Spokesman says the Philippine president is entitled to express his views on faith and religion.
by Ted Regencia
25 Jun 2018
Duterte has repeatedly said the Catholic Church has no moral authority to criticise him [File: Reuters]
Duterte has repeatedly said the Catholic Church has no moral authority to criticise him [File: Reuters]
Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte is entitled "not to believe in any faith" and express his views, his spokesman has said, addressing criticism following the 73-year-old leader's recent commentary describing God as "stupid" and a "son of a whore".
In an interview on Monday with the Philippine television GMA-7, Harry Roque said the remarks were an expression of the president's "personal belief".
He added that Duterte has his way of expressing his spirituality and what he said "does not need any interpretation".
"He never tried to hide that kind of language when he ran for president. Just accept it that he is that way, because when he asked for a mandate from the voters, he never tried to hide that," said the spokesman.
Roque said that the president's tirade may be rooted on his own "unpleasant" experience with the church.
Duterte has said that as a child he was also a victim of sexual molestation by a Catholic priest.
'What kind of religion is that?'
Duterte was addressing an information technology summit in his hometown of Davao on Friday when his speech veered towards religion and the Bible.
The president, who comes from a Catholic family, questioned the passage on creation in the Bible and the concept of "original sin".
"Adam ate it (the fruit from the forbidden tree), then malice was born. Who is this stupid God? You are really a stupid son of a whore if that is the case," Duterte said in Filipino and English.
"You created something perfect, and then you think of an event that would tempt and destroy the quality of your work. How can you rationalise a God ... would you believe that?"
He also said that an infant should not have an original sin, as conception and intercourse only involve the parents.
"What kind of religion is that? That's what I can't accept," he said as his audience sat awkwardly.
Opposition Senator Antonio Trillanes described Duterte's tirade as "blasphemy".
"It is the height of arrogance of power not only to disrespect and spit on an individual's faith but also to act as though he is a god," Trillanes said in a statement.
'People can identify with him'
The Philippines is a predominantly Catholic country, with an estimated 79 percent of its 107 million population identifying themselves as Catholics. The rest belong to other Christian denominations, Islam and other religions.
Jeaneth Faller, dean of the Divinity School at Silliman University, said that while she supports the president personally, she believes Duterte should choose his words carefully.
"Everybody is listening. If your opinion is not good for the people, you should just keep it to yourself," Faller told Al Jazeera.
At the same time, Faller said she is "not surprised" that despite Duterte's controversial comments, he still enjoys support from his predominantly Christian followers.
"People can identify with him. He knows how to handle the people, he knows their language, he knows what they're thinking. That is why he is very popular."
But Faller also said that supporters should also be able to criticise the things Duterte is not doing right.
Since the 2016 presidential campaign, Duterte has clashed with the Catholic Church, a critic of his human rights records as mayor.
But Duterte said the church has no moral authority to criticise him, chastising the alleged cover-up of sexual abuse by clergy members.
During the campaign, Duterte also cursed at Pope Francis, whom he had referred to as "son of a whore".
Faller said Duterte's feud with the church also reflects a "split Christianity" in the Philippines, where people go to church, but "don't care what the priest would say" about the president.
Elizabeth Angsioco, a Manila-based activist and political observer, said she agreed with the statement of Duterte's spokesman that the president is entitled to his own opinion.
"However, I still believe that as president of the country, he must observe some form of decorum. If you don't believe in God, you don't have to insult those who have different views than you."
Angsioco also noted that some of Duterte's supporters have expressed their "disgust and displeasure" over the comment, even though they have "stayed quiet" about the ongoing killings during the government's war on drugs.
"To me, that is inconsistent. Because if you are a Christian, I know that you believe in justice. I find it baffling," she told Al Jazeera.
Meanwhile, Ana Santos, an international journalist and columnist based in Manila, told Al Jazeera that Duterte's statements are meant to "gaslight us and divert our attention from important issues".
"By now, the public should know that Duterte will not stop making comments that are more ludicrous than the previous one. We, the public need to refuse this diversionary tactic and demand that he speak and act on issues that are more urgent and pressing," she said, pointing to the deadly drug war, inflation and the territorial dispute with China.
SOURCE: AL JAZEERA NEWS
1 comment:
I don't blame him how he view the Catholic Church Organization. Catholic Church takes paganism beliefs and mixed them into "Christian" beliefs. Like Christmas, Easter and Mary with baby Jesus. Mary with baby Jesus is pagan symbol of the Queen of heaven. Protestants don;t hold Mary in high esteem only as a vessel God used to bring his Only Begotton Son, born of a virgin.
Sexual abused is rampant in the Catholic Church. I heard of a testimony of a woman who escaped the Convent, that a Convent is a prison to lure women in in the name of "serving" God with all their heart, soul and mind. Once they got in the Convent the trap is set and women are nothing but sex slaves to the priests. Children that are born there are killed to hide suspicion from outsiders. Catholic doesn't represent my faith and belief even though they call it Christianity.
True faith abide in the God of Israel. The Catholic Church hijacked true Christianity from the belief faith of Israel in the early days of "Christianity." Peter was not the first Pope, its all a farce by the Catholic Church. Pope doesn't hold the key to God's kingdom, by pretense they make merchandise of those who trust in them. Using the words of Jesus, "Vatican is a den of thieves and robbers and a brood of vipers." Catholic Church killed many Protestants during the inquisition because they exposed the "brood of vipers" they were. Many were burned alive by those brood of vipers in the 1500s. The Jesuit Order by the Catholic Church was born after the break away by the Protestants. Jesuit Order is another demonic entity created to infiltrate the non-Catholic Churches to bring them back back to Mother Church (Catholic).
Duerte judge God by the deeds of the Catholic Church, well he is no better off than those priests who molested boys. He chose to defy the Most High..isn't this like a hunk clay saying to the Potter "what make thou me thus and thus?..." Do the clay have power over the Potter to dictate how he should make a person thus and thus? Man is a rebel but God gives grace to the humble. Duerte shall be broken like an earthen vessel when God is done with him.
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