Catholic Free Press on Mission in the Philippines |
![]() |
Two Filipino men supported by local Catholics were sent home as missionaries in January “For us it’s a dream come true,” Brother Alex Castro said after a commissioning Mass at Assumption College, Jan. 15, as he and Brother Clemente Boleche beamed at the thought of returning to their native land the next day. “They’ve been thinking about this for a long time and now it’s becoming a reality.” “They” are the Augustinians of the Assumption, commonly called Assumptionists, who founded and sponsor Assumption College. What they have been thinking about – and working on – is founding their first community in the Philippines. Since 2000, young Filipino men discerning an Assumptionist vocation have come here to live with the Assumptionists and take classes at Assumption College. Those who stayed did their novitiate at St. Anne and St. Patrick Parish in Sturbridge, which the Assumptionists staff. Brother Castro, Brother Boleche and Brother Carlos Melocoton professed their first vows as Assumptionists there. They introduced parishioners to their faith and culture through Filipino festivals and the installation of a statue of San Lorenzo Ruiz – their country’s first saint – in St. Anne Shrine’s votive chapel. The Assumptionists turned to San Lorenzo as the patron for their efforts to establish a community in the Philippines.
After studying at St. John Seminary in Brighton and living with the Assumptionist community nearby, Brothers Castro and Boleche were “missioned" to the Philippines” along with Father Bernard Holzer, a French priest who had been serving in Rome, and Father Gilles Blouin, a Canadian previously stationed in Jerusalem. Father Jean-Marie Chuvi Adubango, of the Democratic Republic of Congo, who had been a pastor in Tanzania, joined them in the Philippines. Before commissioning the men, Father Richard Lamoureux, superior general, told them to search constantly, be ready to move in response to the call, ask God’s guidance and be witnesses. I was moved by the liturgy,” Father Blouin, who arrived in Worcester last December, said afterwards. “I could feel the tears coming behind my lens. You’ve been part of something and now it’s time to go.” “We would like to thank all the people who have helped us, for this dream to become a reality,” Brother Boleche said, explaining that the support reaches beyond them. “It’s an opportunity for us to bring the Assumption to the Philippines and then work as laborers in the vineyard of the Lord to our fellow Filipinos,” said Brother Castro. In the first “chronicle” of the new foundation, Father Holzer wrote about waking up to an aging rooster and millions of motorized tricycles, shopping for a computer room air conditioner and getting used to texting – “a national sport which allows us to communicate with each other and with the people we meet, by cell phone, at low price.” They also visited the museum of the Augustinians, the first religious order to arrive with Spanish conquerors, and met with them and the Religious of the Assumption and Little Sisters of the Assumption, another congregation in the Assumption family, he wrote. They rented a house in Quezon City, close to a Jesuit University where the Assumptionist brothers are to continue their studies. On Feb. 2, the feast of the Presentation and of Consecrated Life, their home was officially blessed and inaugurated. Father Lamoureux helped them define their mission at their first local Chapter Feb. 6, then they held an open house Feb. 11. “Our purpose is to build an international, inter-Asian and Christ-centered Assumptionist community, sharing our charism with the Filipino people, attentive to their needs, especially those of the poor,” Father Holzer wrote. “We want to insist on vocation ministry for the future and the solid initial and continuing formation of our brothers, as our priorities at this time of founding. … Our apostolate will be defined gradually, by being attentive to the needs of the Filipino people and becoming more involved in their life."
Catholic Free Press (Worcester, Massachusetts) ![]()
|
|||
Last Updated on Tuesday, 30 March 2010 09:47 |