Filipino Catholics celebrate Holy Child

A celebration of the “Santo Niño” (or Holy Child), a symbol of the birth of Catholicism in the Philippines more than 500 years ago, took place on Jan. 18, 2026, at Incarnation Parish in Sarasota.

The Diocese of Venice Santo Niño Festival on the Second Sunday of Ordinary Time was organized by the local Filipino Catholic Community (Senor Santo Niño Devotees of Manasota Florida, Inc.), with more than 600 people participating in the Mass and Festival which celebrates an important conversion story. This was the fifth year for this Festival in the Diocese.

Bishop Frank J. Dewane was the main celebrant for the Mass and said the Santo Niño Mass and Festival “is a wonderful example of a faith and culture coming together beautifully. This devotion has spread throughout the world due to the spreading of Filipino culture expanding into the world. Your presence within the Diocese brings with it a unique richness.”

Bishop Dewane encouraged everyone present to hear the call of Santo Niño to help fulfill their mission in life to serve the Lord, while gaining strength from the celebration to encourage the reign of Christ throughout the world and within themselves.

The celebration also serves as an opportunity to refocus on the children in the Filipino Catholic community.

“During this Eucharistic celebration let us entrust our children to the protection and guidance of the Holy Child, as He is so much a part of history and our lives,” said a leader of the Senor Santo Niño Devotees of Manasota Florida, Inc. “We ask Santo Niño to take care of our children and teach us how to do likewise.”

The Feast Day celebration serves to remind Filipinos of the Christianization of their homeland in the 16th century but also enables them to see the relevance that this devotion to the Santo Niño has for people to this day, whether they are living in the Philippines or elsewhere. The Feast places a special emphasis on the children and youth, with all the hopes they raise.

 

The Mass opened with the traditional presentation of the Santo Niño statue to Bishop Dewane. In addition, the faithful are encouraged to bring their own Santo Niño statue, or one purchased in the past year, to be blessed by the Bishop. This was done at the conclusion of the Mass.

 

The presentation is a reflection of the tradition of Filipino immigrants, or diaspora, who brought their Santo Niño statues with them to the United States to be their spiritual recourse, assistant and protector.

 

Following the Mass, the celebration continued with traditional music and dancers first outside the Parish Church and then in the Parish Hall.