Archbishop Gomez: Church needs to 'return to Guadalupe'

Our Lady of Guadalupe Credit Sacred Heart Cathedral Knoxville via Flickr CC BY NC 20 CNA 10 8 15 Our Lady of Guadalupe. | Sacred Heart Cathedral Knoxville via Flickr (CC BY-NC 2.0).

The Archbishop of Los Angeles wrote this week that Our Lady of Guadalupe, a messenger of reform and renewal, has important lessons for contemporary Catholics.

"In the Church today we face new challenges to our fidelity to Jesus Christ, both personally and institutionally," wrote Archbishop Jose Gomez in a Dec. 10 column in Angelus.
 
"In this moment, I am more and more convinced that we need to 'return to Guadalupe,' to the original vision, the original path that Christ wanted for us in this country and throughout our continent. Our Lady of Guadalupe is the messenger who is sent to lead us to renewal and reform in our time."

The archbishop noted that Our Lady of Guadalupe appeared "at a time of confusion and discord - and a time of immense cruelty and suffering, corruption, and infidelity."

She appeared in 1531 to St. Juan Diego, a poor indigenous man, on a hill near what is now Mexico City. She identified herself as the Mother of the True God.

She instructed Juan Diego to have the local bishop build a church on the site, and famously left an image of herself imprinted miraculously on his tilma, a cactus-cloth tunic. The image has survived to this day. Several million pilgrims journey each year to see that tilma.

Gomez wrote that the apparition occurred less than two decades after the start of the Protestant Reformation, at a time when the Church in Europe was "confronting decadence and corruption and the need for renewal and reformation."

There were debates among theologians in the so-called Old World about whether indigenous peoples in the Americas were even people with souls, the archbishop wrote.

At the same time, the economy of the New World was being developed on the backs of slaves, and "the greed and ambition of Spanish colonizers led to unspeakable horrors" and the destruction of many native peoples and their ways of life.

Gomez noted that Mary appeared as a "mestizo," a brown-skinned mixture of European and indigenous peoples, and spoke to Juan Diego in his own indigenous language.

"She reminds us that beyond the color of our skin or the countries where we come from, we are all brothers and sisters," the Archbishop reflected.

"We are - every one of us, without exception - children of one heavenly Father and we have the Mother of God as our mother...a profound icon of the unity of humanity and the Church's mission to create one family of God out of all the world's nations and races, peoples, and languages."

Today, as in Juan Diego's time, there are new forms of inhumanity and cruelty, Gomez wrote. "Selfishness and greed" lead to injustices like abortion and the persecution of religious minorities.

The archbishop recalled the words Mary spoke to Juan Diego: "Do not let your heart be disturbed. Do not fear. ... Am I, your Mother, not here? Are you not under my shadow and protection? Are you not in the folds of my arms? What more do you need?"

In her role as our mother, Mary "guides us along the pathways that lead us to her Son," Gomez wrote.

"In leading the mission to the Americas, Our Lady of Guadalupe was showing us the vision of a way forward - to a new humanity, a new Church, a new world."

"Authentic reform and renewal are always based on a return to the origins - to the purity of first beginnings. That is what distinguishes reform and renewal from revolution, which always seeks to destroy the old in order to build the new."

"In these troubling times, we need to go always forward with joy and confidence. May we lay our fears and hopes at the feet of the Virgin. And may we contemplate these times we are living in under the gaze of her loving eyes," Gomez concluded.

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The Feast of Our Lady of Guadalupe is celebrated on Wednesday, Dec. 12.

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