“Happy birthday, Jesus.” Beneath this familiar Christmas greeting lies a demanding idea: God did not address humanity’s deepest failure from a distance. He did “Happy birthday, Jesus.” Beneath this familiar Christmas greeting lies a demanding idea: God did not address humanity’s deepest failure from a distance. He did

Emmanuel and the politics of presence

Happy birthday, Jesus.”

Beneath this familiar Christmas greeting lies a demanding idea: God did not address humanity’s deepest failure from a distance. He did not issue instructions from afar or rely on intermediaries alone. He came near. He entered history. He took on flesh. Emmanuel, God with us, was not an abstraction, a slogan, or a policy statement. He was presence made real, authority made visible, and commitment made costly.

The Gospel of John captures this with stark clarity: “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.” The Logos, or word, did not remain theoretical. After four centuries of waiting, God did not send another commandment or reform agenda. He sent Himself. Salvation came not only with truth, but with proximity.

That choice offers a powerful lens for governance in the Philippines today. If the central failure of humanity required God’s incarnate presence, then persistent national failures —weak institutions, uneven growth, recurring corruption, vulnerability to disasters, and political exclusion — cannot be resolved by plans, budgets, and rhetoric alone. They require a government that is likewise with the people: present in execution, visible in accountability, and credible in leadership.

WAITING, THEN ACTING
Before Christ’s coming, Israel endured long periods of conquest, decline, and silence. Institutions weakened. Authority was imposed rather than trusted. Hope narrowed. The people waited.

The waiting ended not with a decree but with action. “The Word became flesh and dwelt among us.” God entered the constraints of human life — time, space, vulnerability. Presence was not symbolic; it was costly.

Many Filipinos should recognize a familiar waiting today. Economic growth is reported, budgets expand, and reform programs are announced. Yet for millions, progress feels abstract. It is remote. Prices rise faster than wages. Taxes oppress both households and business. Public services fall short. Disasters expose gaps in project design and execution, as well as in preparedness and response. The recurring question is not philosophical but practical: Where is the government when it matters?

PRESENCE AS A GOVERNING PRINCIPLE
In contrast, Jesus’ ministry was defined by proximity. He taught where people gathered, healed where suffering was visible, and confronted abuses of authority directly. He did not operate through distant intermediaries. He bore the costs of engagement — misunderstanding, opposition, and the cross.

This offers a direct parallel to governance as we know it in the Philippines. Presence is not sentiment; it is a governing principle. It means policies designed with real conditions in mind, leaders accountable for outcomes, and institutions that do not retreat behind procedure when results fall short.

In the Philippine context, governance often relies on form rather than substance. Development frameworks are comprehensive, but execution is performative and inconsistent. Laws are passed, but enforcement is uneven. Authority exists, yet responsibility is diffused and denied.

BUDGETS AS INCARNATION OR ITS ABSENCE
If Emmanuel is truth embodied, then the budget is where government either becomes real — or remains a ghost. A budget should translate intention into action, priorities into programs, and authority into results.

Yet the national budget increasingly reveals a gap between design and delivery. While the executive proposes the initial expenditure budget, the legislative process introduces extensive dubious insertions that fragment priorities. Projects end up with weak links to agency mandates. Funds are divided into localized items that are politically attractive but administratively difficult to monitor.

This mirrors a government that speaks but does not dwell, announcing priorities without fully inhabiting their consequences. Implementing agencies are tasked to execute projects they neither planned nor evaluated, blurring accountability when outcomes disappoint. We see these today in the unfolding flood control scandal.

Unprogrammed appropriations in this country have destroyed the budget process. Intended as contingent spending, they have expanded to levels that effectively create a parallel budget. This weakens fiscal discipline and expands discretion, especially when revenue assumptions prove optimistic. Like authority exercised without presence, spending authority without assured funding or clear safeguards erodes credibility.

In contrast, an “Emmanuel” approach to budgeting would emphasize clarity of purpose, restraint in discretion, and accountability in execution. It would favor fewer, well-designed programs over many fragmented ones, and outcomes over announcements.

POLITICAL DYNASTIES AND THE PROBLEM OF DISTANCE
No discussion of absence and distance in Philippine governance is complete without confronting the role of political dynasties. For decades, power has been concentrated in a narrow set of families that dominate both national and local offices, often across generations.

