The first Vocations Awareness Weekend at St. John Vianney College Seminary for the 2009-2010 academic year will be held from November 13th to the 15th. For anyone from the Diocese of Orlando interested in coming on this weekend, please call the Office of Vocations at 407-246-4875.
A few years back, when news of the clergy sexual abuse scandal hit the church, many people would think that young men would be turning away from the church and ignoring the call of our Lord to the priesthood. The biggest fear was that the number of men entering the seminary would drop dramatically. Though the clergy abuse scandal may have had some impact on numbers immediately after the news broke, things have not remained that way. In the past couple of years, numbers at seminaries across the United States and globally are on the rise.
In fact, at St. John Vianney College Seminary this year, the number of seminarians is at 35-year record high. The seminary welcomed 35 new seminarians at the beginning of August, bringing the total number of seminarians to 76 for the year. We are witnessing hope.
MIAMI | When former Air Force pilot Ryan Boyle, 32, finished his stint in the military to pursue a 10-year call to the priesthood, he inadvertently helped make history.
“The last time we had numbers like this was more than 35 years ago,” said Msgr. Michael G. Carruthers, rector-president of the seminary, which is marking its 50th anniversary this year.
St. John Vianney opened in 1959 as a high school seminary for the then newly created Diocese of Miami. It now takes in students from throughout Florida, other U.S. dioceses and the Bahamas who are pursuing a bachelor’s degree in philosophy or a two-year degree in pre-theology in preparation for the priesthood.
The larger-than-usual entering class has created some extra work for the faculty and staff.
“It’s been a lot of hard work, but we’re very excited. We’ve been adding extra tables, chairs, and preparing to accommodate these young men here,” Msgr. Carruthers said.
He credited Archbishop John C. Favalora’s support for the seminary – particularly his resistance to the idea of moving the education and training of priests-to-be away from the seminary setting – for “enabling the growth of a healthy environment and a strong model of priestly formation” that made the growth in enrollment possible.
“Some suggested that we have a study house attached to a university,” Archbishop Favalora said, where future priests would attend classes with other college students while living and being instructed on the particulars of the priesthood in the study house. “However, neither the U.S. Catholic bishops nor I agreed with that. Seminarians need to be trained in the seminary. That is how it is done and how the bishops want it done.”
The historic number entering the seminary also seems to defy the economic reality.
“I’m proud these men are answering God’s call. There is a lot of pressure, especially during these hard times, to go and do something else. However, they are here seeking (Christ),” Archbishop Favalora said. “It really shows that God’s ways are not our ways.”
The archbishop visited the seminary Aug. 22 to officially open the academic year with the traditional Mass of the Holy Spirit, during which he invoked the guidance of the Spirit upon the seminarians, their professors and the seminary’s staff.
“We’re invoking the Holy Spirit to transform us into something greater than what we appear to be,” Archbishop Favalora said. “We’re asking the Holy Spirit to make holy the work we’re going to do.”
“The Holy Spirit is the breath of the seminary. It is a string that connects us to Christ whom we follow,” said Martin Nguyen, 20, a third-year seminarian from the Diocese of Orlando.
“It is an honor to pass on the priesthood from one generation to the next. Passing on the faith is what this seminary is all about, and I’m very proud to see so many taking on that tradition,” Archbishop Favalora said.
Many of you may think that my recent wrist surgery has made me a little loopy with a title of “Three Days” in the middle of August. No, “Three Days” is not an article about the most profound Christian celebration, the Triduum. Rather, it is simply about the remaining three days of the seminarians’ summer recess from the seminary.
Even though the majority of the seminarians have been enjoying the last few weeks at home, the new seminarians from all of the dioceses of Florida have already begun their year of formation. Altogether, there are 35 new seminarians from across the state, including eight from the Diocese of Orlando. (A breakdown of the numbers will be coming shortly.) Along with these 35 men, the additional 44 returning seminarians reenter St. John Vianney College Seminary on Thursday of this week. This makes a total of 79 seminarians for this academic year.
As we return to the seminary this week, please remember to keep us and those responsible for our formation in your prayers, especially during this Year for Priests. Please know that all of our benefactors are prayed for on a daily basis at the seminary. We voice our gratitude in our intercessions during our communal Evening Prayer. Thank you for your prayers and support.
As most of the readers are aware, Pope Benedict XVI declared 2009 as the Year for Priests. In commemoration of this declaration, I have decided to publish a new vocation support blog. The blog will go live sometime in the next few days, probably early next week and will be titled, “Whispers of the Spirit.”
Whispers of the Spirit will not only cover vocations stories and thoughts, but will feature interviews with priests and seminarians from St. John Vianney College Seminary, seminary statistics, etc. The site will also include any remarks made by Pope Benedict XVI regarding the Year for Priests. If there is something you want covered, please email me and I will do my best to put it up on the site. A special email address will be created for this purpose (to be determined at a later time).
Now, to another major announcement about the blog: Seminarian Cliff Whitty, from the Diocese of St. Petersburg will be a co-writer on the blog. Cliff is the author and creator of Catholic Eye Candy, blog that features different liturgical aspects of the Catholic Church. It is an awesome site and I am very thankful that Cliff has decided to help out in this ever important and necessary endeavor.
I would like to take this time to thank all of you, my readers, for your support and prayers over the last few months. I am quite new to this whole blogging thing and your feedback is much appreciated. Please keep it coming!!
May God bless all of you and may He continue to bless the Roman Catholic Church. St. John Vianney…Pray for us!
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