Sunday, January 11, 2015

WHATEVER HAPPENED TO THE ISSUE OF GRACE AND THE SQUABBLING DOMINICANS AND JESUITS OF 16TH CENTURY

In the beginning

In the middle ages, Dominicans and Jesuits were no keen friends. The members of the two orders were known to have opposed each other, particularly on the issue of grace. The conflict was sparked by the Jesuit Luis de Molina’s Concordia Liberi Arbitrii Cum Gratiae Donis Divina Praesentia, Providentia, Praedestinatione er Reprobatire, published in 1588 in Lisbon. It was a dispute that refused to rest in the next centuries, even after Clement VIII established the Congregatio de Auxiliis in 1598 to avert further controversy. This, however, did not stop further debates. Sixtus V ordered the Dominicans and Jesuits to stop their squabbling and let the Magisterium decide. A decision was never rendered, but thankfully, the controversy soon died down. The question, however, lingers: is there still a rivalry between the Dominicans and Jesuits? Not in the Philippines. Not with the younger generations of Filipino Dominicans and Jesuits of Quezon City.  
    

It is in the genes

“Pueblo amante de Maria,” a people deeply in love with Mary-- this is how Filipinos are in relation to the Mother of God. For the Filipino Dominicans and Jesuits, blood, truly, is thicker than water. The love for Mary that runs in their veins makes them one.  They have not allowed the conflicts on grace of their Western forebears to hinder their being one in their love for Mary, who is full of grace. Instead of arguing on grace, they have chosen to love Mary, full of grace. There now exists a warm fellowship between the younger generations of Dominicans and Jesuits, under the mantle of the Blessed Virgin Mary, a brotherhood that is truly filled with grace. 


The encounter

As part of their formation, the Jesuit novices used to go on pilgrimage to Manaoag from their novitiate house in Novaliches, Quezon City. They would journey on foot, walking two by two going to the Shrine of Our Lady of the Rosary in Manaoag, Pangasinan, approximately 200 kilometers away. The pilgrimage was an arduous three-day of walk, begging for food and sleeping in the houses of strangers. However, when they arrived in Manaoag, at the Dominican Novitiate of the Annunciation, they received the welcome of long-lost brothers from the Dominican novices.

The Dominicans would offer them accommodation, food, and rest from the long and tiring journey.  They would even invite the Jesuits to join them in their regular schedule of praying in common, eating in common, and time for recreation in common. They would organize sessions where they would share their stories about their formation, the richness of their respective spiritualities, even cracking some Dominican and Jesuit jokes. Indeed, they learned to laugh with each other, without the vestige of past rivalries. Those momentous encounters have served as the fertile seed bed where Filipino Dominicans and Jesuits formed relationships that bridged any differences, with Mary and her Son filling the gap with grace.  
     

Nurturing a brotherhood, a brotherhood that nurtures

If great philosophical thoughts and ideas in Continental Europe were mostly developed over cigars and cups of coffee, the fraternity between younger Dominicans and Jesuits has grown over the banquet of the Eucharist celebrated on the Feast of our Lady of the Rosary, La Naval de Manila. For several years now, on the second Sunday of October, Jesuit scholastics have graced the grand procession in honor of our Lady of Rosary, La Naval de Manila, a procession that commemorates the 1646 victory of Filipinos and Spanish soldiers against the invading Protestant Dutch. It was a victory fought and won through the intercession of the Lady of the Rosary. Jesuit scholastics, together with their Dominican student-brothers-- “batchmates”-- would join the throng of thousands of devotees walking through the streets of Quezon City, praying the rosary and shouting “Viva la Virgen.” They are made one by their deep devotion to Mary, making them sons of Mary.

After the grand procession, seminarians from various inter-diocesan seminaries in the metropolis would join other religious in a banquet prepared by the Dominican community to cap the celebration of the great feast of the Lady. For the Dominican and Jesuits scholastics, however, their celebration would start when other visitors have left, bottles of wines are brought in. The brothers would share their stories and struggles in formation, just like before in their novitiate days. Should a passerby see the Dominican and Jesuit scholastics, he would probably think that they have not seen each other for centuries, though it had just been over a year since the last visit.

It was the issue of grace that divided the Dominicans and Jesuits in the past. Today it is the Mary who is full of grace, and her Son, who now unite them in this corner of the world. Divided by centuries of disputes and rivalries, younger Filipino Dominicans and Jesuits have found brothers in each other through Mary, their Mother, uniting the fragments and cracks between their Orders with her Son’s unending grace.          

More than grace, more than rivalries

The history existing between the Dominicans and Jesuits is not always of bitter episodes. There exist too sweet chapters worthy of being remembered and indeed of being treasured.

During his year of discernment and conversion in 1522, St. Ignatius stayed with the Dominicans in Manresa. He was given a cell by the Dominicans in their very own convent. Here he had severe illness. It can be presumed that the Dominicans had took care of Ignatius, for in the spring of the following year, 1523, he left for Barcelona en route to Rome.  His stay there prove to be of great importance as it is during that respite in Manresa with the Dominicans, he was able to write the Spiritual Exercises and saw a vision of the future of the Society of Jesus.

The joy of being together was not felt only by St. Ignatius and the Dominicans of Manresa. Years after that poignant encounter with Ignatius and the Dominicans in Manresa, there occurred another event wherein brothers from these two congregations held each others hand building the Church.

In 1579, on his way to his then far-flung and newly established diocese of Manila, newly appointed Bishop Domingo de Salazar, OP, the first bishop of Manila, asked the Juan de la Plaza, SJ, the Jesuit provincial in Mexico City,  to give him a large number of religious to accompany him to Manila. De la Plaza granted the request of Salazar and had allowed Antonio Sedeno, the director of the group, Alonso Sanchez, Gaspar de Toledo, and Nicolas Gallardo. Aside from a lone Dominican companion in the person of Cristobal de Salvatierra, Bishop Domingo de Salazar, OP arrived I Manila in the same year accompanied by brothers from the Society of Jesus; A Dominican accompanied by Jesuits. That cooperation between these Dominicans and Jesuits of the 16th century did not stop in accompanying the Bishop of Manila to his diocese. Indeed, after they had arrived in Manila, the Jesuits helped the Salazar in administering the newly established Diocese. He had Alonso Sanchez, SJ as his trusted secretary until Sanchez left for Spain in 1586. He assigned to the Jesuits the study and solution of difficult cases of conscience; cases related to justice and restitution of properties. Salazar had a high opinion with the sons of Ignatius that he would often stay with them in their convent for days. Jesuits indeed showed the same hospitality the Dominicans of Manresa rendered to Ignatius by building a room dedicated solely for the Bishop.    

Almost five centuries had passed since these encounters took place but they remain to be springs of insights whereby the generations of today can derive inspiration in doing their own collaborative efforts with each other in building the Church in the Philippines and in Asia.

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