANNE LE BER, RECLUSE; AND SAINT CARLO ACUTIS ~ FEAST DAY: OCTOBER 12TH: Today, the Church commemorates four holy witnesses of Christ: Saint Felix IV, Pope (Defender of Grace and Advocate for Church Unity); Saint Wilfrid, Bishop (Apostle of Northumbria and Champion of Roman Orthodoxy); Blessed Jeanne Le Ber, Recluse (Mystic of Eucharistic Adoration and Model of Hidden Holiness); and Saint Carlo Acutis (Millennial Apostle of the Eucharist and Patron of the Digital Age). Through their powerful intercession, and with the maternal care of our Blessed Mother Mary, we pray for peace, unity, and fidelity to Christ in our families, the Church, and the world. May God comfort the sick and dying, especially those battling cancer and terminal illness; console widows, widowers, and the poor; and grant eternal rest to the souls in Purgatory and all the faithful departed. We lift up our Holy Father, Pope Leo XIV, together with all bishops, priests, and religious, asking the Lord to bless His Church with renewed zeal, holiness, and vocations. We pray also for persecuted Christians and for the conversion of sinners throughout the world. Amen. 🙏🏾

Saints of the Day with Daily Reflections | October 12th | https://dailyreflectionswithphilomena.com

( Direct link to the detailed history of Saint Felix IV, Saint Wilfrid, Blessed Jeanne Le Ber, and Saint Carlo Acutis | https://dailyreflectionswithphilomena.com/saints-of-the-day-feast-day-october-12th/)

SAINT FELIX IV, POPE (Died 530): Born in Samnium, Italy, Pope Felix IV served as the 54th Pope from 526 to 530. Chosen with the backing of King Theodoric the Great, he used his brief pontificate to strengthen the Church during turbulent times. Known as the “Definer of Grace,” he upheld the teachings of Saint Augustine and worked against the heresy of Semi-Pelagianism, which denied the necessity of grace for salvation. His theological clarity helped lead to the condemnation of this heresy at the Second Council of Orange (529). Felix also dedicated the ancient Roman temples of Cosmas and Damian to Christian worship, founding the Basilica of Saints Cosmas and Damian the first church in the Roman Forum and home to the earliest known papal portrait. Remembered for his simplicity, humility, and kindness to the poor, Pope Felix IV died peacefully on September 22, 530, and was buried in Saint Peter’s Basilica.

PRAYER: O God, Light and Shepherd of souls, You raised Saint Felix IV to govern Your Church in wisdom and holiness. Through his intercession, guide our leaders in truth and charity, that the flock of Christ may grow in unity and grace. Amen. 🙏🏾

SAINT WILFRID, BISHOP (c. 634–709): Saint Wilfrid of York was a courageous English bishop and missionary who helped align the English Church with Roman customs. Born of noble birth, he was educated at Lindisfarne and later in Rome, where he absorbed the faith and discipline of the universal Church. As Bishop of York, he labored zealously to reform and unify the Church in England, famously defending Roman practice at the Synod of Whitby (664). Despite facing exile and persecution from both civil and ecclesiastical authorities, Wilfrid remained steadfast in faith. During exile, he evangelized the South Saxons and inspired many to conversion. He founded monasteries, trained clergy, and brought Benedictine order to English monastic life. Known for his courage, holiness, and devotion to the Holy See, Saint Wilfrid died peacefully at Ripon in 709. He is the patron saint of Ripon, England.

PRAYER: Heavenly Father, through the steadfast faith of Saint Wilfrid, You strengthened the Church in unity and truth. Grant that we, too, may remain faithful amid trials and proclaim Your Gospel with courage. Amen. 🙏🏾

BLESSED JEANNE LE BER, RECLUSE (1662–1714): Blessed Jeanne Le Ber of Montreal, Canada, was a woman of deep prayer and Eucharistic love. Born into a prominent family, she felt called from a young age to a hidden life of union with Christ. Turning from worldly comforts, she made vows of perpetual seclusion, chastity, and poverty, living as a recluse in a cell behind the altar of the Hôtel-Dieu chapel, where she could adore the Blessed Sacrament daily. She lived in silence, prayer, and manual labor, creating vestments and altar cloths for the Church. Her life of simplicity and intercession became a source of grace for her community. She supported the Sisters of the Congrégation de Notre-Dame and inspired devotion to the Eucharist throughout New France. Jeanne died in 1714, venerated as a Canadian mystic and model of contemplative love.

