"I found myself wondering one day in prayer, what would it have been like for the local peoples of the Upper Pimería to have this mysterious holy man, this priest, emerge from their own wilderness -- arriving from a far distant and mysterious place -- and speaking to them of a God who had always been theirs -- long before they even heard of him," he reflected.
"A priest who didn't begin his preaching with the fact that they were 'lost' and needed to be found -- because in truth, they weren't -- but rather, that even without yet knowing it, they were loved and embraced and treasured by this God he preached -- a God of compassion and mercy," Bishop Weisenburger said. "A God who actually loved them no less than this mysterious God loved the people who had sent this Padre Kino to them."
Her legislative district includes northwest Pima County, covering parts of Tucson and the Pascua Yaqui Reservation. Gonzales attends Cristo Rey Church on the reservation, a mission of St. Kateri Tekakwitha Parish in Tucson."Father Kino is well-respected in the Indigenous community because of the dignity that he gave the people as he did his work here," said Gonzales.