IMAGE: CNS photo/James Ramos, Texas Cat
By James Ramos
HOUSTON (CNS) — Part reunion,
part crash course in Catholic teaching and navigating the current political
climate both in the U.S. and back home in the Philippines, and part celebration
of all things Texas, a national assembly for Filipino priests brought faith and
culture full circle in Houston.
Hosted by a local organizing
committee, the National Assembly of Filipino Priests is held every three years
by the National Association of Filipino Priests of the U.S. and Canada.
Despite concerns following
Harvey, plans came together to have the assembly in Houston Nov.
7-10. It drew 330 Filipino priests and countless volunteers.
In their addresses, Cardinal
Roger M. Mahony, retired archbishop of Los Angeles, and Cardinal Daniel N.
DiNardo of Galveston Houston, who is president of the U.S. Conference of
Catholic Bishops, encouraged the Filipino priests to stand for and support fellow
immigrants, both Filipino and non-Filipino alike.
Other speakers included Auxiliary
Bishop George A. Sheltz of Galveston-Houston; Archbishops Charles J. Chaput of
Philadelphia and Gregory M. Aymond of New Orleans; Bishops Larry Silva of
Honolulu, Joseph N. Perry of Chicago and Robert W. McElroy of San Diego; and the
first Filipino bishop in the U.S., Bishop Oscar A. Solis of Salt Lake City.
Many of the prelates also celebrated Masses throughout the conference.
Father Eurel Manzano, pastor of
St. Theresa Catholic Church in Sugar Land, said Cardinal Mahony addressed
“squarely a reality that’s very much in the front of the consciences of many
Filipino Catholics,” especially those tangled in the U.S. legal system.
Father Manzano, who served on
the association’s national leadership council as vice president, also said the
conference worked during the gathering’s downtime, offering the visiting
priests a chance to reconnect many family and friends who may live in Houston,
or simply to visit with former seminary classmates or town mates.
With the support of the USCCB,
priests should be unafraid to listen to the Gospel and the voice of Jesus and
“have to be unafraid to present in positive ways, the immigration teachings of
the church,” Cardinal Mahony said. “We really have to be leaders among our
people and in our communities.”
In September, the future for
22,000 young Filipinos in this country without legal documents blurred after
the Trump administration announced the scrapping of the Deferred Action for
Childhood Arrivals program, or DACA, and the Deferred Action for Parents of
Americans and Lawful Permanent Residents program, known as DAPA. President
Donald Trump said Congress would have to act to keep the programs.
The Filipino group represents a
small portion of the 800,000 young people brought to the U.S. as children who
have been protected by DACA since President Barack Obama created the program by
executive order in 2012. They along with their parents and countless family members
have been hoping for a path to citizenship.
On Sept. 12, the USCCB urged
Congress to pass legislation “as a prompt, humane and durable solution to this
problem of greatest urgency” and asked the Trump administration to “show mercy
and compassion for those seeking refuge, and to advance the American value of
freedom through providing safe harbor to those fleeing tyranny and religious
persecution.”
Even with the Oct. 5 deadline to
apply for DACA renewals now passed, Cardinal Mahony in his remarks Nov. 8 echoed
the USCCB statement and encouraged the Filipino priests to support and find
better ways to communicate the value of immigrants to our communities.
By 2013, the Philippines was the
fourth-largest country of origin of immigrants in the U.S., accounting for at
least 1.8 million people, or 4.5 percent of the immigrant population, according
to the Migration Policy Institute. That population is the third-largest
foreign-born immigrant group from Asia, after India and China, with most
Filipino immigrants residing in the U.S.
“It’s a very pastoral dimension
of our ministry as priests to accompany those who may be in situations where. …
They just don’t know where to turn,” Father Manzano said. “And so the church
should rightly be a resource for those who might need help.”
During his homily at Mass Nov. 9,
Cardinal DiNardo told the Filipino priests that they must accompany the
faithful in all things, especially in hard times, using the dimensions of the
priesthood as “stewards, contemplative heralds of sacramental life.”
Reflecting on the teachings of
the early Church fathers, he also reminded the priests that they must have the
support of God’s holy people, the faithful, to be close to Christ.
The people of God hold priests
up to the wounded side of Christ, he said, so that the blood and water of baptism
and the Eucharist are given especially to priests. Priests won’t stay there, he
continued, if they “don’t have the prayers and the cooperation and energy of
God’s holy people. ‘ Many priests think they can do it on their own, but the
waters flow for all.”
Priests, he said, “need, desire
and want the cooperation, zeal and energy of the people to be equal to the zeal
of Christ.”
“I am grateful to you disciples,
Filipino disciples of the Lord, brother priests,” Cardinal DiNardo said. “I,
with … other bishops in this country, would not be able to do our ministry as
well without your collaboration.”
The next National Assembly of
Filipino Priests of the U.S. and Canada will be held in New Jersey and New York
in 2020.
– – –
Ramos is a staff writer and
designer for the Texas Catholic Herald, newspaper of the Archdiocese of
Galveston-Houston.
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