500th year of PH Christianity: Spain gets religious image from Pampanga archdiocese
GUAGUA, Pampanga, Philippines — The Archdiocese of San Fernando has sent a religious image to a parish in Spain in gratitude for bringing Christianity to the Philippines almost 500 years ago.
During Saturday’s rite at St. James the Apostle Parish in Betis here, Archbishop Florentino Lavarias and Archbishop Emeritus Paciano Aniceto put a woodblock to close the bust of the Santa Maria del Sagrario image.
The wood was part of a relic made to touch the original Santo Niño de Cebu image, said to have been a gift of Portuguese circumnavigator Ferdinand Magellan to Rajah Kulambo after the native chieftain’s baptism into Catholicism following the first Mass in the country in 1521.
Enshrinement in Malaga
The new image will be enshrined on March 26 at Nuestro Padre Jesús de la Verdad parish church in Málaga, Spain, in time for Holy Week, said Willy Layug, who sculpted and donated it.
In a message read during the occasion, Jose Manuel Leiva Perez, president of Grupo de Fieles de Nuestro Padre Jesus de la Verdad, said “she is anxiously awaited to be welcomed.”
Article continues after this advertisementCaloocan Bishop Pablo Virgilio David, a native of Betis, helped Layug request Cebu Archbishop Jose Palma to provide the relic.
Article continues after this advertisementLayug said Grupo de Fieles de Nuestro Padre Jesus de la Verdad and its designer, Alvaro Fernandez, commissioned him in November last year to make the bust.
Layug, a papal awardee, decided to donate the image as a “token of appreciation for the heritage.”
Perez and Fernandez documented the production of the bust for the Nuestro Padre Jesús de la Verdad parishioners.
For the 500th year of the Christianization of the Philippines next year, the Betis parish commissioned a bamboo organ, the second so far in the country.
The government has declared Betis Church a national cultural treasure, likening it to Sistine Chapel at the Vatican because the Gospels are taught in visual catechism on its walls, ceilings and doors.