Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Manila

Archdiocese of Manila
Archidioecesis Manilensis
Arkidiyosesis ng Maynila
Arquidiócesis de Manila

Arms of the Archdiocese
Location
Country  Philippines
Territory City of Manila
Makati
Mandaluyong
Pasay
San Juan
Metropolitan Manila
Statistics
Area 549 km2 (212 sq mi)
Population
- Total
- Catholics
(as of 2004)
2,993,000
2,419,781 (80.9%)
Parishes 85
Members 347 over all
Information
Denomination Catholic
Sui iuris church Latin Church
Rite Roman Rite
Established 6 February 1579 (Diocese)
14 August 1595 (Archdiocese)
Cathedral Cathedral Basilica of the Immaculate Conception
Patron saint Our Lady of the Immaculate Conception, Patroness of the Philippines
Current leadership
Pope Francis
Archbishop Luis Antonio G. Tagle
Auxiliary Bishops Most Reverend Broderick S. Pabillo[1]
Vicar General Very Reverend Monsignor Jose Clemente F. Ignacio, PC[1]
Map

Jurisdiction of the metropolitan see within the Philippines.
Website
www.rcam.org

The Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Manila (Latin: Archidioecesis Manilensis; Filipino: Arkidiyosesis ng Maynilà; Spanish: Arquidiócesis de Manila) is an archdiocese of the Catholic Church in Metropolitan Manila, Philippines. Its present local ordinary is Luis Antonio Cardinal Tagle, the 32nd Archbishop and 5th Filipino to hold the office.

The cathedral church is the Minor Basilica and Metropolitan Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception, with the Blessed Virgin Mary, under the title of Immaculate Conception as its principal patroness. The archdiocese juridically comprises the cities of Manila, San Juan, Makati, Pasay, and Mandaluyong, as well as the EDSA Shrine located in Quezon City.

History

Per the efforts of conquistador Martín de Goiti—who founded the City of Manila by uniting the dominions of Sulayman III of Namayan, Tondo, and Sabag, Rajah Ache Matanda of Maynila, and Lakan Dula of Tondo—the Diocese of Manila was then canonically erected on February 6, 1579 through the Papal bull Illius Fulti Præsidio by Pope Gregory XIII, encompassing all Spanish colonies in Asia as a suffragan of Mexico. Fray Domingo de Salazar, a Dominican from the Convent of San Sebastian in Salamanca, Spain, was selected by King Philip II of Spain to be bishop of the new diocese and was presented to the pope.[2]

Over the course of history and growth of Catholicism in the Philippines, the diocese was elevated and new dioceses had been carved from its territory. On August 14, 1595, Pope Clement VIII raised the diocese to the status of an archdiocese with Bishop Ignacio Santibáñez elevated as its first archbishop. Three new dioceses were created as suffragan to Manila: Nueva Cáceres, Nueva Segovia, and Cebu. With the creation of these new dioceses, the territory of the archdiocese was reduced to the city of Manila and the adjoining civil provinces in proximity including Mindoro Island. It was bounded to the north by the Diocese of Nueva Segovia, to the south by the Diocese of Cebu, and to the southeast by the Diocese of Nueva Cáceres.[3]

Interior of the Throne Room in the Archbishop's Palace as it was during the Spanish colonial period.

During the Hispanic period, the Archdiocese was ruled by a succession of Spanish and Latino archbishops. The British occupation of Manila during the Seven Years' War saw the temporary conversion of Sultan Azim ud-Din I of Sulu to Catholicism, the massive looting and destruction of ecclesiastical treasures, as well as the burning of churches by British soldiers, Sepoy mercenaries and rebellious Chinese residents in Binondo. This episode was particularly damaging to Philippine scholarship due to the fact that the monasteries holding the archives and artifacts about the precolonial Philippine Rajahnates, Datudoms, Sultanates and Huangdoms and their conversion to Catholicism; were either burnt, lost or looted by the British. An example of which would be the Boxer Codex, whose earliest owner Lord Giles of Ilchester, had inherited it from an ancestor who stole it from Manila during the British Occupation.[4]

