IMAGE: CNS photo/Victor Aleman, Angelus News
By J.D. Long-Garcia
LOS
ANGELES (CNS) — The answer to society’s dysfunctions can be found in one
person: Jesus Christ.
That
message is at the core of a new pastoral letter by Los Angeles Archbishop Jose
H. Gomez — “For Greater Things You Were Born” — released March 1, Ash
Wednesday.
The
letter is a 16,000-word meditation on human nature, which the archbishop
maintains can only be understood in relation to God.
“Jesus
Christ alone knows who we are and he is the one teacher of life,” he writes.
“He alone shows us the way to live in order to lead a truly human life.”
The
elections revealed rifts in American society. The archbishop notes in
particular “the persistence of racist thinking,” class divisions, “cruel
indifference to the sufferings of immigrants” and efforts to “normalize”
abortion and euthanasia.
“In
place of a coherent national spirit and ethos, we see in our society new
expressions of radical individualism and new forms of domination by the strong
against the weak,” he writes.
The
“divisions and dysfunctions” in American society expose unanswered questions
about the meaning of life, Archbishop Gomez writes. By forgetting God, society
has lost a common foundation on which to build, he says.
“So
many of our neighbors seem to be not really living but only existing,” the
archbishop writes. But, recalling that human beings are created in the image of
God, he writes “God made us for greater things!”
The
title of the pastoral letter is from Mother Maria Luisa Josefa, who founded the
Carmelite Sisters of the Most Sacred Heart of Los Angeles. As the archbishop
mentioned in his first homily in Los Angeles, she would “tell everyone: ‘For
greater things you were born!'”
Mother
Maria Luisa Josefa is a candidate for sainthood. She has been given the title “venerable,”
the official recognition by the Vatican Congregation for Saints’ Causes of a
sainthood candidate’s heroic virtues.
Archbishop
Gomez’s letter — broken into 40 sections — covers the vast implications of a
Christian anthropology: the duty to be stewards of creation, love for others as
brothers and sisters, the beauty of marriage and the call to saintly life in
imitation of Christ. The archbishop also outlines a “plan of life,” including
reading the Gospels, going to Mass and confession and carrying out acts of
service.
The
letter relies heavily on Scripture, the Catechism of the Catholic Church, and
the teachings of the saints and sainthood candidates, like St. Junipero Serra,
Blessed Oscar Romero and Dorothy Day, who was co-founder of the Catholic Worker
Movement.
Day
has been named a servant of God by the church and the diocesan phase of her
canonization cause has been underway in the Archdiocese of New York since 2000.
Archbishop
Gomez also quotes Pope Francis, Pope Benedict XVI and St. John Paul II.
“We
are made out of love, a thing of beauty in God’s eyes and the glory of his
creation,” the archbishop writes. “We are made to share in his divine nature as
his beloved children. We are made to be holy, to be saints!”
The
entire letter is available online at www.archbishopgomez.org/planoflove and
hard copies are available at no cost at www.archla.org/planoflove.
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Long-Garcia is editor-in-chief of Angelus News, the
multimedia platform of the Archdiocese of Los Angeles.
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