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July
21, 2005
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Saint
Francis Seminary celebrates
150th Anniversary |
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| PRIESTS
ATTEND SEMINARY MASS — Retired
archdiocesan priests Fr. James Brady, left,
Edward Carroll and William Cox listen to
Archbishop Timothy M. Dolan deliver his
homily during an outdoor Mass at Saint Francis
Seminary July 15. (Catholic Herald photos
by Sam Lucero) |
ST. FRANCIS
— When an institution celebrates the 150th
anniversary of the laying of its cornerstone,
the effect might be as bland as the brick and
mortar that surround that stone. But the 150th
anniversary Saint Francis Seminary celebrated
July 15 made little mention how Henni Hall, its
central building, was constructed of bricks baked
from clay that anchored the site.
Instead, the celebration which began the seminary’s
anniversary year, and which also marked the 100th
anniversary of the Salesianum, its alumni/alumnae
association, was filled with the stories of people
who received their education there, be they the
clergy it has always educated, former seminarians
who answered the call to other vocations, or laity
who have been invited to receive formation there
since 1972.
Fr. Michael Witczak, the seminary’s rector
since January 2002, noted in an interview with
the Catholic Herald that memories Saint Francis
Seminary alums have are often linked to those
who taught them.
“They talk about the professors they had
here who influenced their way of thinking, their
prayer life, their way of seeing who Jesus is
in their life,” he said. “That constitutes
the core of Saint Francis Seminary.”
Stories
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| SINGING
PRAISE — Cynthia Rapacke
plays the organ during an outdoor Mass at
Saint Francis Seminary while Judith Wargin
and Fr. Norberto Sandoval lead the congregation
in song. |
As more than 200
people gathered to celebrate the occasion at an
outdoor Mass with Archbishop Timothy M. Dolan,
Auxiliary Bishop Richard J. Sklba, and other clergy
who had served on the seminary faculty, one could
hear reminiscences between alums.
“I lived on the fourth floor one year,”
would begin a story. “Fifth and sixth floors
were condemned.” This would lead to an exchange
of who lived where. (Fr. Witczak noted in his
interview with the Herald that the two floors
had not been condemned, but that the rector at
the time had concerns about students’ safety
and therefore opted not to house them on those
floors.)
In the midst of a conversation, someone would
ask “Do you remember the time …”
and another round of memories would be served.
In his homily, Archbishop Dolan noted that he
had learned about Saint Francis Seminary as part
of his graduate studies in church history at The
Catholic University of America.
“Salzmann. Haas. Muench. Meyer,” he
said, citing men who served as rectors of the
seminary — Fr. Joseph Salzmann, Bishop Joseph
Haas, Cardinal Aloysius Muench, and Cardinal Albert
Meyer.
He noted how he felt on June 24, 2002 when Bishop
Sklba drove him “up the ‘Gone With
the Wind’ driveway” toward his residence.
“‘This is home; this is ours. I belong
here,’” he recalled thinking that
day.
Describing the seminary as “part of our
sacred heritage,” Archbishop Dolan said,
“For all that has been, thanks be to God.
For all that is to come, Jesus, we trust in thee.”
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| PRAYER
CARDS ON DISPLAY — Souvenir
prayer cards from priestly ordinations dating
to the late 1800s lined the walls of Christ
King Chapel inside Saint Francis Seminary.
The display of prayer cards, distributed
to friends and family on the day of ordination,
was created by Tim Cary, archdiocesan archivist. |
Fr. Joseph Baran,
a member of the ordination class of 1947, told
the Catholic Herald that his seminary experience
is never far from his mind or from that of his
classmates.
“We (priest friends) chat about this for
15-20 minutes every day,” he said.
Fr. Baran, whose class went to school during the
summers of 1944 and 1945 allowing them to be ordained
a year earlier than scheduled, recalled that seminarians
in their last two years of philosophy studies
and throughout their four years of theology studies
dressed the same.
“We wore cassocks all the time,” he
said — even for post-breakfast walks to
the lakefront.
Lifelong friendships with classmates were not
unique to one generation of priests.
“An experience I take with me is the faith
community of my brother priests and the close
bond we had,” Fr. Tim Bickel, class of 1992,
told the Catholic Herald. “These friendships
will last forever.”
Fr. Bickel, pastor at St. Agnes, Butler, said
that his seminary education “gave me the
confidence to share the faith and to follow through
with my priesthood commitment and lifestyle.”
He added that the support of other priests continued
to be instrumental in that, too.
Fr. Todd Budde, class of 2001 and associate pastor
at St. Mary, Hales Corners,noted not only the
bond he felt with other seminarians, but the grounding
that the seminary provided for his vocation.
“It was a very good base to have as a priest.
A lot of what we were taught helps when dealing
with people and issues,” he said. “The
seminary was a good foundation for me to be the
kind of priest I am.”
Asked what his most memorable experience was at
Saint Francis Seminary, Fr. Leonard Barbian, class
of 1965, replied quickly, “The day I received
word I had passed metaphysics!”
Now pastor of St. William, Waukesha, Fr. Barbian
said the seminary “had a profound impact”
upon him.
“It prepared me for my life’s work.
It taught me that serving God’s people is
what ordination is about — that we are ordained
not for ourselves, but to serve others,”
he said.
‘Crucial
moment’ for seminary
While the anniversary evoked memories and highlighted
the seminary’s heritage, Fr. Witczak, a
member of the class of 1977 who has studied or
experienced the changes that have taken place
in the seminary’s history, refers to the
present as “a crucial moment in the history
of Saint Francis Seminary” and a time when
it “redefines its future.”
When he speaks about that future, he mentions
not only the increase in the number of seminarians
who have enrolled in recent years, but about the
education and formation it has provided to candidates
for the diaconate since 1973, and, since 1972,
to laity who are involved in ministry.
Fr. Witczak said that the “repositioning
of the seminary as a viable asset for the church
in the life of the Archdiocese of Milwaukee,”
raises questions to which he, Archbishop Dolan
and others seek answers:
• Is this the place where we train ministers
for the church, but which also has seminarians,
or is this a seminary that provides the education
and formation for men studying for priesthood,
and also provides education and formation for
deacon candidates and those involved in lay ministry?
• Is the time right to invite those from
other dioceses to consider us for the education
and formation of their seminarians?
• How might Saint Francis Seminary and other
institutions collaborate?
• What needs to be done in order to foster
leadership in the archdiocese? What role does
the seminary have in that?
Following the presentation of awards by the Salesianum,
Fr. Witczak told the gathering, “Saint Francis
Seminary is a constant in the archdiocese. We
continue to grow, develop, and evolve. I invite
you to participate in that growth.” |
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