- “Your life, your priestly consecration, is a
witness today of grace that pardons,
renews, creates a new heart,
comforts, and gives hope and reassurance with the certainty
of divine love”, Cardinal
De Paolis told the 44 new priests.
Madrid | Rome,
December 15, 2012. - Cardinal Velasio De Paolis, C.S., the
Papal Delegate for the Legionaries of Christ and Regnum
Christi, ordained 44 Legionaries of Christ in the Basilica
of Saint John Lateran in Rome, during a ceremony
attended by about 3 thousand friends and family members. In
his homily, the Cardinal pointed out how, given the
recent history of the Legion, these 44 new priests
become “a witness of grace that pardons, renews, creates a
new heart, comforts, and gives hope” and “a great
gift to the Church through the congregation of the
Legionaries of Christ.”
Among the new priests, who are between 29
and 39 years of age and come from twelve
different countries, 11 are from United States, and 1
each from England and Puerto Rico. The Americans include a
pair of brothers of Vietnamese background from Georgia, Fathers
Jason and Peter Huynh. The other Americans are Fathers
John Pietropaoli (New York), Mark Thelen (Michigan), Michael Moriarty
(Kansas), Ronald Conklin (Texas), Jeremy Lambert (Georgia), Brian Coe
(Maryland), Stephen Dardis (Louisiana), Louis Melahn (Massachusetts), and Andrew
Dalton (Georgia). Father Juan José Hernández Rodríguez was the first
Legionary priest from Puerto Rico.
The words of
the Cardinal were focused on the need of each man
and woman to meet Christ, and the priest as
God’s answer to this need. “We need priests because
we need Christ,” he said, “and Christ is the man
that all people of every time and place need
to meet to reach the truth about God and themselves,
and to find happiness and the meaning of life.”
The Papal Delegate for the Legion of Christ
offered the young men being ordained a very positive
vision of their own weakness, which can make them “witnesses
of divine grace.” “The priest experiences his own weakness
and fragility. This experience is healthy, if it brings
him to the only one who can give him the
grace of fidelity, of love and total self-giving,” De
Paolis said.
About the meaning of these 44
new priests in the recent history of the Legion of
Christ, the Cardinal gave a clear and direct word
of hope and confidence in grace at the end
of the homily. “Dear young men, you are members of
the Legion of Christ, a religious congregation which has
had to confront a particularly difficult moment in its
own history,” he told them. “This history has been
marked by sin, by discouragement, perhaps even dejection and humiliation.
As Saint Paul says,
you have been afflicted
from every side.” He added, “But you have advanced. You
did not lose heart. You have persevered in your
vocation. You believed in the one who called you.
You believed in grace. For grace, everything is possible.”