A. Catholic Population
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Based on 2008 data, the Archdiocese of Manila has recorded 2,435,313 Catholics, which make up 81.04 percent of the 2,993,000 total populations. In 2005, there were 63,046 baptisms of infants and 1,743 catechumens. There were 20,971 confirmations; 29,927 first communions; and 6,308 marriages. There were 84 parishes and 44 mission stations in the archdiocese.
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People in the Diocese
Recorded Catholics: 2,435, 313 or 81.04 %
Members of other Christian denominations (approximate): Born Again 2.82 %, Iglesia ni Kristo 2.3 %, Phil Independent Church 2%, Baptist, Methodist, Iglesia Filipina Independiente, Lutheran, Episcopalian, Salvation Army, United Church of Christ in the Philippines, United Methodist Church, Iglesia Evangelica Unida De Cristo, Apostolic Catholic Church, Society of St. Puis X, Eastern Orthodox Church
Followers of other religions: Islam 5.06%, Buddhism 3 %, Hinduism, other religion 3.28 %
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B. Archdiocesan and Religious Priests
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Diocesan Priests: 232 (210 Filipinos, 22 foreigners)
Religious Priests: 298 (288 Filipinos, 10 foreigners)
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C. Religious Brothers , Sisters
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Religious Brothers: 52 (43 Filipinos, 9 foreigners)
Religious Sisters: 824 (732 Filipinos, 92 foreigners)
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D. Lay Missionaries, Catechists
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Catechists: 165 (all salaried)
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E. Seminaries, Houses of Formation (Click here for details)
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Minor and Major Seminary/Number of seminarians
Our Lady of Guadalupe Minor Seminary: 85
San Carlos Seminary: 125
Holy Apostles Senior Seminary
Lorenzo Mission Institute: 24
Redemptorists Mater Missionary: 21
Novitiates and hoses of formation of Religious: seminaries - 2; residences - 4
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F. There are 84 parishes and 44 mission stations in the archdiocese (Click here for details)
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| Coat of arms of Archbishop Cardinal Gaudencio B. Rosales - Si mortuum fuerit, fructum affert. "If it dies, it brings forth fruit" (John 12:24) |
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| The image of Our Lady of Guadalupe hangs on the facade of the administration building at Our Lady of Guadalupe Minor Seminary, Makati City, south of Manila |
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Archdiocesan Activities and Organizations
A. Major Archdiocesan Commissions and Organizations
B. Catholic Educational Institutions (Click here for details)
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Schools |
Students |
| Kindergarten |
53 |
4,212 |
| Primary Schools |
56 |
51,956 |
| Secondary Schools |
53 |
39,655 |
| Higher Institutions |
19 |
116,958 |
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C. Catholic Social Welfare
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Hospitals: 5
Clinics, and dispensaries which provide medical services: 5
Elderly homes: 4
Orphanages: 7
Nurseries: 3
Youth Centers: 5
Social action centers: 13
Marriage counseling and Family Life centers: 4
Centers for Victims of Violence: 3
Job Training centers: 3
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D. Social Communications
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Ministry of Social Communications
Archdiocesan Office of Communications (AOC)
Address: Arzobispado de Manila, 121 Arzobispo St., Intramuros, Manila, Philippines
Phone: +63 2 527-7631 to 36 loc. 209; 230
Fax: +63 2 527-6159
Director: Ms. Maria Corazon Yamsuan
TV station: TV Maria
Radio station: Radio Veritas
Website: www.rcam.org
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| Nearly 300 participants from Manila archdiocese attended a seminar on altar decorations in 2005 organized by the Manila Archdiocesan Commission for the Cultural Heritage of the Church as part of Lenten activities |
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| Priests at a Mass in 2005 celebrating the 50th foundation anniversary of Manila's Our Lady of Guadalupe Minor Seminary in Makati City included alumni, professors and other seminary staff |
