Religion and Popular Religiosity in The Philippines: Brendan
Religion and Popular Religiosity in The Philippines: Brendan
Religion and Popular Religiosity in The Philippines: Brendan
in the Philippines
Brendan LOVETT
T’boli Study Center
Readers of these Inter-Religio bulletins will be familiar with: the question of engaging
in dialogue with “folk” or ‘popular” religious traditions. Brendan Lovett, one of the
circle of those working with tribal peoples in the Philippines amid trying to find with:
them a way to care for the earth as a primary religious reality, raises some interesting
theoretical issues from: his experience.
It is very nearly impossible to find a piece of writing on popular religiosity at the
present that does not manifest a note of condescension. This is true despite the fact
that writers are divided into passionate defenders of popular religiosity and
equally passionate detractors. The passionate defenders speak in moving but
patronizing terms of safeguarding the faith of the simple faithful: the passionate
detractors write off as stultifying any religious symbolism which falls outside their
own limited range of comprehension.
Both sides share what I shall call the prejudice of the Enlightenment in
regard to all that preceded that particular historical movement or fell, sub-
sequently, outside its scope of influence. Since a crucial moment in the develop-
ment of this particular ideology was the value set on book-learning, and since
learning and education generally came to be reductively identified with schooling,
all those whose consciousness has been shaped by schooling easily assume that
what they have learned in school is unquestionably superior to, infinitely truer
than, that understanding of things with which “the unschooled” have to manage.
I have already written an admittedly rather slim book dedicated to proving
just why we should have second thoughts about this presumption.1 As a result of
that effort, I feel justified in the present context m making just a few summary
assertions. The main reason why the presumption should be re-thought is that the
most important part of anybody’s learning owes nothing to the modern in-
stitutions which we call schools, colleges, and universities. I include within this
most important part of what we know, of course, people’s religious understand-
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1. Before Death: Life Before Death: Inculturating Hope (Quezon City, 1986). The book attempts a comprehensive
critique of modernity.
and I find the suggestion that the religion of a particular class of people could ever
be judged superior to that of another class an absurd suggestion. There are, of
course, institutionalized practices of religion. An there is such a thing as the
religiosity of people whose categories of understanding and expression of faith is
very heavily shaped by institutional reality. Priests, religious, and theologians, and
the few who read theological books and hear a lot of sermons probably fall into
this category. But if there is only people’s religiosity, how does one determine how
one person’s religiosity, how does one determine how one person’s religiosity is
better than another person’s? There may well be says of doing this but what I am
suggesting at this point is that invocation by one group of the category “popular
religiosity” in reference to another group is definitely not one of the acceptable
ways. Insofar as authorities in the Church are tainted with the ideology of
professionalism, they may be tempted to see themselves as
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5 Tom Berry says, by contrast, that “If there is no spirituality in the atom, there is no spirituality is us”.
Critique of Religion
But if the criticism of popular religion is wrongly conceived, the criticism of reli-
gion remains both possible and necessary. In other words, it is not its popular
nature which is problematic when religion needs to be criticized: it is its alienated
and alienating forms, forms which are to be found irrespective of the level of
articulation or mode of cultural expression in which they may be embodied. The
critique cannot simply be a matter of disqualifying certain rituals, symbols, rites,
altered states of consciousness, as “unorthodox.” Not many of these, no matter
how strange they may seem to an over-cerebral Church, are of themselves in-
dicative of false God-consciousness. What makes a medal a fetish? It cannot be the
ring or scapular or medal as such. People must express themselves through
tangible symbols: this belongs to authentic humanity. Those who laugh at prayer-
wheels have no right to feel good about candles.7 And yet there is such a thing as
false God-consciousness and the need for a critique is clear.
Dr. Nemenzo 8 tells of a high-ranking Party member who ate the child of his
sister. He, as any right-thinking person would be, is rightly horrified by this
manifestation of religiosity. In a similar manner, the thinkers of the Enlightenment
were horrified by the cruelty of religious wars, manifest harm done to people in
the name of religious faith, and, in general, the historical dark side of religious
faith, and, in general, the historical dark side of religion. More recently people
have been horrified to read of cannibalistic ritual murders carried out by fanatical
groups in service of the government’s anti-insurgency campaign. But the
challenge is to understand such phenomena, not to simplistically try to ex-
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6 Cf. M. Singleton, “Let the People Be,” Pro Mundi Vita Bulletin, No. 61 (July 1976). “[Religion of the People is
marked by] indifference to the purely speculative . . . though the dispositions and interests of the spirits are
well known or often anxiously the subject of enquiry, the conditions of their existence as such, let alone
their nature, are often ignored by the People. There is ignorance and ignorance. One can be totally
ignorant of what is in fact the case, one can ignore what is the case because it is not practically relevant to
the matter in hand, but one can also ignore what others suppose to be the case because one’s own
presuppositions are quite other! We should not automatically assume that the People’s ignorance is of the
former rather than the latter type . . . Idioms that are quite consistent when judged in keeping with their own
intentionality can appear ‘wrong’ when illicitly appraised in the light of alien yardsticks of coherence”(p.
21)
7 Cf. M. Douglas, Purity and Danger, (London, 1969): Natural Symbols, (London, 1973); Reynaldo C. Ileto, “The
Role of Culture in Transformation: Contrary Reflections,” Kalinangan, 4:4, pp. 5-7.
