Now One Hundred Years Later

With the autumn months comes another change of seasons and the start of a new academic and formation year.  Our candidates began with a retreat led by Superior General, Fr. Raymond Finch.  Some are completing their undergraduate studies at St. Xavier University while others are pursuing Master of Divinity degrees at the Catholic Theological Union.  Five of these men are participating in the Spirituality Year, which is very similar to a novitiate program.

These men and others who are studying in our Overseas Training Program wish to become Maryknoll Missioners. They hail from all over the United States and from countries where we serve in Africa, Asia and Latin America.  They share in common the desire to be servants of the Gospel.  The message of God’s love for all people is so important.  It needs to be preached not only in words but in the actions of our daily lives.  Each of you is a messenger wherever you go and in whatever you do.  But, you still need to take some steps in the direction that will fulfill the dreams that have brought you in contact with us.  Perhaps a visit to one of our mission stations may be a step along the way.  It can change your life!

 As always we look forward to hearing from you: Fr. Mike (msnyder@maryknoll.org), Fr. Joe Donovan (jjdonovan@maryknoll.org) and Mr. Greg Darr (gdarr@maryknoll.org)

Finding God – A Poem by Sem. Jonathan Hill

Finding God

What if God was beyond my constrained Imagination

Not limited by lofty words of mindful expression

Nor kept in a guarded box of theological debate

But free to roam amongst the slightest doubts and strongest fears

That come from the hearts and minds of all

Across the expanse of a multitiered Multiverse

What if God whispered to children and prophets alike

And found expression in the butterfly as well as the pen

Would not the butterfly express the divine best

By Dancing about in its three-dimensional and holy form

Far clearer than a pen which can only illuminate

A dimension or two at best before stopping where the paper ends

What if God was found in that pen as well

Enlightening far more than acid-free paper with lead

But supple minds that can transcend our three-dimensional prison

Into the far-off limits of our cosmic creation

What if God was found beyond our limitations

Hiding not only in the fields of what is known

But in the trenches of guesses and shadows

Of what we think we comprehend

Is God then to be found in our rigid ideologies

Surrounded by deep moats and mossy walls of unyielding belief

That keep God tame to our mind’s imagination

And protects our Orthodoxy from severance or breach

Perhaps God is Only found beyond my rocky walls and muddy moats

Out in the vast and forbidden fields of the Unknown

Where pilgrims stop for fear of life and death

And the sea monsters and dragons of our past still roam

+Jonathan Hill, M.M.

Five Candidates Begin the Novitiate Program

Seminarian Matthew Sim reports: the Spirituality Year candidates started their Inter-Community Novitiate (ICN) program at Techny Towers, home of the SVD novices.

Maryknoll joins 12 other communities of novices at ICN to share and exchange the spirituality and charisms of the various groups. The communities of novices are made up of various religious congregations of sisters, brothers and priesthood candidates.

At ICN, we pray and worship together and have workshops, run by various experts around the United States, on topics ranging from human formation to spirituality development. It is an enriching experience brought about because of the great diversity of participants in this program.

Mission Reflection – The Feast of Corpus Christi in Tanzania

My most recent assignment in Africa took place in the city of Dar es Salaam on the shores of the Indian Ocean where I served as Catholic chaplain at the national medical university.  Out of a student body of 1600, 800 were Catholic.  We enjoyed a vibrant Catholic community. The university was adjacent to the large national hospital that had 1200 beds.  In addition to serving the needs of my students, I also occasionally visited patients in the wards.  I would bring them Holy Communion and the sacrament of the sick.  So often, these people were in great discomfort and pain.  Patients could wait days, even weeks for the results of testing (blood, X-ray, whatever).  The hospital was so overcrowded. But, it never failed.  Whenever I visited and patients received the sacraments they would smile and, at least for a few brief moments their bodies would relax and the pain would seem to cease.

One year, on the feast of Corpus Christi, it had been a busy day.  In Tanzania there is not only Mass on this day, but a long procession outside carrying the Blessed Sacrament.  I wasn’t able to leave church until dusk and just as I was leaving some students came asking if I could visit one of the wards where an elderly woman had asked that morning to receive Communion on this special feast day.  So, off we went.  We entered the ward; visiting hours were over so things were very quiet.  Patients were settling in for sleep.  The woman I came to visit was sitting on the bed.  She was an elderly slight woman with silver hair, the image of a typical Tanzanian grandmother.  She had fallen at home and broken her hip.  When she saw me coming from the distance she raised her voice: “I knew you would come.  Today is the feast of the Holy Eucharist and I knew that you would bring me Jesus.”  She began to sing an old song (originally a Latin song translated into Swahili) about the Body & Blood of Christ.  I gave her Communion and suddenly many of the patients in the ward asked to receive.  Despite all of their problems and discomfort, there was so much joy in the ward during this precious moment as everyone sang and rejoiced.

