Fifth Sunday in Ordinary Time
One of my favorite saints has always been St. Peter. No, I don’t want to be pope (being a pastor is enough responsibility for me!), but I like St. Peter. He’s one of the great apostles of Jesus, who always has great things to say, unless he’s putting his foot in his mouth (as he also often does). He is, we might say, very relatable. I’d like to believe that I have had great moments of faith and trust in God (even if great is a sliding scale), but I also know that I have had my own outbreaks of foot-in-mouth disease.
When others hear this story, they sometimes ask me how I came to follow Jesus as a priest. And certainly, all of our readings focus on calls: on the call of Isaiah to be a prophet; the call of St. Paul to preach the Gospel as the last apostle; and, as I mentioned, the call of St. Peter to follow Jesus as one, and the chief, of His apostles.
Some priests I know have amazing stories like St. Peter of Jesus doing something great and spectacular in their lives. But for me, that’s not the case. As an eighth grader, I started thinking about what I wanted to do as an adult (so that I could concentrate on the right classes in high school, get into a good college in a field in which I wanted, and then get a good job). If it were up to me, I wanted to be a lawyer, and then maybe go into politics. I wanted to be married, have a few kids, a couple of dogs, and have lots of money. But I knew that if I were going to be happy, I had to do what God wanted me to do. So I started praying to God each night, asking Him to let me know. And I heard nothing.
So I started to go to daily Mass a few times at Lansing Catholic High School, and it was there that a stranger asked me if I were going to be a priest. And other classmates and teachers started to do the same thing. And before long, I started to realize that maybe God was asking me to consider a vocation to the priesthood. I started to learn more about Catholicism, and fell in love with the Church, as one falls in love with his girlfriend. And I decided that I wanted to give my life to serve her, just as a man decides (and hopefully the woman agrees) that he wants to give his life to serve the woman he wants to be his wife. I applied to the seminary in my senior year through the Diocese of Lansing, and was accepted for my freshman year of college. Each year I asked God to make it painfully clear if He didn’t want me to continue on. And each year, I was asked to come back and continue studying to become a priest. It wasn’t always easy; there were times where I thought (with the assistance of a rather attractive female lab partner) that maybe the priesthood wasn’t for me; but God did and has sustained me in my vocation. God’s providential care for me has been more in the day-to-day events of life, not so much in the spectacular, like St. Peter.
But God knows what we need in responding to His call. Some people don’t need the dramatic moments. Some people do. The key is that we are listening for the call of Jesus, and we respond with courage to the call of Jesus. Because Jesus says to anyone who wants to follow Him, “Put out into deep water.” In Latin that phrase is Duc in altum, and it was used by Pope St. John Paul II as he began his Apostolic Letter on the new millennium in 2001. It was also a favorite of Bishop Mengeling, who told us seminarians not to dangle our toes in the water, but to put out into deep water.
Any vocational call–ordained ministry, marriage, consecrated life–and even while discerning God’s call, takes courage. It takes faith in God, and confidence that He will show you the way. As a priest it takes courage to serve when a very small percentage have tainted the good name of the priesthood, and it takes courage to say yes to never having a wife and a biological family of your own. As a consecrated man or woman it takes courage to promise to not have any personal bank accounts and to be obedient to the religious congregation’s superiors. As a married man or woman, it takes courage to commit to only being with one person in the special friendship of marriage for your entire life, to only be physically intimate with that person as long as that person lives. Any vocation, and, again, even when trying to find out what God wants us to do, takes the courage to put out into deep waters and trust that God will not abandon us in those waters.
Many of you already have discerned your vocation here. But some of you have not. Be courageous in answering the Lord’s call, whatever it is, in your life. Some of you may have spectacular calls like St. Peter. Some of you will have more quotidian or ordinary calls like me. But don’t be afraid to answer it. Duc in altum!