Archbishop Jose H. Gomez is headed from the City of St. Anthony to the City of Angels. What this means for the Church in this country I'll leave for others to speculate. For those of us whose future is in an Ordinariate, it's very good news indeed.
From the time of his arrival in San Antonio, Archbishop Gomez has shown a great appreciation for the Pastoral Provision, and very recently expressed to me his complete support for the Holy Father's Apostolic Constitution, Anglicanorum coetibus. The archbishop has made several pastoral visits to us at Our Lady of the Atonement Church, and put in the great effort of learning to celebrate our liturgical use, as a sign of how seriously he takes his responsibility of being our spiritual father-in-God. A few years ago, when we celebrated our twenty-fifth anniversary, Archbishop Gomez preached at a Solemn Mass marking the event, and his respect for our Anglican patrimony is evident in his words:
My brother Bishops, Priests, Sisters and Brothers in Christ,
Today as we gather for this special celebration it is providential that we celebrate the feast of St. Benedict. We can say that he is the Patron Saint of the Holy Father Pope Benedict XVI. So, we especially pray for the Holy Father and his universal ministry in the Catholic Church.
This past April Pope Benedict XVI discussed the influence St. Benedict had on Western Europe. The pope said that “with his life and work St. Benedict exercised a fundamental influence on the development of European civilization and culture” and helped Europe to emerge from the “dark night of history” that followed the fall of the Roman empire.
As you probably know, also on this very day, July 11, 1533, exactly four hundred and seventy five years ago, Pope Clement VII formally excommunicated England’s King Henry VIII for remarrying after his alleged divorce from his legitimate wife, Catherine of Aragon. He also excommunicated the Archbishop of Canterbury, Thomas Cranmer, and withdrew the papal nuncio from England. This day of infamy marks the day in which England formally fell out of communion with Rome.
All this occurred 475 years ago. I therefore find it rather appropriate that on the feast of St. Benedict, we are gathered together today in the name of Christ and in the name of the Catholic Church as a witness to the beautiful reality of what was once Catholic England, and now is the Pastoral Provision for the Anglican Use established by our beloved Pope John Paul II, and in the Archdiocese of San Antonio by my predecessor, Archbishop Patrick Flores who, twenty-five years ago, decided to erect this personal parish of Our Lady of the Atonement in which many of the elements of English Catholicism are preserved and given new life in the Catholic Church.
Those of you here who possess an appreciation for Church history will realize the significance of today’s Gospel as it prophecies against kings who shall persecute the faithful.
In today’s Gospel, Christ warns his followers, “You will be dragged before governors and kings for my sake.” As we celebrate this year’s Anglican Use Conference, we might remember the namesake of the most recent pastoral provision parish, that of Saint Thomas More in Scranton, Pennsylvania. Saint Thomas More, as we all know, was an English Catholic who held true to the Catholic Faith. Two years after the papal decree, Thomas More would receive a martyr’s reward for his fidelity to the Pope in Rome.
The Pastoral Provision looks back to those sorrowful days and seeks to provide a way for the children of Henry’s “Church of England” to return once more to the universal embrace of Rome. Many of you here today are converts from Anglicanism of one sort or another. Some of you are former Anglican clergy. Perhaps, you were not “dragged before governors and kings” for the sake of Christ, but some of you were persecuted.
Some of you offered up your vocations and others of you may have received harsh words from friends and family members who could not understand your decision to enter into full communion with the Catholic Church. Nonetheless, today we stand around the altar of Christ and we receive the consolation of Heaven.
In the past two years, Pope Benedict XVI has increasingly centered the Church’s attention on the mystery of the Church’s communio. Our Holy Father reminds us that we must be one in Christ and this union is ratified every time we celebrate the Holy Eucharist. Moreover, our union with one another is further realized when at each Mass, the celebrant invokes the name of the Holy Father in Rome.
Prior to being elected as Pope, Benedict XVI once wrote: “Communion with the pope is that communion with the whole, without which there is no communion with Christ. A part of Christian prayer and of the Christian act of faith is committing oneself in faith to the whole, overcoming one’s own limits. The Liturgy is not the setting up of some club, an association of friends; we receive it from the whole church, and we have to celebrate it as coming from the whole and directed toward the whole.”
