Bishop Cantú’s Statement on the recent shootings

In the wake of the series of shootings in our country, especially those in California, and in our neighboring community of Half Moon Bay, we extend our prayers to all the grieving families, work colleagues of the victims, and all those affected by these tragedies. We pray for healing to all those who are injured, and comfort to those who mourn.

As we Catholics seek the face of Jesus the healer and consoler. Let us remember that we are called to offer loving presence and support to one another in a real and concrete way. Let us build a community that provides support, especially to those who struggle with mental health, as we come together urging our leaders to work towards finding common-sense solutions to the scourge of gun violence. We also call for dignified treatment and living conditions for our brothers and sisters who work on farms to provide the food we eat.

Bishop Cantu’s Statement on Pope Benedict XVI passing.

“Today we grieve the loss of Pope Benedict XVI.  One of the great theologians of the past two centuries, he left his mark on the Church.  His writings, teachings, and homilies will remain a treasure to the Church.  Yet it was his gentle soul that touched so many who were blessed to know him.  He was humble, reserved, and yet inviting.

He appointed me to serve as a bishop in 2008, so I feel a personal connection to and fondness for the late pontiff.  My personal encounters with him were with that of kind, wise, and encouraging pastor.

May he rest in peace.”

+Oscar Cantu

Bishop Oscar Cantú’s Christmas Message- Welcoming Jesus more deeply into our lives

 

Download Bishop Cantú’s Christmas Message   English  | Spanish  |  Vietnamese

Brothers and Sisters in Christ,

As we celebrate the mystery of the Incarnation in this Christmas season, the following Scripture passage comes to mind: “While they were [in Bethlehem], the time came for [Mary] to have her child, and she gave birth to her firstborn son. She wrapped him in swaddling clothes and laid him in a manger, because there was no room for them in the inn” (Lk 2:6-7).

Mary placed the Christ-child in the manger, the feeding trough for the animals, as the impoverished Mary and Joseph could not find an adequate place to stay in Bethlehem.  Yet the symbolism of the place of nourishment, the manger, is not lost on St. Luke: Mary’s “yes” provides sustenance to a world hungry for the presence of the divine.  This image would be one of the titles of the child: Emmanuel, God-with-us.  In the darkness and cold of the night, Mary offered Jesus as nourishment for the world, a world thirsting for justice and peace, for contact with the divine, for consolation, truth, and light.

Jesus later refers to himself as “the Bread come down from heaven,” and he eventually proclaims at the Last Supper, “This is my body….  Take and eat.”  It is clear that God willed to remain with his people as the “Bread of life” (Jn. 6:35) to nourish us in our sometimes arduous journey through life.  And it all began in Bethlehem, a town that literally means “house of bread,” as the Virgin places the Christ-child in the manger.

Over the next three years, the Catholic Church in the United States will be engaged in a Eucharistic Revival.  This effort at the local, regional, and national levels focuses on helping Catholics understand more clearly the mystery of the Eucharist, to participate more consciously and devoutly in the worship and celebration of the Eucharistic sacrament, and to love more deeply Christ present in the sacramental mystery.  Jesus indeed wishes to nourish us spiritually in our journey through life as we embark in faith on a journey, sowing seeds of hope with love along the way to the fullness of the kingdom of God.  This Christmas, may we acknowledge our spiritual hunger as Mary, our mother, offers us her Son as “bread for the journey” and accept Him more deeply into our lives.

Bishop Oscar Cantú

Rev. Paul-Cuong Phan’s Obituary

Fr. Paul-Cuong Phan died on December 7, 2022, at O’Connor Hospital in San Jose, where he was a chaplain since 2021.  He is survived by his mother and five siblings.

His hospital ministry at O’Connor and Valley Medical Center was brief, but he was known as a chaplain with a compassionate heart and cheerful spirit.  Not only patients, but doctors and nurses also noticed his presence and ministry.

He was the fourth of six children of Ted Phan and Huong Nguyen.  He was born on January 12, 1962 near Saigon, Vietnam.  With the fall of the city in April 1975, he and his family escaped out to sea and was rescued by the U.S. Navy. They were among the first 125,000 Vietnamese refugees that settled in America. The family spent two years in Tennessee then moved to San Jose.

After graduating from Independence High in 1980, he worked for nine years in high tech companies while attending some colleges. Then he became a seminarian for the Diocese of San Jose in 1990 and was ordained a priest on June 12, 1999.  He was the last person being ordained a priest by our founding Bishop Pierre DuMaine.

In 23 years of priestly ministry, Fr. Paul-Cuong was assigned to eight different parishes in the diocese: St. Joseph of Cupertino, St. Patrick’s Proto-Cathedral, Christ the King, St. Victor, St. Athanasius, St. Maria Goretti, St. Lawrence the Martyr, St. Elizabeth, and a year in hospital ministry at O’Connor and Valley Medical Center.

From 2019 to 2022, he was Vicar for Vietnamese Ministry in our diocese.  In that role, he quickly worked with a team of clergy, religious and lay people to provide the virtual Vietnamese Mass within a week when the Shelter in Place started. The broadcast continues to these days on VieToday TV through KTSF 26.5 and Comcast 174.

