In the nine days leading up to Christmas, Filipino Catholics around the Archdiocese of Chicago gather at various parishes to celebrate the annual Simbang Gabi novena. Cardinal Cupich joined them Dec. 17 for a Mass and prayer at Santa Maria del Popolo Parish in Mundelein. Simbang Gabi refers to nine Masses in honor of Mary, traditionally celebrated in the nine days before Christmas by Filipino Catholics around the world. Since 1986, Filipino Catholics have organized the novena here. Every novena takes 12 months to plan with an average of 45,000 people attending over the nine days. Six percent of the archdiocese’s population is Asian, and many of those are Filipinos. This year, 66 churches in all parts of the archdiocese participated in Simbang Gabi. Unlike in the Philippines, where the novena Masses are held at dawn, the Masses in Chicago are held in the evening. Children usually carry parols, or Christmas lanterns, in opening processions during the service, and many people wear traditional Filipino clothing. One of the highlights of the novena follows Mass when participants partake of traditional Filipino food. The tradition of Simbang Gabi Masses can be traced back to the arrival of Spanish missionaries in the Americas and the Philippines. At the time, they had a tradition of celebrating pre-Christmas novena Masses in honor of the Annunciation. Those Masses were known as “Misa de Gallo” or “rooster Mass,” because they were celebrated at dawn. Pope Sixtus V gave Augustinians in the Americas permission to celebrate the Misa de Gallo on the nine days leading up to Christmas. Spanish evangelizers in the Philippines continued their tradition of celebrating nine days of Misa de Gallo and found it was a good way to spread the faith. The novena is popular with Filipino Catholics around North America. On a recent evening in Vancouver, British Columbia, figures dressed as Mary and Joseph made their way down the center aisle of Vancouver’s Holy Rosary Cathedral. At various points, they stopped and asked parishioners playing the part of innkeepers for a place to stay. Invariably the reply was negative. Finally, the two figures reached the foot of the altar and asked the congregation if they had any room for Christ. The congregation said they did have room for Christ, and only then did the entrance procession for the first Simbang Gabi Mass of the year begin. The Filipino community of Vancouver began the novena with a Mass celebrated Archbishop Michael Miller at the cathedral. The scene of Mary and Joseph asking for a place to stay is a standard feature of the first nights of Simbang Gabi. It helps the faithful focus on making room for Christ in their hearts. Archbishop Miller told the congregation Mary and Joseph repeatedly heard that there was no room to spare because the people they met did not want to be bothered. The world was in darkness and needed the light of Christ, he said. “In the ancient church, baptism was called the sacrament of light. In baptism you became children of the light. You all have a light,” he said, adding, “someone is waiting to see that light.” “They see the light of Lord shining through you simply because you celebrate the birth of the Son of God,” Archbishop Miller said before he asked the congregation to pause and silently ask themselves: “To whom should I bring this light this Christmas? Who is waiting for you?” Suggesting ways to bring Christ’s light to others, the archbishop said the faithful could bring someone struggling with their faith to Christmas Mass. “Don’t leave them alone,” he said. “Through you, Christ wants to reach out and touch them. “We’ve all received so much from him, let’s not hoard that light,” he said. The remaining eight Simbang Gabi Masses were to be celebrated in a different Vancouver parish each night. Host parishes assembled a special choir for their evening of Simbang Gabi. Michael Goco, a member of the Filipino Catholic organization Sambayanang Pilipino Society of British Columbia, which organized the novena, said the decision to celebrate Simbang Gabi Masses in a different parish each night was practical and symbolic. “In a practical way, traveling from parish to parish gives more communities throughout the archdiocese an opportunity to experience this gift and tradition of the Filipino community” and at the same time “puts us, the ‘pilgrims’ who attend this Mass as well, in the place of Mary and Joseph, who invite these parish communities to open their hearts for Christmas.” The same evening as the Vancouver Mass, thousands of Filipino Catholics from throughout Southern California celebrated with a special evening Mass at the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels in Los Angeles. Archbishop Jose Gomez was the main celebrant of the liturgy, sponsored by the Filipino Ministry of the Archdiocese of Los Angeles. The Mass was preceded by the traditional “Parade of Parols,” or Christmas lanterns, of more than 100 parishes. The Archdiocese of Galveston-Houston has an extremely active Filipino Catholic community, and last year nearly 30 parishes from Conroe to Nassau Bay, Texas, offered Masses for Simbang Gabi, leading up to an archdiocesan Mass. In Houston, like Chicago, the Masses are in the evenings. “This beautiful longstanding tradition of the Filipino community ... is a beautiful influence you can have on the diocese,” said Cardinal Daniel DiNardo.
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