‘I just wanted to be a priest’: Archbishop Gomez elected president of USCCB

By JD Flynn

Cardinal Daniel N. DiNardo of Galveston-Houston, president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, right, applauds as Archbishop Jose H. Gomez of Los Angeles acknowledges the applause after being named the new president during the fall general assembly of the USCCB in Baltimore Nov. 12, 2019. (CNS photo/Bob Roller)

Washington D.C., Nov 12, 2019 / 07:25 am (CNA).- When he became a priest four decades ago, Archbishop Jose Gomez did not expect that he would one day lead the largest archdiocese in the U.S., or the country’s bishops’ conference.

“I just wanted to be a priest,” Gomez told CNA with a laugh, speaking about his election.

“Somehow God wanted me to do what I am doing, and I’m just counting on the grace of God to be able to be faithful to what God is asking me to do.”

“And also on intercession of Our Lady of Guadalupe,” he added, explaining that he has entrusted all of his ministry as a bishop to the prayers of the Blessed Virgin Mary.

Gomez, 67, was elected Nov. 12 as president of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops. The archbishop, born in Monterey, Mexico, and ordained a priest in Spain, is the first Latino to lead the bishops’ conference. He is also the first immigrant to head the conference.

His election is historic, but it was no surprise. Gomez became vice president of the conference, a central organizing body of almost 200 Catholic bishops with more than 300 employees, in 2016. The vice president is traditionally elected to the top job, so Gomez knew his election was likely.

But, he told CNA, the real surprise was becoming vice president three years ago.

“I was not expecting to be the president. Some people put my name forward for election as vice president [in 2016].”

“To my surprise I was elected vice president, then once you are the vice president, it is more likely that they elect you president. The whole process was a surprise to me, but I see that God is asking me to do it, and I just pray that with the grace of God I can do a good job.”

Gomez laughed, noting that he had never expected to become a Denver auxiliary bishop in in 2001, the Archbishop of San Antonio in 2004, or in 2010 head of the Los Angeles archdiocese, the largest local Church in the country.

The archbishop told CNA that his goal is to “try to live what I preach, and then, also, my ministry to the people — that’s the most important thing.”

His ministry, he said, includes serving “my brother bishops, priests, deacons, and also the lay faithful. Because really my vocation started with ministry to lay faithful.”

Gomez acknowledged that he spends a great deal of time on administrative responsibilities, and will have more of them as his term as president begins. But he said that even amid those responsibilities, and even while exercising them, he has time to build the pastoral relationships he finds so fulfilling.

“The fact that I am the Archbishop of Los Angeles gives me a beautiful opportunity to be with the people, because there are so many people active in the Church in Los Angeles. And also in the conference of bishops, really what’s its all about it serving the people, so I hope that I can have the opportunity to be with people, in events where people are, and that I can continue to be a pastor which is, I believe, my vocation.”

Gomez is the first bishop elected to lead the conference to be associated with Opus Dei, a Church group, founded in Spain and supported by Pope St. John Paul, that focuses on finding holiness in everyday life, and on the call to holiness of lay Catholics. The archbishop became affiliated with Opus Dei as a college student, and was a priest in the organization, formally called a personal prelature.

The archbishop’s vision of the Church, focused on collaboration and friendship between laity and clerics, and on the idea that everyone should be a saint, is informed by his experience in Opus Dei.

“The spirituality of Opus Dei,” he told CNA, “basically is to strive for holiness— personal sanctification — and ministry. Sharing our faith with everybody else.”

“Most of the members of Opus Dei are lay faithful living their lives and working and trying to share the faith and to be holy.”

“Everybody, starting with the pope and going through every single bishop, and priest, and deacon, we all are called to strive for holiness, with the universal call to holiness, provided to us by the Second Vatican Council, and also, as Pope Francis is insisting that we should be missionary disciples, so that means sharing our faith with everybody else,” he added.

Gomez told CNA that groups like Opus Dei, along with other Church movements like the NeoCatechumenal Way and Communion and Liberation that have gained popularity in recent decades, emphasize “the universal call to holiness making a reality in the life of the Church.”

“All of those different institutions that are promoting the vocation of the lay faithful are a blessing for the Church.”

“By the work of the Holy Spirit there have been in the universal Church many groups of people working as a movement just to bring the beauty of the Chirstian life to the presence of the lay faithful all over the world,” Gomez added, comparing Church movements to the diversity of ministries and apostolates in parishes, which he called “the center of Christian life in the United States.”

