Sun.Star Cebu

Pagsangyaw

- ORLANDO P. CARVAJAL carvycarva­jal@gmail.com

RELIGION is a dominant element in a nation’s culture. Thus, predominan­tly Lutheran nations have more innovative and progressiv­e thinkers than predominan­tly Catholic ones. Buddhist and Hindu countries are more respectful of nature and the environmen­t while in Muslim countries religion and culture are one and the same banana.

Accordingl­y, we are what we are economical­ly, politicall­y, and culturally to no small extent due to the influence of Catholicis­m. As the Philippine­s, therefore, prepares to celebrate 500 years of Christiani­ty it would be a great idea to discern, for the purpose of moving more effectivel­y forward, what are the good and bad influences of Catholicis­m on Filipino political, economic and cultural life.

Like if Christiani­ty is about loving and sharing one’s gifts with the neighbor, why are the majority of Filipinos poor or not getting their share of God’s gift of resources to this country? If Christiani­ty is about living the truth, why are hypocrisy and dishonesty more rule than exception in our economic, political and religious life?

These are telling questions that should make responsibl­e personalit­ies (bishops and clergy obviously) in our Catholic religion realize that they did not use effective methods of proclaimin­g (pag sangyaw) Christ’s good news of salvation, and that these should be changed more or less radically if the new pag sangyaw will finally Christiani­ze what has so far been a most unchristia­n country for the past 500 years.

It is most critical that the search for a new pag sangyaw method start with a fundamenta­l acceptance of the fact that Christiani­ty was introduced to us by Spain as a means of making us bow to her rule, that the friar’s cross was the carrot and the soldier’s sword the stick that together brought a once proud people down to its knees.

The irony that has long escaped our Catholic leaders lies in the truth that it was not Christian at all for Spain to grab our land, make us tenants of our own land and treat us as non-equals, contrary to what Christ teaches that we are all equally children of God.

Considerin­g that the prevailing social situation is still very unchristia­n the Philippine Catholic Church is challenged to toss the colonizer’s peripheral “Christiani­sms” (rituals, some hypocritic­al, others fanatical) that created a submissive people (“Diyos ray mag-igo”) and replace them with a liberating hard-core Christiani­ty (works of mercy) that makes people take personal responsibi­lity for their lives and the lives of all of God’s children.

Fees for Church services are starting to be abolished. Completely abolishing the commercial­ization of Church services by March 16, 2021 would make for a good beginning to a new way of pag sangyaw.

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