CBCP Pastoral Statement on Ecology: ‘A call for unity and action amid a climate emergency and planetary crisis’

Philippine Church leaders reaffirm their commitment “to lead by example”
in promoting the use of renewable energy


January 30, 2022

Then God spoke to Noah, saying, “Go out of the ark, you and your wife and your sons and your sons’ wives with you. Bring out with you every living thing of all flesh that is with you, birds and animals and every creeping thing that creeps on the earth, that they may breed abundantly on the earth, and be fruitful and multiply on the earth. – Genesis 8:15-17

Today, COVID-19 has taken more than 5.62 million1 lives globally and plunged nations into economic devastation. As we strive to recover from this crisis, the pause imposed by the pandemic on industrial and economic activity encourages us to reflect on the decades of polluting practices our Common Home has had to suffer at the hands of humanity – practices which nations around the world are now, sadly, swiftly returning to.

This is concerning as, while suffering from the impact of the pandemic, climate-vulnerable nations have also experienced intensifying calamities due to the instability of our biosphere. The Philippines, for example, was battered by multiple tropical storms including some declared to be the deadliest in the world from 2013 to 2021.

This has happened even after almost two years of the issuance of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines (CBCP) Pastoral Letter on Ecology entitled “An Urgent Call for Ecological Conversion, Hope in the Face of Climate Emergency”.

The Pastoral Letter is a testimony of the Church’s long-standing regard for the care of God’s creation. It is guided by the wisdom of our Holy Father Pope Francis’s encyclical, Laudato Si’ On Care for Our Common Home, which calls “for a new dialogue about how we are shaping the future of our planet” (LS, 14).

Time and again, we consider and listen to the findings of competent ecological scientists as they “are in a good position to tell us” about the “magnitude of the destruction taking place in our time”.

Even with the pastoral letter and the Pope’s encyclical, we continue to suffer an increasingly warming world and ailing biosphere triggered by exploitative practices that benefit the wealthy few but cause poverty and hunger to many.

At the same time, we are saddened that many of our faithful and partners taking peaceful actions toward ecological conversion are also experiencing increasing harassment and violence.

The proposed measures and policies for addressing the impacts of this crisis should always place social and ecological justice at the forefront. As one of the most vulnerable nations in this era of global emergency, the Philippines has the moral imperative of pursuing the most sustainable development pathway possible for the sake of current and future generations, ensuring that the voices of everyone are accounted for. The task of ensuring this becomes all the more apparent in the context of an upcoming national election that will shape governance in our country during this critical decade for climate and ecological action.

We are committed to advance the teachings of the Laudato Si’ and be bearers of hope in the face of an ecological crisis, following our Lord Jesus, our redeemer. As such, we commit to “integrate the care of creation as our common home in our teaching and practice of Christian discipleship” through concrete ecological actions in caring for our Common Home. In 2019, the CBCP Pastoral Letter on Ecology detailed 13 such action points; in 2020, the celebration of the special anniversary year of Pope Francis’s encyclical led to the creation of Laudato Si’ Goals (LSGs) to guide our work towards integral ecology.

Today, we strongly enjoin all our brothers and sisters in dioceses across the country to be further guided by the following reflections:

1. Ecological Conversion through Stewardship of our Resources

Laudato Si’ Goals: Response to Cry of the Earth and Ecological Economics

We believe that the full alignment of all nations to the 1.5°C goal of the Paris Agreement is necessary to truly respect our planet’s ecological limits. In the 2021 United Nations climate conference (COP 26), countries around the world agreed that there is an “urgency of enhancing ambition and action in relation to [climate] mitigation, adaptation, and finance”, including phasing down coal and deeply cutting both carbon and non-carbon emissions by 2030. As a climate vulnerable country that must lead in demanding the fruition of this goal, the Philippines must ensure that its greenhouse gas emissions, especially those from fossil fuels, peak much earlier than the year 2030.

The peak in our country’s use of coal, the dirtiest of all fossil fuels, should pave the way for a complete phase-out of all other polluting energy. This will happen only if financial resources are re-channeled so as to disable the coal industry. Financing for fossil gas, which is expanding greatly in the Philippines today and threatening vital life systems, must also be done away with.

