Holy Gardens Funeral and Chapel Service

Holy Gardens Funeral and Chapel Service

Thursday, November 6, 2025

The chapel and funeral service serves as the more important addition to your memorial service package









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The  chapel and funeral service serves as the more important addition
to your memorial service package

Holy Gardens group which has been known to offer memorable one of kind
interment service completes the entire memorialization package by adding among
its offering funeral and chapel services

We have been around for the last 36 years, and we have chapel facilities, with family rooms
 in Calamba, Pangasinan,and  Morong,  and Oton so that you do not look for such services elsewhere.    One place to purchase your lot, interment and funeral service.  Isa na lang kausap.   One stop shop   We offer the latest: karuwahe, family car (NV350) * electronic tribute, obituary and dove release among others.   
*not yet available in Oton

In case somebody joins the Lord soon, contact call us (at the bottom of the page).  Other funeral services have no places of interment - WE HAVE -  our advantage.


PM us now        




Our C3  Vision:   Chapel Services, Crematorium and Columbarium for the next five years

For the chapel:  quality services and yet affordable for the majority of our plot buyers and the community.We only deliver what we can and over extend resulting in poor service

   The current pain:     Families when they canvass for the best service are often lured into
   expensive packages by sweet talking funeral directors,  And since most are home services, the families home security is compromised not to mention the hassle and heat of going around the town for the funeral procession.   Viewing in a chapel is a better choice:  with family rooms, with Aircon, wide parking and easy access by relatives

   Pleasure with Holy Gardens Chapel and Funeral Service

       1. Funeral pack
       2.  Free obits
       3.  Dove release
       4. Music
       5.  Free family car
       6.  Free use of karuwahe depending on the package of lot

 We are in this business because we want to reduce the grief of those who are in need.  Holy Gardens
                                   Helping in the Grief of Many People  (HGMP)

          Your Assurance
Holy Gardens Memorial Park group  has been around for 36 years, with 7 branches of memorial parks all over the Philippines.  We have called ourselves memorial parks.    We are venturing into this after realizing that funeral service is an important aspect of service to be provided to the public if we are to fulfill our mandate of Helping in the Grief of Many People.  We have enough resources, equipment and finances to deliver this service properly.  If for any reason you are not satisfied with our service, we would discount the package and or even refund if necessary


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You can contact me if you problem with our service 09089287888
  My personal assurance.  I answer many pm (not kuya Kim)


Our Partners

Caskets


1, St Joseph Caskets

Banks:

1.  Metrobank

2.  BDO

3. RCBC savings


Insurance:

1. Grepalife and Sun Life (the largest life insurance company in the Philippines)

2. Malayan Insurance (the largest non life insurance company in the Philippines)

      
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Our Offerings:

Top of the line  SUPER LUXURY (SL)

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Luxury
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De Luxe

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    Benefits/Features

   1.  Free pick up for 25 km radius

   2. First call

   3. Standards for embalming and mortuary service

   4.  Preferred customer service:

     1.  Funeral pack
     2.  Music
     3.  Dove release
     4.  Free on line obituaries
     5.  Tributes



    Contact, PM text inquire now:
              SBU                                      Number          Contact Person
       Holy Gardens Pangasinan         0956 391 2000      Roshel
                                                                         

      Holy Gardens Calamba         0927 875 3000         Veron

      Holy Angels Memorial          0917 822 1110         Mary Joy

      Holy Gardens Oton                0917 118 8924         Aprilyn

        Or DM

Tuesday, October 26, 2021

Holy Gardens PH contacts

  1.   San Fernando La Union                        +63933 861 1771               launion@holygardens.ph


     

      2.   San Carlos City, Pangasinan                 +63956 391 2000               sancarlos@holygardens.ph 


      3.  Malasiqui, Pangasinan

    

      4.   Barandal,  Calamba City                         +63927 875 3000               calamba@holygardens.ph

      

     5.   Taghangin, ,Morong  Rizal                    +63917 822 1110                admin@holygardens.ph


      6.   Calapan, Oriental Mindoro                   +63917 305 7025               calapan@holygardens.ph


      7.   Oton, Iloilo                                           +63917 118 8924                oton@holygardens.ph

Wednesday, November 27, 2019

Creative memorial service ideas - Celebration of life, not death


Rizal Philippines
November 18, 2019


How to Plan a Celebration of Life Memorial Instead of a Funeral: A Practical, Step-by-Step Guide to Planning A Respectful and Loving Memorial Service

From Hub Pages

How?  We at Holy  Gardens are doing this ( and sometimes being neglected too)


Personalized and unique memorial services are replacing traditional ceremonies, which typically honor loved ones with solemn rituals. Nowadays, families and friends want to focus on values and character and not follow an accustomed order of service. If given the task of planning such an event, these unique memorial service ideas can help you prepare for that big day.