Fr. Paul-Cuong was also a chaplain or spiritual guide to some Vietnamese organizations: Eucharistic Youth Movement, Cursillo, especially he was the national chaplain to the Federation of the Sacred Heart League – USA, an organization for Vietnamese Catholic men.

In his autobiography, he wrote “I have found true happiness in living my priesthood.”  Before his ordination to the priesthood, he said, “When I was a little boy, my mom told me to pray for more vocations every time a priest raised up the (consecrated bread and wine).  I have done that ever since.”  He wanted to become a priest in order to “achieve my highest ideal: living according to Jesus’ model; being His disciple” and to “devote my whole life to doing what I love to do: caring for God’s people,” he wrote in The Valley Catholic, May 18, 1999.

Our Lady of Guadalupe Mass Schedule

 

-CAMPBELL-

Saint Lucy Parish
2350 Winchester Blvd., Campbell

December 11
1 pm – Parish Activity
6:30 pm – Aztec Dance Performance
7 pm – Reenactment play
8 pm Rosary
9 pm Adoration
11:59 pm Mañanitas with Mariachi Band
December 12
8 am – Parish Activity
6:30 pm – Aztec Dance Performance
7 pm – Reenactment play
10 pm Mañanitas with Mariachi Band

-CUPERTINO-

Saint Joseph of Cupertino Parish
10110 North DeAnza Blvd., Cupertino

December 9, 7:00 pm Mass

-GILROY-

Saint Mary Parish
11 First St., Gilroy

December 3-11 6 PM Rosary Novena
December 11
11:30 AM Procession (meet at Eigleberry & 10th Street)
1 PM Misa con Mariachi
2-5 PM Convivio
9 PM Velada Guadalupana
10 PM Rosario
11 PM Misa del gallo
December 12
12:00 AM Serenata con Mariachi
1 AM Mananitas con Banda
2 AM Microfono abierto para cantarle a la Virgen
4 AM Mananitas con Mariachi
5 AM Misa con Mariachi
12 PM Misa con Mariachi
7 PM Misa con Mariachi

-MILPITAS-

Saint Elizabeth Parish
17400 Peak Ave, Morgan Hill

December 11
6 pm Holy Rosary
7 pm Danza Saint Elizabeth
8 pm The Apparitions of Our Lady of Guadalupe
9 pm Las Mañanitas with Mariachi

December 12
7 pm Mass with Mariachi

-MOUNTAIN VIEW-

Saint Joseph Parish
582 Hope St., Mountain View

December 11 
9:00pm Apariciones de la Virgen
10pm Danza de Chinelos
11pm Music
December12
12am – 4am Rosario
4am Mananitas a la Virgen
5am Holy Mass

-MORGAN HILL-

Saint Catherine of Alexandria Parish
17400 Peak Ave, Morgan Hill

December 1-10, 6 pm Novena
December 9
6 pm Rosary with flower offerings
7 pm Representation of the apparitions of Our Lady to Juan Diego
December 11
10:30 am Procession
12:15 pm Holy Mass, entertainment after mass
8-10 pm Prayer and Worship
December 12
5 am Mañanitas with mariachi
6 am Holy Mass, Gathering with sweet bread and chocolate after

-SAN JOSE-

Christ the King Parish
5284 Monterey Rd., San Jose

December 12
5 AM Mañanitas
6 AM Spanish Mass
6 PM Programa de catecismo para la Virgen de Gaudalupe
7:30 PM Spanish Mass

Holy Family Parish
2040 Nassau Dr.San Jose

December 12
5 AM Mass with Mariachi

Most Holy Trinity Parish
4848 Pearl Ave, San Jose

December 12
5 am Mañanitas
5:30 am Misa

Our Lady of Guadalupe
2020 East San Antonio St, San Jose

December 11
12 am Early Bird Mass (Spanish)
December 12
5 am (Spanish)
8 am (Spanish)
12 pm (Bilingual)
5 pm (English)
7 pm (Spanish)
9 pm (Spanish)

Our Lady of Refuge
2165 Lucretia Avenue, San Jose

December 11
11:00 PM Mañanitas – Spanish
12 am Misa
December 12
4 am Mañanitas con Mariachi
5 am Misa
6 pm Apariciones
7 pm Misa

Saint Francis of Assisi Parish
5111 San Felipe Rd, San Jose

December 12
8:30 AM English Mass
7:00 PM Spanish Mass with Mariachi

Saint John Vianney Parish
4600 Hyland Ave, San Jose

December 12
5 AM English Mass
6 AM Misa
7:00 PM Misa

Saint Julie Billiart Parish
6410 Cottle Rd., San Jose

December 11
2 pm Novena
4:30 pm Mañanitas

December 12
5 am Mass

-SANTA CLARA-

Saint Lawrence the Martyr Parish
1971 Saint Lawrence Dr.Santa Clara

December 12
4:45 AM Mañanitas
5:00 AM Holy Mass