Hence, re-echoing the statement of the civil society on the submission of the country’s Nationally Determined Contributions (NDC), the climate commitment should “include clear decarbonization pathways, indicative of a just transition in the energy sector, with a higher share of unconditional commitments, established timeline for reducing the reliance on fossil fuels, a rejection of nuclear power, and ambitious targets for renewable energy development and efficiency by 2050”.

In our recent Pastoral Letter on Ecology, we wrote that we must “not allow the financial resources of our Catholic institutions to be invested in favor of coal-fired power plants, mining companies and other destructive extractive projects.” This was strengthened by the Holy See’s Laudato Si’ manual for Church leaders and workers which includes calls for pollution reduction, decarbonization of energy and economic sectors, and investing in clean and renewable energy which is accessible to all.

Through efforts by many members of the Church and civil society, we are now all the more aware that many of the financial institutions in whom we place our trust have been instrumental in the rise of fossil fuels, as well as other destructive and exploitative industries like mining and logging.

It is unacceptable that finances so graciously provided to us are used for such industries. Financial resources must be used solely for the Common Good, Integrity of Creation, and the Glory of our Creator. Thus, we affirm our commitment to divest from coal and other destructive industries, and urge the whole Body of the Church to:

● Examine all banks and institutions in whom we have entrusted financial resources, and assess the social and environmental implications of their financing activities;

● Use our position as shareholders, clients, or stakeholders of financial institutions in and beyond the Philippines, but especially towards domestic banks, to demand for policies and plans to phase out their exposure to coal, fossil gas, and destructive energy in line with the 1.5°C ambition. The CBCP National Laudato Si Program, together with partners and experts, is asked to strategically engage with Catholic institutions, such as but not limited to archdioceses, dioceses, and religious congregations and communities, to act on ecological financial stewardship, and provide technical support and capacity building;

● Without clear commitments and policies from these banks to divest from fossil fuels, we commit to withdraw all our resources that are with them not later than 2025, and hold them accountable to their fiduciary duties and moral obligations as climate actors;

● Steer resources of the Church to genuinely sustainable ventures by actively urging financial entities to adopt sustainable finance policies and invest in renewable energy and ecological restoration and protection efforts;

● Lead by example by promoting the use of renewable energy and other sustainable systems in our own facilities and communities;

● Urge all institutions holding the Church’s financial resources to move away from extractive industries, including logging and mining, with haste. We will not support any activity that leads to promoting destructive mining, recognizing the suffering it has and continues to bring upon the environment and affected communities;

● Assert a CBCP-initiated non-acceptance policy of donations of whatever kind, from owners or operators and any representative of extractive industries especially coal, fossil gas, mining, quarrying, logging, etc. (regardless of scale of operation); and

● Build the knowledge and capacity of our congregations, schools, communities, and organizations to meaningfully contribute to the call for divestment through education campaigns and programs.

2. Laudato Si’ Formation and the National Laudato Si’ Program

Laudato Si’ Goals: Ecological Education, Ecological Spirituality, and Community Resilience and Empowerment

The Pastoral Letter of 2019 and the steadfast commitment of our brothers and sisters in Christ have birthed a National Laudato Si’ Program that will guide ecclesial communities to live the teachings of Laudato Si’.

We have sowed beginnings of what could be a thriving network of workers for our Common Home across all dioceses, including the establishment of 15 Ecology Desks across the Philippines. Let us build on these through the following:

● Continue the creation of an Ecology Desk in every diocese, a mandate first initiated by our predecessors during the Second Plenary Council of the Philippines in 1991 and later affirmed with urgency by the Pastoral Letter of 2019, and strengthen the capacities of existing Ecology Desks. This would require our respective bishops and religious superiors to prioritize the allocation of budget and financial support for the desk and its activities aligning with the 13 ecological actions of the 2019 Pastoral Letter on Ecology in which the National Laudato Si’ Program is also instructed to conduct a stocktaking of such actions;

● Institutionalize the celebration of the Season of Creation and Laudato Si’ Week to nourish our spirituality and awaken our identity as members of a single, sacred Earth-community called to care for our Common Home and all life in it; and

● Strengthen and participate in the National Laudato Si’ Program, where representatives of dioceses, members of communities of faith, and civil society can work together in national and sub-regional levels. This ecological convergence is expected to support and promote the Church’s Laudato Si’ Action Platform (LSAP).

