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Philippine Religion and Philosophy |
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The
Philippines proudly boasts to be the only
Christian nation in Asia. More than 86 percent
of the population is Roman Catholic, 6 percent
belong to various nationalized Christian
cults, and another 2 percent belong to well
over 100 Protestant denominations. In addition
to the Christian majority, there is a vigorous
4 percent Muslim minority, concentrated on the
southern islands of Mindanao, Sulu, and
Palawan. Scattered in isolated mountainous
regions, the remaining 2 percent follow
non-Western, indigenous beliefs and practices.
The Chinese minority, although statistically
insignificant, has been culturally influential
in coloring Filipino Catholicism with many of
the beliefs and practices of Buddhism, Taoism,
and Confucianism.
The pre-Hispanic belief system of Filipinos
consisted of a pantheon of gods, spirits,
creatures, and men that guarded the streams,
fields, trees, mountains, forests, and houses.
Bathala, who created earth and man, was
superior to these other gods and spirits.
Regular sacrifices and prayers were offered to
placate these deities and spirits--some of
which were benevolent, some malevolent. Wood
and metal images represented ancestral
spirits, and no distinction was made between
the spirits and their physical symbol. Reward
or punishment after death was dependent upon
behavior in this life.
Anyone who had reputed power over the
supernatural and natural was automatically
elevated to a position of prominence. Every
village had its share of shamans and priests
who competitively plied their talents and
carried on ritual curing. Many gained renown
for their ability to develop anting-anting, a
charm guaranteed to make a person invincible
in the face of human enemies. Other sorcerers
concocted love potions or produced amulets
that made their owners invisible.
Upon this indigenous religious base two
foreign religions were introduced -- Islam and
Christianity -- and a process of cultural
adaptation and synthesis began that is still
evolving. Spain introduced Christianity to the
Philippines in 1565 with the arrival of Miguel
Lopez de Legaspi. Earlier, beginning in 1350,
Islam had been spreading northward from
Indonesia into the Philippine archipelago. By
the time the Spanish arrived in the 16th
century, Islam was firmly established on
Mindanao and Sulu and had outposts on Cebu and
Luzon. At the time of the Spanish arrival, the
Muslim areas had the highest and most
politically integrated culture on the islands
and, given more time, would probably have
unified the entire archipelago. Carrying on
their historical tradition of expelling the
Jews and Moros [Moors] from Spain (a
commitment to eliminating any non-Christians),
Legaspi quickly dispersed the Muslims from
Luzon and the Visayan islands and began the
process of Christianization. Dominance over
the Muslims on Mindanao and Sulu, however, was
never achieved during three centuries of
Spanish rule. During American rule in the
first half of this century the Muslims were
never totally pacified during the so-called
"Moro Wars." Since independence, particularly
in the last decade, there has been resistance
by large segments of the Muslim population to
national integration. Many feel, with just
cause, that integration amounts to cultural
and psychological genocide. For over ten years
the Moro National Liberation Front has been
waging a war of secession against the Marcos
government. |
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While Islam was contained in the southern
islands, Spain conquered and converted the
remainder of the islands to Hispanic
Christianity. The Spanish seldom had to resort
to military force to win over converts,
instead the impressive display of pomp and
circumstance, clerical garb, images, prayers,
and liturgy attracted the rural populace. To
protect the population from Muslim slave
raiders, the people were resettled from
isolated dispersed hamlets and brought "debajo
de las companas" (under the bells), into
Spanish organized pueblos. This set a pattern
that is evident in modern Philippine Christian
towns. These pueblos had both civil and
ecclesiastical authority; the dominant power
during the Spanish period was in the hands of
the parish priest. The church, situated on a
central plaza, became the locus of town life.
Masses, confessions, baptisms, funerals,
marriages punctuated the tedium of everyday
routines. The church calendar set the pace and
rhythm of daily life according to fiesta and
liturgical seasons. Market places and
cockfight pits sprang up near church walls.
Gossip and goods were exchanged and villagers
found "both restraint and release under the
bells." The results of 400 years of
Catholicism were mixed -- ranging from a deep
theological understanding by the educated
elite to a more superficial understanding by
the rural and urban masses. The latter is
commonly referred to as Filipino folk
Christianity, combining a surface veneer of
Christian monotheism and dogma with indigenous
animism. It may manifest itself in farmers
seeking religious blessings on their rice seed
before planting or in the placement of a
bamboo cross at the comer of a rice field to
prevent damage by insects. It may also take
the form of a folk healer using Roman Catholic
symbols and liturgy mixed with pre-Hispanic
rituals.
When the United States took over the
Philippines in the first half of the century,
the justifications for colonizing were to
Christianize and democratize. The feeling was
that these goals could be achieved only
through mass education (up until then
education was reserved for a small elite).
Most of the teachers who went to the
Philippines were Protestants, many were even
Protestant ministers. There was a strong
prejudice among some of these teachers against
Catholics. Since this Protestant group
instituted and controlled the system of public
education in the Philippines during the
American colonial period, it exerted a strong
influence. Subsequently the balance has
shifted to reflect much stronger influence by
the Catholic majority.
During the period of armed rebellion against
Spain, a nationalized church was organized
under Gregorio Aglipay, who was made
"Spiritual head of the Nation Under Arms."
Spanish bishops were deposed and arrested, and
church property was turned over to the
Aglipayans. In the early part of the 20th
century the numbers of Aglipayans peaked at 25
to 33 percent of the population. Today they
have declined to about 5 percent and are
associated with the Protestant Episcopal
Church of the United States. Another dynamic
nationalized Christian sect is the lglesia ni
Kristo, begun around 1914 and founded by Felix
Manolo Ysagun. Along with the Aglipayans and
Iglesia ni Kristo, there have been a
proliferation of Rizalist sects, claiming the
martyred hero of Philippine nationalism, Jose
B. Rizal as the second son of God and a
reincarnation of Christ. Leaders of these
sects themselves often claim to be
reincarnations of Rizal, Mary, or leaders of
the revolution; claim that the apocalypse is
at hand for non-believers; and claim that one
can find salvation and heaven by joining the
group. These groups range from the Colorums of
the 1920s and 1930s to the sophisticated
P.B.M.A. (Philippine Benevolent Missionary
Association, headed by Ruben Ecleo). Most of
those who follow these cults are the poor,
dispossessed, and dislocated and feel
alienated from the Catholic church.
The current challenge to the supremacy of the
Catholic church comes from a variety of small
sects -- from the fundamentalist Christian
groups, such as Jehovah's Witnesses and
Seventh Day Adventists, to the lglesia ni
Kristo and Rizalists. The Roman Catholics
suffer from a lack of personnel (the priest to
people ratio is exceedingly low), putting them
at a disadvantage in gaining and maintaining
popular support. The Catholic church is
seeking to meet this challenge by establishing
an increasingly native clergy and by engaging
in programs geared to social action and human
rights among the rural and urban poor. In many
cases this activity has led to friction
between the church and the Marcos government,
resulting in arrests of priests, nuns, and lay
people on charges of subversion. In the "war
for souls" this may be a necessary sacrifice.
At present the largest growing religious
sector falls within the province of these
smaller, grass roots sects; but only time will
tell where the percentages will finally rest. |
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