 A Diverse Church |
|
 |

 |
Reliquary and Tabernacle, ca. 1750
From the American Southwest or Mexico.
The Catholic University of America
James A. Magner Museum Collection
|
|
Latino Americans
Catholicism's deepest roots in what became the United States lie in the Southwest among
the Latino or Hispanic Americans who settled that region. The Church was first established
there as far back as the sixteenth century, but priests were always scarce in an area so
vast and so far from the centers of Spain's American empire or later the Republic of
Mexico. Vibrant lay Catholic traditions thus emerged to serve the spiritual needs of the
people on this Spanish frontier. Male confraternities
flourished in much of New Mexico. These associations helped organize richly elaborate
commemorations of Christ's passion during Holy Week and feast day celebrations during
other times of the year. In the region around Tucson, in Arizona, the feasts of San Isidro
and San Juan (St. John the Baptist) were especially important. Women played a critical
role in community religious life as well, particularly during the month of May, the month
of Mary, when they organized and participated in prayer meetings honoring the Virgin
Mother.
After the United States took over much of the southwest following the war with Mexico, the
Vatican carved up these new parts of the United States into new dioceses: Galveston, the
first diocese in Texas in 1847; and the largest Santa Fe, New Mexico in 1853 (made an
archdiocese in 1875). Despite the new diocesan structure, a shortage of priests continued
to plague the region. The early bishops of Santa Fe, John B. Lamy and John B. Salpointe,
of French origin themselves, and the new bishops in Texas brought in priests from all over
Europe and the eastern United States to meet their needs. These clerical newcomers labored
tirelessly in their new and difficult work. Bishop, later Archbishop, Lamy was especially
heroic in travelling long distances over the rugged terrain of New Mexico to minister to
his far flung flock. Yet tensions sometimes arose between these priests and the Latino
laity, who wished to preserve the time-honored societies and devotions that they had
maintained for centuries.
Home | Previous | Next |
|