Nevertheless, peace was subsequently restored after the Protestant British occupation. In the time after this, the Catholic religious orders (with the exception of the Jesuits who were temporarily suppressed by the Spaniards due to their role in anti-imperialist movements in Latin America) became the powerful driving force in the Archdiocese of Manila. The local diocesan clergy resented the foreign religious orders due to their near monopoly of ecclesiastical positions. The opposition of the religious orders against an autonomous diocesan clergy independent of them lead to the martyrdom of priests Mariano Gómez, José Burgos, Jacinto Zamora collectively known as Gomburza. This inspired the Jesuit educated Jose Rizal to form the La Liga Filipina, to ask for reforms from Spain and recognition of local clergy.

Rizal was executed and the La Liga Filipina dissolved. The 1896 Philippine revolution was triggered when the Spanish discovered the anti-colonial secret organisation Katipunan, and ended Spanish rule. The United States took the Philippines from Spain in the 1898 Spanish–American War; this developed into fighting between the Philippine revolutionaries and the US in the 1899–1902 Philippine–American War, followed by victory for the US and disestablishment of the Roman Catholic Church as the state church of the Philippines. Some members of the Katipunan then turned to the Catholic Church, especially to the Jesuit order who had fostered Philippine nationalism in the students they educated. In the period after the war Philippine churches were restored in the Art-Deco architectural motif.

The province of Mindoro was established as an independent diocese on April 10, 1910 by virtue of a Decretum Consistoriale executed by Pope Pius X, implementing the Bull Quae Mari Sinico of Pope Leo XIII. On the same date the Diocese of Lipa (later Archdiocese of Lipa) was created, with jurisdiction over the provinces of Batangas, Tayabas, Marinduque and some parts of Masbate.

In May 1928 Pope Pius XI established the Diocese of Lingayen, carved from Manila and Nueva Segovia. In this creation 26 parishes were separated from Manila. He also named Our Lady of Guadalupe as a patroness of the Filipino people in 1938.

December 8, 1941, marked the beginning of the Japanese occupation of the Philippines.[5] Members of the secretive Black Dragon Society had infiltrated all facets of Philippine life and had greatly guided the invading Japanese forces. World War 2 marked a period of irreplaceable loss to the Archdiocese of Manila. The combination of violent theft and arson done by the Japanese and the indiscriminate carpet bombing perpetuated by the Americans lead to the permanent loss of many of the ancient Gothic, Art-Deco and Earthquake Baroque Cathedrals found around the Archdiocese of Manila.[6]

In the aftermath of the war, in September 1942, Pope Pius XII declared Our Lady of Immaculate Conception as the Principal Patroness of the Philippines on the Papal Bull, Impositi Nobis, along with Saints Pudentiana and Rose of Lima as secondary patrons.[7]

Due to the heavy damages resulted from World War II, the Manila Cathedral underwent major rebuilding from 1946 to 1958. The Parish of San Miguel served as pro-cathedral or temporary cathedral of the local church until the Manila Cathedral was reopened and blessed in 1958.

On December 11, 1948, the Apostolic Constitution Probe noscitur further divided the Archdiocese of Manila by separating the northern part of the Archdiocese and establishing it as the Diocese of San Fernando. On November 25, 1961, the Archdiocese of Manila was again partitioned. The civil provinces of Bulacan in the north and Cavite in the south were separated from the Archdiocese with the northern part becoming the Diocese of Malolos and the south the Diocese of Imus.

Pope John Paul II declared the Manila Cathedral a minor basilica in 1981 through a Motu Proprio. In 1983, fifteen towns in Eastern Rizal, the city of Marikina, and two barangays of Pasig were separated to form the Diocese of Antipolo.

The archdiocese witnessed many grace-filled church events such as the Second Synod of Manila (1911), Third Synod of Manila (1925), 33rd International Eucharistic Congress (1937), First Plenary Council of the Philippines (1953), papal visit of Pope Paul VI (1970), Fourth Synod of Manila (1979), papal visits of Pope John Paul II (the first in 1981 and the second in 1995), National Marian Year (1985), National Eucharistic Year (1987), Second Plenary Council of the Philippines (1991), Second Provincial Council of Manila (1996), and World Meeting of Families (2003).