We Catholics talk about the real presence of Jesus in the Eucharist.  I can testify to this through the many experiences in Tanzania where I witnessed Jesus’ presence in the faces of people like this old grandmother.

Four New Candidates For Maryknoll

Maryknoll recently accepted three new seminarians and one Brother’s candidate to our Initial Formation Program and it is with pleasure that we welcome them to Maryknoll!

Paul Augustine Khiet Tran is 24 years old and comes from Garland, Texas.  He joined us in January 2018 as a candidate for the priesthood and is now completing his bachelor’s degree in philosophy at St. Xavier University in Chicago.

..

Victor Mutobera is 28 years old and comes from Kakamega, Kenya.  He has earned a bachelor’s degree in education and a master’s degree in econometrics. Presently studying philosophy in Nairobi Kenya Victor will come to our Initial Formation Program in Chicago in early 2019 as a candidate for the priesthood.

Diego Ramirez is 29 years old.  Born in Eagle Pass, Texas, he was raised in Morelos, Mexico.  Diego has studied at St. Joseph’s College Seminary in Covington, Louisiana where he earned a bachelor’s degree in philosophy.  He will join us this coming fall as a candidate for the priesthood.

Paul Shultz is 23 years old and comes from Forsyth, Illinois.   He has earned an associate’s degree in applied science from Richland Community College with a specialty in sustainable agriculture.  Paul will begin the Initial Formation Program this coming fall as a candidate to become a Brother.

A Precious Moment

A Precious Moment

Many people used to come to my office door at the Catholic Chaplaincy of the Muhimbili University of Health and Allied Sciences in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania.  The university shares its campus with the national hospital with 1200 beds and over 1000 day patients.  There is also a large slum called Jangwani situated not far from the hospital.  The news must have spread that Fr. Michael will help people in need.  That was nice, but it resulted in a steady stream of people coming to my door.  I was getting a bit overwhelmed.

Many of the cases were genuine; but others were con artists; and still others, while poor, they pretty much would say anything it takes just to get some assistance.  For so many, giving them money was just not the answer to the problems facing them.  Poverty is such a horrible disease!  I was getting discouraged.  Sometimes I felt I needed a social worker that could listen and direct people to places where they could find the proper assistance.  My own background as a social worker years ago came in handy.

I think the news also spread that Fr. Michael asks many questions and often does not give money; so the numbers at my door eventually reduced.  Nevertheless, one day a lady came to the office.  She was ill, stricken with AIDS.  Her children and husband had died.  She was told to vacate the room where her husband was renting.  She had no money and felt it was time to return to her parents’ home in Mwanza, a city situated on the other side of Tanzania about 900 miles away.  Her name was Rehema, which translated to English means ‘Compassion’.  I tried to console her and direct her to the local parish.  Already she was receiving medicine from the Archdiocesan AIDS outreach program named PASADA.  She seemed lost, her spirit broken.

I decided to give her 50,000/= shillings ($50 US) for the bus trip to Mwanza. She thanked me and began to shed tears.  As she stood to leave she said she would board a bus that very day.  Rehema extended her hand to me and then went down on one knee thanking me so much for helping her.  I took her hand into both of mine and prayed for a safe journey.  As Rehema left the office, it occurred to me that this had been a precious moment.  I had just been in the presence of God.  Jesus had come to me as Rehema asking me to never harden my heart to those who come to my office in need.  Jesus doesn’t say that we will not have trials and tribulations.  Rather he says these will not overcome us, these will not destroy us.

Rehema felt blessed for my assistance, but in reality I was the one being assisted and indeed blessed!  Later that day, I was the one on bended knee, grateful for such a precious moment.

All in God’s Time

All in God’s Time

Seminarian Jonathan Hill shares a reflection having completed two years of overseas training in Tanzania, East Africa and now residing at our Formation Residence in Chicago where he is completing his Master of Divinity studies at the Catholic Theological Union in Chicago.

