by Lope Coles Robredillo, SThD
 ALONGSIDE
 THE LITURGICAL celebrations that the Church observes during the Holy 
Week are practices which, in the Philippines, have long been linked with
 it. Among them are the siete palabras, the way of the cross, procession of 
images, salubong, pabasa, cenaculo, and penitencia. For most Catholics, they not only add color to the week-long celebrations, but are, in fact, so associated with the Holy Week that it could not be conceived without them. It is not seldom that devotees--if only for these folk rituals—would spend the Holy Week in Sta. Cruz (Marinduque), Palo (Leyte), Grotto (Novaliches), or in some remote town in Bicol or Pangasinan, rather than in their own parishes. Some, for example, may decline to attend the Good Friday liturgy, but they will certainly make an effort to witness penitentes reenact the crucifixion on that day. Indeed, it happens that these activities attract more people than the liturgical celebrations themselves. But since these practices belong to the extra-liturgical spiritual life of the Church, the question is often raised: how do you look at them a critical point of view?
images, salubong, pabasa, cenaculo, and penitencia. For most Catholics, they not only add color to the week-long celebrations, but are, in fact, so associated with the Holy Week that it could not be conceived without them. It is not seldom that devotees--if only for these folk rituals—would spend the Holy Week in Sta. Cruz (Marinduque), Palo (Leyte), Grotto (Novaliches), or in some remote town in Bicol or Pangasinan, rather than in their own parishes. Some, for example, may decline to attend the Good Friday liturgy, but they will certainly make an effort to witness penitentes reenact the crucifixion on that day. Indeed, it happens that these activities attract more people than the liturgical celebrations themselves. But since these practices belong to the extra-liturgical spiritual life of the Church, the question is often raised: how do you look at them a critical point of view?
            For the nonce, it may be well to focus on the pabasa, cenaculo, and penitencia, and, to start with, give a short description of these practices. Usually held at home, the pabasa is the singing of the life of Jesus in poetic form, called pasyon. Accompanied
 by a musical instrument, with the book placed between the two lighted 
candles, singers chant verses, oftentimes in alternation, before a 
crucifix. It is not uncommon for the host to serve drinks and finger 
foods during a pabasa. The cenaculo is
 the dramatization of the passion story, which normally begins with the 
scene of the agony in the garden, and ends with the crucifixion. It may 
take the form of simple passion play or a grand one similar to that of 
Oberammergau in Bavaria, where practically the whole village is involved
 in holding it once every ten years. Unlike the way of the cross which 
is aimed at meditating on the journey to Calvary, the penitencia
 seeks to dramatize the physical sufferings of Jesus bodily, either by 
physical flagellation, the carrying of a heavy cross, being crucified on
 it, or their combination. All of them are, objectively viewed, forms of participation in the suffering of Jesus: oral (pabasa), dramatic (cenaculo) and bodily (penitencia). 
Expressions of Affective Faith
            It is instructive that whereas in the siete palabras, procession, salubong
 and the way of the cross, the priest ordinarily accompanies the 
participants, especially in the provinces, he is conspicuously absent in
 pabasa, cenaculo and penitencia. Of
 importance, however, is that these three rituals are basically meant 
for the edification of lay people. And they are held without having to 
be joined with the liturgical celebrations going on in the church. The 
priest has no role in them. They belong to the popular tradition. But 
they are originally aimed at participation in the celebrations of the 
mysteries of redemption. If these observations have anything to tell us,
 it is that these rituals are expressions of the people’s affective 
faith, which scarcely finds place in the official worship in the Church.
 In effect, it may be said that these popular practices are expressions 
of the lay people’s affective dimension of faith and at the same time 
are catered to it. They enhance religious affections and feelings. In 
the chanting of the pasyon, it sometimes happens that singers, swept by their emotion as they sing the poetic lines, shed tears; in the cenaculo, the participants become emotionally involved as they dramatize the events surrounding Jesus’ death; and in the penitencia,
 they are able to empathize with him in his pain. On the other hand, 
Roman liturgy is sober and reticent, and such emotion experience has 
scarcely any place for expression in it.
