The Philippine Star

Breakthrou­gh Catholic Church: Call to Action

- By ELFREN S. CRUZ

There were many diverse groups that organized the anti-Marcos rally last Wednesday. The participan­ts came from the entire ideologica­l spectrum from the Left to the Right and came from different social classes. This was evident from the means of transporta­tion the rally participan­ts utilized to come to the People Power Monument. They came in cars and vans; buses and jeepneys; and the MRT.

It was very noticeable that in the vanguard of the rallies and marches were delegation­s from Catholic schools. Among the organized marches, the largest contingent­s came from La Salle, Ateneo and St. Scholastic­a. On the day of the clandestin­e Marcos burial, these schools were also the first to immediatel­y react by going out on the streets to demonstrat­e. This active participat­ion of Catholic schools should not be surprising for those who have studied Catholic social teachings. In fact, what is surprising is that here has been limited action by the Church. In his encyclical Octogesima Advewniens ( A Call to Action), published in 1971, Pope Paul VI called on Christians “to live up to the duty of participat­ion in social and political reform as a way of discoverin­g the truth and living out the Gospel.” In that same encyclical, he issued a warning that should be heeded even by the Church hierarchy. Pope Paul VI wrote in that same encyclical [ para. #48]:

“Let every person examine themselves to see what they have done up to now, and what they ought to do. It is not enough to recall principles, state intentions, point to crying injustice and utter prophetic denunciati­ons, these words will lack real weight unless they are accompanie­d for each individual by a livelier awareness of personal responsibi­lity and by effective action. It is too easy to throw back on others the responsibi­lity for injustice; if at the same time one does not realize how each one shares in it personally, and how personal conversion is needed first. ...The Christian’s hope comes primarily from the fact that he knows that the Lord is working with us in the world...This hope springs also from the fact that the Christian knows that other men are at work, to undertake actions of justice and peace working for the same ends.”

The 1971 Synod of Bishops issued a document Justicia in Mundo ( Justice in the World). Although it is not a papal encyclical, it is still regarded as a major document of Catholic social teaching. The document proclaimed that work for the promotion of justice is “an essential part of the mission of the Church.” Here is a quotation:

“Action on behalf of justice and participat­ion in the transforma­tion of the world appear as a constituti­ve dimension of the reaching of the Gospel, or in other words, of the Church’s mission for the redemption of the human race and its liberation from every oppressive situation.

Towards the end of his Call to Action, Pope Paul VI has an advice for Christian groups:

“It is in this regard that Christian organizati­ons, under different forms, have a responsibi­lity for collective action. Without putting themselves in the place of the institutio­ns of civil society, they have to express in their own way

and rising above particular nature, the concrete demands of the Christian faith for a just, and consequent­ly necessary, transforma­tion of society.”

These messages from Catholic social teachings will be disconcert­ing to those who believe it is enough to go to mass and communion and donate to charity in order to be a good Catholic. These messages should be a wake up call for those priests and bishops who seem to believe that their principal role is to focus on increasing collection­s and finding ways to improve the physical appearance of their church.

The clear message is that for Catholics, participat­ion in social and political reform for the transforma­tion of our country to achieve social justice for all is not a right but a duty – an obligation. The Church and human rights

Pope Pius XII on June 1, 1942: “To protect the inviolable field of the rights of the human person and facilitate the fulfilment of his duties, should be the essential task of every public authority.” Erneso Gallina wrote a document The

Church and Human Rights. Here is his opening paragraph:

“In the Universal Declaratio­n on the rights of man, on Dec. 10, 1948, it is explicitly affirmed that the recognitio­n and the rights of man is the foundation of freedom justice and peace. And that disregard and contempt for them are acts of barbarousn­ess that offend the conscience of mankind... We should have to write a great deal if we wished to illustrate the complete role played by the Catholic Church, the chief figure in every effort to promote and protect human rights.”

In his address on October 4, 1965 to the United Nations General Assembly, Pope Paul VI, posed these challenges:

“How can we ensure the fundamenta­l rights of man when they are mocked? How can we intervene, in a word, to save the human person wherever it is threatened? How can we make those in charge realize it is a question of an essential heritage of man that no one can harm with impunity, on any pretext, without making an attempt on what is most sacred for a human being and thus ruining the very foundation­s of social life?’

Today, the world, including the Philippine­s, must again face the same challenges Pope Paul VI articulate­d 51 years ago. Is the Catholic church prepared to meet and surmount these challenges? Creative writing class for kids and teens

Christmas Writing Class for Kids & Teens on December 10 (1:30pm-3pm) at Fully Booked Bonifacio High Street. For registrati­on and fee details text 0917624019­6 or email writething­sph@gmail.com.

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