The Way of the Cross: Suffering Selfhoods in the Roman Catholic Philippines

Paperback: $28.00
ISBN-13: 9780824892470
Published: December 2021
Hardback: $80.00
ISBN-13: 9780824879976
Published: September 2019

Additional Information

146 pages
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  • About the Book
  • Every year during Holy Week in the Philippine province of Pampanga, hundreds of men and women undergo acts of excruciating, self-inflicted pain in ways that evoke the Way of the Cross: the torment and crucifixion that Christ endured in the last days of his earthly existence. Because these Passion rituals are officially disavowed by the Filipino Roman Catholic Church, most observers view them as irrational and extremist mimicry of Christ’s painful ordeal. Even scholars conventionally depict them as theatrical “spectacle” or macabre examples of Filipino “folk religion.” But what conditions enable ritual actors to submit to such extreme pain? What justifications do they give for going against official prohibitions? What outcomes do they seek in channeling Christian piety in this way?

    This book addresses these questions through its in-depth analyses of three interconnected ritual acts: the pabasa, a days-long communal chanting of Christ’s Passion story; the pagdarame, the public self-flagellation of hundreds of devotees; and the pamamaku king krus, in which steel nails are driven through the palms and feet of ritual practitioners as part of a street play performed in front of tens of thousands of spectators. Author Julius Bautista suggests that such ritual acts manifest the embodied physicality of a suffering selfhood that facilitates the expression of heartfelt sentiments of pity, empathy, trust, and bereavement. By emphasizing these outwardly focused human sensibilities as the wellsprings of ritual agency, he demonstrates that Passion rituals are reinterpretations of the very idea and experience of pain, hardship, and suffering and premised on an appeal for a certain kind of divine intimacy.

    The author draws on a decade of in-depth and often exclusive interviews with a host of local stakeholders—including ritual practitioners, clerics, scholars, and government officials—and his own participation in a Passion play. Ethnographic insight is considered alongside primary and secondary archival sources, including unpublished, locally produced oral historical accounts and a survey of relevant media coverage. The Way of the Cross makes a welcome contribution to the anthropology of religion by examining the unique ontological contexts in which ritual agents experience God’s involvement in their lives.

  • About the Author(s)
    • Julius Bautista, Author

      Julius Bautista is associate professor at the Center for Southeast Asian Studies, Kyoto University.
  • Reviews and Endorsements
    • Julius Bautista’s The Way of the Cross offers an ethnographically rich and elegantly holistic account of the Philippines’ most recognized and sensational of Holy Week rituals. Bautista challenges universalized assumptions about the meaning of imitating Christ’s suffering, showing how Filipinos transform ritual pain into positive forms of religious selfhood that are first and foremost embedded in the social. Like the best ethnographies, The Way of the Cross both grounds its analysis in diverse scholarly literatures and draws from vernacular concepts to theorize anew, all in the spirit of comparative and cross-cultural studies. It is a welcome contribution to the anthropology of Christianity, Philippine Studies, and much more.
      —Deirdre de la Cruz, University of Michigan
    • Julius Bautista’s superb ethnographic work, conceptualization of the theoretical framework, and sophisticated approach will make The Way of the Cross appealing to an audience ranging from upper level undergraduate students to graduate students and specialists. While classical Catholic theorizing would posit that self-inflicted hurting (at Holy Week or other times) is a two-way vicarious identification with the suffering of Christ, the crucifixion practices in Pampanga represent what Julius Bautista calls “triangulated empathy”—an intersubjective link between God, the flagellant, and a particular person for whom divine intervention is sought. This is a very significant insight.
      —Ariel Glucklich, Georgetown University
    • The Way of the Cross is a compelling contribution to current scholarship on ritual, religion, and culture in the contemporary Philippines. The author provides rich descriptions of the rituals themselves, opening the acts out and disclosing the complex and shifting contexts of tourism and local government that feed into these rituals which are highly performative.
      —Paul-François Tremlett, The Open University
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