Saturday, June 21, 2025

A call to Filipino Catholics from St. Teresa of Avila



By Teresa R. Tunay, OCDS

Filipinos are a prayerful people. We light candles, wear scapulars, carry statues in processions. We pray novenas for our families, our jobs, our sick relatives. But in this time of political turmoil and growing division, when lies spread faster than truth—and when TikTok is fast becoming the “opium of the masses”—is this really all we are called to do?

St. Teresa of Avila says: No.    A mystic and reformer, she did not hide in her cell when her Church was in crisis. “The world is on fire. It is not time to treat with God about things of little importance,” she wrote.  She lived during the violent upheavals of the Reformation, when priests were corrupt, the people were confused, and the Church itself seemed under attack. She could have kept quiet in the safety of the convent; instead, she prayed, then she acted.

She spent hours in contemplation, then rose from prayer to deal with, bishops, nobles, Church politics, petty nuns, outright opposition and even the Spanish Inquisition. As she founded convents she travelled by rickety carriages and slept in rat-infested inns.  She wrote books that still shake the world.  She saw—and taught— that prayer without action becomes self-indulgent, and action without prayer becomes vanity.

Many Filipinos are “religious,” but is our faith mature?  We go all out for fiestas but are stingy with our time alone with God. We help the poor but do not want to be poor ourselves. We wear religious medals while tolerating corruption. We pray for truth and justice, but refuse to speak up when our leaders lie. We ask God to protect our families, but close our eyes when others suffer injustice.  Is this faith, or just comfort?

The world is on fire—and the Philippines is not spared.  St. Teresa says: now is not the time to pray only for small things. It is time to pray with eyes open to the suffering around us. It is time to grow up in faith—to seek truth, work for justice, and be brave in the face of manipulation and disinformation.  If you love God, get to know what is happening to His people. Listen beyond your echo chamber. Be aware.  Read. Ask. Pray. Speak. Act.  Let us be contemplatives in action.  Let us not pray for safety when what we need is courage.  As St. Teresa’s example shows, the holiest people are not the ones who pray the longest, but the ones who love the hardest and serve the bravest.  And that’s the truth.

 

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