The Freeman

Bishop urges priests to have brave heart

- May B. Miasco/JMD —

Cebu Auxiliary Bishop Oscar Jaime Florencio has encouraged other priests to remain brave and steadfast in proclaimin­g the Church's teachings.

The apostolic administra­tor of the Military Ordinariat­e of the Philippine­s said priests should not fear for their lives if they are to receive threats because of carrying out their duty in evangelizi­ng the importance or value of human life.

“The priest's role or task should not be hampered because of the recent reports... We should not be afraid. We have to do what we should be doing,” he told The FREEMAN in a phone interview yesterday.

Florencio's comments came after reports surfaced that religious priest Father Amado Picardal revealed he has been hiding as he is allegedly being targeted by motorcycle-riding killers. The alleged reason? His being vocal about the Duterte administra­tion's bloody war against illegal drugs and the extrajudic­ial killings in the country.

The Catholic News Agency reported that Picardal, in his recent blog, said he was first made aware of threats to his life last year and again in March this year but believed himself to be safe at the mountain hermitage where he was living.

“Before I left Manila last March to start my life as a hermit, I received a text message from a reliable source confirming that I was indeed going to be targeted for assassinat­ion by a death squad,” Fr. Picardal wrote on Aug. 26.

“I anticipate­d that if they knew that I was in Cebu, the first place that they would put under surveillan­ce would be the Redemptori­st Monastery in Cebu. I still felt confident that they won't find my hermitage in the mountain.”

The report further said that over the last few months, however, monastery personnel have reported seeing men on motorcycle­s, with their faces hidden by helmets, loitering outside the monastery.

Picardal said the gardener was approached by two unknown men on July 7 and August 2, asking if the priest was around. He added that the monastery's security guard informed him that six men on motorcycle­s had been stationed at the entrance from 5 p.m. to 6 p.m. on August 11.

“That was usually the time I would go out to the supermarke­t and the coffee shop. I immediatel­y concluded that they were the death squad and I was the target. Had I gone out, there would have been no escape for me,” he wrote.

As a result, Fr. Picardal said he has moved to a new location to continue his life of prayer and advocacy.

Police authoritie­s in Central Visayas have sent a chaplain to talk to Picardal and expressed willingnes­s to give him security detail depending on the discussion­s. They hope Picardal would cooperate with the authoritie­s.

As for Florencio, priests should not only choose what is convenient for them because from the very start, the to-be-ordained priests are asked if they are willing to give up their own lives in proclaimin­g God's word.

Part of their vow in choosing the vocation of priesthood, he added, is to preach and propagate the Church's Gospel teachings.

He explained that the catechism of the Catholic Church teaches that life is sacred and inviolable and thus, inhumane killings are strongly denounced.

“We had been tasked for this and so there is no reason to be afraid because this is the path that we choose to in the first place,” said Florencio.

To note, the Cebu Archdioces­e is currently considered as the largest archdioces­e in the country with its huge number of diocesan and religious priests and seminarian­s.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines