For most
Filipinos, the belief in God permeates many aspects of life. Christians celebrate important holidays in many different ways, the most important of which are
Christmas,
Lent and
Holy Week,
All Souls' Day, as well as many local fiestas honouring patron saints and especially the
Virgin Mary. Filipinos living and working in
Metro Manila and occasionally those from
the diaspora often return to their respective home
provinces and towns to observe these holidays with their birth families, much like the practise in
Mainland China for
traditional holidays. Filipino infants and individuals are more often than not expected to be baptised as Christians to affirm faith in Christ and membership in a specific denomination.
Christmas Christmas is the biggest holiday, and one of its most beloved rites is the
Simbang Gabi or
Misa de Gallo, a
series of
Masses held before dawn in the nine days preceding
Christmas Day. Devotees attend each Mass (which is different from the otherwise
Advent liturgy of the day elsewhere) in anticipation of Christ's birth and to honour the Virgin Mary, along with the belief that attending the novena ensures fulfilment of a favour requested of God. After the service, worshippers eat or buy a breakfast of traditional delicacies that are sold in churchyards, the most common being
puto bumbóng and
bibingka.
Lent The second most important religious season is Lent, which commemorates Christ's
Passion and
Death, ending with
Easter which celebrates the
Resurrection. Beginning with
Ash Wednesday, Lent has a sombre mood that becomes more pronounced as
Holy Week (
Semana Santa) arrives.
Holy Week in the Philippines is a period especially rich in centuries-old tradition, which have undertones from indigenous customs and beliefs that date back to the
pre-Christian period.
Customs Practises include the continuous melodic recital of the
Pasyón, a 17th-century
epic poem which narrates Biblical stories and the life of Christ, with a focus on the Passion narrative (hence its name). Adapted from the ancient Filipino art of
orally transmitting poems through chant, the devotion is usually performed by groups of individuals, each member chanting in shifts to ensure complete, unbroken recitation of the text. Theatre troupes or towns meanwhile stage
Passion plays called
Senákulo, which are similar to its European predecessors in that there is no universal text, that actors and crew are often ordinary townsfolk, and that it depicts Biblical scenes related to
Salvation History other than the Passion. The
Visita Iglesia is the praying of the
Stations of the Cross in several churches (often numbering seven) on either
Maundy Thursday or
Good Friday.
Processions are a staple throughout the week, the most important being on
Holy Wednesday,
Good Friday (where the
burial of Christ is reenacted with a town's
Santo Entierro image) and the joyous
Salubong that precedes the first Mass on Easter Sunday.
Fasting and abstinence is undertaken throughout the season and traditional taboos are enforced on Good Friday, usually after 3:00 p.m.
PHT (
UTC+8) - the time Christ is said to have died - all through
Black Saturday until the
Easter Vigil.
Television and
radio limit broadcasting hours and air mostly inspirational programming alongside the days' religious services;
newspapers are also on hiatus, while shopping malls and most restaurants are closed to allow employees to return home. Popular holiday spots such as
Boracay often dispense with these customs, while many people use the long holiday for overseas travel instead of observing the traditional rites.
Other festivals in
Naga City,
Camarines Sur Other observances include
All Saints' Day and
All Souls' Day in November, which are taken as one season called
Undás (traditionally known in English as
Allhallowtide). As with Christmas and Lent, most Filipinos also return home in the period (the third most important in the calendar), but with the main intent of visiting and cleaning ancestral tombs. January itself has two important Christological feasts: the Feast of the
Translation of the
Black Nazarene on January 9, where the image is returned to its shrine in
Quiapo Church in a day-long procession of millions; and the Feast of the
Santo Niño de Cebú (Holy
Child Jesus) every Third Sunday of January, with the largest celebrations being held in
Cebu City. In May, the
Flores de Mayo (literally, "Flowers of May") is when small altars are bedecked with flowers in honour of the Virgin Mary. Communities also hold the
Santacruzan, which is part-procession honouring the
finding of the Cross (on its
old Galician date), and part-
fashion show for a town's maidens. In addition, most any place that has a
patron saint (often
barangays, towns, Catholic schools, and almost every church) holds a fiesta, where the saint's image is processed and feted with traditional foods,
funfairs, and live entertainment on his/her feast day, which is often declared a holiday for the area. Examples of patronal fiestas are the
Nativity of St John the Baptist every June 24, where communities under his patronage would celebrate his summertime birth by splashing other people with water, and the
triduum of feasts known as the
Obando Fertility Rites held in mid-May, where devotees dance for fertility in a custom that has ancient animist roots. ==List of Christian denominations==