ACADEMIA DE SAN JOSE

Sotero B. Cabahug Street, Barangay Centro, Mandaue City, 6014 Cebu, Philippines

History


Academia de San Jose (formerly: St. Joseph’s Academy of Mandaue Inc.) was founded on 29 January 1964 by Msgr. Jose A. Alojipan. This was after the Archbishop of Cebu, His Eminence Julio Cardinal Rosales, requested him to establish a Catholic school. The ICM Religious Sisters (Immaculati Cordis Mariae) was tapped to help prepare for the opening of the School Year 1964-1965.

In July of 1966, the Congregation of the Missionary Sisters of the Immaculate Heart of Mary was designated by the Archbishop of Cebu as the steward of ASJ. The first secondary graduation took place in 1968. Two years after, the first elementary graduation came to pass.

Through the years, ASJ strove to grow in social consciousness towards the evangelization of the poor and the promotion of a lifestyle of simplicity. January 2001 witnessed the groundbreaking and blessing ceremony of the Marie Louise de Meester building. This reinforced the hopes and dreams of all those who wished ASJ to soar to greater heights of academic excellence and spiritual fervor.

ASJ’s faith, hope and love were challenged when a terrible fire, which started at the nearby public market, destroyed the administration building. But this only galvanized the administration’s resolve to relentlessly pursue integral human and Christian despite limitations imposed by institutional resources. During this time also, administrative discussions about the possibility of turning over the school to the Archdiocese of Cebu became very animated.

His Eminence Ricardo J. Cardinal Vidal, the Archbishop of Cebu, right away commissioned the Superintendent of the Archdiocesan Catholic Schools of Cebu, Fr. Eduardo O. Ventic, Ph.D. to take over as ASJ’s School Director effective School Year 2003-2004 which was also the last year of the ICM management. With courage and determination, the School Director envisioned a development plan with the able assistance of the new Basic Education Principal, Perlita S. Quiñones, Ed.D.

The construction of the five-story building to replace the burned edifice started on February 2006. It was inaugurated and blessed on 10 September 2007 in the presence of a jubilant and grateful community.

The year 2014 marked the Golden Foundation Anniversary and the beginning of another chapter in the grace-filled ongoing story of Academia de San Jose. Fr. Jesper John R. Petralba, Ed.D., D.M., Ph.D., D.P.A., Fr. Mariano Dioscoro E. Cuarto, M.A.S.L. and Maria Alma T. Flores, Dev.Ed.D. were appointed as the new Director, Treasurer and Principal respectively. Building on all the sincere efforts of their predecessors, they successfully toiled to render ASJ worthy of PAASCU (Philippine Accrediting Association of Schools, Colleges and Universities) Level I status on 25 November 2014.

School Year 2015-2016 saw the complete integration of ASJ into the Archdiocesan Catholic Schools of Cebu System as well as the laying down of the foundations of its Senior High School Program and its future Jubilee Building in old Mandaue’s lot #5 owned by the Archdiocese of Cebu. From 2017-2018 the following major projects were accomplished: the construction of the Oratory of St. Joseph the Protector of the Universal Church and the Giuseppean Covered Court, the procurement of a new air conditioned school bus, the renovation of the Quinquagenary Auditorium, the air conditioning of all classrooms, the construction of the Jubilee Hall and the repainting of the entire campus.

Fr. Sherwin Leo O. Ferrater, J.C.L., M.A.P.M became part of the administrative team in 2017. PAASCU-FAAP granted Level II Re-Accredited Status to ASJ on 15 December 2017 valid until 22 November 2022. In 2019 Fr. Conrado C. Sedillo, Jr, D.M and Fr. Andrei Mikhail S. Tabotabo, M.A.P.M were appointed Basic Education Principal and School Treasurer respectively. Fr. Alberto D. Cabag Jr. M.A.T (Candidate) was incorporated into the learning community of ASJ as an administrator in 2021. And the continuing revelation of God’s immeasurable goodness unceasingly unfolds with each passing day of ASJ’s educational ministry.

Saint Joseph the Protector of the Universal Church


Joseph was "a just man". This praise bestowed by the Holy Ghost, and the privilege of having been chosen by God to be the foster-father of Jesus and the spouse of the Virgin Mother, are the foundations of the honor paid to St. Joseph by the Church. So well-grounded are these foundations that it is not a little surprising that the cult of St. Joseph was so slow in winning recognition. Foremost among the causes of this is the fact that "during the first centuries of the Church's existence, it was only the martyrs who enjoyed veneration". Far from being ignored or passed over in silence during the early Christian ages, St. Joseph's prerogatives were occasionally descanted upon by the Fathers; even such eulogies as cannot be attributed to the writers among whose works they found admittance bear witness that the ideas and devotion therein expressed were familiar, not only to the theologians and preachers, and must have been readily welcomed by the people.