In 2002, two more dioceses were carved out of the Archdiocese: the Diocese of Novaliches in the north and the Diocese of Parañaque in the south, which also comprised the cities of Las Piñas and Muntinlupa.

In 2003, by the recommendation of Jaime Cardinal Sin (the spiritual leader of the People Power Revolution) and by papal decree, the archdiocese was further partitioned to form three new dioceses: the dioceses of Cubao, Caloocan and Pasig.

Archbishop

The seat of the Archbishop is in Manila Cathedral-Basilica, under the patronage of the Our Lady of the Immaculate Conception. The Archbishop is also overseer of several suffragan dioceses of Manila.

The Archbishop notably has a voting seat on the board of the Bank of the Philippine Islands, as the Archdiocese is the bank's fifth-largest owner with a 8.35% share.[8]

After having been served by a single diocesan bishop, nineteen archbishops were later appointed from Spain. In 1903, the archdiocese received its first American archbishop as appointed by the Holy See. Following the tenure of Archbishop Jeremiah James Harty from St. Louis, Missouri, the Irishman Michael J. O'Doherty was appointed, and received on September 6, 1916.

O'Doherty would lead the church in times when the Filipinos were petitioning for sovereignty from the United States and the Japanese Occupation of the Philippines during World War II. When O'Doherty died after Philippine independence in 1946, Rev. Gabriel Reyes, already serving as coadjutor archbishop, became the first native Filipino chosen for the position. Reyes' successor, Archbishop Rufino Jiao Santos, became the first Filipino to become a cardinal in 1960. After Santos' death in 1973, Auxiliary Bishop Artemio Casas was named in the capacity of vicar-capitular to oversee the archdiocese until a bishop was nominated. On January 21, 1974, Pope Paul VI appointed Jaro Archbishop Jaime Sin as new Archbishop of Manila. Archbishop Sin was named cardinal in 1976 and would later be instrumental in the People Power Revolution of 1986 that ousted President Ferdinand Marcos.

In 2003 Pope John Paul II appointed Gaudencio Rosales, Archbishop of Lipa, to succeed Cardinal Sin. Pope Benedict XVI later elevated Rosales to the cardinalate on March 24, 2006. On October 13, 2011, Most Reverend Luis Antonio Gokim Tagle, Bishop of Imus, was named archbishop. Tagle replaced Cardinal Rosales, who had resigned at the compulsory age of retirement and now bears the honorary title of Archbishop Emeritus. Tagle was himself made a cardinal by Benedict XVI on November 24, 2012.

List of Archbishops of Manila

No. Picture Name From Until
1 Domingo de Salazar, O. P. February 6, 1579 December 4, 1594
2 Ignacio Santibáñez, O.F.M. August 30, 1595 August 14, 1598
3 Miguel de Benavides, O. P. October 7, 1602 July 26, 1605
4 Diego Vázquez de Mercado May 28, 1608 June 12, 1616
5 Miguel García Serrano, O.S.A. February 12, 1618 June 14, 1629
6 Hernando Guerrero, O.S.A. January 9, 1634 July 1, 1641
7 Fernando Montero Espinosa February 5, 1646 1648
8 Miguel de Poblete Casasola January 21, 1649 December 8, 1667
9 Juan López, O. P. 1672 February 12, 1674
10 Felipe Fernandez de Pardo, O. P. October 28, 1681 December 31, 1689
11 Diego Camacho y Ávila August 19, 1696 January 14, 1704
12 Francisco de la Cuesta, O.S.H. August 12, 1707 1722
13 Carlos Bermúdez Gonzalez 1722 November 13, 1729
14 Juan Ángel Rodríguez, O.S.T. May 18, 1731 June 24, 1742
15 Pedro de la Santísima Trinidad Martínez de Arizala, O.F.M. February 3, 1744 May 28, 1755
16 Manuel Antonio Rojo del Río y Vieyra 1758 1764
17 Basilio Sancho de Santa Justa, S.P. April 14, 1766 December 15, 1787
18 Juan Antonio Orbigo de Gallego, O.F.M. December 15, 1788 May 17, 1797
19 Juan Antonio Zulaibar, O. P. March 26, 1804 March 4, 1824
20 Hilarión Díez, O.S.A. July 3, 1826 May 7, 1829
21 José Seguí, O.S.A. July 5, 1830 July 4, 1845
22 José Aranguren, O.A.R.January 19, 1846 April 18, 1861
23 Gregorio Melitón Martínez Santa Cruz December 23, 1861 1875
24 Pedro Payo y Piñeiro, O.P. January 28, 1876 January 1, 1889
25 Bernardino Nozaleda y Villa, O. P. May 27, 1889 February 4, 1902
26 Jeremiah James Harty June 6, 1903 May 16, 1916
27 Michael J. O'Doherty September 6, 1916 October 13, 1949
28 Gabriel Reyes y Martelino October 13, 1949 October 15, 1952
29 Rufino Cardinal Santos y Jiao February 10, 1953 September 3, 1973
30 Jaime Cardinal Sin y Lachica March 19, 1974 September 15, 2003
31 Gaudencio Cardinal Rosales y Borbon November 21, 2003 October 13, 2011
32 Luis Antonio Cardinal Tagle y Gokim December 12, 2011 present[9]

