Santuario del Santo Cristo

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Santuario del Santo Cristo
Santuario del Santo Cristo Parish
San Juan del Monte Church
West façade of the present shrine
West façade of the present shrine
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Location 183 F. Blumentritt St., San Juan, Metro Manila
Country Philippines
Denomination Roman Catholic
Website http://santuariosantocristo.com/
History
Founded 1602
Founder(s) Dominicans
Dedication Holy Cross
Associated people Fr. Sebastian de Oquendo, OP
Architecture
Functional status Active
Heritage designation Historic structure
Designated 1937
Style Earthquake baroque
Specifications
Number of spires 2
Materials stone, cement
Administration
Parish Santuario del Sto. Cristo Parish
Archdiocese Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Manila
Clergy
Archbishop Cardinal Luis Antonio Tagle
Priest in charge Fr. Jesús Prol O.P.

The Santuario del Santo Cristo, also known as the Church of San Juan del Monte is a church and convento in San Juan, Metro Manila, Philippines. The shrine was built in 1602-1604 by the Dominicans on land that was donated to the order. Both the church and convento were burnt and destroyed during the Chinese insurrection of 1639, and later rebuilt in 1641. It was again destroyed in July 1763 as Britain briefly occupied Manila during the Seven Years' War. The current church and convento were built in 1774, and used as a shelter by Katipuneros during the 1898 Philippine Revolution against the Spanish Empire. It has since been renovated many times until the 1990s.

The shrine is the seat of the Cofradia del Santísimo Cristo de San Juan del Monte ("Confraternity of the Holy Christ of Saint John of the Mountain"), which received papal approval on March 4, 1648.[1][2]

History

Arrival of the Dominicans

The Dominicans arrived in the Spanish East Indies in 1587 and had founded the Santo Domingo Convent in Spanish Manila (now known as Intramuros). Fifteen years after their arrival, the Dominicans went to the hill country east of Manila in what is now San Juan, and found clusters of small nipa huts. The area was the property of a certain Spaniard named Captain Julian de Cuenca, who had been granted an encomienda along the banks of the San Juan River where cattle were bred and raised.

The heavy work and hot climate were taking their toll on some of the ageing friars, who had been in the colony for several years already. While the Order's vow of poverty stood in contrast with the concept of a convalescent and retirement home for Dominicans working in Manila and in the provinces, it was decided that it would be in order under three conditions:

  1. The land would have to be donated;
  2. It should be in a healthy place, with a climate cooler than Manila's; and
  3. Nearness to and accessibility from Manila

It so happened that Captain Cuenca had heard about the Dominicans' plan; he lived in Manila and before that Mexico, where he had befriended some of the Order's members. He and his wife thought it the right time to show their family's gratitude to the Dominicans, and so they offered an nearly three-hectare plot of wooded land in his hacienda along the San Juan River. The property was at a higher elevation than Manila and close to the city ("one legua", or five kilometres to the east). It was also easily accessible by banca (outrigger canoe): up the River Pasig, then into the San Juan River and finally landing at the embarcadero Captain Cuenca had built at the confluence of the San Juan and Maytunas Creek.

The Order gratefully accepted the offer, and the work began, with a small chapel to San Juan Bautista del Monte built after several months. At first it was a "filial house" of the friary in Manila, from where it was administered, until it became a religious house in its own right in 1616. Independent of Santo Domingo Convent, it was then called the House of San Juan Bautista del Monte. Fathers Huete, Oriol, and Samaniego were assigned to the new house in 1617.[3]

Arrival of the Santo Cristo

File:Santuario del Sto. Cristo - Santo Cristo Image (full).jpg
The Santo Cristo image, its feet encased in glass, in the Calvario behind the main altar.

In 1641, Fr Sebastián de Oquendo, OP, the Prior of Santo Domingo monastery in Intramuros, decided to send to San Juan the image of the Santo Cristo that was then venerated in Binondo Church (another Dominican possession). The venerable image was brought to the reconstructed church in San Juan and placed on the main altar, displacing the image of John the Baptist, since the image, which was "nine palmos in height" (approx. 1.80 metres) would not fit. From then on, devotion to the Santo Cristo spread to nearby communities.[4] The shrine itself gained popularity when the image began to perform miracles, thus earning the shrine the name Santuario del Santo Cristo. News of the image's miracles spread to Manila and the surrounding areas, particularly the neighbouring Franciscan parish and town of Santa Ana, to which the present-day San Juan Mandaluyong once belonged to.[4]

The Confraternity of the Santo Cristo was established and approved by Pope Innocent X in 1648, roughly 45 years after the arrival of the Dominicans in San Juan. Prominent citizens of Manila and other towns became members of the Confraternity and made yearly pilgrimages to the shrine. Others decided to settle in the vicinity of the shrine, forming the nucleus of the present city of San Juan.[3]

The Convento and Santuario

The first convento and the church on the site must have been simple and unpretentious, in keeping with the rustic surroundings, and yet well suited as a places for convalescing and aged Dominicans from Manila.

In 1639, the Chinese insurrection took place in Manila, with the very first church and convento destroyed in the ensuing chaos. When the rebels were defeated by the Spanish-Filipino troops, the former retreated to Marikina and the mountains beyond, passing by San Juan. For some time the rebels occupied the convento and the church and, when they decided to flee to the mountains, torched the church complex and the few houses in the vicinity. The buildings went up in a column of smoke, which could be seen from a distance for several days.

In 1641, Oquendo decided to rebuild the church and convento of San Juan using solid materials such as adobe, which was found in the area. The church became a Santuario (shrine) with the transfer of the Santo Cristo, and it increased in popularity when a spring of good drinking water was discovered within the shrine grounds. An aqueduct was built to bring the spring water from the shrine to the San Juan River, from where it was collected in big tinajas (large, porous jars that cooled water) and brought by banca (outrigger canoe) to Manila.