Making the Memorial Service Unique

Memorial services are an important part of the grieving process, so it's best to make them meaningful. This is typically done by personalizing the entire ceremony, from the setting to the theme. You can make the service unique by:
  • Choosing a special location: The memorial service's setting is key to establishing the entire mood of the ceremony. For instance, those services held in a church or similar building are more traditional as opposed to memorials held at a park or golf course. Alternative settings for a memorial service include sports field, art gallery, beach or any other place that was of importance to the person who died. Remember that the place you choose has to fit in line with everything else you want to offer at the memorial service including the number of guests, available parking and whether you are serving a meal.

  • Selecting a proper time and date: Because you can expect some guests to come in from out-of-town, the time and date of the memorial service will influence how many people actually attend. A memorial service held only a few days after your loved one died will typically have less non-local attendees than those held a few weeks out. The juncture will also decide the venue's size. Weekend memorial services serve working families and those from out-of-town better than those held on weekdays. Make it unique by holding the ceremony at sunset, with its conclusion right at twilight.
  • Choosing a personalized theme: This is tricky or easy, depending on how well you know the deceased person. The theme allows guests to truly focus on their loved one and remember details about his or her life. For instance, if he or she was a member of the military, display items related to that branch of service. If the deceased person loved sports, tout his or her personal memorabilia on the subject. You can even design a memorial program that fits a specific theme as well. Besides memorials, these types of themes are also common at similar Celebration of Life services.
  • Determining readings and music: Make this event memorable by selecting readings and music that the deceased person favored such as poetry or religious scripture and classical or country music. Personalize the service by having guests read or sing songs, do special dances or even act out a scene from your loved one's favorite Broadway play or movie. A copy of the songs and readings should also become a part of the memorial program.
  • Using photographs and slideshows: This is one of the most common memorial service ideas. Display poster boards with various images of the deceased person's life or have photo albums set out on tables. A music and video montage of your loved one's life is oftentimes encouraged. Make the service special by giving each guest a DVD copy of all the photographs or videos presented.



Saturday, November 23, 2019

Funeral Etiquette - Do you know them, observe them

Rizal Philippines
November 18, 2019


Unspoken funeral etiquette to observe

Funeral Etiquette Infographic.


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Unspoken funeral etiquette to observe

Tips when transacting with a Funeral Director; how he/she can help you?

Rizal Philippines
November 18, 2019

From funeral wise. What do in case of death. Tips

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When a friend or loved one dies or death is expected to take place soon, there are many details to take care of. This can be a very stressful time. You are grieving and may have assumed a great responsibility by taking on the task of making funeral arrangements for someone you care about. The following information will make this difficult time easier for you.
We’ll take you through the steps of arranging a funeral — from making the first calls when someone dies to taking care of the financial and administrative matters that have to be handled following the funeral. If a death has already taken place and you have not yet begun to make notifications, visit our First Call page. This page has information that can help you understand what steps you need to take right away.
In addition to the information on the steps to planning a funeral that you see below, we’ve included links to our Funeral Planning Forms and Worksheets  and our Wise Planning System. These valuable tools can help make arranging a funeral and managing funeral costs much easier by guiding you through the necessary steps.

Steps in the Funeral Planning Process

  1. First Calls

    Make the “first calls” to notify the appropriate parties and have the deceased removed from the place of death. 
  2. Deceased Transportation

    The First Call results in an initial transfer of the deceased from the place of death to a funeral home or other facility. In some cases, a second transfer may be required either locally to another funeral home or to another city. 
  3. Pre-Arrangements

    Determine if the deceased left behind a pre-arranged funeral plan. A pre-arranged plan generally specifies the funeral service provider that the deceased selected. 
  4. Funeral Services

    Meet with a funeral director to make arrangements for the funeral services. During the meeting, you will discuss how the deceased will be cared for, whether you will have a burial or cremation, and what type of ceremony will be held. 
  5. Cemetery Arrangements

    If the deceased will be buried and cemetery property has not already been purchased, meet with officials of the selected cemetery to purchase interment property (e.g., grave plot, crypt, a niche for an urn). The funeral director may be able to make these arrangements on behalf of your family. You may inquie at Holy Gardens Memorial Park for Plots
  6. Funeral and Memorial Products