Auxiliary bishops

College of Consultors

Below are member priests of the College of Consultors of the Archdiocese of Manila since July 1, 2015. Auxiliary bishops also serve as vicars general.

Demographics

As of 2004, the archdiocese has registered a total of 2,719,781 baptized faithful. They are served by 475 diocesan and religious priests – with a ratio of 5,725 faithful per priest, under 85 parishes. The archdiocese also houses 369 male religious and 1,730 female religious engaged in various social, pastoral and missionary works in various areas of the archdiocese.

Formation of priests

The archdiocese administers San Carlos Seminary, the archdiocesan major seminary which caters to the formation of future priests for the archdiocese and for its suffragan dioceses. Located in Guadalupe Viejo, Makati City, it has college program (AB Philosophy) and graduate school (master's degree in theology or pastoral ministry), as well as formation houses for future priests committed to serve the Filipino-Chinese communities in the country (Lorenzo Ruiz Mission Society) and a center for adult vocations (Holy Apostles Senior Seminary). The archdiocese also operates Our Lady of Guadalupe Minor Seminary for young men at the secondary school level. It is located a few blocks from San Carlos Seminary.

Parishes

The Virgin Mary as the Immaculate Conception, patroness of the Archdiocese. Consecrated by Pope Pius XII's Papal Bull Impositi Nobis in 1942, the Immaculate Conception is also honoured as "Principal Patroness" of the Philippine Islands.
Façade of the Basilica Minore de Nuestro Padre Jesús Nazareno in Quiapo, Manila. The church enshrines the Black Nazarene, an image of Jesus believed to be miraculous, which attracts thousands of devotees on Fridays and millions during its annual procession on 9 January.
Vicariate of Nuestra Señora de Guia (Ermita; Intramuros; Malate, Manila)
Name of Church Administered Adress Feast Day Parish Priest
Minor Basilica and Metropolitan Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception Intramuros. Manila December 8 Rev. Fr. Reginald Malicdem, MAL
Archdiocesan Shrine and Parish of Nuestra Señora de Guia Ermita, Manila May 19 Rev Msgr. Mario D. Enriuez, PC
Archdiocesan Shrine of Nuestra Señora de Consolación y Correa Order of St. Augustine Intramuros, Manila Rev. Fr. Arnold C. Sta. Maria, OSA
Our Lady of Remedies Parish Missionary Society of St. Columban Malate, Manila Third Sunday of November Rev Fr. Leo Distor, MSSC
Our Lady of the Assumption Parish Malate, Manila August 15 Rev. Fr. Benjie Ledesma
San Vicente de Paul Parish Congregation of the Mission Ermita, Manila September 27 Rev. Fr. Jojo M. Rendon, CM
Vicariate of San José de Trozo (Quiapo; San Miguel; Santa Cruz, Manila)
Name of Parish Administered Adress Feast Day Parish Priest
Minor Basilica of the Black Nazarene / Saint John the Baptist Parish Quiapo, Manila January 9 Rev. Msgr. Hernando M. Coronel, PC., MBA., MPA., MA.
Minor Basilica of San Sebastian/Our Lady of Mount Carmel Order of the Augustinian Recollects Quiapo, Manila January 20 Rev. Fr. Antonio C. Zabala, Jr., OAR
National Shrine and Parish of Jude Thaddeus Society of the Divine Word San Miguel, Manila October 28 Rev. Fr. Linus E. Nicasio, SVD
National Shrine of Saint Michael and the Archangels San Miguel, Manila September 29 Rev. Fr. Genaro O. Diwa, SLL
