Jul 16, 2010
Dressed in cassock and surplice, I stood in the work sacristy of Christ the King Cathedral in Atlanta, Georgia on June 26. The air conditioning was either broken or was so tepid that the room was approaching eighty-five degrees. The humidity was high, the Cathedral was full, and the sacristy was packed with seminarians and Masters of Ceremonies. Six men, one after another, knelt in front of the bishop, who placed his hands on them. Then they knelt as some 100 priests from around the diocese solemnly processed by, placing their hands on their heads and sharing with these young men the great gift they had received. The bishop then recited the consecratory prayer and these six men stood, now conformed permanently to Christ the High Priest.
From where I was standing, I could really only see two of the men. When the final one stood -a priest forever,- I was immediately moved with an awesome thought: I’m next.
I looked at the men, all of whom I knew well, and realized that every single man who was in the seminarian program in Atlanta when I joined six years ago has now either left to pursue a vocation to the married life or has been ordained a priest of Jesus Christ. I’m the last one—the last man standing. This makes me the senior “non-ordained” man in the program, and it fills me with a sense of immanence that is palpable and quite exciting.
My summer has shaped up as follows: I will spend all of June and July in a pastoral assignment at the Cathedral. I will return to Rome in September. On October 7, I will be ordained a transitional deacon in St. Peter’s Basilica in Rome along with about 40 of my classmates from around the United States and Australia. Then, God-willing, I will return to Atlanta after the school year to be ordained a priest in June.