Cardinal Wilton Gregory was welcome home to the Archdiocese of Washington on Dec. 3, 2020 as he was greeted with applause by about three dozen employees when his car pulled up to the Archdiocesan Pastoral Center in Hyattsville, Maryland. Reflecting coronavirus safety precautions, the employees wore face masks and stood at social distances from each other in the parking lot, with some holding red star-shaped balloons, signifying the color of his new rank as a cardinal in the Church.
Five days earlier, Pope Francis had elevated Cardinal Gregory to the College of Cardinals during a Nov. 28 Consistory in Rome
As he arrived back to work as Washington’s archbishop, a large blue banner with his Coat of Arms and the words, “Welcome Home, Wilton Cardinal Gregory” had been erected in front of his parking spot.
Waving to the crowd, he then said, “It’s good to be home!”

Cardinal Gregory waves to the people greeting him at the Archdiocesan Pastoral Center and expresses thanks to them for welcoming him home on Dec. 3, 2020. (CS photo/Andrew Biraj)

He shared something that his mentor, the late Chicago Cardinal Joseph Bernardin – whom he served as a priest and auxiliary bishop – had jokingly said about being a cardinal in Rome and back home: “I love going to Rome, and I love being with the Holy Father. I love being in that city… (but in Rome) there’s 40 or 50 cardinals. Here I’m the only one!”
Later that day at a noon Mass of Thanksgiving in the Pastoral Center’s St. Ursula Chapel, Cardinal Gregory noted, “Every Mass is a Mass of Thanksgiving, because every Mass is a celebration of Christ’s gift of Himself to His Father on our behalf.”
The cardinal thanked the archdiocesan employees and about a dozen priests for joining him at the Mass, and he also thanked his auxiliary bishops for being there, noting that Pope Francis earlier that week named Washington Auxiliary Bishop Michael Fisher as the new bishop of Buffalo. He thanked Bishop Fisher “for his devotion, for his kindness and for his dedication to this local Church,” adding that he would “bring all the gifts he has, and the gift that he is, to the Diocese of Buffalo.”
Cardinal Gregory also thanked Cardinal Donald Wuerl, the archbishop emeritus of Washington, for his presence at the Mass, noting that he “has been such a friend of mine for so many, many years.”

Cardinal Gregory gives his homily during a Dec. 3 Mass of Thanksgiving at the Pastoral Center's St. Ursula Chapel. (CS photo/Andrew Biraj)
Recalling the sight of driving up to the Pastoral Center and seeing the banner welcoming him and the people holding red balloons, Cardinal Gregory – who was named as Washington’s archbishop in April 2019 and installed the next month -- said, “Within a year and eight months, this has really become my home. It (that welcome) was very much an expression of the family greeting me, telling me, ‘Welcome home!’”
The cardinal smiled and quoted a line that Robert Frost had written in his poem “The Death of the Hired Man” about coming home:
“Home is the place where, when you have to go there, they have to take you in.’”
Cardinal Gregory added, “Home is where you belong.”

Cardinal Gregory's Mass of Thanksgiving at the Pastoral Center on Dec. 3, 2020 marked the first of several Masses of Thanksgiving he will be celebrating at parishes in different parts of the Archdiocese of Washington. (CS photo/Andrew Biraj)
He noted that day’s Gospel emphasized “you’ve got to build your home, your house on a solid foundation, because there will be challenges, there will be storms and winds that will buffet that house.” That foundation, that rock, to build your home upon is Christ, he said.
The new cardinal added, “I feel very comfortable and very much at home in this house which is the Archdiocese of Washington, because it is built on a solid foundation, a foundation of your faith and your love for Christ Jesus… I’m so grateful that I am now a part of this family.”
After Communion, Father Daniel Carson, the archdiocese’s Vicar General and Moderator of the Curia, noted that the employees there are preparing a spiritual bouquet to present to Cardinal Gregory on Dec. 7, his 73rd birthday. A spiritual bouquet can include things like a commitment of prayers, Mass attendance, and acts of charity or sacrifice on someone’s behalf.
The cardinal was presented with a gift from local Catholic school leaders, and also cards from children in the religious education programs at St. Anthony’s Parish in Washington and St. Anthony’s Parish in North Beach.
In his closing remarks at the Mass, Cardinal Gregory noted a happy surprise he had two days before the Consistory.
“Pope Francis invited me to have Thanksgiving Day lunch with him. We didn’t have turkey,” he said, later explaining they had a pasta dish. “He shared with me his wonderful kindness, his great joy and humor.”
And the cardinal added, “I shared with him the great goodness of the people of the Archdiocese of Washington.”

A banner placed outside the Archdiocesan Pastoral Center on Dec. 3, 2020 welcomed Cardinal Wilton Gregory home after his Nov. 28 Consistory in Rome. (CS photo/Andrew Biraj)