TODAY, MARCH 9, marks the 86th birthday of
Archbishop Emeritus Paciano B. Aniceto. It has also been nine years since Apu
Ceto was succeeded as prelate of the Archdiocese of San Fernando, two years
after reaching the mandatory age of retirement at 75.
Retired – we wrote here at that time – only from the
administration of the archdiocese but not, never, from being the shepherd
to his flock which he shall carry all his life. And, in the
divine order of things, up until the life beyond, in the company of the elect
basking in the glory of the Lord.
And indeed, he is as active, as
involved, as committed as ever in his labors in the Lord’s vineyard everywhere,
as though nothing has changed, in his status – for lack of a word – dispensing
the gifts of his priestly faculties, sharing the gift of grace with his flock.
Correspondingly the outpouring of gratitude, praise, and reverence
that came in the wake of his retirement continues to this day, ever growing
that one feels some beatification
process has commenced for the cause of Apu Ceto.
Apu Ceto will be the first to dismiss even the slightest
whiff of saintliness ascribed to him. Just an everyday human being trying to
live up to his calling, he would rather be deemed, humbling himself as
one “malating talasuyu.”
It is precisely though that “littleness,” that “trying to
live up to his calling” that have – in the eyes of his flock – elevated Apu
Ceto over and above their everyday pastors, and enshrined him in their hearts.
Precisely as the Good Book says of those who humble themselves.
By transcending all socio-economic classes, embraced as much
by the perfumed set as by the sweating masses, Apu Ceto is in a
class all his own, unwavering though in his steadfastness to the Church’s
preferential option for the poor. His mission most focused on “the last, the
least, and the lost” in human society. Again, the Good Book on the blessed who
shall have the kingdom of heaven, who shall inherit the earth.
If there is anybody that literally graces any and all
occasion s/he comes to, it is Apu Ceto, with his abundance of such sanctifying
gift. So much abundance that urban legend has it: Apu Ceto administering the
sacrament of extreme unction warrants an instant visa to heaven, that whomever
he served the viaticum passes on blissfully through the pearly gates. The
peace, serenity and joy as they lay in state – those he anointed proximate to
death – a testament to the potency of Apu Ceto’s gift of grace.
Less human instinct than spiritual rush for the living to
reach out to, to touch Apu Ceto, and be imbued with his grace. This I
personally witnessed as much in the Pampanga parishes as in the different
churches in San Francisco and Los Angeles, in his three pastoral visits from
the 2000 to 2004.
And not only Kapampangans and other Filipino regional groups,
but even Latinos, African-Americans and whites were wont to circle about him
after each Mass seeking his blessing, kissing his hand, embracing him, taking
photographs with him, not a few of these framed and found spots in their altars
and family shrines at home.
So, I already sound like the postulator for the cause of
sainthood of Apu Ceto when he had only retired, and still very much alive. So
be it, his most enthusiastic apologist I may serve, but I offer no apologies.
Touched by his grace, the day I entered Mater Boni Consilii
Seminary, prayerfully hoping to be a priest.
Unabandoned by him, in the darkest period of my apostasy,
when the trinity of Marx-Lenin-Mao obliterated all faith in the Father, the Son,
and the Holy Spirit.
Converted by his holiness – he did a Maximilian Kolbe, albeit
of less-than-fatal proportion, when he signed my custody papers, offering
himself in my stead at the Camp Olivas stockade, if ever I rejoined the
movement. This in the earliest – and thus, most terrifying – days of
Martial Law.
By his grace, I am alive and have become – for better – what
I am now. As with countless others, not only in Pampanga but in the other
dioceses he served, aye, every one whose life he has had even the slightest
touch.
Apu Ceto is that good sermon we
see, we feel, and – prayerfully – we live.
(Snatches from previous Zona pieces
dating from 2014, crafted for our beloved Apu Ceto’s 86th birthday,
9 March 2023)
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