Missionary spirit at diaconate ordination

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Australian Jesuits Nico Lariosa, Alan Wong and Robert Morris were ordained deacons in Boston by Cardinal Sean O’Malley OFM Cap. The three Australians were among 12 Jesuits ordained at St Ignatius Church in Chestnut Hill on September 3. Three of the other new deacons are from Nigeria, and the remaining six are from the United States.

The new deacons with Cardinal Sean O’Malley

The diaconate belongs to the sacrament of Holy Orders. Deacons proclaim and preach the Gospel, lead people in prayer, preside over baptisms and marriages, and conduct funeral services. For those on the path to priesthood, the diaconate ordination usually takes place several months to a year before priestly ordination.

Before his ordination, Rob Morris said that the initiation into sacramental ministry “completes” his vocation.

“I don’t mean that to put the priesthood or ordained ministry above other forms of ministering in the Church. But for me, in terms of my own sense of vocation, I get a sense of fulfilment at the thought of being a sacramental minister for people,” he explained.

In his homily at the ordination, Cardinal O’Malley spoke of the extraordinary witness of the Jesuits in Japan recently depicted in the movie Silence. He noted that more than 50 Jesuits had died as martyrs in Japan.

He said that it was a testimony to the formation that these missionaries gave the Japanese converts that, when Father Bernard Petitjean entered Japan after it had been opened to foreigners in 1865, tens of thousands of underground Christians were discovered.

“They had been underground for 250 years, braving persecution, baptising their children and observing the liturgical year without priests,” said Cardinal O’Malley. “They passed on the teachings of the Church and long quotes from the Bible, all from memory.  Their faith and resilience are in part a result of the formation that they received from Jesuit missionaries, many of whom witnessed to that faith by their own martyrdom.”

“How blessed we are that our God is still calling young men to this way of life, to be companions of Jesus, ready to go to the most difficult posts to set the world on fire, to be God’s instruments.”

The three Australians will be continuing their formation in Boston, and preparing for priestly ordination next year. [Australian Jesuit News]