Santa Cruz Parish Congregation of the Blessed Sacrament Sta. Cruz, Manila Second week of October Rev. Fr. Joseph Matitu, SSS
San José de Trozo Parish Lorenzo Ruiz Mission Society Sta. Cruz, Manila May 5 Rev. Fr. Anthony Chan P. Olaguer, LRMS
'Vicariate of the Holy Spirit (Santa Cruz; Tondo, Manila)
Name of Parish Administered Adress Feast Day Parish Priest
Archdiocesan Shrine of Espíritu Santo Sta. Cruz, Manila Sunday after Ascension Sunday Rev. Fr. Wilmer R. Rosario, JCD
Immaculate Conception Parish Tondo, Manila December 8 Rev. Msgr. Geronimo F. Reyes, JCD, PC
Risen Christ Parish Society of the Divine Word Tondo, Manila Easter Sunday Rev. Fr. Alfredo Sabado, SVD
Saint Joseph Parish (Gagalangin) Tondo, Manila March 19 Rev. Fr. Joselino B. Tuazon
San José Manggagawà Parish Tondo, Manila May 1 Rev. Fr. Artemio P. Fabros
San Rafael Parish (Balut) Tondo, Manila October 24 Rev. Fr. Prudencio T. Solomon, Jr.
San Roque de Manila Parish Sta. Cruz, Manila August 16 or 17 Rev. Fr. Antonio B. Navarrete, Jr.
Santa Monica Parish Tondo, Manila May 4 Rev. Fr. Juanito C. Arroco, Jr.
Vicariate of Our Lady of Loreto (Sampaloc; Santa Mesa, Manila)
Name of Parish Administered Adress Feast Day Parish Priest
Archdiocesan Shrine and Parish of Our Lady of Loreto Sampaloc, Manila December 10 Rev. Msgr. Emmanuel V. Sunga, PC
Archdiocesan Shrine of Saint Anthony of Padua Sampaloc, Manila June 13
Most Holy Trinity Parish Sampaloc, Manila First Sunday after Pentecost Rev. Fr. Enrico Martin F. Adoviso
Nuestra Señora de Salvación Parish Sta. Mesa, Manila Third Saturday of August Rev. Fr. Jesus Jose C. Bustillo
Nuestra Señora del Perpetuo Socorro Parish Sampaloc, Manila First Sunday of May Rev. Fr. Jerome R. Secillano
Our Lady of Fátima Parish (Bacood) Sta. Mesa, Manila May 13 Rev. Fr. Primitivo T. Lopez
Sacred Heart of Jesus Parish (Old Santa Mesa) Sta. Mesa, Manila Friday after Trinity Sunday Rev. Fr. Jason H. Laguerta, Ph.D.
San Roque de Sampaloc Parish Sampaloc, Manila Third Sunday of August Rev. Fr. Leo Nilo C. Mangussad
Santísimo Rosario Parish (University of Santo Tomas) Order of Preachers Espana, Manila October 7 Rev. Fr. Louie R. Coronel, OP
Vicariate of Sto. Niño (Binondo; Tondo, Manila)
Name of Parish Administered Adress Feast Day Parish Priest
Minor Basilica of San Lorenzo Ruiz/Our Lady of the Most Holy Rosary Parish Binondo, Manila September 28 Rev. Fr. Andy O. Lim
Nuestra Señora de la Soledad Parish Binondo, Manila January 1 Rev. Fr. Jeremiah A. Adviento
Our Lady of Peace and Good Voyage Parish Order of Augustinian Recollects Tondo, Manila Third Sunday of May Rev. Fr. Joseph D. Granada, OAR
Saint John Bosco Parish (Barrio Magsaysay) Salesians of Don Bosco Tondo, Manila January 31 Rev. Fr. Eduardo Canua Hila, SDB
San Pablo Apostol Parish Congregation of the Canossian Sons of Charity Tondo, Manila Fourth Sunday of January Rev. Fr. Carlo Bittante, FdCC
Santo Niño de Tondo Parish Tondo, Manila Sunday after Baptism Sunday Rev. Fr. Estelito E. Villegas
Vicariate of San Fernando de Dilao (Paco; Pandacan, Manila)
Name of Parish Administered Adress Feast Day Parish Priest
Our Lady of Peñáfrancia Parish Paco, Manila May 14 Rev. Fr. Alexander O. Thomas
Saint Maria Goretti Parish Paco, Manila July 6 Rev. Fr. David T. Concepcion
