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Back to Archive 2001
05/13/01
In Christ: Shepherd and King
I am the good shepherd, we hear Jesus say in the Scripture for
Easter time. The passages, especially from the Gospel according
to St. John, which help us understand our relation to the Lord
as our shepherd, are also used to draw our attention to those
ordained to represent him to his people, to shepherd Christs
flock as Christ would shepherd it. Ordinations to the priesthood
for the Archdiocese are on May 19 this year, when ten men will
become priests of the Church at Holy Name Cathedral. Through the
invocation of the Holy Spirit and the laying on of my hands, they
will be given the grace to love Christs people and will be called
to serve in various capacities, especially as parish priests.
(See stories, Pages 12-13.)
The call to ordained priesthood is a vocation from God discerned
by the Church and confirmed by the bishop. The bishop uses others
to help him call, form and prepare candidates for the priesthood.
In the Archdiocese of Chicago, we have a high school seminary
named in honor of Archbishop Quigley, the second Archbishop of
Chicago. The downtown Gothic building which houses Archbishop
Quigley Preparatory Seminary was built under Cardinal Mundelein,
the third Archbishop of Chicago. A couple of years ago, Quigley
was recognized as one of the hundred best high schools in the
country. Its program for the spiritual preparation of future priests
is well worked out. I am proud of Quigley and grateful that the
Archdiocese continues to provide a special place for those whom
God calls to the priesthood when they are still quite young.
From Quigley, seminarians move to the college-level seminary,
St. Josephs on the Loyola University campus. The seminarians
take some of their courses at St. Josephs, where they live, and
other courses, depending on their major, at Loyola University,
which grants them their bachelors degree. Here, too, the spiritual
formation program has been strengthened in recent years and the
results are evident in the quality of the seminarians. The Archdiocese
also sponsors four other programs for post-high school priesthood
candidates. There is Casa Jesus, for Hispanic candidates; Bishop
Abramowicz Seminary for Polish seminarians who are learning English;
Tuite House at St. Columbanus Parish for African and African-American
candidates and a non-residential program, Insearch, which calls
working and professional men together once a week for prayer and
study. All of these programs are directed by dedicated priests
of the Archdiocese who help in the discernment and selection of
vocations to the ordained priesthood.
The major seminary of the Archdiocese of Chicago is located at
Mundelein, 40 miles north of Chicago. Cardinal Mundelein used
the very first university charter of the State of Illinois, a
charter obtained from the state legislature by the first bishop
of Chicago, William Quarter, to begin a seminary with the official
title of the University of St. Mary of the Lake. In Bishop Quarters
time, the lake was Lake Michigan, and the university was downtown;
in Cardinal Mundeleins hands, a century later, the lake became
St. Marys Lake, formed by damming a river in Lake County. Today,
Mundelein Seminary is the largest and one of the very best diocesan
theologates in the country. Besides seminarians studying for the
Archdiocese of Chicago, there are seminarians from about 40 other
dioceses, both in this country and from foreign lands as well.
They come for spiritual formation and for the four-year theology
course which leads, usually, to a Master of Divinity degree. Mundelein
Seminary also has authority from the Holy See to grant ecclesiastical
degrees. This coming year a Liturgical Institute will begin accepting
lay students along with priests and seminarians. The Doctor of
Ministry program also accepts lay students. The deacon and lay
ministry formation programs are also administered at Mundelein;
and the campus is home to the Center for Development in Ministry,
designed to host conferences and provide ongoing formation for
those in ministry.
These seminaries and programs are supported by tuition and fees,
fund-raising events, endowment income, the annual seminary collection
and other subsidies and gifts from donors. More explicit prayer
for vocations to the ordained priesthood and attention to helping
men hear the call and welcoming them have begun to result in our
having more seminarians. Classes of ten for Chicago have been
about average for the past generation, but the number being ordained
will increase to 14 next year and then continue to grow. Mundelein
Seminary will be welcoming at least 33 new seminarians for the
Archdiocese of Chicago next fall, the largest number of new theologians
for Chicago in over 20 years. The vocation directors, along with
many other priests and lay people and religious women and men
who assist them in calling men to priesthood, deserve our gratitude.
Christ is shepherd of his flock, the head and bridegroom of his
Church; but Christ is also King of the Universe. The sacrament
of Holy Orders is a form of participation in Christs headship
of the Church; the sacrament of Confirmation is a form of participation
in Christs kingship in the world. In May, bishops spend much
time going from parish to parish in order to confirm during the
Easter season. In the sacrament of Confirmation, the Holy Spirit
comes with new strength and power to confirm the baptism often
received as an infant. Ones baptism is sealed, and the one confirmed
takes his or her place as a witness to the risen Lord in the world.
Sometimes this is explained as becoming an adult Catholic.Adults,
of course, have responsibilities to others; and the confirmed
Catholic has a responsibility to worship God in spirit and in
truth and to witness to Christ, to evangelize and transform the
world.
During his trip to Syria this past week, the Holy Father spoke
to the young Christians of Damascus: Christ is calling you and
awakening in you a desire to make your life something magnificent
and beautiful, a determination to pursue high ideals, a refusal
to be satisfied with mediocrity, and the courage to make commitments,
with patience and perseverance.
In order to be able to respond
to this call, strive constantly to grow in closeness to the Lord
of life
.You cannot be a Christian if you reject the Church founded
on Jesus Christ; you cannot be called believers unless you put
your faith into practice.
I invite you today to proclaim Jesus
Christ with courage and fidelity, above all to the young people
of your generation.
In seeing the way you live, your contemporaries
ought to wonder what is your inspiration and the source of your
joy. All of us should pray often these days for those confirmed
during the Easter season, from the Holy Saturday vigil to the
feast of Pentecost.
Sincerely yours in Christ,
Francis Cardinal George, OMI
Archbishop of Chicago
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