● Through the National Laudato Si’ Program, mandate pursuit of and participation in education campaigns, such as the Deep Journey to Laudato Si’, which will deepen our collective understanding of the challenges faced by our Common Home and strengthen our unity to take action.

● Intensify existing efforts to establish Laudato Si’ schools framework or guidance where civil society, faith-based organizations and the academe led by the Catholic Educational Association of the Philippines (CEAP) work together in synergy; and popularize the Holy Father’s suggested “little daily actions” highlighted in Laudato Si’ passage 211 in campuses and community partners.

3. Advancement of the Rights of Nature and the Defense of Life

Laudato Si’ Goals: Response to the Cry of the Poor and Adoption of Sustainable Lifestyles

We renew our commitment to advance the Rights of Nature campaign. This is our contribution to the preservation of the delicate interdependence among all forms of life, recognizing that all elements of nature have the common right to exist and flourish.

We believe that the proposed piece of legislation for the recognition of the rights of nature that is now awaiting decision in both houses of Congress can push forward a Philippine society where mining, fossil fuels, development aggression, and other forms of ecological destruction are cast away.

It would serve as a barrier to detrimental projects that would only benefit the few while exacerbating the climate vulnerability of many.

Moreover, we affirm the vigilance of many indigenous groups, local and faith communities, members of civil society, and others who are risking their lives so that projects that mar nature may be derailed.

However, we are alarmed by the persisting culture of impunity that threatens environmental defenders. As such, we call on the whole body of the Church to:

● Support the Rights of Nature Bill in Congress and Senate, and push for environmental local ordinances that promote the same;

● Implement education and information campaigns on the Rights of Nature and Integral Ecology;

● Establish coordination and dialogue platforms with local government units for eco-governance initiatives and programs;

● Call on the national government and its line agencies to respect and support the environmental code of local government units, especially those that ban destructive extractive and polluting projects;

● Demand transparency and genuine stakeholder involvement from the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) and National Commission on Indigenous Peoples (NCIP) in all decisions made relative to ecologically and socially hazardous endeavors including mining, logging, construction or operation of infrastructure and energy or other industrial facilities, and others;

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Address of the CBCP President to the Opening of the CBCP Annual Meeting

by Bp. Pablo Virgilio S. David, D.D
Bishop of Kalookan
President, CBCP
January 27, 2022

Your Eminences, your Excellencies, especially our Apostolic Nuncio to the Philippines, dear brother archbishops, bishops and diocesan administrators of the Philippines, magandang umaga po sa inyong lahat.

We enter into this 123rd CBCP Plenary Assembly in the spirit of synodality to listen to one another, and to foster communion, participation and mission, especially as we face these challenging times of the third year of the Covid pandemic, and as we prepare for the May 2022 elections. 

Many of our brothers and sisters in the Visayas and Mindanao are still struggling to stand on their feet again after that devastating typhoon Odette that left thousands homeless and caused unspeakable damages on properties and lives.

We think in particular of the faithful of Surigao under the spiritual leadership of Bishop Yiet, those of Tagbilaran under Bishop Abet, Talibon under Bishop Danny, Maasin under Bishop Precious, Tandag under Bishop Raul, San Carlos under Bishop Gerry, Cebu under Archbishop Joe, Dumaguete under Bishop Julito, Puerto Princesa under Bishop Soc, Taytay Under Bishop Broderick, and Kabankalan under Bishop Louie.

Excellency, our dear Papal Nuncio, please convey our heartfelt thanks to the Holy Father for remembering the Philippines in his prayers, especially the survivors of typhoon Odette.

