Fr. John Jay Hughes: I've been a priest for 63 years. Celebrating Mass has never gotten old.
Last edited Sun Apr 30, 2017, 03:26 PM - Edit history (1)
The girl caught in the act of adultery and dragged before Jesus may well have been a teenager. She knew the prescribed punishment (imposed only on women): death by stoning. How terrified she must have been. And when, at the end of this terrible story, all her accusers have slipped away and she hears Jesus say, Neither do I condemn you. Go, and from now on do not sin anymore, how grateful she must have been (Jn 8:11).
I have personal reasons for gratitude no less than hers. Sixty-three years ago I knelt before a bishop to be ordained a priest in the Catholic Church. It was the fulfillment of the dream I had had, without a single interruption, from age 12. And not only a dream: I had it in writing. When my high school English teacher told the class to write an essay about What you expect to be doing in 25 years, I wrote about being a priest. I told my classmates about my answer, so from age 12 I have been called Fatherwith varying degrees of seriousness. I entered seminary eight years later not to discern a vocation (something I would not hear about for another quarter century) but because I was told that was what I must do to get ordained.
Has every one of the 63 years since then been happy? Of course not. That does not happen in any life. All of us must travel at some time or another through the psalmists dark valley. For seven years, from 1974 to 1981, I was without assignment and unemployed. Living in St. Louis, Mo., but subject to a bishop in Germany, I was like an Army officer detached from his regiment. The clerical system did not know what to do with me. Those years were hard and terribly lonely. I survived only by prayer.
If you were to ask me, however, whether I have ever regretted my decision for the priesthood, I would reply at once, Never, not one single day. I will say it another way. If I had my life to live over again, knowing in advance all the hard and difficult years which lay ahead, would I still choose the priesthood? In a heartbeat! I would change just one thing: I would try to be more faithful.
http://www.americamagazine.org/faith/2017/04/27/ive-been-priest-63-years-celebrating-mass-has-never-gotten-old