03.08.2020 Views

Angelus News | July 31-August 7, 2020 | Vol. 5 No. 21

The eight deacons being ordained priests Aug. 8 for the Archdiocese of Los Angeles strike a pose in front of the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels. Starting on Page 10, the men of St. John’s Seminary’s “Pandemic Class of 2020” reflect on where God called them from and what they’re looking forward to the most.

The eight deacons being ordained priests Aug. 8 for the Archdiocese of Los Angeles strike a pose in front of the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels. Starting on Page 10, the men of St. John’s Seminary’s “Pandemic Class of 2020” reflect on where God called them from and what they’re looking forward to the most.

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

Create successful ePaper yourself

Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.

signal the pope’s approach, will now<br />

be used in parish processions; and the<br />

insignia of the Papal Cross Keys will<br />

appear in banners, signs, and over the<br />

mission’s doors.<br />

The faithful will also now be able to<br />

obtain a plenary indulgence, which<br />

removes the temporal punishment due<br />

to sins, on predetermined “basilican<br />

feast days.”<br />

But for Father Elewaut, who likes to<br />

teasingly remind his fellow priests that<br />

he is St. Junípero’s 30th successor as<br />

pastor of San Buenaventura, the honor<br />

is less about pomp and pageantry and<br />

more about motivating his parishioners<br />

to live and share their faith in a<br />

more authentic way.<br />

“This is going to put a greater responsibility<br />

on the parish leadership and<br />

the people of the parish to discover<br />

new ways of evangelization in the<br />

spirit of St. Junípero Serra and St.<br />

Bonaventure,” he said.<br />

WHAT'S NEXT?<br />

The change in status comes at a difficult<br />

time for the mission on multiple<br />

fronts.<br />

Across the state, statues of St. Junípero<br />

are falling in the wake of angry<br />

protests that wrongly blame the saint<br />

for the historic mistreatment of Native<br />

Americans. Last month, statues to<br />

the missionary were toppled in San<br />

Francisco and in Los Angeles, and the<br />

weekend before the fire, a long-standing<br />

St. Junípero statue outside the<br />

state capitol building in Sacramento<br />

was felled.<br />

On the day the new basilica designation<br />

was to be announced, the<br />

Ventura City Council voted to remove<br />

a St. Junípero statue from in front of<br />

City Hall. And the weekend before<br />

the announcement, a mysterious<br />

overnight fire ravaged the church of<br />

another mission in the Archdiocese of<br />

Los Angeles founded by St. Junípero,<br />

Mission San Gabriel Arcángel. While<br />

the cause of the blaze is still under<br />

investigation, many see its timing —<br />

on the same weekend that saw several<br />

acts of anti-Catholic vandalism around<br />

the country — as suspicious.<br />

Two days prior to the announcement,<br />

California’s governor ordered houses<br />

of worship to cease indoor gatherings<br />

<strong>July</strong> <strong>31</strong>-<strong>August</strong> 7, <strong>2020</strong> • ANGELUS • 23<br />

A Mass of commemoration of the canonization<br />

of St. Junípero Serra was celebrated by<br />

Archbishop José H. Gomez at Mission San<br />

Buenaventura <strong>No</strong>v. <strong>21</strong>, 2015.<br />

VICTOR ALEMÁN<br />

for the foreseeable future as part of a<br />

statewide reclosure amid a spike in<br />

coronavirus infections.<br />

The governor’s announcement left<br />

Father Elewaut and parish staff scrambling<br />

to transform the mission’s garden<br />

into a liturgical space to celebrate the<br />

first Mass at the newly named basilica.<br />

Once the pandemic passes, Father<br />

Elewaut looks forward to hosting a<br />

larger, more festive celebration to<br />

mark the milestone. For now, he’s<br />

asking his saintly predecessor to help<br />

him keep things in perspective.<br />

“The famous words of St. Junípero<br />

Serra were ‘always forward, never<br />

back,’ ” he said on the night before<br />

the celebration Mass. “All of these<br />

missions have had destructive things<br />

happen at one time or another, whether<br />

it’s earthquakes, or fires, or even<br />

pandemics, and yet they keep enduring<br />

and keep going forward — that’s<br />

what we do.” <br />

Pablo Kay is the editor-in-chief of<br />

<strong>Angelus</strong>.<br />

¿Qué Legado dejará Usted?<br />

Es fácil incluír a su Parroquia,<br />

Escuela o Ministerio en su Testamento.<br />

Para dejar un legado perdurable,<br />

llámenos hoy.<br />

La oficina de Planned Giving<br />

(<strong>21</strong>3) 637-7364<br />

PlannedGiving@la-archdiocese.org<br />

www.ADLALegacy.org<br />

1403<strong>2020</strong>_ADLA_<strong>Angelus</strong>__1-3pgH_4-10.indd 1<br />

3/29/20 11:38 AM

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!