Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Filipinos, the truest of believers?

By Teresa R. Tunay, OCDS 

    After the Philippines gets the flak from travelers worldwide for having “The Worst Airport in the World”—the Ninoy Aquino International Airport—here comes a survey that says Philippines is Number One.  Wow! 
A report on the survey, titled “Belief about God across Time and Countries”, was released on April 18, 2012 by the General Social Survey of National Opinion Research Center (NORC) at the University of Chicago.  NORC is an organization whose mission is “to conduct high-quality social science research in the public interest.” 
Filipinos may rejoice to hear that in this study, the Philippines came out as the country with the highest belief, with 94 percent of Filipinos saying they were strong believers who had always believed in God.
The top four after the Philippines are Chile (87.9), the United States (80.8), Poland (80.2) and Portugal (78.9).  Taking the 6th to the 10th slots are: Cyprus (76.5), Israel (73.2), Italy (72.1), Northern Ireland (71.4), and Ireland (70.6).
It is interesting to note that Spain, the country that brought Christianity to the Philippines 491 years ago, ranked eleventh at 67.4.  And which country came out at the opposite end from ours? Germany (former East), with only 13 percent saying “I believe in God and I always have”.
The new poll which covered 30 countries in surveys from 1991 to 2008 noted that belief in God had slowly eroded since the 1950s  in most countries around the world, but developing countries and Catholic societies stood out as the truest, most consistent believers. 
Tom W. Smith, who directs the General Social Survey of the NORC/University of Chicago and who wrote the report, is thus quoted in Huffington Post: “The Philippines is both developing and Catholic; religion, which is mainly Catholic, is very emotionally strong there.”
While the findings may be morale-boosting for Filipinos who are likely to see this in the same light as Pacquiao winning or a Filipina beauty emerging as a runner-up Miss Universe—or for those still hung up on their EDSA euphoria—it is really nothing to celebrate with horn-tooting and victory parades.  I don’t mean to belittle the report, in fact I’ve posted it on Facebook.   I just happen to think that the result of this study which ran for 17 years should poke us into examining the link between this reported belief in God and the perennial problems besetting our country—widespread corruption, unemployment, defiance of urban settlers, abuse of power, ever-widening chasm between rich and poor, et al.
It is good to know that the Filipinos’ belief in God is established as a fact in a scientific and respectable survey for the world to see, but take note—these findings can also be used against us in myriads of ways by The Enemy who never sleeps.  Don’t we have wolves in sheep’s clothing everywhere we turn, befriending the simple believers in our flock in order to lead them to the slaughterhouse?  Don’t we have “Catholics” who preach a gospel of death and endorse a hedonistic mentality, Christians who make evangelization a lucrative business, fundamentalist believers who go into “sacred wars” and use devotion for political ends? 

Let this revelation then spur us on to reexamine our concepts of “belief” and “God”.  Do we see God as a loving Father to obey or as scapegoat for our failures?  Does our belief lead us to the best we can become, increase our compassion, fortify us for sacrifice—or does it make us arrogant, complacent, and slothful?  “By their fruits you will know them…” (Matthew 7:16).  True belief in God is efficacious—when all is said and done, it imbues believers with such light and grace that they can then declare “…yet I live, no longer I, but Christ lives in me…” (Galatians 2:20).
The Filipinos as the world’s strongest believers in God?  We ought to thank God and remain on our knees, brave our crosses, and thus remind the world Who created it, to Whom it belongs and to Whom it must return.  If the Filipinos’ remarkable belief in God bears no fruit in our daily life, the world will never believe that we know the difference between a crucifix and an amulet.  And that’s the truth.

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