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Religious Congregations, Societies and Institutes
A. Religious Institutes of Men
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| Organizers decorated the gate ofOur Lady of Guadalupe Minor Seminaryfor the golden anniversary ofthe seminary's foundation in 2005 |
Congregation of the Immaculate Heart of Mary ~ CICM
Congregation of the Mission ~ CM
Missionaries of Saint Charles Scalabrinians ~ CS
Brothers of Charity ~ FC
Congregation of the Sons of Charity ~ FdCC
Sons of Mary, Health of the Sick ~ FMSI
Brothers of Christian School ~ FSC
Missionaries of the Sacred Heart ~ MSC
Missionary Society of St. Columban ~ MSSC
Missionary Society of Saint Paul ~ MSSP
Order of the Augustinian Recollect ~ OAR
Order of Friars Minor ~ OFM
Order of the Friars Minor Capuchins ~ OFMCap
Hospitaller Order of St. John of God ~ OH
Order of Preachers ~ OP
Order of St. Augustine ~ OSA
Order of St. Benedict ~ OSB
Order of St. Camillus ~ OSC
Oblates of St. Francis ~ OSF
Oblates of St. Joseph ~ OSJ
Salesian Society of Don Bosco ~ SDB
Society of Jesus ~ SJ
Montfort Missionaries ~ SMM
Society of St. Paul ~ SSP
Congregation of the Blessed Sacrament Fathers ~ SSS
Society of Divine Word ~ SVD
Amigonian Fathers and Brothers ~ TC
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B. Religious Institutes of Women
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| New catechetical module for Manila archdiocese in 2003 |
Augustinian Missionaries of the Philippines ~ AMP
Augustinian Recollect Sisters ~ AR
Carmelite Sisters of Charity - Vedruna ~ CCV
Carmelite Missionary Sisters of Saint Therese of the Child Jesus ~ CMSTCJ
Sisters of the Holy Family of Nazareth ~ CSFN
Daughters of Charity of Saint Vincent de Paul ~ DC
Daughters of St. Mary of Leuca ~ DML
Daughters of Wisdom (Montfort Sisters) ~ DW
Franciscan Apostolic Sisters ~ FAS
Congegration of the Hijas de Jesus ~ FI
Canossian Daughters of Charity ~ FdCC
Daughters of Mary Help of Christians ~ FMA
Daughters of Mary of the Assumption ~ FMA
Franciscan Missionaries of Mary ~ FMM
Verbum Dei Missionaries ~ FMVD
Daughters of Saint Paul ~ FSP
Sisters of the Holy Face of Jesus ~ HFJ
Little Sisters of Jesus ~ LSJ
Missionaries Apostles of Christ in the Eucharist ~ MACE
Missionaries of Charity ~ MC
Missionaries of the Child Jesus ~ MCJ
Missionary Catechists of Saint Therese of the Infant Jesus ~ MCST
Missionary Sisters of the Immaculate Conception ~ MIC
Missionary Sisters of Saint Columban ~ MSSC
Congregacion de Religiosas Misineras de Santo ~ OP
Dominican Sisters of the Trinity ~ OP
Congregation of the Dominican Sisters of the Most Holy Rosary of the Philippines ~ OP
Dominican Sisters of Saint Catherine of Sienna ~ OP
Missionary Dominican Sisters of the Rosary ~ OP
Dominican Sisters of Blessed Imelda ~ OPBI
Augustinian Sisters of Our Lady of Consolation ~ OSA-ASOLC
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| A fireworks display lights up Santo Niño de Tondo Parish Church in Manila on Jan. 17, 2009 the eve of the Feast of the Child Jesus |
Missionary Benedictine Sisters of Tutzing ~ OSB
Oblate Sisters of the Most Holy Redeemer ~ OSR
Sister Oblates of the Holy Spirit ~ OSS
Pious Disciples of the Divine Master ~ PDDM
Perpetual Adoration Sisters of Mary ~ PSM
Parish Visitors of Mary Immaculate ~ PVMI
Religious of the Assumption ~ RA
Conceptionist Missionary Sisters ~ RCM
Religious of the Good Shepherd ~ RGS
Religious of Mary Immaculate ~ RMI
Religious Sisters of Mercy of the Americas ~ RSM
Religious of the Virgin Mary ~ RVM
Sisters of Charity of Saint Anne ~ SCSA
Siervas de Jesus dela Caridad ~ SdJ
Sisters of Saint Joseph the Apparitions ~ SJA
Sisters of Mary of Banneux ~ SM
Missionary Sisters of the Catechism ~ SMC
Sisters of Providence ~ SP
Congregation of the Sisters of Saint Paul de Chartres ~ SPC
Siervas de San Jose ~ SSJ
Missionary Congregation of the Servants of the Holy Spirit ~ SSpS
Capuchin Tertiary Sisters of the Holy Family ~ TC
Xaverian Missionaries of Christ Jesus ~ XMCJ
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| General Characteristics of the Archdiocese
History
Manila was established as a suffragan diocese of Mexico, now Central America, on Feb. 6, 1579 by Pope Gregory XIII by virtue of the Apostolic Constitution "Illius fulti praesido," following the first successful missionary efforts.
