Statement on the 15th Anniversary of Republic Act 9346 (The Death Penalty Prohibition Act of 2006)

The Episcopal Commission on Prison Pastoral Care of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines (CBCP-ECPPC) joins the Coalition Against the Death Penalty (CADP) in the joyful celebration of the 15th year of the abolition of the death penalty in the Philippines.

We at the CBCP-ECPPC maintain that no person is beyond reformation. Every person deserves a second chance in order to correct his/her wrongdoings.

Our Holy Father Pope Francis in his teachings, has constantly stressed that the taking away of life is inadmissible. Every person is valuable as he/she is created in the image and likeness of God.

Thus, we strongly and unequivocally oppose the move of the present Congress to restore the Death Penalty in our Justice system.

We maintain that the death penalty is violative of the inherent dignity of the human person. No person, no matter how evil he is perceived to be, is beyond redemption and reformation.

The death penalty will only mostly victimize the poor. Our past experiences show that most of those who were meted the death penalty were indigent and poor individuals, who simply could not afford quality legal representation to defend them before the courts.

Lastly, the death penalty cannot work in an imperfect judicial system like ours. Once carried out, the death sentence is irreversible, and there is no possibility for rectifying an erroneous judgment.

Let us instead continue affirming our Option for Life, and clamor for the State to pass laws which will make our criminal justice system more restorative and not merely punitive.

We challenge all sectors especially our youth to elect people who will rightfully serve the nation by championing the cause of life and fight the existing culture of death.

Manila, June 24, 2021

Sgd.

+JOEL Z. BAYLON, D.D.
Bishop of Legazpi
Chairman
CBCP-COMMISSION ON PRISON PASTORAL CARE (CBCP-ECPPC)

New Website of the Dicastery for Laity, Family and Life

June 14, 2021

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,

The peace and love of the Lord!

The Dicastery for Laity, Family and Life has launched a new website on “Initiatives for the formation of the lay faithful” http://laityinvolved.org/ The website is a good resource for updating and improving the formation of our respective groups.

We encourage everyone to make use of this valuable tool for the formation and growth of our members.

Sincerely yours in the service of the Lord,

Noted by:

+ MOST REV. BRODERICK S. PABILLO, D.D.
Chairman CBCP-Episcopal Commission on the Laity

World Day of Grandparents and the Elderly and Fathers’ Day Invitation

Your Eminences,
Your Excellencies,
Reverend Monsignori and Fathers,
Consecrated Men and Women,
Partners in the Family and Life Apostolate,
Brothers and Sisters in Christ,

Peace be with you!

First, we commend all who are organizing conferences, seminars, and events on the national, regional, diocesan, parochial etc. levels to mark the Amoris Laetitia Family Year and the Year of Saint Joseph. Such initiatives not only attest to your pastoral zeal but also help incarnate the Holy Father’s vision of the Church as a “family of families” (AL 87).

Second, we are happy to inform you that the Episcopal Commission on Family and Life is offering conferences that can complement the regional and diocesan programs: “Fathers’ Day” in June, “Grandparents and the Elderly” in July, “Migrant Families” in August, etc.

Third, we invite you to join, promote and share the ECFL’s Fathers’ Day offering on 18-20 June 2021. We take our theme from the opening lines of Pope Francis’ Apostolic Letter Patris Corde: “With a father’s heart: that is how Joseph loved Jesus, whom all four Gospels refer to as ‘the son of Joseph’”. In order to facilitate participation and sharing here and abroad in the context of the pandemic, the event will be streamed live via Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/archdioceseoflipa:

  • Friday, June 18, 09:00-10:30 am
    • Most Rev. Gilbert A. Garcera’s talk on “Forming Fathers in the Image of Saint Joseph” based on Pope Francis’ Apostolic Letter Patris Corde.
  • Saturday, June 19, 09:00-11:00 am: Personal testimonies on fatherhood in the image of Saint Joseph:
    • Family Integration
      • Climbing out of addiction (Mr. Jose Antonio Mañosa, Addictions Counselor ICAC 1 / Recovery Coach)
      • OFW Fathers overcoming distance (Mr. Wilson Lumbao, Electrical Engineer, Saudi Electric Company)
    • Family Discernment
      • Fathers educating children towards their vocation (Rev. Michael Sandoval, Deacon, Archdiocese of Lipa)
      • Fatherhood in an online environment (Mr. Edwin Lopez, International Marketing Manager, EWTN)
    • Family Accompaniment
      • Fatherhood and an LGBT person’s journey (Mr. Edwin Valles, President, Courage Philippines)
      • Family in the midst of the Covid crisis (Mr. Victor Alvarez, Couples for Christ)
  • Sunday, June 20
    • 11:00 am: Holy Eucharist to be celebrated by Most Rev. Gilbert A. Garcera in the Archdiocesan Shrine and Parish of St. Joseph the Patriarch, San Jose, Batangas.
    • 01:00-03:00 pm: Tribute to Fathers (with games and raffle).

