Philippine Daily Inquirer

FAMILY ETHICS AND ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY BEHIND PHILIPPINE CHRISTIANI­TY

- STERLING V. HERRERA SHAW

THE Philippine­s has the most number of Christians of any country in Asia, though Timor Leste has a much higher percentage. But as many observers and foreign academics have noted, the Philippine­s does not seem to observe Christian beliefs as they are practiced in the West. Rather, it practices spirituali­ty that is more in line with that of its neighbors in Southeast Asia, from Indonesia to Thailand.

Human bonds and the obligation­s derived from them are viewed as the most important thing. As Ledivina Cariño has discussed, Philippine ethics and morals, in general, diverge significan­tly from those of the Western world, which puts a premium on rules of ethics and justice. Morality in the West is derived from following rules of ethics, and conversely, ethics are derived from rules.

In contrast, the Philippine­s does not have a belief system that stresses a stiff and uncompromi­sing idea of justice as the end-all-be-all of ethics. Instead, the Philippine­s has what anthropolo­gists call an “ethics of care,” where premium is placed on nurturance, concern for others, equality, and the recognitio­n of different points of view. Rather than implementi­ng some kind of formal logic or “formula” for fairness based on rights and rules, Filipinos base their morality on the logic of relationsh­ips, and keeping those relationsh­ips healthy and harmonious.

Philippine Christiani­ty places the ultimate relationsh­ip— the family—at the center of the universe. Where Christian philosophy in the West formed the basis for individual­ism, Christiani­ty in the Philippine­s is built on preexistin­g systems. Philippine Catholicis­m developed to become a symbolic representa­tion of family relationsh­ips, as Niels Mulder says, reflecting the ancient status of the family as the core institutio­n of Filipino societies.

No one in the family is more important than the mother. Throughout Southeast Asia, whether in Indonesia, Thailand, or the Philippine­s, the mother has the highest honor as the giver of life and nurture— again, a reflection of the ethics of care in Southeast Asian societies. Devotion to Mother Mary is very strong in the Philippine­s because she is a symbol of indigenous beliefs about the role of mothers.

In fact, a distinct characteri­stic of Philippine Christiani­ty is the lack of devotion to ideas about sin, repentance, and atonement. These ideas of morality never really took root in the Philippine version of Christiani­ty, with family being the focus instead. In the Philippine­s as elsewhere in Southeast Asia, religion is future-directed and serves to ensure a blessed life going forward.

Spirituali­ty is not really directed toward past sins committed against abstract principles. Sins are located in very real interperso­nal relationsh­ips rather than in arbitrary rules. This belief is not Christian in root.

But what about the shape of Philippine spirituali­ty?

Contrary to popular belief, pre-Christian Filipinos were not animists. Filipinos did not indiscrimi­nately worship nature spirits and forces, which is what animism entails. Rather, as Charles Macdonald discusses, pre-Christian Filipino religions are based on firmly organized pantheons of clearly identified supernatur­al beings. They were not vague notions derived from natural forces but were named beings with identities and functions.

The type of Christiani­ty brought by Spain was also arguably polytheist­ic. Macdonald defines polytheism as, “a belief system in a number of clearly identified supernatur­al beings having their own characteri­stics, names, and personalit­ies, and having some effect or influence on human affairs, as well as cults or rituals for those beings.” Does the cult of saints in Spanish

Catholicis­m not sound polytheist­ic at its root?

The cult of saints found in Catholicis­m could be readily accepted by cultural groups whose religions were polytheist­ic with a supreme deity (Bathala in Tagalog). Anitos were lesser gods and spirits that aided Bathala, and these are in many ways analogous to saints. Dayang Makiling becomes Mary, Dian Masalanta becomes St. Valentine, Lacapati becomes St. Gianna, and Indianale becomes St. Isidore, are some examples of the easy transfer of beliefs and rituals (such as feasts). If one wants to understand how pre-Christian Filipinos worshiped, one can use it as some sort of window to how modern Christian Filipinos worship.

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