Posted: Jan.08.2008 @ 6:42 am | Lasted edited: Jan.10.2008 @ 8:59 am
Contact Fr Fernando Suarez
I have received an email from a girl asking about on how to contact Father Fernando Suarez. She have read my blog about the healing priest . So I immediately have searched the contact info of Fr Saurez and replied her coz she really needed the touch of Fr Suarez.
I just seen Father Suarez did miracles on the television and never really intended to have contact info on him. Until few requested from my blog and I really think all people ill or not needed some prayers from the priest. Visit Fr Suarez site on Fatherfernando.com . From there you can get his contact information, ask some prayer request and his year round schedules.
Previewed on Jessica Soho Report the Chem Engg graduate becoming a priest ordained at Canada. Fr Suarez is now at the Philippines healing fellow kababayans.
Below is the picture of a young lady dead and ready to be embalmed was brought to life when Fr. Suarez touch him for healing. Some other pictures are prominent people ask healing from him.
Vickie Lynn Marshall (November 28, 1967 – February 8, 2007), better known under the stage name of Anna Nicole Smith,[1] was an American model and television personality. She first gained popularity in Playboy, becoming the 1993 Playmate of the Year. She modeled for clothing companies, including Guess jeans. She starred in her own reality TV show, The Anna Nicole Show.
Born and raised in Texas, Smith dropped out of high school and first married at the age of 17. Her highly publicized marriage to oil business executive and billionaire J. Howard Marshall, 63 years her senior, resulted in speculation that she married the octogenarian for his money, which she denied. Following his death, she began a lengthy legal battle over a share of his estate; her case, Marshall v. Marshall, reached the U.S. Supreme Court on a question of federal jurisdiction. In the months before her death, she was the focus of renewed press coverage surrounding the death of her son, Daniel Smith.
I can't tell you that cellphones are safe, and I can't tell you
that they are harmful. That's the problem. The reason I can't is that
there isn't really independent information, and the cellphone industry
has been so quick to spin information.
Studies that you hear about that don't find a risk are often
extremely limited, like the Danish Cancer Study. That's a ridiculous
study. Anybody who used a cellphone for work was kicked out of the
study, which is crazy, because those are the highest users. And they
put all of these people together who were not using it for business --
the high users, the low users -- and they didn't find anything.
A study just released from France showed that people who used a
cellphone for 10 or more years have double the risk of brain cancer.
And people who owned two or more cellphones had more than double the
risk of brain cancer. The level of this increase wasn't what we call
statistically significant, but that doesn't mean that it wasn't
important.
I do advocate that people use them with speaker phones, and with a
head piece, and that children not use them. In Bangalore, India, and in
Scandinavia, they recommend that children not use cellphones. It's
illegal to sell a cellphone to someone under the age of 16 in
Bangalore, India.
A cellphone is a microwave, and basically the reason your ear gets
hot is that you're warming it with a microwave. You like cooking your
brain? How would you like to cook the brain of your child? We're not
cannibals. We shouldn't be doing that.
A story of four beautiful half-sisters with different eccentricities
and issues on family and relationships, it portrays the Filipino
woman’s many trials and how she copes with life’s unending ups and
downs but in the end realizes that all she really needs is love.