Finally, we invite you to mark the dates of the next ECFL event, the first virtual national conference of grandparents and the elderly on 22-24 July 2021. This is in view of the first World Day of Grandparents and the Elderly as announced by Pope Francis. The program will be sent to you in the first week of July.

Sincerely,

RMP hearing to ‘unfreeze’ bank accounts reset to Sept 20, 2021

RMP National Office

UCCP leaders speak out in solidarity together with peasant and indigenous peoples advocates
#DefendTheDefenders #StandWithRMP

On June 11, 2021, at 10am, Church leaders and other supporters gathered outside the Manila Trial Court for a vigil protest, while legal counsels of the Rural Missionaries of the Philippines(RMP) sought for the lifting of the Anti-Money Laundering Council’s freeze on their bank accounts.

The Rural Missionaries of the Philippines, who have been engaging ministry with poor communities for fifty years, are subjects of persecution and “red-tagging.” The United Church of Christ in the Philippines expressed a strong empathy for RMP, since the UCCP Haran Sanctuary is facing similar harassments.  Bishop Emergencio Padillo of the UCCP expressed solidarity and lamented “rather than appreciating their contributions to society, the Duterte administration with their all-out war policies, seeks to attack RMP’s ministries by raising false allegations of ‘terrorism financing.’” Bishop Padillo commended RMP for being instrumental “in bringing health, literacy, and livelihood programs to some of the poorest and most marginalized areas of the country.” 

“RMP is engaged in mission and ministry, which is part of their practice of their religious freedoms. The absurd allegations of ‘terrorism financing’ only unmask how far this government is prepared to go; they want to stifle dissent, and in the process, they are undermining democracy in the Philippines,” said Bishop Padillo.

Another UCCP pastor, Rev. Callum Tabada, also assailed the Duterte administration for impinging on the practice of religion, because they don’t understand ‘peacebuilding.’ He explained that people in the Duterte administration “misconstrue transformative love as rebellion.”

“The law is being ‘weaponized’ against any who do not petty after the National Task Force-End Local Communist Armed Conflict.  Malicious legal maneuvers, like the case lodged against RMP, are intended to weaken the ministries of the church that are trying to help communities to empower themselves and protect their interests and welfare,” said Rev. Tabada.

Noting that the forces of exploitation through logging, mining and extraction of other resources, together with militarists who promote such endeavors, make life difficult in rural areas, the protesters insisted that Church ministries are under attack because rural communities are easier to dominate, when they are less educated and aware of their rights.

“The current predicament of RMP, where their banks accounts are frozen, denies much-needed services to poor communities.  Under the Anti-Terrorism Act of 2020, there will surely be even more harassments and false allegations against church ministries. The poor are the ones who will suffer most,” said Bishop Padillo.

Once again, the hearing was reset.  Now scheduled for September 20, 2021, the Rural Missionaries of the Philippines will be denied access to their mission monies for months more.  “After decades of service to the poor, this case against them is shameful and should be dismissed,” said Bishop Padillo.

11 June 2021

Protecting the Planet

Shay Cullen | 11 June 2021

Have you ever seen the sun set upon the sea,
the migrating birds fly in formation proud?
Have you ever seen the mighty forest and heard the birds sing clear and loud?
Have you seen the flowers in the meadows and the fields that provide the nectar for the bee,
That gives the honey in the hive hanging from the tree?
Have you ever seen the dolphins race across the ocean wave,
The mighty whales that swim the oceans strong and brave?
A breathless sight of beauty you will ever see
If we will just allow them to live and to be.

We inhabit a most amazing planet filled with life forms and hundreds of thousands of amazing creatures, animals, birds, insects, and fish. In the natural world, the living forests and plants and oceans make up a living, evolving integrated planet with us humans. We the creatures that have a developed brain, conscientious, knowing and with awareness of self and all that is around us in the environment. have the responsibility to preserve it.

We are the ones that can admire, appreciate, and wonder at the beauty of the environment and the universe. We are the thinking consciousness of the universe. We can know good and bad and we have unique free will to choose one or the other. That is what makes us human and different from other creatures we share life with on this climate-sensitive planet.

