Some members of the Catholic Church hierarchy were not impressed with
a priest running for governor in Masbate in the 2013 midterm elections,
calling it a betrayal of his “spiritual calling.”
The prelates of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the
Philippines (CBCP) also reiterated on Wednesday that the laity, not the
clergy, should engage in politics.
But, at the same time, they admitted
that some priests were thrust into the political arena under
“exceptional situations.”
“It’s a betrayal of commitment and obligation,” said Archbishop
Emeritus Oscar Cruz. “When a priest is ordained and he accepts his
obligations for his whole life, it’s a pity if these obligations he will
betray in favor of something else.”
Fr. Leo Casas made his bid for governor official on
Friday under the administration’s Liberal Party.
He will go against the
established political dynasties in the province.
Some prelates earlier
said that he could lose his clerical ministry or removed from the
priesthood if he pursued his political plans.
Sorsogon Bishop Arturo Bastes shared the view, on Wednesday, that
priests entering politics would be a “betrayal of spiritual calling.”
“Perhaps, because of exceptional situations like in Masbate, the priest
thinks he can enter politics.”
But from previous experience, a priest-politician did not always
succeed in the end, he noted.
“That’s why the Church forbids the clergy
from engaging in partisan politics.”
Priests are drawn to seek government office especially when the
political sector is handicapped, according to Lipa Archbishop Ramon
Arguelles.
“I am not in favor of any priest becoming a politician. But the
Church does not lose anything when a priest turns into a politician. God
remains complete and his work of saving man does not wane,” he added.
“It is the political sector that appears handicapped [so] it has
to bring in clerics for lack of competent and reliable people,” said the
prelate.