We remember with sadness our brother Archbishop Romulo De la Cruz of Zamboanga who passed on last December 10, 2021.  And we pray for Archbishop Ramon Arguelles, emeritus of Lipa, who, according to Archbishop Gilbert, is critically ill, and has opted to stay home and prepare for the inevitable instead of submitting himself to any further medical intervention.  We also pray for Bishop Joe Bantolo of Masbate who underwent a colon surgery last Tuesday.

We thank the Lord that Bishop Val Dimoc, who is currently still in the hospital for a severe case of Covid, is on his way to recovery.  He is virtually present, by the way, following our plenary from his hospital bed.  We note with relief that the rest of those who also got infected by the virus and have already fully recovered. 

Of course we rejoiced with Malaybalay for their new bishop who was ordained last September 14, 2021.  Sorry, Bishop Noel Pedregosa, we were prevented by Covid from attending your ordination. Although you have already been with us as diocesan administrator we welcome you again, nevertheless, to the CBCP.

Allow me now to share some thoughts related to the challenges that we are currently facing as a conference of bishops.

From the year 1997 to 2000, in preparation for the coming of the Third Millennium, the CBCP started issuing one Pastoral Exhortation per year:  on Economy in 1997, on Politics in 1998, on Culture in 1999, and on Spirituality in 2000. I remember how the late Dr. Tony Ledesma approached me one day, asking for a favor on behalf of the late Archbishop Legaspi.  Back then he and his wife were running an NGO known as “CENDHRRA”.

Doc Tony, as I fondly called him, told me in confidence that he used to do a lot of drafting of pastoral statements for the CBCP before, but that he was no longer as adept as he used to be.  Apparently, Archbishop Legaspi had asked to find someone to draft the pastoral on spirituality.  He said with a tone of sadness that he would actually have done it himself if he had not been diagnosed of Parkinson’s disease.  And so his request was, would I kindly do it for him?

I remember how I spoke very frankly to him.  I said, “With all due, respect, Doc Tony, do you really think those CBCP pastorals are read and taken seriously by our people?  In the first place, they are all written in English, never in a language that the majority would understand.  Whom are they really addressing in their letters? (I did not imagine back then that I would be asking the same question again, but this time already as part of the Church’s leadership body that I used to criticize.)

Back then, I also said to Doc Tony, “I would understand the need for an English version if it is a translation from an original text in a Filipino language—no matter if that language might be Tagalog, Cebuano, or Ilocano. Other non-English speaking conferences of bishops sometimes also see the need to have English versions of some of their messages. But you can always be sure that the original texts are always in their own native languages.”

I find it sad that up until now we still communicate to one another mainly in a language that is foreign to all of us.  In today’s stratification of the Philippine society, the English language allows us to communicate mainly to those in the upper strata of Philippine society, the more educated class.  In a very recent survey that classified Filipino voters by their socio-economic status, we are told that only 3.7M voters actually belong to the ABC educated classes on top of the pyramid, while 48.2 M voters come from the class D and 9.9 M from the Class E.

We must admit with regret that language and our manner of communicating ourselves has been one of the reasons why many of those in the D and E—even the baptized Catholics among them have remained alienated from the Church.

I have a feeling that PCP2’s vision of the Philippine Church as a Church of the Poor was, to a large extent what it said it really was—still a vision, not yet a reality.  Well, to cut the long story short, I told Doc Tony that I was willing to draft the Pastoral on Filipino Spirituality only if I could be allowed to do it in a Filipino language, either in Kapampangan or Tagalog.  He smiled and said, “Give me some time to discuss it with Archbishop Legaspi.”  I also smiled and said to myself, “Good, I’m off the hook.”

To my surprise, one week later, he called me up to say that my proposal had been approved.  “If possible,” he said, “please write it in Tagalog, because very few would understand it in Kapampangan, and I will take care of having it translated into English.  And so I drafted the said pastoral and entitled it, LANDAS NG PAGPAPAKABANAL PARA SA PILIPINO.