Saint Peter the Apostle Parish Lorenzo Ruiz Mission Society Paco, Manila Sunday nearest to June 29 Rev. Msgr. Noly A. Que, LRMS, Ph.D., PC
San Fernando de Dilao Parish Paco, Manila Sunday after the 19th of August Rev. Msgr. Rolando R. dela Cruz, PC
Santo Niño de Pandacan Parish Pandacan, Manila Sunday after Baptism Sunday Rev. Fr. Sanny C. de Claro
Vicariate of the Holy Family (Malate; Paco; San Andres; Santa Ana, Manila)
Name of Parish Administered Adress Feast Day Parish Priest
Parish of Our Lady of the Abandoned (Santa Ana) Order of Friars Minor Sta. Ana, Manila May 12 Rev. Fr. Wilfredo S. Benito, OFM
Parokya ng Ina ng Laging Saklolo Sta. Ana, Manila Last Sunday of June Rev. Fr. Richard James M. Babao
Sagrada Familia Parish San Andres, Manila Sunday after Christmas Day Rev. Fr. Reynaldo A. Cruz
Saint Anthony of Padua Parish San Andres, Manila June 13 Rev. Fr. Benito B. Tuazon
Saint Pius X Parish Paco, Manila Sunday nearest to August 21 Rev. Fr. Alvin A. Fullon
Santísima Trinidad Parish Malate, Manila Sunday after Pentecost Sunday Rev. Fr. Joselito L. Buenafe
Vicariate of Sta. Clara de Montefalco (Pasay City)
Name of Parish Admistered Adress Feast Day Parish Priest
Archdiocesan Shrine of Jesus the Way, the Truth, and the Life Central Business Park, Reclamation Area, Pasay Rev. Msgr. Roberto C. Canlas, PC
Mary, Comforter of the Afflicted Parish Maricaban, Pasay August 28 Rev. Fr. Russel G. Ocampo
Our Lady of Fatima Parish (Don Carlos) Don Carlos Village, Pasay May 13 Rev. Fr. Michael D. Kalaw
Our Lady of Sorrows Parish Society of St. Paul F.B. Harrison St., Pasay September 15 Rev. Fr. Feliciano P. Marquez, Jr., SSP
Our Lady of the Airways Parish NAIA, Pasay Second Sunday of May Rev. Msgr. Modesto M. Teston.,PC
Our Lady of the Blessed Sacrament Parish Kalayaan Village Pasay Second Sunday of May Rev. Fr. Domingo Asuncion
San Isidro Labrador Parish Taft Ave., Pasay May 15 Rev. Fr. Macias Wency D. Serafica
San Juan Nepomuceno Parish Malibay, Pasay May 16 Rev. Fr. Edgardo C. Coroza
San Rafael Parish (Park Avenue) Park Ave., Pasay Last Sunday of September Rev. Fr. Reynaldo B. Bungay
San Roque Parish (Cabrera) Cabrera St., Pasay August 16 Rev. Fr. Paschal Ma. R. Gorgoña
Santa Clara de Montefalco Parish P. Burgos St., Pasay August 17 Rev. Fr. Nicardo P. Blanquisco
Vicariate of Saint John the Baptist (Mandaluyong City, San Juan City and Ortigas, Quezon City)
Name of Parish Administered Adress Feast Day Parish Priest
Archdiocesan Shrine and Quasi-Parish of Mary, Queen of Peace (EDSA Shrine) EDSA cor. Ortigas Ave., Quezon Example Rev. Fr. Lazaro B. Abaco
Chapel of the Eucharistic Lord SM Megamall, Mandaluyong Every Third Sunday of January Rev. Msgr. Esteban U. Lo, LRMS., PC
Mary the Queen Parish Society of Jesus Greenhills West, San Juan August 22 Rev. Fr. Guy Peter V. Guibelondo, SJ
Saint Francis of Assisi Parish Order of Friars Minor Capuchin Saint Francis St. cor. Shaw Blvd., Mandaluyong City October 04 Rev. Fr. Royce Andres M. Quitillan, OFMCap.
Saint John the Baptist Parish Pinaglabanan, San Juan June 24 Rev. Msgr. Nestor C. Cerbo, PC
Santuario de San José Parish Oblates of St. Joseph Greenhills East Subd., Mandaluyong March 19 Rev. Fr. Alexius V. Magtibay, OSJ
Santuario del Santo Cristo Parish Order of Preachers F. Blumentritt St. San Juan May 3 Rev. Fr. Jesus C. Prol, OP