Although we may share liturgical variations, we are united in the Eucharist and we celebrate our communio with one another by being in constant communion with our bishops and, ultimately, with the successor of Saint Peter.
In his recent Apostolic Visit to the United States, Pope Benedict XVI left us some challenges. One of them is the promotion of unity in the Church. In his homily at the Mass in Washington, DC, he said: “As the church in the United States gives thanks for the blessings of the past 200 years, I invite you, your families, and every parish and religious community, to trust in the power of grace to create a future of promise for God's people in this country. I ask you, in the Lord Jesus, to set aside all division and to work with joy to prepare a way for him in fidelity to his word and in constant conversion to his will. Above all, I urge you to continue to be a leaven of evangelical hope in American society, striving to bring the light and truth of the Gospel to the task of building an ever more just and free world for generations yet to come” (4/17/08).
We just heard the words of the Prophet Hosea who said:
“Let the wise man understand these words.
Let the intelligent man grasp their meaning.
For the ways of the Lord are straight,
and virtuous men walk in them”Let us take Hosea’s words to heart today. The way of the Lord is straight. Let us recommit our lives to Christ this day and continue together along the narrow way of salvation drawn out for us by holy men and women, such as St. Benedict, Thomas More, Cardinal Newman and many others, to the gates of Heaven.
And let us share with all those who treasure the Anglican traditions the joyous conviction that the new Israel draws its life from the fullness of communion in the Word of God, in the Eucharist and with the See of Peter.
Let me finish invoking the intercession of Mary Our Blessed Mother for each one of us, for the Pastoral Provision, for the Catholic Church in the United States and for the Universal Church.
To her, Mary, Our Lady of the Atonement was dedicated this Parish, the first one of the Pastoral Provision. May she continue to accompany us in our journey of faith, hope, unity and love and for the greater glory of God. Amen.
As he prepares to take on the responsibility of being the shepherd of a major See (and inevitably receives the red hat as a Cardinal), I have no doubt we'll continue to see his support for the Ordinariates in this country and around the world.
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This is amazing and wonderful news for the Church in Los Angeles as well as the national Catholic Church. God bless Archbishop Gomez in his new appointment!
(I only hope as fine a prelate replaces him in San Antonio.)
Thanks be to God!
This is great news! Wow. Maybe he will put a stop to the horrific liturgical abuses in Los Angeles, little by little.
I wonder what the new coadjutor Archbishop will do with that modernist pile they call the Catholic cathedral?
In a perfect world: burn it, bulldoze the rubble and sow the earth with salt.
Extremely optimistically: sell the Taj Mahoney as a conference centre and use the proceeds to fund the building of an actual Cathedral.
Realistically: re-order the interior and make the best use of it he can.
"I wonder what the new coadjutor Archbishop will do with that modernist pile they call the Catholic cathedral?"
Getting rid of that horrible image of Our Lady in a buzzcut would be a good start…
I agree with other posters the apointment of Archbishop Gomez to Los Angeles is great news!
I'm very happy, the last three Hispanic bishops in Los Angeles were all catalan people from Barcelona, just like me!!! (In the 19th century)
Also, he has studied in the Opus Dei Navarra University in Spain…
I am very excited to hear that the Archbishop will be coming to us here in Southern California, we need someone like him down here to breathe life back into the Church in light of all that we have undergone over the last few years.
Archbishop Gomez was our Auxiliary Bishop here in the Archdiocese under Archbishop Chaput. Everyone at our seminary is very excited about the appointment. I just hope that the rumors of priests and seminarians leaving in huge numbers because of the presence of a more conservative, (i.e. faithful) bishop are not true. God bless Pope Benedict and let's make Los Angeles truly a city for the angels again!
"I just hope that the rumors of priests and seminarians leaving in huge numbers because of the presence of a more conservative, (i.e. faithful) bishop are not true."
In one sense I agree, in another I rejoice in the departure of modernist cancer from the local church.