I was surprised to hear later on from some priests, former students of mine from the Visayas and Mindanao, that they did not even feel the need to translate it into Cebuano because they understood the Filipino quite well.  I also heard from some parish priests and school directors that they used it as a kind of manual for spiritual formation in parishes and schools.  It did not land in the headline news, it did not become controversial, but it reverberated among the grassroots, I heard, and was even used by the BECs.  But that was about the only time that a pastoral was drafted in a Filipino language.  It did not succeed in setting a linguistic trend in the drafting of other pastorals.

Perhaps it’s about time that we took more seriously the consequences of our cultural distance from the majority in our Philippine society.  We must humbly admit that our spiritual and moral influence on them has become very minimal.  One of the best proofs for this is the fact that the present populist government is very successful in alienating us from our own people, in stoking deep-seated resentments among those in the D and E strata, against those in the A,B, & C, and to identify us Church leaders with the ABC because seminary formation has given us the same level of education. 

Knowing our own vulnerabilities as Church leaders, the populist leader now takes advantage of every opportunity to question our credibility, to call us a bunch of hypocrites, to accuse us of playing politics, and to insult the God we proclaim with cuss words that entertain people—most of whom belong to our Catholic faithful.  He has succeeded in caricaturing us as elitists, as pharisaical leaders who don’t walk our talk, as shepherds who don’t smell like our sheep.  His social media army of trolls have succeeded in amplifying his message while keeping him high in terms of popularity in the surveys.

We know we are sinners, we have our own share of human failures and weaknesses, but we also know these caricatures are what they are—caricatures.  Meaning, “distorted representations in a way that exaggerates and oversimplifies,” with the objective of insulting or making fun of those being caricatured.  Caricaturing perceived enemies seems to be very consistent with the typical demagoguery that has given rise to populist governments all over the world, the kind of worldview that has found a perfect tool in the modern social media.  All they need to do is to hire armies of IT people, whose job is to create fake accounts that would efficiently amplify their so-called “alternative narratives.” 

And mind you, they are very successful at it.  They have mastered the technique of boosting their fake news, bullying truth-tellers by blasting their comment boxes with invectives and intimidations.  They can spread their falsehoods with the speed of light, and make their videos go viral on Tik-Tok, Instagram, WhatsApp, Twitter and Fb. 

People, especially the young, don’t even know anymore that many of those whom they interact with in the social media are not real people but mostly virtual accounts run by a handful of trolls, who dominate the cyberspace through AI (artificial intelligence), and, in effect, are able to control public opinion about almost anything. 

Most social media users don’t even know that what they post on any social media platform does not belong to them.  The cloud of data belongs to the owners of those platforms who have the exclusive right to sell these data and earn billions from companies that also earn billions by using them to control people’s product preferences, their choices of entertainment, their sexual preferences and their addictions through AI-generated algorithms in the information ecosystem.

Worse yet, they sell their data to governments and aspiring politicians who have succeeded in making fascism, dictatorship and authoritarianism fashionable all over again.  They go by the principle made popular by Joseph Goebbels, whom Hitler appointed Minister of Public Enlightenment and Propaganda in the German Reich.  He said, “A lie told once remains a lie.  But a lie told a thousand times becomes the truth.”  And that “truth” is now called the ALTERNATIVE NARRATIVE.

That is how the present populist government in our country rose into power.  Pope Francis has spoken very often about the evils of populism in his encyclical Fratelli Tutti.  His words ring true in our own setting, especially now that we are witnessing how the family of our present populist leader is entering into a convenient deal with the family of the late dictator for political expediency, in a kind of symbiosis of power or a mutually beneficial intermarriage of political dynasties. And apparently they are leading in the surveys, as you will hear later from our invited resource persons.   Apparently more than 60 percent of our Catholic faithful will support them, according to reliable survey results.

I think they are having their heyday partly because we have conveniently avoided politics and have kept the social teachings of the Church about the politics of the common good practically unknown to our faithful.  As a consequence, our laity have tended to be more clericalistic than clerics themselves.  They keep their involvement to a bare minimum, such as through non-partisan organizations for election monitoring like PPCRV (which are, no doubt, also important).

