
“Ipagdasal Niyo Ako”: When Prayer Is Asked, but Accountability Is Avoided
“Ipagdasal niyo ako sapagkat kapag ang Pangulo ay nagtagumpay, ang buong bansa ay nagtatagumpay.”

A comforting line — familiar, safe, and powerful in a deeply religious nation. President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. once again leaned on faith-language to frame leadership as collective destiny.
But former COA and Comelec Commissioner Rowena Guanzon responded with a sharper, grounded reality check:
“Pinagnanakawan mo na ang Pilipinas, gusto mo ipagdasal ka pa namin?”
Agila satire does not mock prayer — it questions timing and context.
Prayer is sacred.
But prayer without repentance becomes performance.
Prayer without reform becomes a shield.
In a nation wrestling with unfinished bridges, questionable projects, and trust deficits, the call to “pray for the President” lands differently. The people are not hostile to faith — they are weary of words replacing work.
The eagle sees the contradiction clearly:
When projects fail → ask for patience
When trust drops → ask for prayer
When questions rise → defer accountability
Guanzon’s statement cuts to the core of public frustration. It is not anti-faith. It is anti-hypocrisy.
Scripture itself warns leaders:
“These people honor Me with their lips, but their hearts are far from Me.”
— Matthew 15:8
A nation does not succeed because a leader is prayed for.
A leader is prayed for because they choose truth, justice, and service — even when it costs them.
🦅 Agila bows in prayer — but keeps its eyes open.