Tag Archives: easter

What Holy Week is for Filipinos

A special multimedia report by Chantal Nabong, Jedd De Luna, Oliver Palileo, and Karla Jiao

What churches want the people to understand about Holy Week
What churches want the people to understand about Holy Week.

As a Christian nation, Holy Week reminds us about what happened to Jesus, why He had to suffer and die, and that He rose after three days and why this is important. And for us to remember His love, we do different traditions to celebrate the week with our family.

Visita Iglesia in the Philippines

In preserving the tradition of Catholics, it has been both a tradition for Filipino devotees to do rounds of churches during Holy Week to honour the death, passion, and undying love of Christ.

The Visita Iglesia (Church Visit) is a Holy Week practice by devotees where they visit and pray in at least 7 churches.

Many devotees believe that seven is the number of divine perfection. Different theories exist  as to the significance of number seven; seven scripture passages of Christ’s arrest and trial, Jesus’ seven last words, seven holy wounds ,seven first Christian holy sites in Israel, seven deacons of the twelve apostles, seven ancient basilicas of Rome, and the historical seven deacons of Rome, responsible for ministering to the poor.

Stations of the Cross is held during Maundy Thursday on their church visits. Devotees either do one station per church, which completes 14 rounds of churches, or divide the stations on all respective churches that they will visit.

Marked as the home to majority of people being of the Christian faith (80%), Filipino devotees never run out of churches to visit. Here are some of the churches that Catholics may visit during Visita Iglesia:

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Maundy Thursday to Black Saturday is declared as a regular holiday and Special Non-working Holiday on the Philippines.

Not your ordinary ‘Stations of the Cross’

The entrance to the start of the Walkway 2015
The entrance to the start of the Walkway 2015

In Bonifacio Global City along with Bonifacio High Street in Taguig is an exhibit for people who would like to reflect on the stations of the cross and apply them by doing acts that are shown in the standees.

Now on its seventh year, “Walkway: Reflections on the Stations of the Cross” is back again to showcase an exhibit by Church Simplified that takes place in the High Street grounds from Palm Sunday to Easter Sunday.

The exhibit included a cross where you can nail your sins, doubts, and problems that you wrote on a red slip, carry a 20 or 40-kilo cross, and even partake of the ‘last supper,’ where you break the bread and drink the wine.

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According to Adam Walker, an Australian missionary who has been volunteering for four years with his wife, that for the previous year, an estimate of 25,000 to 40,000 people came to the Walkway.

“I think the purpose of Walkway, really, is to give people who, throughout the holy week, looking to kind of experience and understand what holy week is about,” said Walker.

Adam Walker of Church Simplified
Adam Walker of Church Simplified

He added that “this art installation is meant to really just take people through a journey and help them kind of think about things, perhaps if they’re not thinking about [it] regularly.”

“So our goal, really, is to kind of help people slow down over Holy Week, help people understand, I guess, what happened in Holy Week, you know, from the Christian message side as well. But also to kind of give people that space to reflect, to pause, and you know, wherever they are in that journey to kind of take the next step in their faith wherever that may be,” Walker said.

Melinda Romulo, who went back for her third year of doing ‘Walkway,’ told On The Lookout that the reason why she came back with her husband is that “this year, as Simon helped Jesus on the cross, we also want to be a Simon in someone else’s life – reaching them for Jesus.”

Carmen Rivero, a mother of one, said that “the Walkway is the best place to go and reflect if you’re within the city,” while waiting for her son and husband to meet her there.

‘Walkway’ started because of Bebo Bharwani, the head pastor of Church Simplified, and their leadership team where, according to Walker, they “wanted to do it in a way that is a little more interactive and a little bit different in terms of how we connect with people. So, it largely came out of church, kind of, wanting to do something, you know, taking the opportunity in Holy Week to give that people the space to think about their sins in life.”

They hope to have an eighth ‘Walkway’ next holy week that would be “bigger and better.”

Walkway also had free concerts; MuteMath played on a Tuesday while Kye Kye sang on Easter Sunday, wherein last year they brought out Jars of Clay and Gungor.

Church Simplified means every Sunday at the 2nd’s Restaurant in The Fort and meets at around 4:30PM.

Families frolic to Eco Park this Holy Week

While most of us escape the city and went to the provinces to have a break from work or to reflect, many of our countrymen are satisfied have their vacation within the city.

During the Holy Week, many people spent their whole day at the La Mesa Watershed and Eco Park in Fairview, Quezon City.

It consists of the La Mesa Dam, an earth dam which it can hold up to 50.5 cubic meters of water and it is supplies most of the water supply of Metro Manila, and it has a nature ecological park within the facility.

Hundreds of families went to the park to bond with their love ones.