    Select and purchase the necessary merchandise (casket, burial vault, urn, etc.), memorial items (grave marker, online memorial) a
  7. Estate, Financial, and Administrative Matters

    Following the funeral, the affairs of the deceased must be put in order. These matters range from sending death notices to filing death benefit claims to changing the title of the deceased’s assets. See our Estateplanning manuals/tips


Tuesday, November 19, 2019

Typical program of viewing (USA customs)

Rizal Philippines
November 18, 2019


The order of service is very important in a funeral program. It tells the events of the service and also list the people who will be participating. It also has the scriptures, prayers and songs that will be used in the service. Check out this article on how to write the order of service for more information.



Ancient burial practices in various parts of the Philippines? Should we revive them

Rizal Philippines
Novemberr 18, 2019

They are unique and sometimes surprising. This is a very small country and we have varied burial practices and customs.     Are you surprised:   Spectacular death practices in the Philippines

Kaya kailangan ang smoke machine para hindi sumama ang kaluluwa ng patay sa buhay



CTTO

THE SPECTACULAR DEATH RITUALS OF THE PHILIPPINES

By: Justin Nobel | Date: Mon, September 23rd, 2013
In the mountainous Sagada region of the Philippines coffins are hung from cliffs. By suspending the coffin in this way it is thought to bring the deceased closer to heaven.

Hanging coffins, kitchen burials, blindfolded corpses, tree trunk burials and coffin hexes, oh my. Tourists flock to the Philippines for the beaches, the food and the cheap medical care but what about the death rituals? Take a peak…
Apayao – This mountainous province in northern Luzon, the largest island in the Philippines, is home to the Isneg people. They live mostly along rivers, in large airy homes adorned with colorful crafts. Homes sit on long wooden posts. Presently, there are about 55,000 Isnegs still living in Luzon. When Apayao people die they are buried under the kitchen area of the house.
Benguet – Benguet is a landlocked region in Luzon. When an individual there dies they are blindfolded and tied in a chair placed beside the main entrance of their home. The evening before the funeral a special ritual is performed in which elders give a sort of chant-like a biography of the deceased. As the body is buried other members hit bamboo sticks together, which will guide the deceased toward heaven. The largest city in the Benguet region, Bagui City, has recently become a popular tourist destination.
Cavite – This region is located just 10 miles south of the buzzing modern capitol of Manila and yet has retained many traditional customs. Some of the rural people in Cavite still use trees as burial places. The dying person will choose which tree they wish to be buried in beforehand. Then when they become sick or grow very old a hut is built for them close to this tree. When the person dies they are entombed vertically inside the hollowed out tree trunk.
Llocos – This region in northern Luzon is filled with colonial churches, the legacy of Spanish Catholicism. Traditional meals include ant eggs, eggplant salad and a vegetable broth called dinengdeng. Here a wife prepares the body of her husband. She takes special care to cloth the corpse, and it is believed that the departed can still convey messages through her during this process. The body is then placed in the coffin in the center of the home, taking great care that it aligns with the planks and floorboards. A wood log is lit in front of the home, as the smoke will assist the spirit to heaven and the fire will repel evil spirits. The log is kept burning during the entire wake. Women wear black clothes and shroud their heads and shoulder areas with a black handkerchief. Before the coffin is taken out of the home, all the windows are closed, and if the coffin hits any part of the home while transporting it out the belief is that someone else will die soon. After the funeral family members wash their hair with a special shampoo, known as gugu, to remove any influences of the spirit.
Llongot – The llongot people live in the Caraballo Mountains on the eastern side of Luzon. Rivers represent their main food source and main source of transportation. The Stanford anthropologist Renato Rosaldo documented headhunting among the llongots during the 1970s and wrote a book on the topic. The Ilongot bury their people in a sitting position. Women are buried with their hands tied to their feet, to prevent their ghosts from roaming . There are presently only about 2,500 llongots left.
Palawan – The people of Palawan are called Palaweños and are known to have buried their dead in burial jars, called Manunggl Jars. These ancient pieces of pottery, found in Manunggul Cave, on the island of Palawan, date back almost 3,000 years. On the lid of the jar is typically found a representation of a human figure, often robed and in a kneeling position. These figures are meant to be souls, riding the boat of the dead and headed across the sea toward their sanctuary in the afterlife. Some of the figures are actually steering with paddles.
Sagada – In the mountainous Sagada region coffins are hung from cliffs. The elderly often carve the coffins themselves. Just like in a typical Western cemetery, the deceased are placed beside their ancestors. The Sagada people have been practicing this ritual for more than 2,000 years. Eventually the coffins will deteriorate and fall. By suspending the coffin from a cliff it is thought to bring the deceased closer to heaven.
Tinguian – The Tinguian people live in northwestern Luzon. For several weeks they will dress the deceased in their best garments and place them sitting on a chair. Sometimes they will even place a lit cigarette between their lips.
Cebuano – The Cebuano people, who form the second largest cultural group in the Philippines, recite the rosary for nine days. They adhere to a number of funerary superstitions, like refraining from sweeping the floor of the deceased’s home and instead collecting the waste by hand. Relatives of the deceased refrain from bathing and combing. No tears are allowed to drop directly onto the casket. Black or white clothing must be worn during the burial, but children are dressed in red, which makes them less likely to see the ghosts of the deceased. Relatives are told to pass under the casket before it is loaded into the vehicle that will be transporting it to the grave. When leaving the cemetery relatives walk through smoke, in order to untangle the spirits of the dead from the bodies of the living.