Look, even our Sangguniang Laiko leaders cannot seem to make up their minds on whether or not their leadership body should go to the point of supporting candidates who represent values close to the Gospel and the social teachings of the Church.  Ironically, it is those who support the candidates who steal, lie and kill, who tend to be more aggressive about insisting on “non-partisanship”, which, to them means keeping the Church in a pure state of neutrality.  They are the ones who love to invoke against us the principle of “separation of Church and State”, as they understand it—not as the Philippine Constitution actually says it.

They remind me of Pontius Pilate and what he did when he asked Jesus in Jn 8:31, “WHAT IS TRUTH?” Pilate somehow knew that the accusations against Jesus were unfounded.  That was why he felt the need to conduct his own investigation on the matter.  Later in the Gospel, we are told that he had found no guilt in the accused.  But in the end, what did he do?  He “washed his hands” and chose to stay “neutral” because he did not have the courage to uphold the truth.

In Jn 8:31-32, Jesus said, “If you remain in my word, you will truly be my disciples, and you will know the truth, and the truth will set you free.”  I remember how the late Jesuit Fr. Guido Arguelles used to paraphrase those words of Jesus.  He said, “The truth will set you free, but first it will make you miserable.”

Dear brother bishops of the Philippines, I know we feel like a David before a Goliath who is armed from head to toe.  I am sure like the terrified army led by Saul, we are inclined to say “He is so big, how can we fight this giant?”  With just a slingshot and some pebbles, and a lot of faith in the God who had seen in him the heart of a good shepherd who was fearless when it came to defending his flocks from predators, David saw things differently.  He said, “He is so big, I cannot possibly miss.” The Goliath that I am referring to is Satan, no other.  Only Satan is our enemy; he fights his battle with lies.  Only Christ is our General; He fights his battle with the armor of truth.

In Ephesians 6:10-17,Paul gives us some tips on how to fight the spiritual battle; by drawing our strength only “from the Lord and from his mighty power.”    He also says, “Stand fast with your loins girded in truth, clothed with righteousness as a breastplate, and your feet shod in readiness for the gospel of peace.  In all circumstances, hold faith as a shield, to quench all [the] flaming arrows of the evil one.  And take the helmet of salvation and the sword of the Spirit, which is the word of God.”

May the Holy Spirit breathe upon us as we begin this plenary assembly.  Thank you.

President, CBCP
January 27, 2022

Oratio Imperata Laban sa Covid 19 – Tagalog

(Revised January 29, 2022)

Mahabagin at maawaing Ama,
inaamin namin ang aming mga kasalanan 
at mapagpakumbabang dumudulog sa iyo
upang makatagpo ng pagpapatawad at buhay.

Nagsusumamo kami sa iyo  
upang hilingin ang iyong patnubay
laban sa CoVid 19 na nagpapahirap sa marami at kumitil na ng mga buhay.

Tunghayan mo kami nang may pagmamahal
at ipagadya kami ng inyong mapaghilom na kamay
mula sa takot sa kamatayan at karamdaman.
Itaguyod mo kami sa pag-asa at patatagin sa pananampalataya.

Gabayan mo ang mga dalubhasang naatasan
na tumuklas ng mga lunas
at paraan upang ihinto ang paglaganap nito.

Pagpalain mo ang aming mga pagsisikap
na mawakasan ng mga nalinang na gamot
ang pandemya sa aming bayan.

Patnubayan mo ang mga lumilingap sa maysakit
upang ang kanilang pagkalinga ay malakipan ng husay at malasakit.

Pagkalooban mo sila ng kalusugan sa isip at katawan,
katatagan sa kanilang paninindigang maglingkod
at ipagsanggalang sa karamdaman.
Itinataas namin ang mga nagdurusa.
Makamtam nawa nila ang mabuting kalusugan.
Lingapin mo rin ang mga kumakalinga sa kanila.
Pagkamitin mo ng kapayapaang walang hanggan ang mga pumanaw na.

Pagkalooban mo kami ng biyaya
na magtulong tulong tungo sa ikabubuti ng lahat.
Pukawin sa amin ang pagmamalasakit sa mga nangangailangan.

