By Norma Montenegro Flynn
GRAPEVINE,
Texas (CNS) — Hispanic Catholic leaders are living an important moment in the
history of the Catholic church in the U.S. and are called to rise and continue
the work of building the church, Los Angeles Archbishop Jose H. Gomez said
Sept. 23.
He
made the comments during the closing Mass of the Fifth National Encuentro in
Grapevine.
“The
Encuentro has made us see our missionary reality and responsibility as Hispanic
Catholics in the United States,” he said. “But most important, the Encuentro
has made us reflect on the personal ‘encounter’ with Jesus Christ.”
Archbishop
Gomez, who is vice president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, was
the homilist. The USCCB’s president, Cardinal Daniel DiNardo of
Galveston-Houston, was the main celebrant of the Mass. Concelebrants were
Archbishop Christophe Pierre, apostolic nuncio to the United States; Bishop
Michael F. Olson of Fort Worth, the hosting diocese; and Archbishop Gustavo
Garcia-Siller of San Antonio.
Archbishop
Gomez reminded the faithful that they’re missionary disciples on a journey, just
like those who walked with Jesus in Galilee and Jerusalem.
The
journey eventually reached Latin America and was sealed with God’s love in the
apparition of Our Lady of Guadalupe to St. Juan Diego, who entrusted him with
the mission of building the church in the Americas.
“Jesus
entrusted the mission of his church in the New World to a layperson. Not to a
priest or a bishop. Nor to a member of a religious order,” Archbishop Gomez
said. “You are the children of Our Lady of Guadalupe in our present times; you
are the spiritual heirs of Juan Diego.
“The
mission that was entrusted to him, is now entrusted to you.”
The
archbishop invited participants to answer the call to be leaders by striving to
be holy and to work united with their bishops.
“I
believe that this moment in the church — is the hour of the laity. It is the
time for saints,” Archbishop Gomez continued. “He is calling the lay faithful
to work together with the bishops to renew and rebuild his church. Not only in
this country, but throughout the continents of the Americas.”
He
also encouraged them to seek discernment as soon-to-be-canonized Blessed Oscar
Romero did, by asking what God’s will for him was.
“He
is asking you to take your place in the history of salvation, and to do your
part for the mission of his church,” Archbishop Gomez concluded.
About
3,200 diocesan delegates, bishops and representatives from ecclesial movements
and Catholic organizations participated in four days of dialogue and
consultation to discern the priority issues for Hispanic ministry currently and
for years to come.
The
V Encuentro, as it also is known, surpassed its goal of identifying and preparing
25,000 new ministry leaders.
The
three most pressing priorities identified focus on developing faith formation
opportunities, strengthening families, and developing more paid positions for
Hispanic youth and young adult ministries. Another important outcome of the Encuentro
is the goal to develop initiatives that promote and create new pathways of
leadership for young adults.
“The
experience of the Encuentro surpassed all my expectations,” said Guzman
Carriquiry Lecour, the Vatican’s secretary of the Pontifical Commission for
Latin America, who encouraged attendees to continue being committed to their
ministries and expand their leadership and outreach.
Father
Raul Valencia is ready to put things into practice at his parish in Tucson,
Arizona.
“We
have had an encounter with ourselves, with Christ, and with many opportunities
and hope, to strengthen the pastoral ‘hispana,'” he told Catholic News Service.
“What
I bring to my diocese is this drive, this happiness and emotion that we carry
after this gathering and looking at so many people involved in the same
mission,” said Ricardo Luzondo from the Archdiocese of San Antonio.
The
V Encuentro is a multiyear process of missionary work, consultation, leadership
development and community building. The last Encuentro took place in 2006.
Hispanics
represent about 40 percent of U.S. Catholics and nearly 60 percent of
millennial Catholics, according to research from the Center for Applied
Research in the Apostolate.
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