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Angelus News | March 15, 2019 | Vol. 4 No. 10

Bishop-elect Alex Aclan faces the cameras at a March 5 news conference at the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels, where he was introduced as the newest auxiliary bishop for the Archdiocese of Los Angeles. On page 10, “Father Alex” opens up about his unusual path to the priesthood and reflects on how his Filipino roots prepared him for this latest chapter in his ministry. On page 14, Bishop Joseph V. Brennan sits down with Angelus editor Pablo Kay as he looks forward to his latest assignment as the new bishop of the Diocese of Fresno.

Bishop-elect Alex Aclan faces the cameras at a March 5 news conference at the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels, where he was introduced as the newest auxiliary bishop for the Archdiocese of Los Angeles. On page 10, “Father Alex” opens up about his unusual path to the priesthood and reflects on how his Filipino roots prepared him for this latest chapter in his ministry. On page 14, Bishop Joseph V. Brennan sits down with Angelus editor Pablo Kay as he looks forward to his latest assignment as the new bishop of the Diocese of Fresno.

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Msgr. Alex Aclan with a cancer patient undergoing chemotherapy after administering the anointing<br />

of the sick.<br />

“One of the things he would tell<br />

me from time to time is, ‘Put things<br />

in the context of eternity,’ ” recalled<br />

Jaranilla, pastor of Nativity Church in<br />

El Monte.<br />

Looking back at 25 years of priesthood,<br />

the bishop-elect said he is<br />

still following the example that<br />

his parents set while he was growing<br />

up.<br />

“The best part of being a priest is the<br />

ability to serve just like I saw my mom<br />

and dad doing growing up,” shared<br />

Aclan. “The service is key for me, and<br />

that’s what’s most enjoyable, because<br />

you are able to alleviate people’s conditions,<br />

and get people closer to God.”<br />

Aclan finds ministering to the sick to<br />

be especially rewarding. But he is also<br />

aware that in an era of secularization<br />

and crisis within the Church, his mission<br />

as bishop must also include never<br />

giving up on those who have fallen<br />

away from the faith.<br />

“It’s really hard,” he replied when<br />

asked how the Church can call back<br />

the “lost sheep.”<br />

“First of all, what I’ve discovered<br />

is that it’s important to listen to the<br />

people,” he said. “And based on what<br />

you hear, proceed with whatever it is<br />

you think can help them. If they’ve<br />

lost faith, we need to help them regain<br />

what was lost.”<br />

Starting during his time at St. Finbar<br />

Church, Aclan saw the importance of<br />

helping immigrants preserve the cultural<br />

Catholic identity they brought<br />

with them. So, he went to work helping<br />

local Filipino Catholics organize<br />

into officially recognized groups in<br />

parishes.<br />

These groups “help keep the devotional<br />

practices of the people coming<br />

from various parts of the world, and<br />

keep the faith of those people who are<br />

not originally from here strong and<br />

flowing,” he explained, adding, “Their<br />

expression of faith in the archdiocese<br />

Msgr. Alex Aclan and Archbishop José H. Gomez<br />

at Aclan’s formal elevation to the rank of “Prelate<br />

of Honor,” or monsignor, on Sept. 3, 2017.<br />

ALEX ACLAN VICTOR ALEMÁN<br />

is very strong, it’s very palpable. As a<br />

priest, you can sense it, you can feel<br />

it.”<br />

Filipino Catholics in Los Angeles got<br />

a boost when Saint Pope John Paul<br />

II named Father Oscar Solis as an<br />

auxiliary bishop in 2003, making him<br />

the first Filipino-American bishop in<br />

the U.S.<br />

At the time, Aclan saw up close what<br />

a shot in the arm the appointment<br />

gave to the local community.<br />

“Bishop Solis was the glue that<br />

bound us Filipino priests together<br />

in the archdiocese,” said the bishop-elect.<br />

“And the Filipino community<br />

here in the archdiocese found<br />

greater unity here thanks to him. He<br />

was a unifying force for us.”<br />

<strong>No</strong>w, Aclan will follow Solis as the<br />

second Filipino-born Catholic bishop<br />

in the United States.<br />

And LA Archbishop José H. Gomez<br />

is looking to Aclan to carry on the<br />

mission to Filipino Catholics in the<br />

archdiocese.<br />

Calling him a “proud son of our<br />

vibrant Filipino community,” Archbishop<br />

Gomez said in a <strong>March</strong> 5<br />

statement, “Bishop-elect Aclan is a<br />

man of prayer and he has a true heart<br />

for Jesus — and a deep concern for<br />

the people he is called to serve. And<br />

I know he will be a voice for Filipino<br />

Catholics, who are a beautiful sign of<br />

growth and renewal in our Church<br />

here in Los Angeles and throughout<br />

the country.”<br />

Because he’s only seen bishops do<br />

their “work” at a distance up until<br />

now, Aclan expects he’ll have a lot<br />

to learn, especially in an archdiocese<br />

with four other active auxiliary bishops<br />

assisting Archbishop Gomez.<br />

“I don’t know what’s going to happen,<br />

but it’s an opportunity to learn<br />

again. And I’m eager to learn,” said<br />

Aclan with a smile.<br />

And he knows he won’t be alone.<br />

“I know for a fact that there’s a lot of<br />

people praying for me,” said Aclan,<br />

who said he is assured of the constant<br />

prayers of at least two prayer groups,<br />

and, most importantly, “my mother<br />

and father in heaven.”<br />

“With that, I know that whatever<br />

challenges are sent my way, with<br />

God’s grace, I should be able to handle<br />

them.” <br />

<strong>March</strong> <strong>15</strong>, <strong>2019</strong> • ANGELUS • 13

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