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The Music of Ricky Manalo

Papal Mass to Include GTU Student’s Songs

Congratulations Ricky Manalo!


Ricky ManaloChoristers in the April 17 Papal Mass at Nationals Park in Washington, D.C. will sing two songs by GTU Ph.D. student Ricky Manalo. Manalo’s compositions, “Come, O Spirit of God” and “Pange Lingua,” will be featured in the prelude and communion.

Earlier this year, Manalo won an ecumenical hymn competition for the song, "That All May Be One." Choristers sang another of his songs, "Ang Katawan Ni Kristo" (Filipino for "The Body of Christ") at the closing Eucharist of the February 2008 Los Angeles Religious Education Conference.

Manalo is a Teagle-Wabash scholar in GTU’s Preparing Future Faculty Project, a year-long training funded by the Teagle Foundation and Wabash Center for Teaching and Learning in Religion and Theology. Besides developing students’ practical teaching skills, the project aims to learn how faculty can best mentor future teachers to develop their sense of vocation and help them bring meaning and value into liberal arts classrooms.

The April 17 Papal mass begins at 10:00 a.m. EST. This mass and full coverage of Pope Benedict XVI’s visit to America is available on EWTN via satellite and cable.


Father Ricky Manalo, C.S.P., wins NPM music competition

by Stefani Manowski

paulist.org, paulistnews.org

Manalo at pianoSometimes going against the grain pays off, and that is the case for Father Ricky Manalo, C.S.P.

“That All May Be One in Christ,” which Father Manalo composed and wrote the English lyrics, recently won the hymn competition sponsored by the National Association of Pastoral Musicians (NPM). Father Manalo’s hymn, along with the other winning title — “Family of Faith” by Steven Ottomanyi — will receive wide distribution by the Atonement Friars and NPM in preparation for the Week of Prayer for Christian Unity, Jan. 18-25, 2008. Unity is a chief Paulist charism, and the Feast of the Conversion of St. Paul on Jan. 25, 2008, will mark the beginning of yearlong celebrations for the Paulist Fathers’ 150th anniversary.

When a song is to be performed in different languages, Father Manalo said, it usually goes to someone who can transliterate the piece. But he took a different, if not novel, approach to “That All May Be One in Christ” by having a Spanish lyricist and Vietnamese lyricist transliterate on the refrain and write three original verses focused on the Holy Trinity.

“What you get are nine perspectives of God,” Father Manalo explained. “You get nuances of the Trinity where one culture is not more important than the other.”

For example, the lyrical images of God the Father include the eternal Father, caller of all nations and one who welcomes all people into his home; images of Christ include the Son of God, the bread of life and the paschal lamb; while the Holy Spirit is referenced as love-fire, healer of divisions and celestial wisdom.

This approach “was a way to respect other cultures and not telling them to do what I do,” by only transliterating the words, said Father Manalo.

“It respects other cultures without imposing one perspective,” he said.

The lyrics of “That All May Be One in Christ” are more important than the music, according to Father Manalo, who said the composition fits right in with his doctoral work in intercultural communication and post-colonial studies at the University of California – Berkeley.

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