LOS ANGELES – There are soul friends in this universe, those always present through good times and bad. They lift you up. They listen. Defend. Celebrate your victories. They are willing to go to battle for you – or because of you. 

Sometimes you don’t realize their full impact. Until they’re gone.

Los Angeles Auxiliary Bishop David G. O’Connell was a soul friend. The Irish-born O’Connell used public ministry to advocate for social and racial justice. He embraced immigrants. The poor. The marginalized. Gang bangers. The ill. The drunk and homeless. Those considered lost and forgotten. He served as their spiritual leader, and remembered each of their names along the way.

Bishop Dave, as he’s known in this city, embodied “anam cara,” Gaelic for soul friend.

This man of the cloth also fought against gun violence – when six people were killed in a month in his parish neighborhood, he mobilized 9,000 families not just to pray but to take action. 

Yet gun violence ultimately stole him away from this community. 

Bishop O’Connell, 69, was found dead Feb. 18 in his home in the Los Angeles suburb of Hacienda Heights. He had been shot in the upper torso.  A handyman whose wife worked as the bishop’s housekeeper has been arrested and charged with murder.

The pain is palpable among those who knew and loved him. Natural death would be acceptable. Understandable. But a violent death for someone who lived in peace is almost impossible to conceive. And even more difficult to forgive. 

I sat in the soaring space of the Los Angeles cathedral on Friday for his funeral. That’s where I met Gina Zepeda, who attends a church O’Connell used to lead. She seemed to know what O’Connell would have thought about the man who killed him.