Within the park, there are many beautiful attractions you can see. There is an uphill that is decorated with flowers and other ornaments, and you can see the whole park as well as the dam when you reach the top.

And as you enjoy the beautiful view, there are many things you can do. Aside from swimming, you can also do bungee jumping, zip line, riding in a kalesa or horseback riding.

“Staycation”

The time to reflect is upon us once again. Since the start of the 30th day of March, the Lenten Season has begun. Students, workers, and families look forward to the holy occasion in hopes of a well deserved break.

As ritual practitioners commemorate their Holy Week break through flagellating or through devoted acts of Visita Iglesias, others prefer to have a vacation – either out of the city or simply taking a load off at home.

Noong panahon, Thursday palang sarado na mga mall. Pagdating ng Friday mahihirapan ka ng maghanap ng mga kainan sa labas kasi lahat talaga sarado na. Lahat nasa mga kanya kanyang mga pamilya,” recalled Ernesto, a 64-year-old retired employee, remembering the days when everything was still simple.

Recollecting that he was among those who was excited when the Lenten Season was just around the corner, during his younger years, he sighs on how the changes have became so quickly and so vastly.

After the most celebrated Christmas Holiday, the next most awaited season would be summer. As early as the start of the year, the young generations of today readily plan their most awaited fun under the sun recoiling on the activities and destinations opted.

These years, armed with a fast developing society, everybody has their choice of entertainment to kill time – this meaning the substitution of the “supposed” meditation time, to an activity-filled week set for the Lenten Season explained GMA Network Lifestyle News on a Holy Week ‘Staycation’ special.

According to a number of people who spent their Holy Week ‘staycationing’: spending quality time with the family or close friends nearby, such as watching movies together or simply catching up on each other took 58% of the population; checking in hotels had 21%; and the remaining 21% maximized the time for their hobbies.

While time killers contemplate on which activities to partake in, under the Cebu Daily News, Cebu Archbishop Jose Palma is requesting the Catholic people to partake in religious festivities instead.

He said the Holy Week is supposed to be the most somber period of the liturgical calendar leading up to the joy of Easter Sunday.

“There are 52 weeks in a year, and only one week when we are called to commemorate the passion, death and resurrection of the Lord. If you intend to go on vacation, please do it after the Holy Week.”

Old City celebrates Easter “selfie” style

By Karla Jiao

A great number of devoted pilgrims gathered in Jerusalem’s Church of the Holy Sepulchre to catch a sight of the Holy tomb last April 5, marking it as a sacred part of Easter and Palm Sunday celebration in the Old City.

As to those who take celebrations in the formal manner of worshipping, to some taking “selfies” has more significance than a somber religious event. Most members of the crowd outside the church even stood atop the steps of Golgatha to have a better shot of the prestigious processions. Some couldn’t help but put out their monopods (selfie sticks) and Go-Pros to get a better view out of their souvenirs.

“Easter celebrates the resurrection of Jesus Christ after his death. Most Christians believe that this event occurred in the Old City of Jerusalem, namely, atop Golgotha at the Church of the Holy Sepulchre,” based from Israel news.

According to the Western calendar, Easter is celebrated on the first Sunday of April. In the Eastern Orthodox Christian calendar, however, Palm Sunday is only celebrated then and Easter is to be celebrated on the next Sunday. Since Jerusalem is a place where majority of Christians gather, both events were celebrated on that Sunday (April 5).

Easter, being the most holy day in the Christian calendar, had pilgrims came as far as Russia to celebrate the momentous holy holiday. Mass services were translated in different languages such as: Arabic, Hebrew, English, French, Russian, and Spanish, to accommodate the vast international viewers.

Inside the Church of the Holy Sepulchre during the mass, it seemed as though half of the people were more focused on getting a digital souvenir of a patriarch exiting Jesus’ tomb than being a part of the meditation at hand. While colorful eggs and chocolate bunnies may not be very popular in Jerusalem during this event, selfie sticks were in for certain, as worshippers made an effort to catch the year’s Easter Sunday celebration on film.

Based on one of Israel’s newspapers: a Consecrated woman, Jennifer Ristine, who celebrated Easter as well in Jerusalem, mentioned that the place held the most essential mysteries of the Christian faith, hence, finding a deeper meaning within its grounds and worshipping on the path of the Lord.

“The most essential part of whether you walk through the stations where Jesus fell or where Simon helped him carry the cross is that you’re doing an interior act of faith and something that happened to Jesus two thousand years ago,” Ristine said.

“So it is a spiritual walk that you take with him. You can do it in your house, you can do it in a church, but it is very special to do it near and around the place it actually happened to Jesus.”

FRUSTRATION: WHERE’S YOUR BREAKING POINT?

