Colonizing Christianity: from Different Viewpoints to a Meeting Point

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Colonizing Christianity: from Different Viewpoints to a Meeting Point Colonizing Christianity: From different viewpoints to a meeting point. Brother Iñigo Riola y Rodillo, FSC 2021 is a special year. It is special not just because we are seeing a bit of the light at the end of this pandemic tunnel. It is special because this year the Catholic Church in the Philippines is commemorating the 500 years of the arrival of Christianity in the archipelago. Aside from this, the country is also commemorating the 500th anniversary of the Filipino victory at Mactan, the Philippine part in the story of the first circumnavigation of the world. On other side of the world, in Spain and Portugal, they are commemorating the 500th anniversary of the expedition of Ferdinand Magellan and Juan Sebastián Elcano who sailed from Seville in 1519 and ended in 1522 after circling the globe. As some of you may know, Magellan, the Portuguese explorer who sailed under the Spanish flag did not complete the global expedition because he was killed in the Battle of Mactan in the Philippines by the forces of Lapu-Lapu. It was only the Spanish Captain Elcano who led the last remaining ship out of the original five back to Iberian Peninsula in 1522. Different Viewpoints. As you may already notice, this particular event that we are commemorating can be viewed from different perspectives. For the Iberians, they would understandably highlight the success of the circumnavigation they have launched in the early sixteenth century. For the Filipinos, we also our own viewpoint, viewpoints in fact, because the historical events of 1521, as with all historical events, can be viewed from different lenses. For the Philippine Government, the current Philippine President released an Executive Order which advocates a Filipino-centric point of view of the first circumnavigation of the world, highlighting the magnanimity, compassion, and humanity of our Filipino ancestors in helping the starving crew of Magellan and Elcano and the courage and bravery of the warriors of Lapu-Lapu in Mactan Island that inspired the Filipino heroes and martyrs of the past and continues to inspire the Filipinos of today. Lapu-Lapu, for those who are not familiar, is the datu or the ruler of the island of Mactan. He was the rival of Rajah or King Humabon of the neighboring island of Cebu. Rajah Humabon became an ally of Magellan and agreed to be baptized. Several historians believe that Rajah Humabon was the reason why Magellan fought in the Battle of Mactan. Historians see Rajah Humabon's conversion to Christianity as a way for him to forge relations with Magellan in order to ask the Portuguese explorer's assistance in Humabon's campaign against Lapu-Lapu. The Battle of Mactan happened on April 27, 1521. Lapu-Lapu and his warriors killed Magellan and defeated the Spanish forces. Lapu-Lapu's victory ended Magellan's ambition to circumnavigate the world. For the Filipino Christians, 1521 is an important year as it is the year when the Gospel of Jesus Christ first arrived in our islands. When Magellan arrived in Cebu, then a flourishing trading center in maritime Southeast Asia, he met and became friends with Rajah Humabon. Subsequently, the Rajah and his wife agreed to be baptized by the chaplain of the Spanish fleet. Magellan also planted a cross in the island of Cebu to mark the arrival of Christianity in the island. He also gave the Queen of Cebu an image of the Santo Niño, the Holy Child Jesus, as a baptismal gift. Both the cross planted by Magellan and the original image of the Santo Niño are still venerated in Cebu up to the present moment. Every January, there is a big feast in Cebu in honor of the Santo Niño called the Sinulog. I attended the Sinulog a few years ago and joined the procession of 3 million people. To put it into perspective, the population of Cebu City is about 1 million. A Meeting Point. We can see that there different points of view when we talk about the events of 1521. Yet all of these view points converge to a single meeting point: that Christianity arrived in the Philippines in 1521, brought by Spanish and Portuguese explorers, and accepted by the people of the archipelago of what we now know as the Philippines. This is a historical fact that we cannot deny or disregard. Some people would ask why do we celebrate the arrival of Christianity in the Philippines that was brought by the colonizers in 1521. Filipino historian Ambeth Ocampo explained that technically Magellan was not a colonizer, he was an explorer. The Spanish colonization of the Philippines did not begin in 1521. It began almost half a century later, in 1565, with the arrival of Miguel Lopez de Legazpi. But even the conquest of the Philippines is fundamentally different from other Spanish conquests. According to the Dominican historian Lucio Gutierrez: "the conquest of the Philippines was due fundamentally not to the sword of the conquistador but to the cross of the missionary." Colonizing Christianity. 1521 is an important meeting point in history and it is best signified by the commemorative mission cross. This cross is inscribed with the name of Jesus and Mary in Roman letters and the ancient Tagalog script called Bayabayin. It symbolizes the encounter, the meeting point, between the faith brought by early missionaries and the Filipino. I also believe that this is a good representation of how the Filipinos "colonized" Christianity: how we received a foreign faith and made it our own through our festivals, devotions, dances, and songs. Today, 500 years after 1521, the Filipino is in another meeting point. Most of us know the story of the Filipino diaspora. In every country that you visit, you would most probably meet a Filipino. 500 years after the Christian faith arrived in our shores, the Filipinos now are the missionaries, whether officially or unofficially. We are the bearers of the Gospel to many parts of the world, in different meeting points of many cultures, traditions, and ideologies. I would like to end with a quote from the homily of Pope Francis on March 14. He said: "five hundred years have passed since the Christian message first arrived in the Philippines. You received the joy of the Gospel... And this joy is evident in your people... In the joy with which you bring your faith to other lands. Keeping bringing the faith, the good news you received five hundred years ago, to others. I want to thank you, then, for the joy you bring to the whole world and to our Christian communities." Maraming salamat po. Thank you very much. Mabuhay tayong lahat! .
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