The archbishop said that in his own ministry as a bishop, he looks to the example of Pope St. John Paul II, and, that among American bishops, he has been influenced and inspired by a number of bishops.

“Obviously in the United States I had the blessing of working together with Archbishop Chaput because I was his auxiliary bishop, so he has been a wonderful example to me. But I have been influenced by many other bishops: Archbishop Joseph Fiorenza, Archbishop Patrick Flores, and then Cardinal William Leveda, who just passed away, he was a good friend.”

Levada, Gomez told CNA, “asked me, when I was a young auxiliary bishop, to be a member of the doctrine committee of the USCCB. So that helped me to get to know the workings of the USCCB.”

Gomez takes the helm of the bishops’ conference in a difficult time.

The sexual scandals that emerged in June 2018, with revelations of abuse on the part of former cardinal Theodore McCarrick, have preoccupied bishops and lay Catholics.

The ecclesiastical landscape has shifted too; the pontificate of Pope Francis is different in emphasis, tone, and style from those of his predecessors. Some U.S. bishops have been accused of resistance to Francis, and bishops have responded to his leadership in different ways.

“The reality of the bishops in the United States is that we all are faithful to Pope Francis,” Gomez told CNA.

“I think we all are united. There is some perception that we are not. But the reality— what I see— is that we are united in our ministry and in our Church.”

“Every pope brings some different aspects in the life of the Church that he, by the grace of God, believes are important. And we, the bishops of the United States, are trying to be more aware of what those things are, and try to make it happen in our ministry.”

Gomez acknowledged that Pope Francis’ leadership is not similar to that of his predecessors.

“I think it takes time for people to really understand the spirituality of Pope Francis.”

“I think there are many, many aspects that are different. They are cultural and spiritual; it’s the first time in the history of the Church that there is a pope from Latin America. And some of us, who have that experience, know that it is different from the culture in Europe, or in the United States, or in Asia,” Gomez said.

“It’s also the first time there is a Jesuit who is the pope. So every religious community, and the diocesan priesthood, have different spiritualities.”

“So I think we the bishops of the United States, and I personally, are learning how to appreciate the different aspects of the spirituality and the culture of Pope Francis.”

Gomez added that “every bishop has his own spirituality, and his own ministry in the diocese, according to the needs of the people in the diocese,” he said, noting the difference in his experiences while serving in Denver, San Antonio, and Los Angeles.

“San Antonio was basically a community of two cultures: Hispanic culture and the Anglo-Saxon culture. Now in Los Angeles we have people from all over the world. So my ministry is different.”

“One thing Pope Francis insists a lot is to respect the cultures of people, different ways of worshipping. People in Peru, or in Mexico, or people from Vietnam have different ways of worshipping and living. So the Church in the United States is learning how to address the needs of people from around the world,” Gomez added.

As he begins his term as president, Gomez told CNA he hopes to help the Church “to really understand the cultural realities of the people in the United States. I think it’s important for all of us to be more open to that.”

“With immigrants, what I talk about is not assimilation, but integration: that they be integrated into the life of the United States and the life of the Church.”

As Gomez discussed the importance of understanding the diversity of cultures in the Church, he also emphasized the source of the Church’s unity.

“Obviously I have the same truths as we all have, the teachings of Jesus Christ, in the Catholic Church.”


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13 Comments

  1. The face of the modern American church, aligned with the left on issues of political order in the name of a distorted moral theology that ignores the order of charity and it’s analogues at the natural level, and hence irrelevant to American “conservatives.”

    Only the laity can restore credibility of the Church to their non-believing American neighbors, and they will have to do it by denouncing the pronouncements of the USCCB as not being representative of Tradition or authentic apostolic Christianity. The bishops will not learn, not even if Robert Sarah were to object to their liberalism and globalism.

    • In this case I would propose a possible, different view, that Archbishop Gomez is good news, for several reasons:

      While acknowledging the role of “culture”, up front he already replaces Pachamama with Our Lady of Guadalupe; he reveres St. John Paul II and is at one with the solid and sometimes slandered (by the usual bad actors) Archbishop Chaput, and with the late Cardinal Leveda; and Gomez has the distinction of not being awarded a red hat (Los Angeles!) but as still (therefore?) being elected–while other less qualified and possible candidates, who did get the red hat, were sidelined early and were not elected; and Gomez does place hope in the stirrings of the laity, as in Opus Dei of which he is a member.