PRAYER: Lord Jesus, You revealed to Blessed Jeanne Le Ber the beauty of solitude in Your presence. Through her example, teach us to find joy in prayer, silence, and adoration, that our hearts may rest always in You. Amen. 🙏🏾

SAINT CARLO ACUTIS (1991–2006): Saint Carlo Acutis, canonized by Pope Leo XIV on September 7, 2025, is the first millennial saint and a shining witness that holiness is attainable in the digital age. Born in London and raised in Milan, Carlo developed an intense love for the Eucharist, calling it his “highway to Heaven.” From childhood, he attended daily Mass, prayed the Rosary, and practiced charity toward the poor. A gifted computer programmer, he used his talents to create a website cataloging Eucharistic miracles from around the world, making devotion to the Real Presence accessible to millions. Despite his youth, Carlo lived with profound faith and simplicity, reminding others that “we are all born originals, but many die as photocopies.” When diagnosed with leukemia at 15, he offered his suffering for the Pope and the Church, saying, “I am happy to die because I lived my life without wasting even a minute of it on anything unpleasing to God.” He died in Assisi on October 12, 2006, and his incorrupt body lies there as a testimony of sanctity in modern times. Declared Blessed in 2020 and canonized as Saint Carlo Acutis in 2025, he is now venerated as Patron of the Internet, Computer Programmers, and Youth.

PRAYER: O God, who gave Saint Carlo Acutis a youthful heart ablaze with love for the Eucharist, grant that through his intercession we may use the gifts of technology and creativity for Your glory and the salvation of souls. Amen. 🙏🏾

Our Blessed Mother Mary, Saint Felix IV, Saint Wilfrid, Blessed Jeanne Le Ber, and Saint Carlo Acutis — 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: Heavenly Father, we come before You in gratitude for the countless blessings You pour upon us each day. Just as Naaman was healed through obedience and faith, and the Samaritan leper returned to give thanks, we lift our hearts in thanksgiving for Your mercy and love. We pray for the grace to recognize Your saving power at work in our lives and to respond with humility and gratitude. Strengthen the faith of those who feel forgotten or distant from You, and heal the wounds of the sick, the poor, and the brokenhearted. Bless our Holy Father, Pope Leo XIV, all bishops, priests, and religious, that they may continue to guide Your people in truth and holiness. We entrust to You families burdened by hardship, the unemployed seeking meaningful work, and young people discerning their purpose in life. Through the intercession of Saint Felix IV, Saint Wilfrid, Blessed Jeanne Le Ber, and Saint Carlo Acutis, may our hearts burn with love for You and our lives become living testimonies of Your saving grace. We pray for the conversion of sinners, peace in our world, and the eternal rest of all who have died in Your friendship. Amen. 🙏🏽

LET US PRAY:

Most merciful Lord, You are able to do all things. You are able to heal all my wounds, forgive my sins and solve every problem I encounter. As I cry out to You in my need, please do heal me. In response, may I always turn back to You with the deepest gratitude and praise so that my faith in You will grow and my love for You will truly flourish. Jesus, I trust in You. Amen 🙏🏽

Lord Jesus Christ, You healed the lepers and restored them to fullness of life; heal us, too, from the leprosy of ingratitude and indifference. Grant us hearts that remember to give thanks for every mercy received. May Your Word remain alive in us as we walk in faith, persevere in trials, and serve You with joy. Through the example of Your saints who loved You above all things, teach us to see Your hand in every blessing and to proclaim Your glory among the nations. We ask this through Christ our Lord. Amen. 🙏🏽

Save Us, Savior of the World. Our Blessed, Saint Felix IV, Saint Wilfrid, Blessed Jeanne Le Ber, and Saint Carlo Acutis ~ 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 Sunday and week ahead, 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 |

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