CMSP

STATEMENTS

POST-CONVENTION STATEMENT AMRSP Joint Biennial Convention 2021 28-30 April 2021

Prot. 2021-068

“It is Christ who operates in time
and who writes His story through our papers,
which are echoes and traces of this passage of the Church,
of the passage of the Lord Jesus, in the world.”
– Saint Paul VI

We, the 275 major superiors and representatives of institutes of consecrated life and societies of
apostolic life, 12 delegates of secular institutes and institutes of contemplative consecrated life, and 10
representatives of the 7 Mission Partners (MPs), of the 2021 Online Joint Biennial Convention of the
Association of Major Religious Superiors in the Philippines (AMRSP), now the Conference of Major Superiors
in the Philippines (CMSP), gathered to reflect on the theme “SINGKWENTA SA LIMANG SIGLO: 50
Years of AMRSP on the 500th Year of Christianity in the Philippines, Celebrating the Gift of
Consecrated Life in Mission at the Service of God and of Humanity.”

As an inter-personal community, together with our MPs, we were welcomed by the Chairpersons, Sr.
Marilyn Java, RC of the AMRSWP and Fr. Cielito Almazan, OFM of the AMRSMP. They said that “this
Convention is a space to pause and reflect on our experiences and God’s graciousness, to be emboldened to
live our mission” towards transformation.

Against the background of the celebration of the 500 years of Christianization of the Philippines, we
focused our energies in revisiting our congregational and our collective journeys spanning fifty years and to
begin to chart our common future as a Conference.

A Listening Heart – Celebrating our Brotherhood and Sisterhood
Going by sheer numbers, the AMRSP is a formidable organization: 361 institutes of consecrated life
and societies of apostolic life out of the 453 congregations in the Philippines are members of the AMRSP,
representing 80 percent of the total number of institutes present in the Philippines. As Archbishop Romulo
G. Valles, DD, CBCP President, said, “We cannot capture the picture of the tapestry of those 500 years of
Christianity without the thread of the consecrated men and women who first came to this country.”

Despite the dark side of the Filipinos’ experience of Spanish colonization, collectively as communities
and as a Conference is the certainty that the Christian faith we received has been embraced and contextualized.
We are a people blessed and committed not only to our Christian faith, but also to transmitting this Faith to
the next generations.

His Eminence João Braz Cardinal de Aviz, Prefect of the Congregation for Institutes of Consecrated
Life and Societies of Apostolic Life, affirmed the fidelity of consecrated life in the Philippines to its concern
for and commitment to the poorest, a solidarity with the poor and vulnerable that is filled with joy “that has
grown over the past 500 years as it has encountered the joy of the Gospel’.

Cardinal de Aviz further affirmed the AMRSP’s journey so far is in full harmony with Pope Francis’
invitation to live synodality which is a constitutive and fundamental dimension of consecrated life, as well as
the whole Church. He emphasized that “during this pandemic, synodality has helped us to appreciate more
the value of walking side by side (with all of humanity). We cannot save ourselves alone.”
It is only with a listening heart can we be a synodal Church. A synodal Church feels and is in solidarity
with the pains, hopes, joys and anxieties of the people.

Sr. Mary Regina Kuizon, RGS, former Co-Chairperson of the AMRSWP, reaffirmed these synodal
practices of AMRSP when she traced the story of how as a fraternal body, the AMRSP responded to the
challenges of the times. Juxtaposing the annals of the AMRSP and her own congregation’s annals during the
Martial Law years, she highlighted the collective responses of AMRSP to the extremely challenging journey of
AMRSP from 1972 to the present. These resulted from deep personal and common discernment, and prayer
of a listening heart.

 
Go into the Deep – Challenges to Faith and Mission
Going into the deep as we re-commit ourselves to the calling of our mission, let us remember these
guideposts to our journey into another 500 years:
What can we learn from our history?
Where are we being called to go?
What are we being called to do?
What would our founders do?
As a Conference, what can we do?

There are many complicated challenges to commit to Christ’s mission: a crisis of vocations and a
dwindling lay faithful – especially among the youth, who no longer find meaning and identity in the Church
and its ministries. Other challenges include the stark contrast between our faith values and the values of a
dominant economy, finding the balance between prayer, silence (meditation) and active ministry. We are
called to engage with the formidable list of social concerns – including the total disregard for ecological
integrity and human dignity, persistent human rights violations, and the 2022 elections, a critical event to
safeguard our country’s democratic structures.

We find our directions in the sharing of Bishop Midyphil B. Billones, DD, Auxiliary Bishop of Cebu,
who said that for the next 500 years, CMSP, formerly named as AMRSP, must re-establish our identity of
communion, moving away from isolationism, individualism and racism towards an openness to a love without
borders, with solidarity which enables us to see the other half of our soul in our brothers and sisters.

Emboldened to Transform and Be Transformed

Cardinal de Aviz said the task before us “is not an easy one, but a demanding and challenging one. It
is a task that “asks for everything, but at the same time offers us everything” (EG 12).

As a collective fraternal body, exploring ways of giving and collaborating essentially means dreaming
together what the next 500 years will be like. It means looking to the future with hope, because only “Hope is
bold; it can look beyond personal convenience, the petty securities and compensations which limit our
horizon, and it can open us up to grand ideals that make life more beautiful and worthwhile” (FT 55).

We have embarked on our collective journey into the future by working on the process of the internal
renewal of the Association. As a body we approved renaming ourselves Conference of Major Superiors in
the Philippines (CSMP) and undertaking the canonical and civil procedures to complete this process.
Beyond the change of name, we hope that this renewal will inaugurate a season of deeper collaboration among
the different forms of consecration.

At this point in our institutional history, we recommit ourselves to Pope Francis’ nine-year Total
Sustainability Plan and the 15-Month Plan of the Justice, Peace and Integrity of Creation Commission and the
Mission Partners, in addressing key social issues, pending the suggestions of the Joint Executive Board.

Only with a listening heart in dreaming and walking together as a synodal body of collaborators, can
we as the Conference of Major Superiors of the Philippines “go out into the deep” to transform and be
transformed, together with the entire body of Christ in animating humanity. We trust in the Lord’s word: “Do
not fear. I am here, your Lord.” (cf. Isaiah 41, 10).

Acknowledgments

We acknowledge and thank the Holy Father, Pope Francis for his paternal concern for our Conference
and for all consecrated persons in the Philippines; as well as to our Apostolic Nuncio, Archbishop Charles J.
Brown, DD, who presented Pope Francis’ message; our conference speakers, Sr. Mary Regina T. Kuizon,
RGS and Bishop Midyphil Billones DD; our panel moderators, Fr. Roel L. dela Cruz, SSS and Sr. Carmelita
Z. Victoria, SSpS; the Listening Heart panelists, Sr. Sonia Aldeguer, rscJ, Fr. Juvenal Moraleda, CSsR, Fr.
Roberto Rivera, SJ, and Mother Marrietta Vega, OSC; the prayer leaders for the three days: the De La Salle
Brothers and the Discalced Carmelite Nuns for the first day; the Franciscan Sisters pro Infante et Familia for the
second day, and the Claretian Missionaries for the third day.


We also recognize with gratitude the contributions of our Chairpersons, the members of the Joint
Executive Board, our Executive Secretaries, and the entire AMRSP Secretariat in making this Convention
possible.

 
May the Good God, the Good Shepherd who is ready to lay his life down for his sheep, urge us with
his charity and love to commit once more to serve him and all of humanity.

 
For the Members of the Joint Convention:


Sr. Marilyn A. Java, RC Fr. Cielito R. Almazan, OFM
Chairpersons