Alam po ba ninyo superstition sa mga burol at libing? Alam no na ba baka masita ka ng matatanda

Rizal Philippines
November 18, 2019

40 Filipino Supestition

Naniniwala ka ba sa mga pamahiing ito?  Ano epekto kung hindi ka maniwala?

Ano ano ba ilan duon:

1. Feet of the dead towards the door;
2. Keep vigil lights always lighted;
3. Dont touch the collection money for the dead
4.  Dont join the funeral procession during the ladies period
5.  Throw coins in front of the funeral car;
6.  Dont wear red clothes
7.  Dont bring home food from a wake, but eat all you can
8.  Dont shower or comb your hair...
9. Magpagpag before going home.   not straight home after coming from a wake or funeral service.


40 Filipino Superstitions during Funerals and Wakes


Funeral Superstitions for General Visitors

1. Avoid Wearing Red Clothes and Bright Colors
Red drives away the spirits of the deceased–not what you’d want to do when you’re paying respects! Save the bright colors for happier occasions. Wear black instead as a sign of mourning.
2. …But Dress Children in Red
Ever heard accounts of children playing with dead relatives, getting nightmares, or mysteriously falling ill during wakes? Dress children in red to avoid such incidents.
3. Keep Falling Tears Off the Casket
Tears on the casket’s glass plate might give the dead a hard time crossing over to the next world. It’s advisable for visitors to bring handkerchiefs to dry their tears.
4. Don’t Bring Food Home From the Wake
Leaving food at the wake helps the deceased stay well-fed in the afterlife. So, mourners who bring take-home food from the wake will either bring bad luck with them or be followed home by the dead.
5. …But Eat All You Can
Did the deceased die at an old age? Feel free to eat to your heart’s content at the wake. It’s believed that you’ll also get the same luck of living into your old age.
6. No Viewing for Pregnant Women
Expectant mothers shouldn’t look inside the coffin. Doing so will give them a difficult delivery and can bring either bad luck or death onto the unborn child.
7. Visit Only One Wake in a Day
Mourners should not visit two wakes in the same day. Otherwise, they might die next or cause one of their family members to die.
8. Don’t Go Straight Home After the Wake
Visit a mall, sari-sari store, or a gas station before heading home from a funeral or wake. This prevents the dead from following you to your house. The Filipino term for this superstition is pagpag.
DID YOU KNOW? There’s a Filipino horror movie named after this practice. The movie Pagpag: Siyam na Buhay follows the consequences of several guests who attend a wake but fail to follow superstitions.
9.  Don’t Go if You’re On Your Period
Ladies going through that time of the month should refrain from attending funerals or visiting wakes. A girl who violates this Filipino superstition may have foul-smelling menses month after month.
10. Throw Coins in Front of the Funeral Car
People who happen to pass by a funeral march should throw coins under the hearse. This Filipino superstition provides the dead with fare money or toll money for the afterlife.
11. Don’t Look Back During the Procession
Mourners should not return to the house or even look back at it when the funeral procession starts. Otherwise, you’ll bring both bad luck and more deaths on the family.
12. Step Over Burning Grass Before Going Home
Mourners should walk over burning grass or guava leaves before going home from the burial site to prevent spirits of the dead from following them home. Cigarettes can also be lit using this fire.
13. Handle With Care
Those who carry the casket should prevent bumping it on anything when bringing it outside. This is done to prevent additional deaths.
14. Pinch Anyone Who Sneezes
Sneezing at a wake invites the deceased to drop by your house by a visit. Retract your invitation by having someone pinch you.