Dynastic politics creates a form of representation that is formal but hollow. Officials may occupy office continuously, yet governance remains distant because accountability is internalized within families rather than exercised by institutions or voters. Public office becomes an inherited asset rather than a public trust.

We are familiar with the story that concentration of power weakens competition, discourages merit, and limits the entry of new leadership. It also helps explain why budget distortions persist. Congressional insertions, discretionary allocations, and localized projects often serve to entrench political networks rather than address systemic needs. In the Philippines, the budget has become a tool of political maintenance rather than national transformation.

In our system, government presence is selective. It is felt during elections, ribbon-cuttings, or moments of patronage — but absent in sustained service delivery, national calamities, institutional reform, and long-term investment. The poor encounter government episodically, not consistently. At various levels, many public servants transact, but they rarely transform.

Emmanuel represents the opposite logic. God did not send representatives to act in His place while remaining distant. He came Himself. Dynastic politics, by contrast, multiplies intermediaries while insulating the elected from accountability. Philippine dynasties produce continuity without reform.

AUTHORITY THAT ACCEPTS COST
After the resurrection, Scripture tells us that Jesus declared that all authority had been given to Him. He then delegated it, sending others to preach, disciple, and baptize. The call is to teach and serve. Authority, in this model, is inseparable from cost and accountability.

This stands in tension with contemporary governance shaped by dynastic protection. Filipino politics dictates authority should expand, but risk is socialized and responsibility diluted. Oversight institutions struggle to penetrate entrenched networks. Audit findings recur — overpricing, delays, weak procurement — yet sanctions are uneven and slow. Worse, as in the flood control anomaly, audit could be compromised.

The parallel is instructive. Emmanuel did not avoid the cost of engagement. Philippines-style governance avoids cost and inevitably retreats into distance and defensiveness.

INSTITUTIONS REFLECT COMMITMENT
Jesus’ parable of the soils offers another parallel. Systems, like hearts, fail when commitment is shallow or divided. Reform collapses when resistance carries no cost and integrity no protection.

Institutions weakened by political accommodation lose their capacity to deliver. Budgets distorted by narrow interests cannot produce inclusive growth. And when enforcement is selective, trust declines, raising the economic cost of compliance, investment, and reform.

An Emmanuel-centered governance framework demands institutions that are present where rules are tested: procurement, regulation, taxation, and justice. Presence here means consistency, not perfection.

EMMANUEL AS A TEST OF ECONOMIC LEADERSHIP
The prophet Isaiah spoke of light breaking into darkness. Apostle Paul described power that chose restraint and service. Emmanuel is not sentiment; it is a standard.

Applied to economic leadership, the test is straightforward. Does government show up where risks are highest and returns politically lowest? Does the budget protect long-term capacity or merely accommodate dynastic bargaining? Do institutions correct failure or normalize it?

Just as salvation required God’s presence, development requires leadership that resists distortion, disciplines discretion, and accepts accountability. It’s about time that the Filipinos experienced government not through speeches but through stable prices, robust growth, efficient services, more jobs, and institutionalized fairness.

CHRISTMAS WITHOUT DISTANCE
Christmas, then, is not about comfort. It is about proximity and responsibility. Emmanuel challenges our leaders to govern without distance — budgets that reflect priorities rather than bargaining power, institutions that enforce rules rather than negotiate them, and political systems that open space for merit, renewal, and accountability.

For Filipinos, the implication is equally direct. Distance, dynastic dominance, impunity, and indifference persist because they are tolerated. The Philippines will therefore be shaped less by ideals than by what they accept as normal.

Jesus’ promise — “I am with you always” — offers assurance, but it also establishes a standard for public leadership. Isaiah makes the implication explicit: with Emmanuel, “the government shall be upon His shoulder.” Authority, in this vision, is not distant or delegated away. It is borne personally, tested in crisis, and exercised in full view of the people. Presence matters most in times of calamity. Leadership matters when institutions falter and citizens are disillusioned and angry. And integrity matters because the Philippines today is in urgent need of clear, credible moral purpose.

With Emmanuel, the challenge is not symbolic. Rising to it means building a government that is with the people. It is the difference between policy that exists on paper and governance that works in practice.

Diwa C. Guinigundo is the former deputy governor for the Monetary and Economics Sector, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP). He served the BSP for 41 years. In 2001-2003, he was alternate executive director at the International Monetary Fund in Washington, DC. He is the senior pastor of the Fullness of Christ International Ministries in Mandaluyong.

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