We humans are changing it dramatically by the lifestyles that we have chosen and the industrial machines and methods we have created to maintain that lifestyle. Our way of living together, travelling, warming and cooling ourselves, producing our food and disposing off the material we manufacture is affecting the environment and the planet itself.

We humans are industrious, inventive, creative, intelligent, kindly, loving creatures to each other and the ecology and environment but many of us are also something else. Many of our species have chosen to act on their lower, thoughtless basic instincts to possess, control, dominate and subjugate others to achieve and satisfy desires and appetites. They impact the human environment. They act with violence and other negative impulses born perhaps from childhood neglect, abuse, deprivation or the evil example of other influencers. They act in anger with violence against the human environment, the human community, inflicting hurt and pain on others.

Some become intoxicated with power and destructive tendencies over their communities. They persecute and kill those that refuse to be subjugated, dominated and abused. These are the tyrants and dictators, and not only do they kill and maim and destroy those who do not approve of them, they attack the environment. Their self-serving policies expand industrial exploitation of the environment and exploit the natural resources. Their goal is to increase their personal wealth and political power and so all creatures, the environment and the planet greatly suffer. They are the humans that allow big and small corporations to destroy the forests and the oceans and create a destructive industrial juggernaut that leaves disorganized citizens divided and powerless.

We must not be silenced or intimidated. We must stand for the earth, act to stop the destruction on a political scale, on a community level and in our personal capacity. When people unite and speak with one voice, they have power to change the world and corrupt politicians unless they are shot and massacred. The environmental destruction by industry that is causing climate change by high levels of CO2 emissions has to be challenged .They cause climate fluctuations that damage sustainable food production and the natural world. Politicians in conspiracy with the industrial leaders, driven by greed, these mighty money moguls, are foremost in destroying the planet.

Australia is an example of government policy supporting the coal extraction industry. It is the biggest exporter of coal in the world. The emissions of the coal they export is equal to 3.3 percent of global emissions. Added to domestically-produced emissions of CO2, then Australia contributes 4.8 percent of world emissions and is a major contributor to dangerous climate change. If we add the emissions for natural gas exports, it is even a bigger footprint and a bigger responsibility. The super cold snap in Australia of late is a direct result of climate change, it seems.

The Australian political industrial complex has to be held accountable and drastically change direction to protect the environment. That is a decision that only the Australian people can make by voting into power a green, environmental-friendly government. Australia is now the sixth biggest polluter of the environment after China, the United States, Russia, India and Indonesia. Australia and all the high CO2 emissions producing countries should choose to obey the principle, “Do no Harm.” However, since basic instincts of greed, money and power are dominating the ruling elites and political establishments of these countries, there is no place for principles of caring and compassion for the people and the planet.

There is good news however. The global awareness of the damage and negative effects of climate change has business and industry concerned and committed to change. A survey by Deloitte in recent months shows that 80 percent of business and corporate executives have expressed serious concern about the impact of climate change and are planning to take mitigating action to address it. But will they?

The Climate Check Report surveyed 750 executives last January and February 2021 and found that 30 percent of them said that climate change is affecting their businesses causing a scarcity of resources and supply chain problems. Self-interest may bring concern for the environment. Political awareness building and peaceful social activism is having a positive effect. School children in Australia have taken to the streets to protest against coal production. Greta Thunberg is leading a global movement to stop industry burning fossil fuels and to build renewable energy sources. Now 18 years old, she blasts the empty promises of world leaders who promise much but do nothing positive but allow the destruction of the Amazon rain forests.

If we want to continue to admire the forests, the dolphins, the birds and creatures of the planet, we have to preserve and protect it with all our strength.

www.preda.org

A statement on the tragedy in Masbate

We will Serve the Lord and We Choose Peace!

The Philippine Ecumenical Peace Platform (PEPP) expresses its deep sorrow over the deaths of Nolven Absalon, the 40-year-old Chairperson of the Board of Directors of the Masbate Electric Cooperative Employees Union and his 21-year-old cousin, Keith, a football player of the Far Eastern University. We offer our prayers and heartfelt sympathies to their families, friends and colleagues. May God be with them and provide them with comfort in their time of grief.

Various leaders, personalities and groups have condemned the actions of the New People’s Army (NPA) which led to this tragedy. While the tragic incident is truly condemnable, it is also a timely reminder for us to pause and reflect. The deaths of Nolven and Keith fully underscores the cost of the armed conflict in the country between the government and the NPA along with Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP)/National Democratic Front of the Philippines (NDFP). This armed conflict, which has deep social, economic and political roots, has spanned more than five decades and led to the loss of thousands of lives, destruction of property and misery and hardship.