            At
 the same time, however, they also externalize the people’s 
understanding of the faith. Of course, the lay people did not compose 
the pasyon; priests did. Most likely too, they did not, at the beginning, write the script of the cenaculo;
 but they make the oral and dramatic expressions, and obviously, having 
been written for them, these influence their ways of thinking and 
acting. For this reason, it is not surprising, indeed, that in most 
cases, their knowledge of who Jesus is and his salvific work shows a 
familiarity more with the pasyon
 and the drama than with the gospels or the official Christology and 
soteriology of the Church. Moreover, today, the script of the cenaculo is
 being written by laymen and, although priests are consulted, the 
over-all outcome mirrors the understanding of lay people. But this is 
especially true of penitencia.
 Though its roots may be traced to the practice of doing penance during 
Lent, it expresses the lay people’s faith in what participation in the 
suffering of Jesus must consist of. The rituals, in the other words, are
 a vehicle which expresses the faith experiences of the participants, 
but at the same time serving to call that faith to mind, and to 
catechize their audience in that faith.
Reason for Attractiveness
            That these rituals (particularly the cenaculo and the penitencia)
 attract more people than the liturgical celebrations has at least four 
significations. First, this indicates their success, at least in 
catering to the affective dimension of their faith, and the 
understanding of that faith. In other words, they are able to speak to 
the needs of the lay people. Unhampered by liturgical discipline, they 
undergo changes and additions as they develop and flourish in response 
to those needs. For this reason, they are meaningful to them. The second
 implication is simply the reverse of the first. These rituals may also 
be interpreted as an expression of their disaffection from the official 
Church liturgy. For lay people, it is difficult to appropriate the 
meaning of the prayers and the action of the official liturgy. Hence, 
they feel the need for a ritual in order to plug in to the reticent 
liturgical celebration. A case in point is the holding of hands during 
singing of the Lord’s Prayer. Although it is against liturgical norms to
 do so, people in Manila make that gesture because, as someone said, it 
feels good. More should be said of this, but the point is, there is 
wisdom in the proposition that liturgy should not be foreign to the 
affective dimension of the people’s faith.
            Moreover,
 the lay people have been estranged from the official liturgy because, 
before the Second Vatican Council, they had a little chance--save for cantoras--to
 take an active part in the liturgy. They were simply spectators, who 
could not understand the meaning of the words and gesture in the 
liturgy. Third, in these folk rituals, the lay people are, on the 
contrary, the subject of the expressions of faith experiences, not 
merely the recipients or onlookers of the celebrations. And the medium 
of expression is the language they speak and are at home with. On the 
other hand, that of the liturgy before, which was Latin, was opaque to 
their understanding. Hence, they could never comprehend nor feel for 
themselves the meaning of the celebrations. And fourth, on account of 
all this, the rituals provide them identity.
Environment of Poverty
            The
 aspect of disenfranchisement brings the discussion to the social 
location which these religious practices presuppose: an environment of 
poverty. In general, those who take part in pabasa, who are involved in the cenaculo,
 and who engage in bodily flagellation do not came from the middle class
 or above it. They belong to the lower classes–those often alienated 
from the official liturgy. Even today, they are, in many areas, still 
disenfranchised, because they are not given opportunities to take an 
active part and express their faith in parish celebrations to a degree 
which these rituals allow. (Eucharistic celebrations in which members of
 charismatic communities are able to express themselves emotionally are 
an exception rather than the rule.)  Quite
 apart from the gulf created between the language of the liturgy and 
that of the poor people, the common values which these practices 
represent are the pain and the suffering which Jesus endured until 
death, and people who are poor easily understand and identify themselves
 with these values. Hence, solidarity in values also accounts for the 
popularity of these rituals in an environment of poverty. The 
crucifixion for them is God’s empathy from which they can derive 
strength and inspiration. Clearly then, these rituals speak something of
 the part of society or the environment in which they thrive.
