‘Be bold for Jesus’: Los Angeles closes out the National Eucharistic Revival
Father Eric Augenstein, archdiocesan director of seminarians, places a host in a monstrance during a Mass for the feast of Corpus Christi at the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels in Los Angeles on June 22 during the National Eucharistic Pilgrimage. Father Augenstein served as a master of ceremonies at the liturgy. (OSV News photo/Bob Roller)
LOS ANGELES (OSV News)—The three-year National Eucharistic Revival closed in Los Angeles on Corpus Christi Sunday with a call to “become eucharistic missionaries” and lead others back to the Catholic faith at a celebration scaled back due to unrest caused by recent immigration raids.
“The Eucharistic Revival does not end today but continues in each one of us, you and me,” said Los Angeles Archbishop José H. Gomez in his homily at the June 22 Mass, which drew more than 3,000 people to the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels on a day of picture-perfect, balmy Southern California summer weather.
The liturgy, together with the procession that followed, marked the official end of the month-long 2025 National Eucharistic Pilgrimage, which traveled more than 3,000 miles across 10 U.S. states from Indianapolis to Los Angeles and served as the national revival’s final act.
The pilgrimage’s closing weekend in Los Angeles included stops in two communities ravaged by the January 2025 wildfires, Altadena and Pacific Palisades, as well as two missions founded by St. Junípero Serra, San Buenaventura and San Gabriel.
Plans for a post-Mass festival and a procession through downtown Los Angeles on Sunday were shelved days earlier due to the unrest caused by mass raids targeting immigrants without legal permission to live and work in the U.S. But at the end of a shortened procession held inside the cathedral plaza, Archbishop Gomez briefly stepped out onto Temple Street carrying a monstrance holding the Blessed Sacrament and blessed the city of Los Angeles.
The moment was a fitting climax to an event marked by moments of silent prayer and rousing song, and attended by everyone from young families to cheery nuns and pilgrims—all expressing the kind of missionary enthusiasm that Archbishop Gomez had called for in his homily.
“Jesus is counting on us to bring people back to the Church, back to Mass,” said the archbishop. “We can never approach the altar without wanting to bring others with us, to know the love that we know. So, let’s be bold for Jesus!”
The principal celebrant of the Mass was the apostolic nuncio to the U.S., Cardinal Christophe Pierre, and the liturgy was concelebrated by 10 bishops and more than 30 priests. In his opening remarks, Cardinal Pierre reported that while in Rome earlier this month, he told Pope Leo XIV that he would be visiting Los Angeles for the occasion.
“The Holy Father told me to greet you in a very special way, and I do,” said Cardinal Pierre, who added that Pope Leo told him he was aware of the many pilgrimages held during the course of the National Eucharistic Revival.
Cardinal Pierre said the purpose of the feast of Corpus Christi was to celebrate the power of the Eucharist to transform people into “God’s presence,” including in their homes, schools and even in politics.
“The Church is ourselves, because we receive the body of Christ,” said Cardinal Pierre. “This is the good news of our faith, that we are the Church, that the Church is the presence of God in America.”
The celebration’s hopeful tone was a contrast to the weekend’s more troubling news headlines, among them the bombing of three nuclear facilities in Iran by U.S. bombers, and the continued raids by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, or ICE, agents in Southern California targeting Latinos suspected of lacking legal status.
An intention read during the prayers of the faithful at the Mass asked “for healing and restoration, especially for all persons and communities impacted by wildfires, and those who live in fear of unrest and the separation of families.”
Marianne Dyogi of Carson, Calif., came with her husband Gary and their five children to the cathedral on Sunday. She described the Mass and procession as “a very hope-filled event” during a “very dark time” marked not only by war and unrest, but also the growing mental health crisis and “a lot of brokenness in families and marriages” in society.
“People don’t know if things are going to get better, and they’re very nervous about what’s coming in the future,” said Dyogi, who attended the National Eucharistic Congress in Indianapolis last summer, and wanted to give her family a “taste” of what she experienced.
“There are a lot of things happening, but we brought our kids because their faith is really powerful. Their prayers work,” she said.
“We just wanted to be a part of this big thing,” added Isaac Martinez of Delano, Calif. “The center of our faith is the Eucharist, so it’s an important place to be.”
At the conclusion of the Mass, members of the Knights of Columbus and Knights and Dames from the Order of Malta and the Order of the Holy Sepulchre led a procession out of the cathedral.
Before Archbishop Gomez and his fellow bishops finally reached Temple Street to bless the city, the procession paused at three prayer altars in the plaza, where the crowd kneeled to pray and sing before the monstrance.
Afterward, the crowd gathered back inside the cathedral for one more moment of eucharistic adoration and Benediction. Then the National Eucharistic Revival’s lead organizer, Bishop Andrew H. Cozzens of Crookston, Minn., stepped to the lectern to thank the three-year initiative’s various sponsors and supporters.
Bishop Cozzens, who also serves as president of the National Eucharistic Congress board, also thanked “all the people across this country who have felt in their own hearts that burning love of the heart of Jesus that flows from the Eucharist and have responded.
“You’ve really helped us to end this revival as a pilgrimage of hope,” he told them. †