Diocesan heritage workers
Safeguard church memory
TAGBILARAN CITY, Bohol (PIA)—Cultural heritage workers of the Diocese of Tagbilaran steps forward in yet again, another calling: safeguard the memory of church heritage by nurturing its meaning and ensuring that these items and structures bequeathed in faith, can be responsibly handed to the next generation.
At the 14th Biennial Convention of Church Cultural Heritage Workers, hosted by the Archdiocese of Cagayan de Oro, Episcopal Commission for the Cultural Heritage of the Church (ECCHC) chair and Prelate of Batanes, Bishop Danilo Ulep situates church heritage work as that within the broader field of ecclesial continuity and mission.
The biennial convention, supposedly set in 2025, but was moved due to the pressing issues brought about by the natural disasters hitting the country, picked on the theme: Church Heritage Beyond the Jubilee Year of Hope.
Our churches, artworks, archives, traditions and sacred spaces are not mere relics of history; they are vessels of faith, witnesses of grace and bridges that connect generations of believers, he said.
As stewards of the Church’s cultural heritage, we are entrusted with this sacred responsibility, the Batanes bishop said, in the context of the slow degradation of heritage structures, artefacts and sacred objects left to the fate of time and neglect amidst the hastened effects of changing climates.
In fact, several of these built heritage structures and artefacts due for restoration and conservation have been victims of tampering in the guise of reconstruction and refurbishment, something that communities of believers cold have protected, had there been research and proper documentation making the attendant information of the object’s value available.
In the conference, National Commission For Culture and the Arts (NCCA) Supervising Administrative Officer and Enforcement Section Head of the Cultural Properties Division Vanessa Marquez-Nicolas pressed on the role of communities and their active engagement in the protection and conservation of church heritage.
Boholano priest and ECCHC Executive Secretary Milan Ted Torralba said that they organized conventions like this, to advance awareness, sensitivity and appreciation of the cultural assets of the local churches in the Philippines, the frontliners and stakeholders in the conservation, advocacy and pastoral care of the ecclesial community’s heirlooms.
And since heritage protectors and community stakeholders can sometimes be easily overpowered by forceful persuasion disguised as restoration, the convention also provides the on-going formation, updating and training of workers, practitioners and scholars on heritage sciences as the Agreement between Rome and the Republic of the Philippines on the cultural heritage of the catholic church, the Boholano heritage scholar added.
Republic Act 10666 (RA 10666) or the National Cultural Heritage Act of 2009 aims to protect, preserve, conserve and promote the nation’s cultural heritage, its property and histories and the ethnicity of its local communities.
It also establishes and strengthens cultural institutions like the NCCA, National Historical Commission of the Philippines, the National Museum of the Philippines, National Archives of the Philippines and the National Library in their tasks of assessing national cultural treasures and historical landmarks, sites and monuments.
Meanwhile, section 34 of RA 11961 or the law strengthening the Conservation and Protection of the Philippine Cultural Heritage tasks the NCCA as the agency responsible for the proper implementation of the laws protecting Philippine Cultural Heritage.
While the NCCA issues the declaration, it partners with NHCP in assessing historical sites, buildings, and historical events, if these can be declared among the National Historical Landmarks, National Historical Shrines and National Historical Monuments.
For documents, the NCCA partners with the National Archives of the Philippines, while for declaration of published books, correspondences and published heritage, National Library of the Philippines aids the NCCA .
In Bohol alone, with over 20 heritage churches, the NCCA has declared 9 national cultural treasures (NCT) and three churches as important cultural property (ICP).
The NCCA with the National Museum has declared the Immaculada Conception Church of Baclayon, Saints Peter and Paul Church of Loboc, Our Lady of the Assumption Church in Dauis, San Nicolas Tolentino Church of Dimiao and the Sto Nino Church of Cortes, as NCT, being among the most historically and architecturally significant Spanish-era churches in the Philippines.
Also declared ICP are Santissima Trinidad Church in Loay, Santa Monica Church in Alburquerque, Our Lady of Light Church in Loon, and Holy Cross Parsih Church of Maribojoc.
The NHCP has also declared church properties like the Immaculada Conception church of Baclayon, Saints Peter and Paul Church of Loboc, Santissima Trinidad Church of Loay, Our Lady of the Assumption Church of Dauis, San Nicolas Tolentino Church of Dimiao, Santa Monica Church of Alburquerque Church and Saint Joseph Cathedral in Tagbilaran City and National Historical Landmarks. (PIAbohol)
COMMITTED TO CHURCH HERITAGE PRESERVATION. A lean team from the diocese of Tagbilaran led by ECCHC Executive Secretary Fr. Milan Ted Torralba, and at least seven parish priests with church heritage workers represented the diocese in advancing faith heritage protection. (PIAbohol)