Encounter between Faith and Culture
            Their
 practitioners to some extend cut off from the official Church, and 
coming from the grass roots, these rituals--it is the whole 
understandable--reflect an understanding which is the outcome of the 
encounter between the Christian faith, which they received with much 
limitations, and the culture in which they were brought up. They 
presuppose an environment removed from the centers of religion and 
politics. Before the coming of the Spanish missionaries, our forefathers
 believed in animism. Here, it was taught that the forces of nature were
 controlled by spirits who, by magical rituals, could be rendered 
beneficent or harmful. These were performed by the diwatahan, tambalan or baylana.
 If Holy Week folk rituals have anything to tell us, it is the animism 
has not been completely erased from the Filipino psyche. If one makes a 
survey on those who join in the cenaculo, for
 example, he will discover that the motive for participation is not 
simply to share the suffering of Christ, if at all; some likely answers 
are: fulfillment of a promise, thanksgiving for a favor granted, or 
reparation for sins.
            In a study made on the penitentes of Palo, Leyte, it emerged that fear of punishment was among the motives for submitting oneself to penitencia. The
 fear of punishment for doing something wrong the year round motivates a
 person to placate an angry God. By experiencing pain, one assures 
himself of forgiveness, escape from punishment, and peace of mind. 
Nonetheless, this is actually an animist theology, though one cannot 
blame the devotees .They probably have never been thought correct 
theology, or have correctly understood it, in the first place. On the 
other hand, the environment of poverty prevents them from having access 
to opportunities to learning orthodoxy. Hence, the theology of these 
rituals does not perfectly cohere with the official teaching of the 
Church. On the contrary, it represents the result of the people’s 
appropriation of the gospel message vis-à-vis their pre-Hispanic culture
 and their situation of poverty.
            Which
 brings us to other shadows of these rituals. Alienated from the centers
 of Catholic authority and life, they are in danger, among others, of 
being engaged in for utilitarian purposes.  That
 one participates in self flagellation to obtain God’s forgiveness 
values the ritual for what the subject can obtain from it. This borders 
on superstitions, which nurtures the belief that as long as one engages 
in the ritual, he will be safe, for example, from calamities. This is 
true of other expressions of popular piety which are celebrated in 
connection with liturgy. For instance, although a procession is designed
 as a public witness to the faith, this is not how lay people take it. 
In many cases, they do not participate in it for that end. That one 
takes part in it so his illness will be cured, or so his son will reform
 his life–motives like these are very common. It fact during fiestas in 
rural areas, many residents will complain if the conduct of the 
procession excludes their houses from its ambit, convinced as they are 
that this will also bar them from receiving the graces that are obtained
 through the intercession of their patron saint.
Subjectivism and Lack of Ecclesial Sense
            Related
 to this is the risk that these rituals are anchored on subjectivism. As
 already noted, one reason for the popularity of a Holy Week ritual is 
that it caters to the people’s affective needs. Because it is in touch 
with their feelings, it makes them satisfied. But there is a danger in 
thinking that what satisfies is good. That is subjectivism. In official 
liturgy, of course, this is not supposed to happen, because liturgical 
signs have their own meaning. That is why the Congregation for Divine 
Worship and the Discipline of Sacraments, for example, forbids the 
raising of hands during the Lord’s Prayer because this gesture 
symbolizes communion.  At any 
rate, lay people continue the practice because they feel good doing it. 
But it is precisely the role of liturgy to educate us in such a way we 
are able to express the meaning of liturgical gestures as our own, and 
so enter into the mystery of God and our own as a community. This frees 
liturgy from the danger of subjectivism. On other hand, since lay people
 engage in Holy Week folk rituals because they make them feel good and 
satisfy their affective needs, they do not lead to a real participation 
in the saving mystery.
