The Valley Catholic September 25, 2018 | Page 13

tvc.dsj.org | September 25, 2018 WELCOME Continued from page 12 There has been a threat right now of using nuclear weapons. If you’re going to threaten, then that’s consid- ered an act of will and intent to use those weapons. So the position of t he nuclear threat cannot be held morally anymore. It was supported back in the 80s during the Cold War as a step towards denuclearization, but not as a permanent policy. So that’s what stirred up a lot of interest in the issue of non-proliferation. I was invited to speak to several groups. There was the Ploughshare group that gathers nationally and often in New Mexico, where a lot of the research is done on nuclear energy and nuclear weapons. So I spoke to them there and I was invited to the U.N. in New York and then to an international gathering in London. You know it was interesting be- cause previously I thought the whole nuclear issue was resolved in the 80s with the end of the Cold War, but it’s not. We’ve got all of these nuclear weapons across the country that are dangerously stored. We’ve got the BISHOP CANTÚ 13 most weapons right behind Russia, and people don’t realize that. They thought since we hadn’t heard about nuclear weapons in decades, it must be resolved. That’s not the case. time and time again and is always fresh and pertinent to every age. LIZ: Your episcopal motto is “Zeal for the Lord’s house consumes me.” Can you speak to how you made this choice? BISHOP CANTÚ: There is Saint Peter. I feel close to him in the sense that he was always putting his foot in his mouth and I feel like I’m doing that all the time as well. And yet how he was transformed after the Resur- rection and I have seen that over and over in my life, which surprises me. I love the psalms in part because I love poetry. There’s something just beau- tifully succinct about those heartfelt prayers and the fact that most of those psalms are complaints. I often complain directly to God about life, about how life is just not fair. Why do innocent people suffer? Those are the mysteries of life that I have yet to understand. And it’s always in a concert in the context of faith. At the end of each Psalm there is an act of faith. Even though I may not understand it, I trust it. BISHOP CANTÚ: It kind of has a double meaning. When you think about what God’s house is, you think about the afterlife. There is this burning desire to be with God in perfect, peace- ful, joy. But there’s also His house right here on earth. When Pope Francis went to Mexico City, he spoke about building a home of dignity of a human person. I’ve been really taken by the profound message of Our Lady of Guadalupe. It’s a mes- sage of human dignity and of ecclesiol- ogy, that she sent Juan Diego to build a church and made him a protagonist as a lay person with little-to-no status. That is what the Gospel is about, that every one of us has the dignity to be when we are baptized and that we have a duty to evangelize. LIZ: Do you have a favorite Scripture that you often go back or a favorite apostle? Photo courtesy of the Diocese of Las Cruces, New Mexico. Our Lady of Guadalupe, 500 years ago, was the first one to give us an elo- quent example of the new evangeliza- tion and what the Spaniards were not able to do very effectively. She came in her maternal wisdom and her kindness and her utter respect for the dignity of the indigenous, spoke to him (Juan Diego) in his own language, appeared to him in his own culture using the very hieroglyphics that the indigenous understood in the image that told the entire story of Christ, who brings them light and brings dignity. That’s an im- age and a story that comes back to me Continued on page 14 Welcome Coadjutor Bishop Oscar Cantú. We pray our Lord will bless your ministry to the people of the Diocese of San José.