Sa pagdamay at malasakit namin sa bawa’t isa,
malampasan nawa namin ang krisis na ito
at lumago sa kabanalan at pagbabalik loob sa iyo.

Hinihiling namin ito sa pamamagitan ni Hesukristo
na nabubuhay at naghaharing kasama mo at ng Espiritu Santo,
Diyos, magpasawalang hangan. Amen.

Dumudulog kami sa iyong patnubay, Mahal na Ina ng Diyos.
Pakinggan mo ang aming mga kahilingan sa aming pangangailangan
at ipagadya mo kami sa lahat ng kasamaan,
maluwalhati at pinagpalang Birhen. Amen.

Mahal na Birhen, mapagpagaling sa maysakit, ipanalangin mo kami.
San Jose, ipanalangin mo kami.
San Rafael Arkanghel, ipanalangin mo kami.
San Roque, ipanalangin mo kami.
San Lorenzo Ruiz, ipanalangin mo kami.
San Pedro Calungsod, ipanalangin mo kami.

Oratio Imperata for Protection Against COVID-19

Merciful and compassionate Father,
we confess our sins
and we humbly come to you
to find forgiveness and life.

We come to you in our need
to seek your protection
against the COVID-19 virus
that has disturbed and claimed many lives.

We ask you now to look upon us with love
and by your healing hand,
dispel the fear of sickness and death,
restore our hope, and strengthen our faith.

We pray that you guide the people
tasked to find cures for this disease
and to stem its transmission.

Bless our efforts
to use the medicines developed
to end the pandemic in our country.

We pray for our health workers
that they may minister to the sick
with competence and compassion.

Grant them health in mind and body,
strength in their commitment,
protection from the disease.
We pray for those afflicted.
May they be restored to health.
Protect those who care for them.
Grant eternal rest to those who have died.

Give us the grace in these trying times
to work for the good of all
and to help those in need.

May our concern and compassion for each other
see us through this crisis
and lead us to conversion and holiness.

Grant all these
through our Lord Jesus Christ your Son
who lives and reigns with you,
in the unity of the Holy Spirit,
God forever and ever. Amen.

We fly to Your protection,
oh Holy Mother of God.
Do not despise our petition in our necessities,
 but deliver us always from all dangers,
oh glorious and blessed Virgin. Amen.

Our Lady, health of the sick, pray for us.
St. Joseph, pray for us.
St. Raphael the Archangel, pray for us.
San Roque, pray for us.
San Lorenzo Ruiz, pray for us.
San Pedro Calungsod, pray for us.

Where Evil Exists, Intervene -Pope Francis

The Philippines sits at a vital juncture in its history as it prepares for the 2022 Presidential elections.

Internationally, there are whispers of the Philippines becoming a FAILED STATE should the current situation and trends continue. The sparks igniting such whispering are President Duterte’s infamous war on drugs, the failure of government to govern for the good of all, and the parlous economic situation, heighted by the government’s haphazard response to the Pandemic.

Should the Marcos Jr – Duterte partnership win the coming election, we fear for our country, we fear for the future of our children, we fear for the future of our nation.

Faced with such a dire scenario, we do not throw our hands up in dismay, nor clench our fists in anger.

Rather we ACT.

Pope Francis has said: “It is necessary to INTERVENE where evil spreads; because evil spreads where there are no daring Christians who oppose with good.”

Pope Francis calls Christians to fight such evil we now face. There is no sitting on the fence.

Caloocan Bishop Pablo David speaks directly: “We should in fact be ashamed to call ourselves Christians if we don’t actively participate in getting trustworthy candidates opted into office. That is if we care at all about the future of the country!”

And St Paul admonishes us thus, “Do not be overcome by evil, defeat evil with good” (Rom. 12:21).

The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good people to do nothing.

To defeat the Marcos JR. -Duterte partnership in these 2022 elections, we need to select and actively campaign for a leader who is the antithesis of the Ferdinand Marcos Jr – Sarah Duterte team. We need choose and strongly support a person of opposite morality, educational background and leadership style.