Vicariate of San Felipe Neri (Mandaluyong City)
Name of Parish Admistered Adress Feast Day Parish Priest
Archdiocesan Shrine of the Divine Mercy Boni Ave., Mandaluyong Sunday after Easter Sunday Rev. Msgr. Alberto G. Salonga, Jr., PC
Our Lady of Fátima Parish (Addition Hills) Highway Hills, Mandaluyong October 13 Rev. Fr. Carlos V. Reyes
Our Lady of the Abandoned Parish (Hulo) Mission Society of the Philippines Hulo, Mandaluyong May 12 Rev. Fr. Socrates C. Mesiona, MSP
Sacred Heart of Jesus Parish (Welfareville) Welfareville Compound, Mandaluyong Friday after Trinity Sunday Rev. Fr. Rey Anthony I. Yatco
Saint Dominic Savio Parish Salesians of Don Bosco Pag-Asa, Mandaluyong May 6 Rev. Fr. Edwin Leuenberger Soliva, SDB
San Felipe Neri Parish Boni Ave. cor. Aglipay St., Mandaluyong December 8 and May 26 Rev. Fr. Ramon U. Merino
San Roque Parish (Barangka Ilaya) Barangka Ilaya, Mandaluyong August 16 Rev. Fr. Aries C. Reyes
Vicariate of Saints Peter and Paul (Makati City)
Name of Parish Administered Adress Feast Day Parish Priest
Holy Cross Parish Tejeros, Makati September 14 Rev. Fr. Alfonso B. Valeza
National Shrine of the Sacred Heart San Antonio, Makati Friday after Trinity Sunday Rev Fr. Victor Y. Apacible
Nuestra Señora de Gracia Parish Order of St. Augustine Guadalupe Viejo, Makati First Sunday of May Rev. Fr. Andres D. Rivera, Jr., OSA
Our Lady of La Paz Parish Ministers to the Infirm La Paz, Makati First Sunday of May Rev. Fr. Gabriel V. Garcia, MI
Saint Andrew the Apostle Parish Bel-Air, Makati November 30 Rev. Msgr. Dennis S. Odiver, P.C.
Saint John Bosco Parish Salesians of Don Bosco San Lorenzo, Makati January 31 Rev. Fr. Renato De Guzman, SDB
Saints Peter and Paul Parish Poblacion, Makati June 29 and 30 Rev. Msgr. Gerardo O. Santos, PC, Ed.D.
Santo Niño de Paz Chapel Greenbelt, Makati Third Sunday of January Rev. Fr. Rufino C. Sescon, Jr.
Vicariate of Our Lady of Guadalupe (Makati City)
Name of Parish Administered Adress Feast Day Parish Priest
Mary, Mirror of Justice Parish Comembo, Makati May 15 Rev. Fr. Jose Joel O. Jason
Mater Dolorosa Parish Religious Tertiary Capuchins of Our Lady of Sorrows East Rembo, Makati September 15 Rev. Fr. Joel Mosura, TC
National Shrine of Our Lady of Guadalupe Guadalupe Nuevo, Makati December 12 Rev. Fr. Roderick L. Castro
Saint John Mary Vianney Parish Cembo, Makati August 4 Rev. Fr. Benjamin D. Jugueta, Jr.
Saint John of the Cross Parish Pembo, Makati December 14 Rev. Fr. Benildo M. Pilande, Jr.
Santa Teresita Parish Montfort Missionaries West Rembo, Makati First Sunday of October Rev. Fr. Richard J. Magararu, SMM
Santuario de San Antonio Parish Order of Friars Minor Forbes Park, Makati June 13 Rev. Fr. Reu Jose C. Galoy, OFM., Ph.D.
Vicariate of Saint Joseph the Worker (Makati City)
Name of Parish Admistered Adress Feast Day Parish Priest
Holy Family Parish San Isidro, Makati Sunday after Christmas Day Rev. Fr. Nestor M. Gungon
Our Lady of Fátima Parish (Bangkal) Bangkal, Makati May 13 Rev. Fr. Edison D. Escario
Saint Alphonsus Mary de Liguori Parish Magallanes, Makati August 1 Rev. Msgr. Claro Matt M. Garcia, PC
Saint Joseph the Worker Parish (Palanan) Palanan, Makati May 1 Rev. Msgr. Roberto A. Espenilla, PC
San Ildefonso Parish Salesians of Don Bosco Pio del Pilar, Makati Last Sunday of January Rev. Fr. Antonio M. Molavin, SDB