As such, what happened in Masbate puts into fore the complexity of the armed conflict in our country and the many nuances to the different aspects of the issue. There are calls for justice from the family and the public. There are mechanisms in place that can hopefully provide justice like the Comprehensive Agreement for Respect for Human Rights and International Humanitarian Law (CARHRIHL) and related agreements and we hope that it is not disregarded by both parties even though the peace negotiations are suspended. What is clear though is that the armed conflict will continue to generate violence on the ground and will definitely result

in more loss of lives from both sides and among civilians. What is very fearsome is the call of some sectors to relentlessly pursue the NPA militarily in Masbate and throughout the country. There are already reports that the military allegedly killed three Masbate farmers accused as NPA. Such an all-out military offensive can turn that island into a howling wilderness and create more pain and suffering throughout the country. The drive to annihilate the CPP/NPA/NDF to resolve the armed conflict without addressing the roots – poverty, landlessness, inequitable access to resources – can just result in more violations to human rights and international and humanitarian law.

As church leaders, we will serve the Lord (cf. Joshua 24:15) and we choose peace and we choose life! We call on all Filipinos to not let the deaths of Nolven and Keith fan the flames of war but rather let their deaths implore us to further sow the seeds of peace that we badly need in our country. Thus, we call on the government and CPP/NPA/NDF to return to the negotiating table to address the roots of the armed conflict and respect all previous agreements.

The PEPP wholeheartedly believes that the most viable option to stop the violence on the ground and to resolve the conflict is through a negotiated peace settlement between the warring parties.  We call on all peace advocates to work hand-in-hand in encouraging and accompanying both parties to once more engage in principled negotiations for a just and lasting peace.

Even as we wish that peace could be achieved with just a snap of a finger, we know that such a process is long and arduous but it can be accomplished in our lifetime, if it is approached deliberately. Therefore, let us not lose hope “…because of the tender mercy of our God, by which the rising sun will come to us from heaven to shine on those living in darkness and in the shadow of death, to guide our feet into the path of peace.” (Luke 1: 78-79, NIV)

Issued and signed on this 12th day of June 2021.

Sgd. Archbishop Emeritus Antonio J. Ledesma, SJ
Archdiocese of Cagayan de Oro
Co-chairperson, PEPP

Sgd.  Bishop Rex B. Reyes, Jr.
Episcopal Diocese of Central Philippines 
Co-chairperson, PEPP

Sgd. Rev. Dr. Aldrin M. Penamora
Executive Director
Commission on Justice Peace & Reconciliation
Philippine Council of Evangelical Churches

Sgd.  Bishop Reuel Norman O. Marigza
General Secretary
National Council of Churches in the Philippines

Sgd.  Sr. Mary John D. Mananzan, OSB
Office of Women & Gender Commission
AMRSP-Women

Sgd.  Bishop Emeritus Deogracias S. Iniguez, Jr.
PEPP Head of the Secretariat
Co-chairperson, EBF

*The PEPP is a platform for 5 church institutions/groups, namely, the Catholic Bishop’s Conference of the Philippines (CBCP), National Council of Churches in the Philippines (NCCP), Association of Major Religious Superiors of the Philippines (AMRSP) with organizations of Religious, Philippine Council of Evangelical Churches (PCEC) and the Ecumenical Bishops’ Forum (EBF), in working for a just and enduring peace by supporting the peace process between the GRP-NDFP.

Latest pastoral resources within the Amoris Laetitia Family Year

Your Excellencies:

The Dicastery for Laity, Family and Life through the ECFL has just sent the following links to the latest pastoral resources within the Amoris Laetitia Family Year which could be very useful for the family ministries in the dioceses and parishes.

Secretary General

Video and guide Amoris Laetitia No. 2, “The Family in the light of the Word of God”: http://www.laityfamilylife.va/content/laityfamilylife/en/news/amorislaetitia/la-famiglia-alla-luce-della-parola-di-dio–il-secondo-video.html

Video and guide Amoris Laetitia No. 3:, “The vocation of the family” http://www.laityfamilylife.va/content/laityfamilylife/en/news/amorislaetitia/la-vocazione-della-famiglia.html

Rosary for engaged couples: http://www.laityfamilylife.va/content/laityfamilylife/en/news/amorislaetitia/pregare-insieme-il-rosario–una-proposta-audace-.html

Guidelines World Youth Days: http://www.laityfamilylife.va/content/laityfamilylife/en/news/2021/le-gmg-nelle-chiese-particolari–pubblicati-gli-orientamenti-pas.html

Pope’s Worldwide Prayer Network: https://www.popesprayer.va/evangelization-prayer-intention-the-beauty-of-marriage/

The Pope Video- Pope’s Worldwide Prayer Network: https://youtu.be/7GUs0ZHmlvc

CBCP releases prayer for June 12 Nat’l Consecration to the Immaculate Heart of Mary

By CBCP News
May 25, 2021
Manila, Philippines

The Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines on Tuesday released the prayer for the upcoming National Consecration to the Immaculate Heart of Mary.