Funeral Superstitions for Family Members

15. Cover All Mirrors With Cloth
This Filipino superstition stems from the thought that the dead may try to show themselves in mirrors. Aside from covering mirrors, people should avoid looking at their own reflections.
16. Whisper Your Wishes
It’s believed that the deceased can carry your wishes to heaven. So, family members can whisper their wishes into the ear of someone who has recently died. This Filipino superstition is fittingly called bulong.
17. Don’t Sweep the Floor
If relatives sweep the floor, it can be interpreted as banishing the spirit of the dead from the house. It may also result in other family members following the dead into the afterlife. Family members can pick trash up and wipe the floor with a wet cloth instead.
18. Don’t Shower or Comb Your Hair
…at least in the place where the funeral is being held. Otherwise, you’ll bring bad luck on the family, sometimes in the form of consequent deaths. If you’d like to take a shower, you may do so in another house.
19. Let Visitors Leave By Themselves
Family members of the deceased should not accompany mourners who are leaving the house. The visitor can simply go their own way. A family member who violates this Filipino superstition may be the next one to die.
20. Don’t Thank Visitors for Condolences
Otherwise, it’s as if you’re thankful that your loved one has died.
21. Place Cash in the Hands of the Dead
The money serves as the deceased’s fare in the afterlife. Before the funeral, though, family members can take the money back as a lucky charm.
DID YOU KNOW? It’s said that if you use this lucky money as capital for a new business, you’ll meet success. You can also have good luck even if you simply keep the money instead.
22. Don’t Touch the Contributions
According to this blend of Filipino superstition and etiquette, all monetary contributions for the dead should only go to funeral expenses. If anyone tries to spend the money on anything else, they’ll be haunted by the deceased.
23. Keep Altar Candles Continuously Lit
If the candles go out, the departed might get lost or have a hard time on their journey in the afterlife. New candles should be lit up before old ones are blown out.
24. Have One Family Member Refrain from Viewing
Not all the members of the bereaved should look at the face of the dead person. Otherwise, the deceased will visit all of them, and the whole family will die.
25. Keep Vigil
At least one person should stay awake to keep evil spirits or aswang from stealing the dead body. This Filipino superstition is why bingo, mahjong, and card games are popular during funerals. Pot money from these games goes to the family to help with funeral expenses.
DID YOU KNOW? In Filipino folklore, aswang who have successfully stolen a corpse will leave a banana trunk as a “replacement” in the coffin.
26. No Malunggay Dishes
The superstition of avoiding malunggay dishes comes from the Ilocos region. Malunggay is prepared by stripping leaves off one by one, symbolizing the relatives of the deceased dying one after the other.
27. Postpone Serving Pancit
Don’t serve pancit at a wake or else you’ll extend the mourning period. Instead, eat pancit after a wake so that the bereaved family members will live longer lives.
28. Break a Plate
Family members may smash a plate to break the cycle of death. Ilocano mourners also break ceramic plates as an offering to the dead.
29. Predict the Future by Throwing a Pot
In provinces, relatives of the deceased will throw a clay pot on sand or soft soil. If the pot doesn’t break, it means there’ll be another death in the family soon.
30. Pass Under the Casket
Relatives should pass under the casket as it leaves the house. This will help them resume life more easily after the funeral. It also prevents more deaths in the family.
DID YOU KNOW? Children should also step over the casket before it is placed in the tomb. This buries the children’s illnesses with the dead and prevents the kids from being visited by ghosts at night.
31. Detours for Widows
As much as possible, a widow should not join the procession but take another route to her husband’s final resting place. This prevents her from following her husband into the afterlife.
32. Remove Curtains and Bedsheets Used During the Wake
Whether the wake was held in a house or in a funeral home, all used sheets should be washed to remove accumulated negative energy and bad luck.
33. Wear Black for a Year
Widows and other family members should wear black for a year as a sign of mourning. They may only wear colored clothes again after the first death anniversary.
34. Wash With Guava Leaves
Relatives who’ve come from a wake should wash hands in cold water with guava leaves before stepping into their houses. This washes bad luck away so that they don’t take it with them.

