Saturday, May 12, 2018

Archbishop Gomez tells Catholic University grads to tell a new story

Facing a divided America, LA prelate calls on youth to ‘tell a new story’

Facing a divided America, LA prelate calls on youth to ‘tell a new story’
Archbishop Jose H. Gomez of Los Angeles, who is vice president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, gives the closing keynote address Jan. 19 at a Vatican-sponsored conference on mass migration and humanitarianism at the University of California in Los Angeles. (Credit: CNS.)
Archbishop Jose Goméz urged the 2018 graduates of the Catholic University of America to tell the story of "a new America."
NEW YORK - Archbishop José Gomez of Los Angeles said Saturday that the U.S. is facing a “crisis of identity,” more bitterly divided and anxious than he has ever witnessed, and he called on college graduates “to tell a new story for a new America.”
“I know that many of you feel the way that I do - that our great nation is losing her way,” Gomez said, while delivering the commencement address at the Catholic University of America.
As the head of the largest and most diverse Catholic diocese in the United States, Gomez urged graduates to rediscover and tell anew the story of America’s founding, one that has not always been pure, yet one that is still defined by “American holiness and heroism.”
On Saturday, Gomez recalled Pope Francis’s 2015 visit to the grounds of the Catholic University of America, where he canonized St. Junípero Serra. Not only did it mark the first time a Catholic had been canonized on American soil, but also it was a bold statement by Francis to cement the legacy of Serra as one of America’s founding fathers.
“It is interesting to think: St. Junípero Serra never even saw Washington, D.C.,” Gomez reflected. “He was a Hispanic missionary who came up from Mexico to preach and build in California. And he never left there. The United States of America was not even established as a nation until the final years of his ministry.”
Even so, Gomez said, America’s founders, including Serra, “dreamed of a nation where men and women from every race, religion and national background could live in equality. As brothers and sisters, children of the same God.”
In order to reclaim that vision, Gomez urged graduates to remember the “mystics and missionaries; martyrs and immigrants; refugees and exiles” that have kept the country’s founding vision alive.
“There are indigenous saints, such as Black Elk, the Lakota Sioux mystic and Catholic catechist. There are freed slaves such as Father Augustus Tolton, our country’s first black priest,” he said.
“The litany of American saints goes on and on, and it includes servants of the poor such as the Creole saint Henriette Delille and Mother Marianne Cope who served the lepers; there are artists and activists such as Dorothy Day and Thomas Merton,” Gomez continued.
In the same manner in which Francis used his 2015 address to the United States Congress to highlight the particular lives of great Americans - Catholic and non-Catholic alike - that have given lived witness to the promise of America, Gomez added that “the saints I know best are in my Catholic tradition. But there are American saints in every faith tradition, and in every family and every neighborhood.”
“They are the hidden saints, saints of the everyday,” he continued. “Holy wives and holy husbands, working hard to do what is right, sacrificing for their children; being good friends and good neighbors; serving the poor and working to make their communities stronger.”
Gomez said that the story of a “new America” would begin with lives of sacrifice for others.
“America’s founders - the missionaries and the statesmen - they knew this truth,” he said. “They knew that we belong to a story that began long before us, the story of our Creator.”
In a nod to the national debate over immigration, where Gomez has long been among the leading champions of immigrant rights among the U.S. bishops, he added: “They knew that we are born with a dignity and a destiny that can never be denied. No matter who we are. Or where we came from. Or how we got here.”
Gomez, who is an adult immigrant to the United States from Mexico, was also conferred an honorary doctorate by the University, for his long-standing advocacy of immigrants and “especially efforts to keep families together and support Dreamers.”
“Dear graduates, now it is your turn to hold these truths and to tell them to a new generation,” Gomez said on Saturday.
In a final summation that wove together Abraham Lincoln, Emma Lazarus, and the Declaration of Independence, Gomez insisted, “the American story is not over yet. It continues in you and in me.”
“We can still rely on the protection of divine Providence. We can still open our door with confidence to people who are yearning to breathe free. We can still practice a politics with malice toward none and charity for all. We are made for greater things,” he concluded.
The Catholic University of America is the national university of the Catholic Church - the sole institution of higher education to be founded by the U.S. bishops.

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