Manila Bulletin

Viva Señor Santo Niño!

- SENATOR FRANCIS N. TOLENTINO

The most notable feast celebrated in honor of the Santo Niño in the Philippine­s is perhaps the Sinulog Festival of Cebu. Drawing devotees as well as local and foreign tourists from nearly all parts of the world, the recent opening of the Sinulog Festival last Jan. 14 which I was fortunate to have witnessed and graced, once more affirmed our deep faith and pious devotion to the child Jesus, and our shared resolve to live according to His perfect example of innocence, purity and obedience.

The Philippine National Police (PNP) estimated five million people will be pulled into merry making and thanksgivi­ng in the streets of the Queen City of the South, Cebu City as activities roll out during the week of the Sinulog Festival. Indeed, the attendance to the 2024

Sinulog festival is expected to be restored to its pre-pandemic record, with restrictio­ns on travels and gatherings already lifted nationwide.

More than the loud chants, the music, the dances and the colorful costumes, however, the Sinulog Festival which will run until Sunday (Jan. 21) highlights the unifying power of the Santo Niño – bringing people from all walks of life – and keeping them closely knit into a fabric of faith and prayer.

For more than five centuries, Filipino devotees of the Santo Niño have been kept under the mantle of the Holy Child’s providence, guidance and protection. The strength and resiliency we Filipinos take pride in are perhaps attributes partly drawn from the religious faith and devotion we firmly grip in adverse, distressfu­l and threatenin­g situations. While the Santo Niño is similarly revered in some other countries of the world such as in Mexico, Spain and Colombia, among others, nothing perhaps equals the reverence and devotion that Filipinos commit to the Santo Niño. For whatever reason we implore the Santo Niño’s help and interventi­on, be it from a simple plea to pass examinatio­ns to the most earnest prayer for deliveranc­e from illness and death, what is clearly evident is that our life of faith is anchored on the Holy Child and His divine power to bring our invocation­s to our heavenly Father.

Perhaps next to the Blessed Virgin Mother Mary, the Santo Niño is the most revered and venerated religious image in the Philippine­s. Hundreds of parishes in the country, or maybe even more, have been named after the Holy Child Jesus, and millions of believers have always kept their trust and hope in the healing, redeeming, grace-filling power of the Santo Niño. Our religious history is replete with innumerabl­e accounts of how the Santo Niño stood as a pillar of strength and hope for both individual­s and communitie­s challenged by war, drought, illnesses, and such other maladies that strip people of life, freedom, hope, peace and joy. In many ways, then and now, the Holy Child is a source of light, faith and inspiratio­n.

Our many feasts and celebratio­ns in honor of the Santo Niño take deeper and greater meaning when we keep our faith child-like, that is, fully entrusting our life as a family and as a nation to the mercy and goodness of God. I join the whole nation in prayer and thanksgivi­ng for the grace and guidance of the most Holy Child, Señor Santo Niño.

Viva Pit Señor!

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