      In these fractious times Gomez also finds a way to express an underlying loyalty to the papacy. In this, the Church universal has at least a reduced risk of sucking up to well-placed termite clerics who would brand the Church in the United States as a reactionary/bought-off/schismatic faction.

      The near-term question, for the next couple of years, is how many of the more routine bishops will also affirm their perennial and indivisible unity at the deep level of the magisterium and indwelling Holy Spirit?

      Near term and long term? Yes, how to morally influence the “political order” without blending into the wall paper. At least the USCCB did not fold toward Germania. Gomez is good news. And as vice president, Archbishop Vigneron is also good news.

      • Yes, he is a pro-life liberal. My guess,though, is that we’ll hear much more about immigration,, welfare, “climate change”, guns, capital punishment, etc. than abortion, especially when it comes to denunciations of the motives of those who don’t toe the line of the Democrat Party, er, I mean, the USCCB. Perhaps some can Californian can enlighten me on how vigorously Gomez has confronted some of his state’s most repugnant Catholic politicians who take promotion of the Culture of Death to new levels. I have not heard of him doing anything of the kind. On the other hand, I can’t tell you how many times I have read him pushing his leftist views on immigration.

      • [Yes, how to morally influence the “political order” without blending into the wall paper.]

        He has no solution except that given by Chaput an others — a religious form of civic nationalism that will do nothing to address identity politics and whether any part of it is legitimate or not. Moreover, requiring what he deems to be a Christian response (it is not) to identity politics from non-Christians is idiotic. Hence, irrelevant.

      • You make a valiant effort about hope and compromise, Peter, but nothing will ever appeal to fanatic schismatics and people whose minds have been poisoned by an endless parade of manipulative internet clickbait. Nothing on heaven or earth could pass their purity tests. To them, the only thing that matters is that the Church mirror the US ideologies they are force-fed daily – not transcend them. The low-key racism and bigotry displayed in some of the comments should clue you in to how hopeless they are.

        Still, we fight the good fight.(?)

        • Project much, Joe K? Bishops mired in the political muck do not transcend ideology, they wallow in it. It is obvious to anyone who has eyes to see that many of them are obsessed with politics. It is quite appropriate, then, to use political adjectives to describe men who often resemble politicians, ususally the cheapest kind. When they try to pass off their half-baked ideas as Church teaching, the laity have a right, and probably a duty, to reject it.

        • Joe K. you yourself are not free from ideology – your last comment is just a display of the SJW gospel that has displaced true Christianity.

  2. Gomez has been a failure. The Religious Education Congress in Anaheim is replete with doctrinal error and shameful liturgical abuse, and he has done nothing to improve it. It’s gotten worse under his tenure. Gays run the Archdiocese.

  3. Archbiishop Gomez stated: “One thing Pope Francis insists a lot is to respect the cultures of people, different ways of worshipping. People in Peru, or in Mexico, or people from Vietnam have different ways of worshipping and living. So the Church in the United States is learning how to address the needs of people from around the world,” Gomez added.”

    Respect other cultures…of course. But, why must the Roman Catholic Church in the U.S. always be forced to ‘change’ b/c people from other cultures emigrate here? Why must the traditional Mass be changed in the US just b/c someone w/o an English-speaking background shows up? I’ve attended Mass in countries throughout Europe and I’ve never assumed they be forced to ‘change’ the language of the liturgy just to satisfy me? Moreover, never have I experienced a ‘dumb-down’ Mass for young Catholics anywhere but in the U.S. I do observe the result is that young people flee the Church. Same with the happy-clappy sing-songey tunes that are forced upon us. Now English-speakers are the ones who are being chased away.

    I Abp. Gomez will be a good president of the US Bishop’s conference.

  4. Our Catholic faith is built on four main principles: One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church! Long ago when Mass was celebrated in Latin every body participated fully; young or old; educated or not educated; black or white we were all One! The oneness is what the devil has tempered with in disguise of respecting culture which has worsened the situation! Our lady of Fatima mentioned the division which was eminent in the Church, My mother never went to school but she could sing the Credo and Gloria as though she was an Italian! There was total holiness in the Church during Mass!We should therefore be careful when we are giving more respect to the culture rather than God who created the owner of the Cultures!Let’s reflect back and know that God of Abraham; Isaac and Jacob is the same God we are adoring and honoring today. I pray that the Holy Spirit may descend upon us and renew the face of the Earth.Amen
    Yours in Chris,
    Ursula Kiiza

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