Shortened and directed to the country’s present context, the prayer was adopted from the “official act of consecration” written by St. John Paul II himself for the Feast of the Annunciation in 1985.

According to the CBCP, the prayer was meant to be offered by the pope himself and all the bishops of the Church.

During that time, Cardinal Jaime Sin of Manila and Cardinal Ricardo Vidal took official part of the solemn act of offering in the Vatican.

March 25 of that year was also the day that Vidal and 27 others were elevated to the College of Cardinals.

The bishops, during their 108th plenary assembly in January 2014, approved that the consecration to the Immaculate Heart Mary be renewed every year on her feast day in every diocese until the Jubilee Year of 2021.

This year, the feast day will be on June 12.

The national consecration will be led by Archbishop Romulo Valles, CBCP President, and will be live streamed from the Davao Cathedral at 9:45 a.m.

The Mass in honor of the Immaculate Heart of Mary will then follow at 10 a.m. in the different cathedrals and parish churches led by the National Shrine of Our Lady of Fatima in Valenzuela City.

Caritas Philippines Academy Re-opens as the Philippine Church’s Learning and Teaching Institute

Caritas Philippines
May 7, 2021

Caritas Philippines Academy, formerly the Center for Resiliency, Empowerment and Integral Development (CREED) of the CBCP Episcopal Commission on Social Action, Justice and Peace, re-opened today as CBCP’s social action teaching and learning institute.

“We are very proud of our Caritas Philippines Academy. During the last six years, we are able to serve 507 scholars from 45 dioceses in the country. This means that during these periods, notable positive changes in our diocesan social action centers were observed, especially on how we implement our humanitarian, development and advocacy services and programs,” Bishop Jose Colin Bagaforo mentioned during the opening of the virtual class.

In 2016, Caritas Philippines started with the Lead to Heal Transformational Leadership Program through a 14-month certificate course in partnership with the Development Academy of the Philippines and the Future by Design Pilipinas.

In 2018, a masteral degree on Social Services and Development was offered with the Asian Social Institute, and in 2020, eight short courses were offered covering topics like resource mobilization, communications, safeguarding and protection mainstreaming, ecology protection and advocacies, and social enterprise development.

“The academy was established mainly to instill professional competence within the Social Action Network, and among the partners of Caritas Philippines, as emphasized by Pope Benedict XVI in Deus Caritas Est. We also want to develop the academy as the national repository of important social action documents, best practices and studies which will make sure we have the needed baseline data to inform and improve our program implementation,” Fr. Antonio Labiao, Jr., Caritas Philippines Executive Secretary, added during the opening program.

“The Caritas Philippines Academy is our legacy, our contribution to the on-going formation and development of the social action works in the Philippines. As the mandated arm of the Catholic Church to form the social conscience of the country, we hope that our academy will be able to firstly help form the heart and improve the competence of our social action and development workers,” Bishop Bagaforo said in closing.

This year’s introductory course on Pastoral Management is availed by more than 70 social action directors, workers, and partners. The course will run for 14 days before the specialization courses that will be offered for the remaining of the school year.

Wakasan Na! Movement

Dear Friends,

On June 3 at 5 p.m., we are launching Wakasan Na!, a movement to end President Duterte’s rule and his legacy of failed and detrimental policies. This will be an online event via Zoom, livestreamed over various social media platforms and covered by the press.

Wakasan Na! is an offshoot of the “Save the Nation! Duterte Resign!” petition initially signed by 500 personalities and which has gathered more than 69,000 at the change.org site. It aims to hold Duterte accountable for his failed leadership and usher in a change in leaders and policies if not now then by the 2022 elections. It is an effort to help the nation out of the rut and spur us into recovery (please see attached concept note).

In this light, we would like to invite you to be part of Wakasan Na! by joining our online launch on June 3 at 5 p.m. (please register using this link: https://bit.ly/2QTEdhX) and by clicking the “Like” button at the Wakasan Na! Facebook Page (https://tinyurl.com/pckacm6p).

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