The buildings of the shrine complex were improved with the passage of time. A certain Fr Peguero, who was the vicar of San Juan, described the shrine as "the biggest in the Islands and the refuge and consolation of all." He described the shrine further as "built on a mountain of solid rock and, thanks to that, it had not been damaged by earthquakes. It has been repaired well recently. It is all — the convent and the church — of stone quarry, and both are strong, firm, beautiful and devout. All in all they are the most perfect structures (of their kind) that exist in the Philippines." He further notes: "It is all painted al oleo en jaspe (imitation marble) from the floor to the ceiling and adorned with many Latin and Spanish verses and texts from the Holy Scriptures. There are three altars with artistic and proportionate retablos. It has five rich ternos — some better than others — and six ordinary ones. It has not much silver, but what it has is enough for the service of the altar."

The shrine was destroyed in 1763 as British troops sacked Manila, and the city's churches and other public buildings were looted and vandalised. The shrine and the convento, along with many houses in San Juan del Monte, did not fare any better, as these were ransacked then set alight by British soldiers. After the end of the Seven Years' War and the colony's return to Spain, reconstruction began. It is unknown whether the image of the Santo Cristo presently enthroned in the shrine is the same one brought from Binondo, or a replica of the same.[3]

Founding of the parish

Negotiations as to whether to elevate the shrine's status to that of a parish began in 1941 between the Archbishop of Manila and the Dominicans. The creation of the Santuario del Santo Cristo Parish and its limits were agreed upon at a meeting in the Archbishop's Palace on November 4, 1941. Present there was the parish priest of Pinaglabanan and Mandaluyong, from which the territory of the new parish would be excised. Before the resolution could be put into effect, however, the Second World War broke out in the Pacific in December 1941. The following year, Imperial Japan occupied the Islands and established the Second Republic,

The parish was canonically erected on May 3, 1942, fifty years after the establishment of Saint John the Baptist Parish at Pinaglabanan. Fr Peregrine de la Fuente OP, formerly parish priest for 18 years in Dominican ministries of Louisiana in the United States and later the first Apostolic Prelate of Batanes and the Babuyanes, was appointed first parish priest.

The official inauguration of the Parish and the installation of its parish priest was led by the Archbishop of Manila, Michael J. O'Doherty, in a ceremony coinciding with the Feast of the Holy Cross, the shrine's titular. In the decree for erection, signed on March 28, 1942, the parish's bounds were set as: to the north, R. Pascual Street and its continuation eastwards to the Ermitaño River; to the west, San Juan River; to the southwest, Shaw Boulevard; and to the east, Ermitaño River. Archbishop O'Doherty said that he erected the new parish due to "the insistence of the people of San Juan, for several years already that the Santuario be made a Parish, the great increase in population and the request of the Parish Priest of Pinaglabanan Church himself, Father Artemio Casas".[3]

Timeline of the present Santuario

  • 16 February 1963 – The cornerstone of the new Santuario was blessed by Archbishop of Manila Rufino Cardinal Santos. The stone, together with other documents, was kept in a concrete box and displayed to the public for eight years. On 8 September 1971, it was finally buried beneath the main altar.
  • 13–14 November 1967 – Arte Español, Inc. delivered ten chandeliers to the shrine, which were immediately installed.
  • 9 January 1968 – The molave wooden crosses marking the Stations of the Cross were blessed and installed by Fr José Martínez, a Franciscan from the church of Santa Ana, Manila. These were made from the beams of the old church.
  • September 1968 – Arrival of 16 stained glass windows, depicting the fourteen Stations of the Cross, one with Our Lady of the Rosary and another one with the Dominican saints Thomas Aquinas, Albert the Great and Vincent Ferrer. Six smaller windows, depicting the Four Evangelists and preaching, were later mounted in the apse. These depict, from left to right: Saints Matthew and Luke; an allegory of the Sermon on the Mount; Saint Paul Preaching to the Gentiles; and finally Saints Mark and John. They were designed by Cenon Rivera, former Dean of Fine Arts at the University of Santo Tomas and made by Kraut Art and Co.
  • 8 May 1973 – Construction began on the church's ceiling, finishing by 12 December; the architect was Adolfo Benavides. At about the same time, the Narra ceiling of the Chapel of the Resurrection was mounted.
  • 6 April 1974 – The painting of the church's exedra, which had began 6 February 1974, was completed. The initial plan was to decorate the exedra with a mosaic of the Resurrection, but the idea was abandoned due to the high cost and other considerations. Finally, a painting with the same theme was commissioned a young University of Santo Tomas artist named Ireneo Robles.
  • November 1978 – Work on the façade was finished, having begun on 10 October 1977. Architect Lorenzo del Castillo's concept was accepted out of many proposals for the façade. The old façade was retained, and a twin of the existing tower was built at the right side. Both towers were united by two arches, surmounted by a shrine containing a cross. Stones from the old convento were used in the new parts of the façade.
  • 1979 – Two bells, one weighing 267 kg. and the other 207 kg., arrived from Quintana's Factory in Saldaña, Palencia, Spain. Following tradition, one is named after the Santo Cristo and the other after Our Lady of the Rosary.
  • November 1990 – concrete statues of eight Dominican saints—Louis Bertrand, Antoninus of Florence, Albertus Magnus, Catherine of Siena, Saint Dominic, Thomas Aquinas, Rose of Lima (a patron saint of the Philippines) and Vincent Ferrer—were installed in the niches of the façade.[3]

Historical recognition

The church was recognized as a Historic Structure by the National Historical Commission of the Philippines (NHCP), with a cast-iron plaque that was issued and placed in 1937.[5]

Gallery

References

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External links