“To make of all my life a Mass and of the Mass all my life”: Reflections on My 35th Anniversary of Priestly Ordination
Last Sunday, June 25th, I marked my 35th Anniversary of priestly ordination—June 25th, 1988, at Holy Cross Cathedral, Boston. (The first photo to the left is the formal picture I had taken for the Boston Pilot: the second [middle] is a picture with my mother Joyce Higgins on the day I offered my First Mass of Thanksgiving at our home parish of St. Joseph’s, Needham, June 26th, 1988.)
These anniversary occasions naturally lend themselves to much thanksgiving, reflections on the events of the last 35 years, and renewal of resolutions for going forward.
I had the particularly wonderful experience last Sunday of attending the Iraqi Chaldean Mission’s Sunday Mass, celebrated by their Bishop, Francis Kalabat, and hearing the Liturgy sung in Aramaic, “the language of Jesus.”
The holy card to the right (above) was a gift to me upon my ordination by my friend Father Jean-François Thomas, S.J. (who was ordained a priest on June 26th, 1988, in France). The words
Faire de toute ma vie une Messe et de la Messe toute ma vie translate as: “To make of all my life a Mass and of the Mass all my life.”
They are words of inspiration indeed for any priest, but they have their meaning for every Christian too. All of us, by virtue of our Baptism share in the one priesthood of Jesus Christ. Our lives should be immersed in the Mass-mystery, with our Praise and Adoration, Thanksgiving, Reparation and Petition joined to that of Christ’s and offered to the Eternal Father. Therefore every one of us Christians can apply the saying,
“To make of all my life a Mass and of the Mass all my life.”
With God there is always more. All around us we see a world where people are demoralized and panicked in their lives. And all the while the Sacrifice of the Mass is in their midst, with everything that is needful for them. If only they could see it…
May our faith in the Mass-mystery ever increase. May God deliver us from the spirit of indifference and that “making free” with God which is so prevalent these days. Thank you for all the kindness, good-will and support which you give to your ordained-priests and which helps to sustain us.