The earliest traces of public recognition of the sanctity of St. Joseph are to be found in the East. His feast, if we may trust the assertions of Papebroch, was kept by the Copts as early as the beginning of the fourth century. Nicephorus Callistus tells likewise — on what authority we do not know — that in the great basilica erected at Bethlehem by St. Helena, there was a gorgeous oratory dedicated to the honor of our saint. Certain it is, at all events, that the feast of "Joseph the Carpenter" is entered, on 20 July, in one of the old Coptic Calendars in our possession, as also in a Synazarium of the eighth and ninth centuries published by Cardinal Mai (Script. Vet. Nova Coll., IV, 15 sqq.). Greek menologies of a later date at least mention St. Joseph on 25 or 26 December, and a twofold commemoration of him along with other saints was made on the two Sundays next before and after Christmas.

In the West the name of the foster-father of Our Lord (Nutritor Domini) appears in local martyrologies of the ninth and tenth centuries, and we find in 1129, for the first time, a church dedicated to his honor at Bologna. The devotion, then merely private, as it seems, gained a great impetus owing to the influence and zeal of such saintly persons as St. Bernard, St. Thomas Aquinas, St. Gertrude (d. 1310), and St. Bridget of Sweden (d. 1373). According to Benedict XIV (De Serv. Dei beatif., I, iv, n. 11; xx, n. 17), "the general opinion of the learned is that the Fathers of Carmel were the first to import from the East into the West the laudable practice of giving the fullest cultus to St. Joseph". His feast, introduced towards the end shortly afterwards, into the Dominican Calendar, gradually gained a foothold in various dioceses of Western Europe.

Among the most zealous promoters of the devotion at that epoch, St. Vincent Ferrer (d. 1419),Peter d'Ailly (d. 1420), St. Bernadine of Siena (d. 1444), and Jehan Charlier Gerson (d. 1429) deserve an especial mention. Gerson, who had, in 1400, composed an Office of the Espousals of Joseph particularly at the Council of Constance (1414), in promoting the public recognition of the cult of St. Joseph. Only under the pontificate of Sixtus IV (1471-84), were the efforts of these holy men rewarded by Roman Calendar (19 March). From that time the devotion acquired greater and greater popularity, the dignity of the feast keeping pace with this steady growth. At first only a festum simplex, it was soon elevated to a double rite by Innocent VIII (1484-92), declared by Gregory XV, in 1621, a festival of obligation, at the instance of the Emperors Ferdinand III and Leopold I and of King Charles II of Spain, and raised to the rank of a double of the second class by Clement XI (1700-21). Further, Benedict XIII, in 1726, inserted the name into the Litany of the Saints.

One festival in the year, however, was not deemed enough to satisfy the piety of the people. The feast of the Espousals of the Blessed Virgin and St. Joseph, so strenuously advocated by Gerson, and permitted first by Paul III to the Franciscans, then to other religious orders and individual dioceses, was, in 1725, granted to all countries that solicited it, a proper Office, compiled by the Dominican Pierto Aurato, being assigned, and the day appointed being 23 January. Nor was this all, for the reformed Order of Carmelites, into which St. Teresa had infused her great devotion to the foster-father of Jesus, chose him, in 1621, for their patron, and in 1689, were allowed to celebrate the feast of his Patronage on the third Sunday after Easter. This feast, soon adopted throughout the Spanish Kingdom, was later on extended to all states and dioceses which asked for the privilege. No devotion, perhaps, has grown so universal, none seems to have appealed so forcibly to the heart of the Christian people, and particularly of the laboring classes, during the nineteenth century, as that of St. Joseph.

This wonderful and unprecedented increase of popularity called for a new luster to be added to the cult of the saint. Accordingly, one of the first acts of the pontificate of Pius IX, himself singularly devoted to St. Joseph, was to extend to the whole Church the feast of the Patronage (1847), and in December, 1870, according to the wishes of the bishops and of all the faithful, he solemnly declared the Holy Patriarch Joseph, patron of the Catholic Church, and enjoined that his feast (19 March) should henceforth be celebrated as a double of the first class (but without octave, on account of Lent). Following the footsteps of their predecessor, Leo XIII and Pius X have shown an equal desire to add their own jewel to the crown of St. Joseph: the former, by permitting on certain days the reading of the votive Office of the saint; and the latter by approving, on 18 March, 1909, a litany in honor of him whose name he had received in baptism (http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/08504a.htm).

School Seal: Significance & Explanation


The seal of Academia de San Jose, Mandaue City is a circular insignia with a flaming torch, a lily, a pair of carpentry tools and a cross intertwined with the letter M.

The Flaming Torch stands for the light of evangelizing education; the Lily for purity as exemplified by St. Joseph, the Chaste Spouse; the pair of Carpentry Tools for dignified human labor as spelled out by St. Joseph, the Worker; and the Cross intertwined with the letter “M” stands for the centrality of Christ and the devotion to the Blessed Virgin Mary.

The use of non-serif, bold type face portrays the dedicated commitment of St. Joseph’s Academy to uphold the standards of Catholic education. Round shape signifies the never ending resoluteness of this learning community to keep abreast with the signs of the times. Royal blue suggests wisdom, fidelity and accountability. Brown color evokes honesty, reliability and simplicity.