Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte should talk with the country’s religious leaders in person and not use representatives, according to a senior church official.
Father Jerome Secillano, executive secretary of the public affairs committee of the Catholic bishops’ conference, said “actual dialogue” with the president would be better.
Early this week, Duterte named a four-man team to talk with church leaders to end a spat following recent tirades he made against God, Christianity, and churchmen.
The priest said the meeting should be between Archbishop Romulo Valles of Davao, president of the bishops’ conference, and Duterte.
The president who hails from the southern Philippine city of Davao has claimed that the prelate is his friend and even baptized Duterte’s grandson.
“That’s very doable. Who knows maybe they are already talking,” said Father Secillano
He said a meeting with the president would be better because if a representative says something, [Duterte] can easily change the meaning.
“But if it is the president who says something … he can be held accountable,” said the priest.
On June 28, Father Secillano met Pastor Boy Saycon, an emissary appointed by the president to talk with the Catholic bishops.
The priest said the meeting was “not yet the dialogue that we speak of.”
“I was just tasked to hold preliminary talks to give our feedback,” said Father Secillano, adding that it would be the bishops who will decide who will take part in an actual meeting.
He said he expects a decision to be made before the bishops’ conference starts its plenary assembly on July 7.
Saycon, meanwhile, said the dialogue aims to seek “understanding from the Church” and “tolerance” of Duterte’s pronouncements.
“[The president] is rough with his words,” said Saycon.
“Because the church is a forgiving church, and God is a forgiving God, these are the things that we will discuss,” he said.
Saycon said Duterte might attend the dialogue. “The chances of him attending are very high,” he told reporters after meeting with Father Secillano.
Archbishop Valles earlier welcomed the call for a dialogue, saying it is “always good” and that “to dialogue is to listen to one another.”
Duterte’s scathing remarks against God last week drew flak from various church leaders and groups.
Presidential spokesman Harry Roque Jr., however, said the president’s tirades were only in response to criticisms leveled against him by Catholic Church leaders.