P a g e |3
congregations in different parts of the country: the Congregation of the Immaculate Heart of Mary,
1907; the Missionaries of the Sacred Heart, 1908; the Society of the Divine Word, 1909; the Missionary
Canonesses of St. Augustine, 1910; and the De La Salle Brothers, 1911.9
In spite of almost 333 years of work of evangelization by the missionaries who were mostly Spanish, the
Philippines, nonetheless, remained not entirely Catholic in as much certain areas of the Philippines were
not yet Christianized. In the beginning of the 20th century, the country was particularly assailed by
masonry that was certainly anti-religion and anti-clerical. Moreover, the U.S.A. government in the
Philippines imposed a separation of Church and State that was definitely prejudicial to the Church that
dominated the Philippines. It intentionally sought to reverse the dominant position of the Church where
Spanish nationals were forced to give up their ministry resulting into neglect of the pastoral care of
many who sought to be faithful to their Catholic faith; where schools mostly administered by the
parishes were closed; where the colonizers had constructed new schools and had prohibited the
teaching of religion, but at the same time had brought in new teachers who were mostly Protestants
and who proselytized while they educated. The result was in the Philippines, there came about a
growing immorality and indifferentism.10
In Manila, just before World War II, there were 42 religious orders in Manila, 20 for men and 22 for
women.11 World War II temporarily stopped the arrival of new religious orders. Sometime in 1946,
Archbishop Michael O’Doherty (1916-1949) reported that there were 62 religious priests in the
Archdiocese engaged in the pastoral ministry, 20 religious houses for men with members numbering 283
and 47 religious houses for women with about 750 members.12 Between 1980 and 1990, there were 16
new arrivals of men congregations; there instead were 64 new arrivals of women congregations, of
which 44 were of Italian origin. By 1983, there were 86 religious institutes in the Archdiocese with a
combined membership of 3,157 religious men and women.13
3.
The Religious Orders
For the present study, I have chosen ten religious orders, of which six are female: (i) the Pious Disciples
of the Divine Master (PDDM, 1924), (ii) the Daughters of Saint Paul (FSP, 1915): Italian (Giacomo
Alberione); (iii) the Religious of the Assumption (RA, 1839): French (St. Anne-Eugenie Milleret de Brou);
(iv) the Augustinian Sisters of the Our Lady of Consolation (ASOLC, 1883): Spanish/Filipino (Mother Rita
Barcelo OSA); (v) the Daughters of Charity of Canossa (FdCC, 1828): Italian (St. Magdalene of Canossa);
and (vi) the Franciscan Missionaries of Mary (FMM, 1877): French/Indian (Helene de Chappotin/Mother
Mary of the Passion).
Instead, the four male religious orders for the study are: (i) the Society of Saint Paul (SSP, 1914) Italian
(Giacomo Alberione); (ii) the Congregation of the Passion (CP, 1741): Italian (Paul Francis Danei/St. Paul
9 Cf. Reginald D. CRUZ, “To Preserve the Faith: The Arrival of the Third Wave of Catholic Missionaries Within the Church-State
Relations of the Philippine Insular Government (1900-1915)”, in MST Review 3 (1999) 41-43 [21-47].
10 Cf. Leonardo Z. LEGASPI OP, “The Church in the Philippines since 1900”, in Boletín Eclesiastico de Filipinas 39 (1965) 339-352.
11 Cf. DE JESUS Armando, “The Archdiocese of Manila: 1945-1995”, in YALUNG Crisostomo (ed.), “The Archdiocese of Manila. A
Pilgrimage in Time (1565-1999), vol. II, Manila 1999, 332.
12 Cf. DE JESUS Armando, “The Archdiocese of Manila: 1945-1995”, II, 333-334.
13 Cf. ibid., 334. Cf. also GUTAY Jose Femilou OFM, “Catholic Education and Church-State Relations until the Sixties”, in Walking
through the Development of the Local Churches after the Spanish Regime. A Historical Reflection with the Catholic Bishops
Conference of the Philippines, Manila 20-21 January 2010, 71-80.