THE FUTURE OF THE CATHOLIC CHURCH IN THE PHILIPPINES

(500 YOC AND BEYOND)

This is how I see the Filipino Church as a “field hospital” of the future, both synodal and participative, both proactive and obedient to our bishops and to the Pope. “If a picture paints an thousand words…” IMAGINE THE FUTURE AND PRAISE THE LORD!

I. GOSPEL FOUNDATION

II. PASTORAL ZEAL OF THE ORDAINED

III. THE LOVING SYNERGY AMONG HIERARCHY, RELIGIOUS, AND LAITY

IV. LAITY AS CO-RESPONSIBLE IN SYNODALITY, LEADERSHIP, AND OBEDIENCE

GOSPEL FOUNDATION

1. We see throughout the Gospels how Jesus reaches out to all. He does not only save people individually but as a people that he gathers together, as the one Shepherd of the entire flock (cf. John 10:16).

2. The ministry of Jesus shows us that no one is excluded from God’s plan of salvation. The work of evangelization and the message of salvation cannot be understood without Jesus’ constant openness to the widest possible audience.

3. The Gospels refer to this as the crowd, composed of all the people who follow Jesus along the path and everyone that Jesus calls to follow him.

PASTORAL ZEAL OF THE ORDAINED

1. Imagine the venerable local Ordinary, after making a firm resolve, leads the most dynamic pastoral work in the diocese, 24/7, without letup, refusing to stay in the unreachable bishop’s palace, always ready to roll up his sleeves, and gets the dirty work done.

2. Imagine all clergy, after making a firm resolve, take a quick breakfast after celebrating the early morning Holy Mass and, with lay volunteers, go out to the “peripheries and the frontiers,” themselves smelling like sheep,” and search for the lost sheep.

3. Imagine a time when you call the parish office to invite the priest for lunch, rrrring, “hello,” and they tell you that he is out and personally visiting the aged and busy anointing the sick (functions only the priest can perform), or conducting strategic planning with catechists and Christian Living Education (CLE) instructors of the whole vicariate – and it is already 12 high noon.

4. Pastoral dynamism prevails over the status quo. Imagine three dozen ordained ministers line up inside a huge gymnasium or an open field, joyfully hearing confessions (functions only the priest can perform), hopping from one vicariate to another, until the last repentant soul is forgiven.

5. When that day comes, you realize that, not just in Nueva Segovia, Marinduque, Sorsogon, or Cotabato but in all ecclesiastical provinces, all ordained ministers, headed by their indefatigable bishop, are out in the field.

6. They are out in the field to proclaim the value of human dignity and rights, and to make sure that the basic catechism and solid doctrine are added to folkloric and popular religiosity of the faithful.

7. With firm resolve, the brave new Filipino Church, beyond 500 YOC, is no longer be the green Antipolo parish patio, the tourist-attracting edifice of the famous town in Bohol, or the great Basilica Minore de Santo Nino square.

8. The local Churches in Marawi, Nueva Caceres, and Kalibo become, borrowing Pope Francis’ words, a “FIELD HOSPITAL AFTER BATTLE,” always near and accessible, always available “to heal wounds and to warm the hearts of the faithful.”

THE LOVING SYNERGY AMONG HIERARCHY, RELIGIOUS, AND LAITY

1. The Filipino Pilgrim Church therefore recognizes that God’s precious gift of being a priest or a bishop is something eternally beautiful in itself. Be that as it may, the hierarchy is not meant for itself.

2. Filipino bishops and priests recognize that the hierarchical authority is intended to serve God’s faithful people, never ever designed for the top but meant for the bottom of the hierarchical pyramid.

3. The hierarchical constitution is God’s gift to the Church, yes, definitely. Just the same, the religious and consecrated persons, the laymen and women are given a greater role in decision-making in the Church are also God’s gifts to us.

4. The Filipino Pilgrim Church is no longer ONLY about what our dear bishops and priests say and do, which they have done effectively in the past, but a greater participative journey of all the faithful, who individually has a charism to share and an integral part to play.

5. The Second Vatican Council reinvigorated the sense that all the baptized, both the hierarchy and the laity, are called to be active participants in the saving mission of the Church (LG, 32-33).

LAITY AS CO-RESPONSIBLE IN SYNODALITY, LEADERSHIP, AND OBEDIENCE

1. The faithful have received the Holy Spirit in baptism and confirmation and are endowed with diverse gifts and charisms for the renewal and building up of the Church, as members of the Body of Christ.

2. Imagine the Filipino Pilgrim Church improving a most BEAUTIFUL WAY OF BEING Church that lives out her mission in the world.

3. The Filipino Pilgrim Church embraces pastoral dynamism and requires the entire People of God to be on a journey together, with each member playing his or her crucial role – and united with each other.

4. Imagine the entire People of God in every diocese COMING TOGETHER TO DISCERN TOGETHER HOW TO MOVE FORWARD on the path towards being a more inclusive and loving Church like Jesus in the Gospel.

5. The future sees our bishops practicing the hierarchical authority by listening from the bottom up, building up more effective Basic Ecclesial Communities (BECs), which is now a priority program of every bishop and every parish priest.

6. The Filipino Pilgrim Church embraces a new beginning of reaching out for the lost sheep and the marginalized in Catholic space, with every member of the clergy, religious, and LAITY as effective agent of change and Church reform.

ALL FOR THE GREATER GLORY OF GOD, SALVATION OF SOULS, AND PEACE AMONG ALL THE PEOPLES!

References:

Maximiano, J. (2022, September 14). THE FUTURE OF THE CATHOLIC CHURCH IN THE PHILIPPINES . Retrieved from The Splendor of the Church: https://thesplendorofthechurch.com/2022/09/14/the-future-of-the-catholic-church-in-the-philippines-by-dr-jose-mario-bautista-maximiano/