This is exactly what Sarah Vabulas, Fr. Cory Sticha, and Fr. Kyle Schnippel very graciously did for me this past week. It was exciting! It was a pile of fun! Hear us talk about our experiences of watching Major League Baseball in this show.
Lino, Mountain, Rob, and some weird guy. (Photo credit: M. Grammer)
I recently arrived home in Watson, Saskatchewan after having experienced some of the more fun and inspiring 10 days that I’ve had so far as a priest. I was in Italy as chaplain for the latest Catholic Guy pilgrimage with Lino Rulli & Rob Keighron. (Lino broadcasts a wildly entertaining show on SiriusXM’s The Catholic Channel, ch. 129 Monday-Friday from 3-5pm MDT/5-7pm EDT. Head to catholicguy.com for more information & podcasts of parts of the show! I even made a few appearances last week… and managed to talk about Star Trek within about 3 minutes of my introduction. *cue eye roll from my family*)
One word keeps leaping to my mind regarding these past days: gratitude.
I am immensely grateful for many things. I’m grateful to have seen so many inspiring churches and other sites during our pilgrimage. I’m grateful for having seen The Shroud of Turin, which revealed to me in an unexpected way the raw humanity of Jesus, and how much he must love you and me that he would be so vulnerable for us. I’m grateful for great food and wine and green sambuca. I’m grateful and truly humbled for having been able to celebrate Masses in so many beautiful places, as Jesus became present sacramentally right in my hands. That’s always more mind-blowing and humbling than I can possibly describe or dare to contemplate.
But as I go over these past days, my biggest feeling of gratitude to God is ultimately for the gift of having shared this time with amazing people from all walks of life. It’s incredible to me how Lino can take over three dozen people from across the United States and Canada and that we all meshed together so well. I thoroughly enjoyed our time together. I’m grateful that they laughed at my cheesy anecdotes during the homilies. I’m grateful for being able to share meals, wine, laughs, walks (54+ miles, according to one person’s Fitbit!), prayer, food, sambuca, wine, laughs, awe-inspiring sights, laughs, food, wine, music, Mass, and laughs. And food. And wine.
(I still refuse to buy a selfie stick, however.)
I’m also grateful for Mountain (thecatholictraveler.com) who took his usual great care of the group. This is my second pilgrimage with him and seriously: if you want to travel and have a group you’d like to take with you, get in touch with him! He’s amazing and so very thoughtful.
And I’m so extremely grateful for Lino and Rob for having invited this rather geeky, short, hockey-playing, Rider-fanatic priest from the middle of Saskatchewan to join them on pilgrimage. God has blessed me through you more than you know. Thank you.
I’ve been in a reflective mood in the wake of this pilgrimage as I’m preparing to move from the four parishes that I love so dearly into a new parish in Saskatoon. This pilgrimage powerfully reinforced in my heart an important reality: I receive so much more from the people of God than I give back. God has blessed me in immeasurable ways through all of my parishioners during these past five years in the Watson area, and through my being with Lino, Rob, Mountain, and everyone else on this recent trip. My heart is full.
St. Paul summarizes my feelings very well:
Now to him who by the power at work within us is able to accomplish far more than all we can ask or imagine, to him be glory in the church and in Christ Jesus to all generations, forever and ever. Amen.” (Eph. 3.20-21)
Round one is in the books! In this mini-episode, Frs. Darryl, Geoffrey, and Travis recap the first round of the Stanley Cup playoffs and make our predictions for round two.
We see the start but You see the end
We see in part but Your love sees everything
We plant the seeds but You make them grow
We’re building a house, You’re building a home
This is the great unknown
Love is a long and narrow road
Come chase this heart of stone
I need a future not my own
– Matt Maher, A Future Not My Own
Today it was officially announced that as of July 1, 2015 I will become pastor of Holy Spirit Parish in Saskatoon.
I praise God and I’m more grateful than words for having had the privilege of being pastor of the parishes in Watson, Englefeld, St. Gregor, and Quill Lake over these past years. You have all become family to me. My final weekend in these parishes will be a sad one indeed.
Trusting in the Holy Spirit, I am also looking forward to my new role within the Diocese of Saskatoon. Holy Spirit Parish holds a very special place in my heart, having been the church in which I was ordained a priest on July 13, 2007.
The new pastor of the Watson-Englefeld-Quill Lake parishes will be Fr. Francis Akomeah. Fr. Francis is from the Diocese of Konongo-Mampong in Ghana. He was ordained in 2004.
In addition, the parish of St. Gregory the Great, St. Gregor will be joining the Lake Lenore and Annaheim group of parishes. The new pastor for these parishes will be Fr. Anthony Atter. He is from the Diocese of Obuasi in Ghana. Fr. Anthony was ordained in 2007.
Joining me as Associate Pastor at Holy Spirit will be Fr. Charles Nweze. Fr. Charles is from the Archdiocese of Onitsha in Nigeria. He was ordained in 2006.
As Matt Maher sang so well, my future is not my own. It is in the hands of the God whose love here and now holds me in being, and by whose love I am redeemed. Such can be said for all of us. Please pray for me, for my current parishes, and for my new parish as we all undertake this transition.
Happy Easter! In this episode, I’m joined by Frs. Cory, Andrew, and Geoffrey as we talk about the first round of the Stanley Cup playoffs. Will our picks do better than that of my dog? And who will win it all?
Happy Lent! In today’s show, Fr. Geoff and Fr. Darryl team up to discuss NHL captains. Who were the best captains the years before we were born (up to the late 1970s)? Who were the best captains as we grew up in the 1980s and 1990s? Who are the best captains playing now? Check it out: