Bishop Richard J. Malone welcomed a crowd of nearly one thousand at St. Joseph Cathedral Saturday morning by noting that he rarely sees so many smiles in church as on the day of an ordination. On this day, he placed his hands upon the heads for men as he said the ordination prayer making them priests of Jesus Christ forever.
"You, as priests, will
come to know both joy and suffering," said Bishop Malone, who went on tell the
story of the Venerable Francois Xavier Nguyen Van Thuan, who became the bishop
of Saigon, Vietnam in 1975, but soon after was arrested by the Communist
regime. During his 13 years of imprisonment, he managed to send out more than a
thousand messages of hope on cigarette papers. "He found every way he could, in
his own suffering, to get the joy and the hope of the gospel to his people and
that's our charge as well."
All four of the newly ordained priests graduated on May 12
from Christ the King Seminary with master's degrees in divinity. Father Robert
Agbo was born and raised in Nigeria where he attended college and the seminary
before settling in Buffalo in 2013. "To be a priest is to give up everything. I've said yes to God and I'm ready for
whatever that 'yes' means," said Father Agbo, who has been assigned to
Immaculate Conception Church in Wellsville.
Father Martin Gallagher has been assigned to St. Stephen's
on Grand Island. "By giving over to God my life, my freedom, my choices, I will
live a life of simplicity and a life of prayer," said Father Gallagher, who
grew up in South Buffalo and holds undergraduate degrees in sociology and
anthropology. "I am offering over everything that I have to
God and I hope that it will be enough. The only one who can answer that is God,
and I hope that he will make it enough."
Father Luke Uebler will make Queen of Heaven in West Seneca
his first parish as a priest. "It entails being present at all the important moments of
people's lives, from the moment of their birth to the moment of their death and
everything in between," said Father Uebler, a native of the Town of Elma who
also holds degrees in theology and philosophy. "I might not be the most
important person in their lives, but I will be an important second. "
Father Cole Webster grew up in Amherst, and holds a degree
in hospitality administration. He has been assigned to Saints Peter and Paul
Church in Hamburg. "God has a unique call for each one of us and all we can do
is wake up every day and say you are in control of my life and I give myself
completely to you."
Bishop Malone reminded them that they will help people to
bear their own crosses. "Christ becomes
present through us. We embrace the cross as a saving reality in ourselves and
in our people. We live deeply in the paschal mystery. The bishop instructed the
newly ordained priests to always put God and God's people first and put
themselves last. "You should always be joyful. The road of hope does not allow
traveling in sadness. It is the road of
joy."