            In
 addition, these rituals hardly promote a sense of belonging to the 
Church. Because they focus on answering the effective needs of the 
participants, they, in general, are individualistic in orientation. If 
one were to ask the motivations of Black Nazarene devotees in Quiapo for
 joining the January procession or for wiping their handkerchiefs on the
 image, the responses would hardly differ from the ones that would be 
given for joining the cenaculo or the penitencia: personal
 favors, either material or spiritual. There is scarcely any sense of 
being community or of belonging to one. (Which reminds us the 
pre-Vatican II eucharistic celebrations where each member of the 
congregation acted as if he or she were not related to the other 
worshippers in the church.)They lack social direction. Understandably, 
the theory of salvation or soteriology they embody is likewise 
individualistic: it is the individual who is saved from material and 
spiritual evils. Hardly ever clear is the concept of salvation of the 
community, still less the teaching that we are saved through the 
community. Consequently, the idea of building up the kingdom as part of 
their mission is far removed from them. On the contrary, the 
understanding is oriented toward the maintenance of the status quo. It 
is not farfetched to say that these rituals are burdened with the 
pre-Vatican II theology. And since they tend to develop apart from the 
hierarchical structure of the Church, it is not surprising that, in some
 cases, they are celebrated without any harmony with the liturgical time
 and meaning of the Holy Week. And their lack of ecclesial sense of 
belonging opens itself to abuse. It does happen that these rituals are 
held either for the personal advantage of their patrons, or for tourism 
purposes, or both.
More Important than Liturgy?
            As
 is true of other popular devotions, these Holy Week popular rituals–to 
many lay people–are regarded as more important than the liturgy itself 
for reason already noted. As a young priest assigned to the seminary, I 
used to say Mass in far-flung barangays. For lack of priest, only one 
Mass was celebrated in each of them once a month. One day, in one 
barangay, the old ladies asked me a favor after the mass: "Father, since
 you come here only once a month, may we suggest that instead of coming 
every first Sunday, you rather say Mass for us every first Friday?” 
Similar views can be encountered when it comes to the Holy Week rituals.
 For many, it is more fitting to act as Pilate in the cenaculo than
 to attend the Holy Thursday liturgy. It is more meaningful to undergo 
self-flagellation than to participate in the Good Friday liturgy, for, 
in the penitencia, one really experiences than the pain which Jesus himself experienced. And so on.
            The
 problem, of course, is that this only reinforces the development of 
wrong values in the sense that these are at variance with those held by 
the Catholic Church. And precisely because many consider these rituals 
more important than the liturgy, there lurks the danger that they might 
think that all that is needed to be in the right before God is to take 
an active part in these folk practices. They might believe these are the
 ways of approaching God. That many ritual enthusiasts do not go to 
Church on Sunday, that they do not receive the sacraments, that they are
 more familiar with their practices than with the Bible--these reflect 
their lack of belonging to the Church and the importance they ascribe to
 these rituals. That the most important in being Christian is to follow 
Jesus daily in discipleship within the community, not in the yearly act 
of self-flagellation--this, it would seem, is still lost to the 
devotees.
Incomplete View of the Passion
            Finally, the primary importance attached by the participants in the cenaculo, pabasa and penitencia
 to the death of Jesus results in the formation of values which have 
grave consequences for their faith and life. (Of course, such 
significance is not limited to the practitioners of these rituals. As 
may be observed during the Holy Week celebrations all the country over, 
it is only during Good Friday that people feel obliged to go to church; 
hence, pews are occupied to the full. But Easter and its Vigil, which 
are the culmination of the three-day celebrations, does not, except in 
parishes where small communities are flourishing, command as much 
crowd.) The value placed on the death of Jesus has serious implications 
for a theology of salvation, because this overlooks the life and 
ministry which led his death, and the vindication of him by God through 
the resurrection. In such a theology, Jesus came only to die. Which, of 
course, is a gross oversimplification. Seen in this light, suffering 
almost becomes valuable in itself, or at least part and parcel of being 
human which nothing can be done about. But then, this would almost 
associate Christianity with masochism! Suffering, however, is evil, even
 in Christianity. In systematics, God is always viewed as a pure 
positivity. In the Bible, Jesus never enjoyed suffering; if he suffered,
 it was a consequence of the life he led. He was murdered; he never 
sought pain and suffering. To say therefore that all that is important 
is to participate in the suffering of Jesus by simply undergoing 
self-flagellation or by joining the cenaculo is
 to oversimplify the meaning of Jesus’ suffering and death. Such a 
theological understanding would encourage the acceptance of injustice, 
oppression and domination, and could be used to justify them.
