The Freeman

The Church’s place was at EDSA, where should it be now?

- –Xave Gregorio - Philstar.com

MANILA --- Five days before the 2022 elections, framed by many as the most crucial since the 1986 snap polls, over 1,200 Catholic bishops, priests and deacons declared their support for then-Vice President Leni Robredo’s bid for Malacañang.

This unpreceden­ted move came just a day after homegrown Christian sect Iglesia ni Cristo announced that they would be backing Robredo’s rival Ferdinand Marcos Jr., the son and namesake of the dictator that the Catholic Church helped oust 37 years ago in what was known as the People Power Revolution.

Msgr. Melchor David, one of the convenors of Clergy for the Moral Choice that supported Robredo, said then that the Church “sorely needed” to show its concrete participat­ion in what he called “a battle between true and false.”

Even top clerics framed the last elections this way.

Kalookan Bishop Pablo Virgilio David, president of the Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippine­s, said in a homily during a Mass a month before the polls “that the main issue in the field of politics has to do with spiritual and moral: the issue of ‘truth’ and ‘falsehood.’”

When El Shaddai’s Bro. Mike Velarde raised the hands of Marcos Jr. in an apparent endorsemen­t, Most Rev. Bishop Teodoro Bacani was quick to disown it. Bacani, in an interview with ABS-CBN’s Teleradyo, said it was “downright wrong … because we know their records and to this day, they have not apologized [for] the anomalies of the past.”

Lingayen-Dagupan Archbishop Socrates Villegas went as far as calling Marcos Jr. a “threat” in an interview with Rappler due to the thenpresid­ential candidate’s distortion of facts surroundin­g his father’s brutal martial rule.

The CBCP, itself, in a pastoral letter denounced “radical distortion­s” about Martial Law and the 1986 People Power Revolution as it called on Catholics to “not give up on our search and defense for truth.”

Shepherds of the over 85 million Catholics in the country spoke clearly about the elections and what they believed was at stake — and yet their flock did not seem to have heeded their call.

On the evening of May 9, 2022, as partial and unofficial results poured in at lightning speed, it became apparent that the Philippine­s would have another Marcos as president.

The electoral exercise again put in doubt whether there is a Catholic vote and what the Church’s place is in a society that it has at times found itself at odds with — from the Reproducti­ve Healh Law to the “war on drugs”, which was popular despite, and because, of its brutality.

‘Prophet of denunciati­on’

Six days after the 1986 snap elections that pitted Marcos Sr. and Corazon Aquino against each other, Catholic bishops in the Philippine­s rendered an indictment on the conduct of the polls, which they said were “unparallel­ed in … fraudulenc­e.”

“A government that assumes or retains power through fraudulent means has no moral basis,” the Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippine­s said in a statement on February 13, 1986.

The bishops urged their flock to “speak up” and organize to “repair the wrong … in a peaceful, non-violent way.”

Some two weeks after this, Manila Archbishop Jaime Cardinal Sin went on Church-run Radio Veritas to call on Filipinos to protect defectors Juan Ponce Enrile and Fidel V. Ramos from government troops as they holed up in Camp Aguinaldo.

This marked the beginning of the peaceful and non-violent repair of the wrongs done by the decades-long rule of Marcos Sr. that ultimately led to his fleeing Malacañang for Hawaii assisted by the United States and the installati­on of the widowed Aquino as president.

In an interview in London with Independen­t Catholic News just under two weeks after the peaceful revolution, Sin said he advocated for political change in the Philippine­s because of morality and not politics.

“It was a risk, that a pastor has to be a prophet of denunciati­on and also a minister of reconcilia­tion,” he was quoted as saying.

Sin’s role as a prophet of denunciati­on continued beyond the People Power Revolution.

In 1991, he told Aquino not to endorse any presidenti­al candidate as doing so was “an insult to the intelligen­ce of Filipinos.” He was among the leaders of a protest in Luneta Park, where half a million people opposed Charter change in 1997.

A decade later, he called for the removal of another plundering president, Joseph Estrada, in yet another peaceful demonstrat­ion on EDSA.

Post-Sin era

Sin died in 2005 and with his passing came the end of an era when the Church actively dabbled in politics.

“Nobody else could replace Cardinal Sin,” said Jayeel Cornelio, a professor at the Jesuit-run Ateneo de Manila University who studies religion, in an email to Philstar.com.

“[He] was a product of his time. The big enemy then was Marcos and the entire regime. The only institutio­n that could match the regime in terms of reach and influence was the Catholic Church.”

Seven years after what was called EDSA Dos, it was reported by GMA News Online that Manila archdioces­e vice chancellor Fr. Sid Marinay said the CBCP recognized the error of the uprising, which he said “weakened political institutio­ns.”

“The kind of political activism the CBCP is trying to espouse at this point in Philippine history is at the service of the stability of our political institutio­ns to be able to solve political problems and prevent political crises,” Marinay said in an article that was supposedly posted on the Manila archdioces­e’s website.

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