To us in KaalagaD, that person is Leonora Gerona Robredo, or simply LENI to her millions of supporters.

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ECEA Update on 2022 Week of Prayer for Christian Unity

January 18, 2022

Your Excellencies,

In the celebration of 2022 Week of Prayer for Christian Unity (January 18-25), the Episcopal Commission on Ecumenical Affairs (ECEA) is sharing the following:

1.  The General Secretariat of the Synod of Bishops and the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity released what I could describe as a “short but sweet” prayer linking synodality and ecumenism as we celebrate the Week of Prayer. The prayer goes:

            Heavenly Father,
            As the Magi journeyed towards Bethlehem led by the star,
            so by Your heavenly light,
            guide the Catholic Church to walk together with all Christians during this time of synod.
            As the Magi were united in their worship of Christ,
            lead us closer to Your Son and so to one another,
            so that we become a sign of the unity that You desire for Your Church and the whole creation.
            We ask this through Christ, our Lord.
            Amen.

2.  CBCP-NCCP Unity Statement FOR 2022 WPCU, attached.

3.  Schedule of Activities: 

https://www.facebook.com/nationalcouncilofchurchesinthephilippines/photos/a.1434316213543827/2678207575821345/?__cft__[0]=AZVMLkfkDL0y9jeGt_jD0-BpolGFxPls0X9HfCAn50ya1v2RCl1usut-hGdzMSiBwRVmuS8mnvm7ayEqy59plxdsXlhIxGnAUL5wRE70UaSaFWzZHCAdrQwHsjH-zmPye7U&__tn__=EH-R

4.  January 18 invite from Dumaguete Ecumenical Group,

Link: 
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/86291464839…

Meeting ID: 862 9146 4839
Passcode: WPCU2022

5. January 19  invite from Manila Cathedral

https://www.facebook.com/themanilacathedral/photos/a.1688013581476930/3268617796749826/?__cft__[0]=AZVC4F0pMON8jWAq4rHLoJGPzoq0lOOY9k8no42OfuznlPNwqmMRfM3pSjmF9Weh6nXVxHJzlc2m-JwFt_LV5CIzgO109nnYmFbTypzc4QV-ztjdFx3fT0Alt0TSdlb1nmI&__tn__=EH-R

Sincerely yours,

Msgr. Bernardo R. Pantin
CBCP Secretary General

Appeal for support to the Pontifical Society of the Holy Childhood

12 January 2022

Dear Fellow Missionaries in Christ:

A hope-filled new year!

Although we continue walking in “the dark valley of death,” yet, we continue giving our best in doing what we have to do, knowing that the Good Shepherd is at our side (cf Ps 23:4). With St. Paul we humbly but confidently, gratefully and defiantly exclaim, “I have \the strength for everything through him who empowers me.” (Phil 4:13)

Despite countless losses, we affirm with Pope Francis that “Children are a blessing for humanity and for the Church, bringing new life and energy to families and society.” (General Audience, St. Peter’s Square, March 18, 2015) Sadly, though, it is the children who are always among the most vulnerable and the most affected when calamities happen. As servant – leaders, it behooves us to echo Pope Francis: “The Church offers her maternal care to all children and their families, and she brings them the blessing of Jesus. May we always care for our children, not counting the cost, so that they may never believe themselves to be mistakes, but always know their infinite worth.” (General audience, St. Peter’s Square, April 8, 2015)

In the midst of the aftermath of super typhoon Odette, and in the face of the ongoing surge of the Omicron variant, may we be blessed, nevertheless, in many different ways; and may we continue to Offer — no matter how humble these may be — spiritual, moral and financial supports for the children. Incidentally, these past many years, most, if not all, of our collections, for the solidarity fund of the Pontifical Society of the Holy Childhood primarily benefit Filipino children. Other countries continue to share part of their annual collections to Filipino children.

Please find attached the e-poster in celebration of the Feast of Sto. Niño, Holy Childhood Sunday. Kindly share this e-poster to as many individuals, communities and institutions as possible. Maraming salamat po! Praying for you and your mission, I remain

Sincerely yours,