I am in the 8th year of my formation with Maryknoll, and I still have one more year to complete. I know, it sounds insanely long. I knew it would be this long when I entered. It’s not easy to see the light at the end of the tunnel nearly a decade away. And I know what you are thinking: if you have a calling to be a missionary priest or brother, you just want to get out there and serve the people! Why are we wasting time sitting in the snow in a formation house in Chicago? Trust me, I hear you. It sounds like a big commitment, and it certainly is. But after eight years, I’ve learned a thing or two, so hear me out.

  1. You need to grow. Yes, you. You are not a perfectly formed human being. You might make a good priest, but there is still some need for growth. We all have it and will have it for our entire lifetimes. So welcome the opportunity for a focus on formation.

 

  1. You need to learn. I have discovered that each stage of this journey is vital to becoming a better me. Philosophy taught me how to think more critically about God, and well, the world. The Spirituality year taught me about this group that I am joining, our history, our work, our spirituality and our Maryknoll family. Theology expanded my horizons about God and people, and has drawn me closer in my relationship to God and others. The Overseas Training Program prepared me to be a minister. I learned how to teach and preach, to meet needs and expectations. Every new day on this journey brings new opportunities for growth and learning.

 

  1. You need to reflect. This is when you really begin to listen to the voice of God in your life. Are you called to be a missionary priest or brother? What are your deepest desires? Do you really know yourself? These questions are vital in our walk with God and to help us to be mature, healthy men who are able to give of themselves in an authentic way.

 

Sem. Jonathan Hill is the second on the left

I am now finishing my last year in formation. I expect to be ordained a deacon in the near future and to take my final oath to Maryknoll. These years of formation have been vital in preparing me for this step. Am I perfect? No, but I have been more perfectly molded over these past years, and I cannot thank Maryknoll enough for giving me that gift.

How About A Short Term Mission Trip As You Look To Your Future

How About A Short Term Mission Trip As You Look To Your Future

As men discern their futures and look at the possibility of embracing the missionary life several seek out opportunities to get their feet wet and experience the life firsthand prior to making any decisions.  Fr. Shaun Crumb, now serving in China, first went there as a Maryknoll volunteer and taught English in a Chinese university for one year.  Later he entered the seminary.  In the photo above, as a seminarian, Peter Latouf traveled with a team to North Korea to provide medical aid to tuberculosis victims.  Now a priest Fr. Peter is serving in Hong Kong. During the summer of 2016 Paul Shultz went to Tanzania.  He has just been accepted to begin training as a Maryknoll Brother.

The message of God’s love for all people is so important.  It needs to be preached not only in words but in the actions of our daily lives.  Each of us is a messenger wherever we go and in whatever we do.  But, we still need to take some steps in the direction that will fulfill the dreams of the missionary life.  If you are thinking o becoming a priest or Brother with Maryknoll consider a short term commitment to mission as a step along the way.  It will change your life!

For more information contact Fr. Mike (msnyder@maryknoll.org)

ABOUT MARYKNOLL

We are a Catholic Society of priests and brothers based in the United States. We are dedicated to missionary work overseas in over 20 countries. Additionally, we animate Catholics in the United States to follow their own baptismal call to share God’s compassion and love with the poor, the sick, and all those in need.

OUR GENERAL COUNCIL

L-R Tom O'Brien, Ray Finch, Joe Everson, Russ Feldmeier

(Fr. Lance P. Nadeau, Fr. James M. Lynch, Fr. Timothy O. Kilkelly, Fr. Juan Montes Zúñiga)

The Maryknoll Fathers and Brothers is overseen by our General Council, led by Superior General Rev. Lance P. Nadeau, M.M.

OUR FOUNDERS

L-R Tom O'Brien, Ray Finch, Joe Everson, Russ Feldmeier

(Our Co-Founders Father Price and Father Walsh)

PLACES WE SERVE

EVANGELIZATION, PARISHES, AND PROJECTS

USA

STORIES OF MISSION

(Africa) Education and Formation of African Clergy

The Maryknoll Fathers and Brothers Africa Region will provide tuition assistance to African clergy, male and female religious at institutes of higher education or specialized training. Read More

Stories of Our Global Mission

The calling of a lifetime

The life of a Maryknoll missioner is challenging, fulfilling, and deeply rewarding. Follow your baptismal call to mission by sharing God’s compassion with the poor, the sick, and people most in need.

Contact Us

Please feel free to get in touch with us by submitting the form below.

"*" indicates required fields

Name*
This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.