Suffragan dioceses

See also

Resources

References

  1. 1 2 "Officials". The Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Manila Official Website. Retrieved on 2013-03-22.
  2. "History – the First Cathedral 1581–1583. Manila Metropolitan Cathedral-Basilica Official Website. Retrieved on 2013-03-22.
  3. "History – The Second Cathedral 1591-1600". Manila Metropolitan Cathedral-Basilica Official Website. Retrieved on 2013-03-22.
  4. Roces 1977, p. 1004.
  5. MacArthur General Staff (1994). "The Japanese Offensive in the Philippines". Report of General MacArthur: The Campaigns of MacArthur in the Pacific Volume I. GEN Harold Keith Johnson, BG Harold Nelson, Douglas MacArthur. United States Army. p. 6. LCCN 66-60005. Retrieved 24 March 2013.
  6. Quezon III, Manuel L. (2007-02-07). "The Warsaw of Asia: How Manila was Flattened in WWII". Jeddah, Saudi Arabia: Arab News Online (archive.arabnews.com). Opinion. Archived from the original on 2010-08-07. Retrieved 2010-08-07.
  7. Pope Pius XII (1942). 34 [1942] - ocr.pdf "Acts of the Apostolic See – Insularum Philippinarum Beatissima Virgo Maria Titulo Immaculata Concepto Primaria Universalisque Patrona et Sanctae Virgines' Pudentiana ac Rosa Limanae Patronae Secundarias Declarantur", pp. 336–337. Vatican Archives. Retrieved on 2013-03-22.
  8. Rufo, Aries (11 January 2015). "Billions of pesos in Church funds locked in stocks". Rappler.com. Retrieved 3 September 2015.
  9. Palad, Carlos Antonio (2011-12-12). "The 32nd Archbishop of Manila". Filipino Catholicism. Retrieved on 2013-03-22.
  10. Catholic Hierarchy: "Bishop Ginés (Ginesio) Barrientos, O.P." retrieved November 12, 2015

Coordinates: 14°35′29″N 120°58′25″E / 14.59139°N 120.97361°E / 14.59139; 120.97361

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