8 Centennial Lectures: Marxism in the Philippines (Quezon City, 1985).
hand, the love of God is penetrated with awe. God’s thoughts and God’s ways are
very different from man’s and by that difference God is terrifying. Unless religion
is totally directed to what is good, to genuine love of one’s neighbour and to a
self-denial that is subordinated to a fuller goodness in oneself, then the cult of a
God that is terrifying can slip over into the demonic, into an exultant
destructiveness of oneself and others.10
The heart of the problem, then, lies in the authenticity or lack of authenticity
in human development. But this issue of human authenticity can never be ade-
quately raised in individualistic categories. Growth is always both personally and
socially transformative and people’s struggles toward authenticity are only rightly
judged when their social context is taken into account and evaluated as promoting
growth or disintegration.
What has almost been submerged in the modern privatization of faith is the
truth that sin is primarily social and only derivatively individual insofar as socially
sinful situations are internalized. Fortunately, we are witnessing a recovery of the
older tradition by the Churches, manifest in the increasing condemnation of the
social evils of racism, sexism, militarism, economic exploitation, environmental
pollution, civil, and religious persecution.
According as the social fabric deteriorates, it becomes increasingly difficult
for people to achieve personal integration and authenticity. The less understand-
ing and control people have of their social environment, the more alienating the
patterns of their religiosity will tend to be. The crisis of the world-system is felt
acutely in countries like the Philippines. But even here, there is an enormous dif-
ference of felt effect on various strata of the population. Those who are completely
marginal to the workings of the system, those who are most victimized by it, are
those who can be expected to manifest the most destructive kinds of religiosity.55
I suggest that the religious needs of less marginalized strata are being met by the
pentecostalization of the Catholic Church and the proliferation of fundamentalist
sects.
Idolatry, for the biblical tradition, is never a theoretical problem. It is the way
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10. Lonergan, Method in Theology, (London, 1972), p. 111.
11 The cynical and murderous exploitation by the Aimed Forces of this religious alienation was the subject of a
broad-based consultation on June 17–19, 1985 in Ozamiz. This fed into the Summer meeting of the
National Conference of Bishops and the bishops came through with an explicit condemnation of the
“unholy strategy,” seen to be “conducive to the worst forms of terrorism” and to have made of the CHDF
“instruments of terror rather than of peace.” For a correlation of the Philippine experience with that of
other Third World Churches, particularly in Central and South America, see Gilbert Markus 0. P.
“Theologies of Repression,” New Blackfriars, Jan. 1986, pp.37-45
In its light our minds can be healed of the distortions of the knowledge born of
fear, since it enables us to identify the source of these distortions.
The knowledge born of love enables us to recognize the truth of God in the
Mystery which entered into a covenant of life with an enslaved and oppressed
Jewish people. As a people who gained their identity in the Exodus event, they
were committed to identifying the love of God with love for their brothers and
sisters. The long sad history of the Covenant is a narrative of how the truth of the
Mystery is both revealed and hidden in the struggles of the people to repent of
their sins, to remain faithful to themselves and to God, above all, to resist the
temptation coming from the surrounding cultures to identify the Divine with
dominative power, the power of empire. This struggle is most evident in the con-
frontation between the prophets and the establishment. The downward spiral of
history led to heightened messianic expectation. Even the form that the Mes-
siah/Messianic people would have to take was grasped in Second Isaiah but no-
body felt up to such an unprepossessing role as that of Suffering Servant. The
dream of a solution to our woes through an exercise of dominative power proved
too addictive. To heal the world by taking on our own shoulders the evil of the
world and turning it around lacked appeal, somehow.
With the coming of Jesus the identification of God with the enslaved and the
poor is intensified. The Divine Mystery is revealed in Jesus as the One who has
taken sides, not with the rich and imperial elites, but with the poor and oppressed
peoples of the whole world. In Jesus’ living and preaching of the Kingdom of God,
the demonic tendency to identify God with dominative power is decisively broken.
To respond to the Kingdom present and operative as free gift in Jesus and those
who follow him among the lowly, is to let God be God in and through us. This
God does not will human suffering. If we will only let Him live us the Beatitudes
become simple truth.
Happy are the poor, for the reign of God is theirs.
Happy those who mourn, for there is One about to comfort them!
Happy are the hungry, for there is One about to give them their fill!
The love of God is a gift, like all of life, but it is a gift constitutive of and
14 Cf. B. Lonergan, Method in Theology, pp. 115–19.
Heart at the center of all human history. Human freedom and human personhood
are redeemed but not by a so-called divine omnipotence that could overpower us
by imposing a humane order on history. Contrary to our cherished images, the
Reign of God, like the Exodus before it, was not the act of a divine engineer or
imperial bureaucrat controlling all history and manipulating to achieve its ends
despite free human response! “Empowering transformation” does not “produce”
a redeemed humankind as a factory produces consumer objects. Such a
redemption would be a contradiction in terms because the victims of history are
victims because of just such efforts to dominate and control. Rather, Christian
redemption liberates human freedom by issuing an invitation, a call, to live out a
discipleship of faith, hope and love and by empowering us to respond by
metanoia, personally and socially transformative conversion.
As has been clear from the very beginning, there can be no theoretical
criterion of authentic religiosity. How, then, can we even begin to discern genuine
from false God-consciousness in the history of Christianity, marked as it is by
more than its share of depersonalizing and dehumanizing sin? The touchstone,
the decisive criterion, lies in how a genuine God-consciousness always leads those
whose lives it informs to seek out solidarity with the poor, with the victims of
history, in their struggles for justice and freedom. Quite predictably, the criterion
is one of practice: “by their fruits you shall know them.”
The forms of prayer or devotions preferred by people is no sure indicator of
anything other than their preference. Whether or not they are praying to the
living God will be infallibly manifest in the stand they take in relation to the
struggles of the poor for life and truth and justice. Alienated religiosity is at home
in the crucifying world. Those who know the living God must gravitate to where
God stands in this world in solidarity with suffering women and men.
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