Aberrations?
But
 despite these observations, there is no reason to dismiss these rituals
 as aberrations. On the positive side, what the Second Plenary Council 
of the Philippines (PCP II) says of popular piety readily applies to 
them: “These religious practices are rich in values. They manifest a 
thirst for God and enable people to be generous and sacrificing in 
witnessing to their faith. These practices show a deep awareness of the 
attributes of God: fatherhood, providence, loving and constant presence.
 They engender attitudes of patience, the sense of the Cross in daily 
life, detachment, openness to others, devotion’’ (PCP II, Acts and Decrees,
 172). In their Third General Conference at Puebla, the Latin American 
Bishops describe the lights of popular piety, which may be said of any 
of our Holy Week popular rituals: it “presents such positive aspects as a
 sense of the sacred and the transcendent; openness of the Word of God; 
Marian devotion; an aptitude for the prayer; a sense of friendship, 
charity, and family unity; an ability to suffer and to atone; Christian 
resignation in irremediable situations; and detachment from the material
 world” (GCLAB, Puebla, 913).
But then, what is to be done?               
Potential for Social Transformation
            Despite
 their weaknesses, they should not be suppressed. Our attitude should be
 “one of critical respect, encouragement of renewal” (PCP II, 175).
 For one thing, these Holy Week rituals are engaged in by numerous but 
poor Catholic all over the Philippines. And being part of the Church, 
they are subject of the Church’s care. This even gains prominence today 
since the Church in the Philippines has declared its intention to 
become a Church of the Poor where, among others, its “members and 
leaders have special love for poor.” The Church must therefore value 
their faith expression, however distorted or superficial, found in these
 rituals. For this reason, we must help the devotees in such a way that 
these practices can contribute to the maturing of our faith. And, 
probably, this could be done in two ways. First, we can identify their 
values and motivations and purify them in the lights of Christian faith.
 Then we can transform them by imbuing them with Christian values. In 
the process, we can show how these rituals are connected, for example, 
with the entire life of the Christian, and with the life of others. The 
purpose here is primary their coherence with right beliefs and right 
living (orthodoxy and orthopraxis).
            Second,
 in helping deepen their faith, we can explore the potential of these 
rituals for social transformation. At present, they are observed yearly,
 but do not have--it would seem--any visible impact on the communities 
they are held in. Probably for most, they are simply rituals, religious 
externals--period.  But it is instructive that during the Spanish period, from the 18th
 century onward, the Tagalogs found in the passion story a motivation 
for revolt against oppression. (A Filipino theology of liberation must 
take into account the theology of the Filipino peasant religious 
movements.) We are still in the process of liberation, and as the 
Philippine bishops noted their Pastoral Exhortation on the Philippines Centennial Celebration,
 “today, our liberty is eroded as much by foreign invaders, as by 
internal enemies as the poverty of the many and the concentration of 
wealth among the few, inequality and lack of participation, injustice 
and exploitation, deficient culture values and mind-set, destruction of 
the ecosystem and deterioration of peace and order, to mention a few. 
True freedom demands that we, especially the poor and the disadvantaged,
 are liberated from this evils (cf. Gal 3:25-28). It requires profound changes in socio-economics and political structures, revolution of the heart (cf. Jas 4:1) and, most important, liberation from sin (2 Chr 7:14 Rom 6 18; 1 Tim 1:5).  It dictates that we ourselves shape our history.”   Of
 course, we should not utilize these rituals to incite revolt—that is 
unchristian. But surely we can ask: what values could be appropriated 
from these rituals which could serve as vehicles, in a very Christian 
way, and how they could contribute to the process of transforming 
society, which the PCP II speaks of (cf. PCP II, Decree 97)?  How can “they serve the cause of full human development, justice, peace and the integrity of creation” (PCP II, 175)?* (Note: The author wrote this essay in 1998].
 

 
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