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A
New Seminary and A Call to "Holy and Virile Men" to
the Old Roman Catholic Priesthood
The Most Reverend
John J. Humphreys
The last year in
which the Old Roman Catholic Church in North
America operated a seminary to nourish and sustain
vocations to the priesthood was 1958. Consequently,
the majority of clergy ordained in the last
thirty-two years trained "on the job", which has
proved far from ideal both for prelates and their
congregations. Even those who had undergone some
previous seminary training found it insufficient
for bringing them to the core meaning of their
priesthood. Hence, the establishment of a seminary
for the Old Roman Catholic communion has long been
one of the Church's goals.
On December 31,
1998, that goal was reached with the purchase of a
building on a one-acre property in St. Petersburg,
Florida. Although the building had been on the
verge of condemnation, we here in the diocese
believed it had the potential to provide the unique
atmosphere that fosters men on their way to the
sacred priesthood, as well as to serve as a retreat
center for clergy, lay men and women, and married
couples.
Immediately
after the diocese took possession of the property,
a crew of hired craftsmen and volunteers began the
necessary repairs and renovations. A fine chapel --
small, but adequate -- was constructed, as were a
refectory (dining room) and kitchen. The remaining
space provided nearly everything a good seminary
requires. In the relatively short period of time we
devoted to rehabilitating and furnishing the
building, we saw a transformation of both building
and grounds that was nothing short of amazing dare
we say -- miraculous? We believe that God has
looked with great favor upon our endeavors and
blessed us in innumerable ways. He has seen to it
that everything is in place. Now, we must make St.
Thomas Aquinas Seminary come alive to its
purpose.
We need
priest-mentors who will guide our future
seminarians intellectually, morally, and
spiritually. And we need those men who are willing
to make of themselves the "Other Christs" our world
so desperately awaits. We need holy and virile men
who both understand our times and are also willing
to give their lives to the Church. Men who believe
that Jesus Christ's gospel belongs to all peoples
in all times. Men who share our regard for the
traditions that are at the center of our mission as
a Church. With sadness, we watch too many Christian
Churches totter on the edge of chaos, often
preaching a message that Christ did not preach. We
see them project a new image, a new doctrine --
indeed, a new "religion". That "religion", we know,
is not what our Blessed Lord speaks in the gospels
recorded by the evangelists.
Our priority,
then, is to revitalize the traditional Catholic
faith among our seminarians so that they may keep
it alive by bringing it to others who will bequeath
it to future generations. Our seminarians will be
steeped in the faith practices of our historic
religion, specifically through frequent attendance
at holy Mass and reception of the sacraments,
through the common recitation of the Divine Office,
and through other spiritual exercises prevalent in
the Church prior to the recent fragmentation of
Christianity, in general, and Catholicism, in
particular.
Our academic
program will be based on a curriculum that broadly
encompasses the arts and sciences, philosophy, and
classical Thomist theology. Instruction will be
given both here at the seminary and at the many
colleges and universities within the Tampa Bay
Area, depending on which best suits each man's
educational requirements. As Rector, I cordially
invite men who feel called to the priesthood, or
clergy who are interested in making a retreat to
send inquiries to: St. Thomas Aquinas Seminary,
1051 72nd Street North, St. Petersburg, Florida
33710.
The Most
Reverend Humphreys is Archbishop of the Old Roman
Catholic See of Caer Glow, Primate of the Old Roman
Catholic Church, and Bishop of the Diocese of
Florida.
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