BENEATH THE SHEETS OF PAPER

By Jedd Francis De Luna

WE think of stress as a good motivator for us to excel and improve on our work or our task. But to some, stress can be considered as one big distraction and it often leads to frustration. But do we look at it as tension or do we see it as a big opening to a better solution?

Ever since I was a kid, I often get ‘good’ marks on my card, seldom got ‘great’ marks, and rarely got ‘excellent’ marks on it. My mom told me not to fear stress, especially in the tasks at school. She told me to take it as a challenge just like when she did back in her school to university days as a student. I always try but I’m not sure that my self-esteem was really that high to hold on to that saying to take stress – that man-eating monster whom I despise very much to just say “hey, come and get some,” and knock the stress off of me.

As the years go by, I always feel inferior to people. I’m more of a visionary, so to speak, which is why I tend to slack off. It’s because I’m too busy planning for the future that I often forget that I need to do something in the present so that I will be able to achieve it in the future. I’ve always considered myself to just leave it all to God: all my problems, stress, frustrations, but at some point, I seem to lack the ease to release the stress in me.

Someone once told me that with God, there is a two-way connection: You talk to Him through prayer, while He talks to you through His Word: the Bible. And for half a year when I was in second year college, I doubted that. I was anxious about Him and His existence, which is why I didn’t bother to really “communicate” with Him. In my mind I thought that was there really a point where things will be easier? I mean, surrender? And then what, do I get my problems solved? They don’t, do they?

NO, they don’t.

Talking to God, telling Him all your problems, and reading His Word won’t make any difference if first – you don’t do your part, and second – if you always think that when you put your faith in Christ, your life will never face any kind of storms at all. But that’s not how that goes. When we pray to God and ask Him to help us achieve a great score in our examination, we don’t just say ‘Amen’ and start playing games or slacking off. What do we do? We do our part. We study. We practice. We learn. We do anything that will help us in answering the exam. But why?

Steve Murrell said in his book, WikiChurch, that “Christianity does not promise a storm-free life. However, if we build our lives on biblical foundations, the storms of life will not destroy us. We cannot have lives that are storm-free, but we can become storm-proof.” Imagine that: a storm-proof life! I mean, yes, we will still face different problems, we will still commit different mistakes…the difference? How we handle these situations and how we face it.

Whenever I get frustrated, I usually pray. Prayer should always be our first priority, not our last-minute necessity. When we pray, it means that we’re strong. We are strong enough to admit that we can’t do this alone, that we need guidance from someone who can understand us, appreciate us, and make us strong.

Don’t forget to thank God for the frustration and stress! You might ask yourself, “Wait, what? Why?” Hold your horses and let me explain:

Living the Christian life is not difficult, it is IMPOSSIBLE. But do you know what’s amazing? I learned once more the real meaning of love and sacrifice, where in Jesus died for my sins, your sins, and everyone’s sins so that we may be free from bondage and hell. His relentless love for us is what makes this, for me, one great love story. Imagine that: God sent His only Son down here on earth to die for our past, our present, and our future sins. He corrected our errors, he fixed our faults, and he loved us (and still does) even when we feel that no one is there who is loving us.

And it is through our stress that we hold on to him more. But we should always remember that God should never be our last resort when it comes to problems. He should be the first one that we go to whether or not we’re in trouble. Before you eat? Praise Him; after you got an A+ in your midterms but got a C+ in your finals? Praise Him; lost a swimming match and placed last? Praise Him!

I realized what my problem was during months of doubt, anxiety, and depression: I never communicated with Him ever again. I was like the prodigal son in the book of Luke, wherein I ran away not knowing that what my Father was saying to me was right all along, but I dare not listen to Him. The LORD said in Joshua 1:5b (NIV) that “I will never leave you nor forsake you,” and added in Joshua 1:9 (NIV) “Have I not commanded you? Be strong and courageous. Do not be afraid; do not be discouraged, for the LORD your God will be with you wherever you go.”

Picture taken from God's Not Dead FB page www.facebook.com/doyoubelievemovie
Picture taken from God’s Not Dead FB page
http://www.facebook.com/doyoubelievemovie

God commands us to be strong and courageous, He didn’t pleaded it to us. He promised us that He will be with us wherever we go and that He will never leave us, neither will He forsake us. And to show it to us, He gave His only son, Jesus, to die on the cross in Calvary for us to be cleansed of our sins, and three days later rose.

My anxiety is gone because God showed me His relentless love and now, I serve Him and share His love to others as well. Now, whenever I get stressed or frustrated with problems, I pray and communicate with God. He knows that I can’t fight this battle on my own and that I need His help.

So death, where’s your sting? Stress, where’s your sting? Frustration, where’s your sting?

For comments and suggestions, you may contact the author at jeddfrancis21@gmail.com