Archbishops
In 1578, Fray Domingo Salazar, OP was appointed first bishop of the diocese, taking possession of his ecclesiastical seat in 1581. The church which was earlier built by Miguel Lopez de Legazpi in the site where the Manila Cathedral now stands became the seat of the diocese under the patronage of La Purisima Imaculada Concepcion de Nuestra Señora. Under him the First Synod of Manila was held among whose decisions were the teaching of catechism in the native dialect and the declaration of the human rights of the native Christians and non-Christians.
Since Bishop Salazar, thirty prelates have governed the ecclesiastical territory. Salazar was succeeded by Santibañez, a Franciscan. He was replaced by the Dominican Miguel de Benavidez in 1603. Diego Vazquez de Mercado, who was appointed in 1610, was the first secular to head the archdiocese. Following him was a succession of archbishops coming from three religious congregations, Augustinians, Dominicans, Franciscans, with some secular priests being appointed in between among whom was Basilio Sancho de Sta. Justa y Rufina, who headed the archdiocese from 1767-1787. He adopted the policy for the training of native secular priests to replace those from the religious orders in the parishes of the archdiocese. In 1903, following the establishment of American sovereignty in the Philippines, the first non-Spanish archbishop was appointed. He was Jeremiah Harty, a secular priest, who succeeded the Dominican Bernardino Nozaleda, the last of the Spanish archbishops. Another American, Michael O'Doherty became archbishop of Manila in 1916 following a stint as the first bishop of Zamboanga In 1949, Gabriel M. Reyes, a Filipino, was appointed the First Filipino Archbishop of Manila. Succeeding him, in 1953, was Rufino J. Santos who, in 1960, was elevated to the cardinalate, to become the first Filipino Cardinal Archbishop of Manila.
Jaime L. Sin, who was then archbishop of Jaro in Iloilo was appointed archbishop of Manila in 1974 following the death of Cardinal Santos in 1973.
Territories
On Aug. 14,1595, Pope Clement VIII raised the diocese to the status of an archdiocese and created three new dioceses as suffragan to Manila: Nueva Caceres, 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 ten civil provinces near it. Rizal, Bulacan, Pampanga, Nueva Ecija, Batangas, Laguna, Cavite, Bataan, Zambales, and Mindoro.
On April 10, 1910, the province of Mindoro was established as an independent diocese by virtue of a Decretum Consistoriale executed by Pope Pius XI implementing the Bull "Quae Mari Sinico" of Pope Leo XIII. Eighteen years later, on May 19, 1928, Pope Pius XI established the Diocese of Lingayen, diving Manila and Nueva Segovia. In this division 26 parishes were separated from Manila.
On Nov. 25, 1961, the Archdiocese of Manila was again divided. The civil provinces of Bulacan in the north and Cavite in the south were separated from the archdiocese. Bulacan became the Diocese of Malolos and Cavite became the Diocese of Imus.
The eastern part of the province of Rizal was removed from the Archdiocese of Manila on Jan. 24, 1983. Fifteen towns and two barangays (villages) were separated from Manila to form the Diocese of Antipolo.
Geographical Aspect
The Archdiocese of Manila is made up of 7 cities, namely, Manila, Makati, Pasay, Mandaluyong, Pasig (excluding Santolan and Rosario District), Quezon City (excluding Northern part from Tandang Sora Avenue and Mactan), Kalookan and 5 municipalities, namely, San Juan, Taguig, Pateros, Malabon and Navotas. It covers a land area of 315.26 square kilometers. It is bounded by the Diocese of Malolos (Bulcan) in the north; Diocese of Antipolo (Rizal) in the East; Diocese of Imus (Cavite) and San Pablo (Laguna) in the south; and the Manila Bay in the west.
The website of Manila archdiocese is available at: www.rcam.org
< Last updated on: May 7, 2009 >
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