Funeral Superstitions Concerning the Deceased

35. Shoes Off
It’s believed that the dead can freely walk around the house. Placing the dead body in the casket without shoes will prevent family members from hearing footsteps in the halls at night.
36. Place Bolos and Broken Rosaries in the Casket
A rosary is often placed in the hand of the deceased to guide them on their afterlife journey. A bolo may also be placed in the casket. These two items both break curses.
DID YOU KNOW? The rosary used here should be torn to prevent consequent deaths in the family.
37. Check the Hands of the Deceased
If the empty hands of the deceased are clenched into fists, the family will have monetary troubles. If the hands are open, they can expect smooth sailing.
38. Death By Murder? Place Chicks on the Coffin
Relatives may also place rice grains on the coffin. Whenever the chicks peck at the grains, the murderer’s conscience will be eaten away, too. This can ultimately bring the murderer to justice.
39. Place the Dead with Their Feet Toward the Door
This Filipino superstition makes it easy for the soul of the deceased to enter the next world. Curiously, the casket should be carried out head first later on so that the spirit won’t come back to haunt anyone.
40. Bury the Flowers
All flowers used in the wake should be placed in tomb together with the dead. If anyone takes a single flower from the wake, there will be succeeding deaths.
DID YOU KNOW? There are also casket decorations that should be removed instead of buried. For one, ribbons on the coffin with family members’ names on them must be removed and kept.

Tuesday, November 12, 2019

Holy Gardens Funeral Service helps you transform the reality of death into a beautiful life story ending.

CREATING BEAUTIFUL LIFE STORIES


The harsh ugliness and macabre picture of lifes end game. Only a nice and appropriate memorial service: interment and funeral can hide the ugliness and make the past life and look memorable and honorable. Only the expert hands and caring of an expert embalmer can make the deceased look beautiful, the funeral director can provide the appropriate casket, have nice flowers and theme, provide the music, the decorations and ceremonies to make this a nice occasion a home coming, a family affair.

PM text or call Holy Gardens, on  how we can help us transform these ugly reality into something beautiful. Beautiful life stories ending

Image result for holy gardens + beautiful life story




WHAT IS THE BEAUTY OF LIFE ?

Ugliness, the realities  of death and dying.

 Look at the picture below and answer these questions.
1. Where is the money that has made you so disrespectful?
 2. Where is the beauty that has made you so proud and pompous?
3. Where are the cars that have made you a colossus over people ?
4.Where are the certificates and accolades that have made you a CEO, and therefore your workers play second fiddle to you?
 5.Where are the friends that flank you to fool?
6.How beautiful are you in the grave?
7.Where are the property for which you are willing to even kill a fellow human being to get?
8. Where are the breasts and buttocks that you spent money to enlarge to the neglect of your family and friends? IT IS GOOD TO BE RICH, IT IS GOOD TO OWN PROPERTY, IT IS GOOD TO BE BEAUTIFUL, BUT IN ALL THESE, LET HUMANITY BE YOUR PRIORITY. THE GRAVE IS THE ONLY PLACE THAT THE RICH AND THE POOR BECOME EQUAL. ENJOY YOUR WEALTH, BUT LET HUMANITY BE FIRST. #ctto VANITY UPON VANITY, ALL IS VANITY.

 The Human Body After Death. 
*3 days after death, finger nails begin to fall;
*4 days after death, hairs breaks out of the skull and all body hairs fall;
*5 days after death, the brain starts to sag, the flesh fades, the buttock, breast, penis, Vagina, will decay (those things that normally drives u into sin, hmmm)
*6 days after death, the skin begins to noircir and gradually detach from the bones;
 *7 days after death, the belly melts and radiates a strong odour beginning with a gaping mouth and a genital organ appealing the marauders;
 *60 days after death, the whole human body is reduced to nothing bones; -

So therefore; Why too much pride? Why too much selfishness? Why too much hate? Why too much jealousy? Why too much evil deeds? Man is a dust and must surely go back to the dust to help the land to be fertile. Do u think that u are the owner of yourself? Why not humble yourself? Why not love your neighbours? Stop those selfish acts? You are only living by God's Grace.

SBU                                            email                                Number          Contact Person


 Holy Gardens Pangasinan      hgmp.pangasinan@gmail.com     0956 391 2000      Roshel
                                                                          

  Holy Gardens Calamba       hgmp.calamba@gmail.com           0927 875 3000          Racquel

   Holy Angels Memorial        holygardens.morong@gmail.com   0917 822 1110          Jeffrey
  
   Holy Gardens Oton            hgmp.oton@gmail.com                 0917 118 8924          Aprilyn 

   

  Messaging link    m.me/432366276892246