A bell to remember and live with
>> Sunday, October 12, 2014
Gina
Dizon
SAGADA, Mountain
Province – Sept. 21, 2014 marked the day
when John, in honor of St. John the Evangelist ceremonially began to be of service to the Sagada community and the rest
of the places nearby.
John refers to the new
bell donated by US residents Dr John
Alipit, a native of Sagada and wife Josephine GalpoAlipit in loving memory of
their parents Feliciano and Maria Alipit and Donato and Emiliana Galpo, long-time
members of the Episcopal Church in the Philippines.In simple and solemn
ceremonies at the Church of St Mary the Virgin last Sept. 21, the new bell was ceremonially officiated by Diocesan Bishop Brent Alawas of the Episcopal Diocese of Northern
Philippines (EDNP) aided by the Rector Constancio Naoy of the Church of St Mary
the Virgin(CSMV).
Distinct and rich
resonance of the pealing of the new bell was witnessed by CSMV Senior warden
Dave Gulian, also a member of the Alipit clan; former CSMV senior warden
Vincent Andawi and also a member of the
Alipit clan; and the community.
The bell was purchased
at Brosamer's Bells with a
32" Menelley 1910 label, restored and complete swinging bell with
the whole mount costing $11,000.00. Made in Germany, the bell is thick and solid made of copper and tin.
The bell alone weighs
600 lbs but with the mount weighing l068 lbs.
The mount measures the base 32" deep by 49" wide. The wheel height is 65 inches and 60 inches
in diameter.
The 1910 bell is historically close to 1904 when the
Episcopal Church was planted in the
Philippines and two years older than
CSMV and the first St Mary’s School
which started in 1912.
In a letter sent by
ECP lay member RaymundAlipit to UNESCO for
tax exemption of the bell transported from the US to Philippines presented the historical
beginnings of the ECP in 1901 when a group of American missionaries led by the
Rt. Rev. Charles Henry Brent arrived in Manila and the beginning of the pealing
of the bell for residents of Sagada then to embrace Christianity.
“From Manila, they
travelled on foot and on horse backs through rugged mountain terrain and rivers
for several weeks and settled in one small tribal village situated on a rocky
mountain slope with extraordinary scenery.
This village was known for its headhunting activities and where Spanish
authorities never dared to explore. These missionaries brought with them one
essential food - the Word of God - and with the help of a church bell they have
carried with them, they began feeding the people the Gospel of our Lord Jesus
Christ.
No one knew then that
this village called Sagada, our hometown, would become the center for
missionary work of the Episcopal Church of the United States of America in the
Philippines. They had the vision and the
evangelistic ministry, thus, the Church of St. Mary the Virgin, the St. Mary's
School, St. Andrew's Training School for
seminarians and the St. Theodore's Hospital rose as their first institutions in
the mission compound.
While the missionaries
worked hard in the village, the church bell pealed and slowly brought in
villagers to the church for worship into the Christian faith. The bell pealed for every angelus and in
every mission activity from sunrise to sundown.
All through the years, village folks learned to love this bell in the
church tower and to let them know what time it is during the day. For the villagers as well as those working in
far away fields, they know for sure that when the bell rings for the angelus
morning, noon and at sunset, they are to pray and thank the Lord for the days
work and at the end of the day, time to return home to feed their families.
They know when the
bell tolls for a departed love one and they know too that when the bell tolls,
another life arrives and is prepared for baptism. The bell serves also as a call for natural
disasters and emergencies as in the case of fire, they know that they would all
come out of their houses and scramble for buckets of water, fire extinguishers
and all means to put out a fire. They know from first hand experience how far
reaching results this bell has for everybody and for every moment of their
lives in this small village.
The huge bell was not
spared during the war. In 1945, the
Church of St. Mary the Virgin was bombed and the bell was destroyed. The cracked bell is now on display at the
church mission yard to remind us that time and time again that the God we love
is a wonderful and living God and that His message can be heard to all lands
through this bell and through people like you.
Another bell was brought in by the missionaries right after the war and
was installed at the bell tower of the new stone church. Again, this bell had been pealing for the
village folks for over half a century now.
Unfortunately, last year it suddenly gave in and cracked.”
And the rest is
history with the coming and installation of the 1910 bell to relive history and
continue to be of service to the faithfuls of
Sagada.
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