Tradition Without Transformation? CBCP Warns vs. “Hollow” Holy Week Observance

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Photo: CBCP

MANILA  (April 3) — For many Filipinos, Holy Week has become as much about travel plans and family reunions as it is about faith—a shift that church leaders now openly warn is hollowing out one of Christianity’s most sacred seasons.

Archbishop Gilbert Garcera, head of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines, issued a pointed reminder: rituals without reflection risk turning devotion into routine.

His message cuts into a growing tension in a country long regarded as Asia’s Catholic stronghold—where outward expressions of faith remain widespread, but deeper engagement appears increasingly uneven.

“Holy Week is not just about gathering—it is about conversion,” Garcera said, urging families to move beyond привычные traditions and rediscover prayer as a shared, intentional act.

At the center of his appeal is a concern that the observance is drifting toward cultural habit rather than spiritual transformation. Packed churches on Good Friday and Easter Sunday, he implied, do not automatically translate to repentance, reconciliation, or renewed faith.

Instead, Garcera called for a return to the essentials: confession, Communion, and honest self-examination. These, he said, are not optional practices but the very heart of commemorating Christ’s passion, death, and resurrection.

His remarks also reflect a broader challenge facing the Church—how to sustain meaningful religious life in an age of distraction, where digital noise, economic pressures, and shifting values compete for attention.

Yet the archbishop stopped short of framing the issue as decline alone. He pointed to families and communities as the front line of renewal, urging households to reclaim prayer as a daily practice and parishes to foster spaces for genuine spiritual encounter—not just attendance.

The call is both pastoral and urgent: if Holy Week is reduced to tradition without transformation, Garcera suggests, its meaning risks being lost in plain sight.

In the end, the measure of the season, he said, is not how faithfully rituals are observed—but whether they lead to change.

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