Fr. Ricky Malano, CSP, Ph.D.

Wednesday 9:30 – 10:15 am | Grand Ballroom 5-8

General Address: Unity Without Uniformity: Diversity in the Universal Church View

Rev. Ricky Manalo, CSP, Ph.D. is a Paulist priest and a liturgical composer, currently teaching at Santa Clara University. He also serves as the main facilitator of the Cultural Orientation Program for International Ministers/Priests (COPIM) of Loyola Marymount University. He studied composition and piano at the Manhattan School of Music, theology at the Washington Theological Union, and liturgy, culture, and sociology at the Graduate Theological Union (GTU), Berkeley, CA.

Fr. Manalo’s music is published chiefly by Oregon Catholic Press. Some of his best known hymns include:

  • Beyond the Days
  • Pange Lingua
  • Spirit and Grace
  • With One Voice
  • Worthy Is the Lamb
  • Mass of Spirit and Grace      

In 2007, his collaborative hymn, That All May Be One In Christ, won the National Hymn Competition of the National Association of Pastoral Musicians (NPM).

Fr. Manalo is also known for pioneering and popularizing Asian Catholic liturgical music in the United States with his hymns, By the Waking of Our Hearts, Many and Great, Ang Katawan Ni Kristo (Filipino: “The Body of Christ”), and his music has been sung during papal Masses of John Paul II, Benedict XVI, and Francis.

In 2008, Fr. Manalo’s course, Asian Liturgies and Devotions, marked the first time this subject was ever taught in a Roman Catholic theological institution in the U.S. (The Franciscan School of Theology, Berkeley, CA). He has written numerous articles and books on liturgy, culture, liturgical music, and intercultural communication. More recently, his book, The Liturgy of Life: The Interrelationship of Sunday Eucharist and Everyday Worship Practices (Liturgical Press, 2014) was a finalist for the 2015 Excellence in Publishing Awards by the Association of Catholic Publishers. He is a member of the North American Academy of Liturgy, the Catholic Theological Society of America, the International Societas Liturgica, and NPM (board member, 2008-12).

Currently, Fr. Manalo is a member of a USCCB steering committee which is creating a national pastoral plan for U.S. Asian Pacific Catholics (publishing date to be announced). He remains an advisor to the U.S. Bishops’ Committee on Cultural Diversity in the Church and the Committee on Divine Worship.

When he is not traveling throughout the world, he resides at Old St. Mary’s Cathedral in Chinatown, San Francisco, CA.