FEATURED VIDEO
Home Vocation Guide Three ways my community makes me the priest I am
VISION Vocation Network Sponsors
Three ways my community makes me the priest I am
By Father Jim Kent, O.F.M. Conv.

Three ways my community makes me the priest I am
By Father Jim Kent, O.F.M. Conv.  
This article is also available in: Français
Español
“I am a Franciscan and a priest,” says Father Jim Kent. “God’s call for me would have it no other way.”

I WAS ORDAINED a priest in 1991 with a host of family, friends, and Franciscan friars in attendance. It was a wonderful and Spirit-filled occasion. It’s worth noting, however, that a year earlier I had professed solemn vows to be a Conventual Franciscan for the rest of my life in the presence of those same family, friends, and friars. That chronology is important because it means I was a Franciscan before I was a priest.

Father Jim Kent, O.F.M., Conv. with Father Bernie Zajdel, O.F.M., Conv.
FATHER Jim Kent, O.F.M., Conv. with Father Bernie Zajdel, O.F.M., Conv. “We have vowed to live quite purposefully in poverty, chastity, and obedience and therefore live amid the rewards and challenges of that life.”
While there is only one priesthood rooted in Jesus Christ, there are various manifestations of that priesthood. For me, being a Franciscan cannot help but affect the way I am a priest. It’s in my blood and frames the lens through which I see the world.

Part of that comes from specific elements of Franciscan life and part from my own spiritual DNA. Through my Franciscan formation I have embraced quite clearly the path God has called me to and the way in which I am to live my life. The charism of Saint Francis of Assisi is at the heart of who I am as a person, and that affects how I pray, minister, and witness to the gospel. It also colors the way I am a priest to others.

Life together
First, I am the priest I am because I live in community with other Franciscans. Some are friar-priests, some friar-brothers. This relational element, which includes ordained and nonordained, gives me a daily experience of living not only with other people but also with my professed brothers. We have vowed to live quite purposefully in poverty, chastity, and obedience and therefore live amid the rewards and challenges of that life. That literally impacts my prayer and preaching and how I see myself as a minister of the gospel.

One of the features of our Franciscan life is common prayer. While we all have our own private prayers and devotions, we celebrate the Liturgy of Hours together (a series of Psalm-based prayers recited at regular times during the day), and that is crucial. The rhythm of Morning and Evening Prayer together reminds us of our common commitment to God and each other.

It is also a discipline that, with all the demands of ministry, draws us together and keeps us focused on God. Even though those of us who are priests have various Mass duties, we also have regular celebrations of the Eucharist only among the friars. The Eucharist was extremely important to Saint Francis, and we find it invaluable to celebrate this sacrament together.

Places to go
Second, I am the priest I am because as a Franciscan I have had the opportunity to serve the church in a variety of ministries and places. I have served in parish ministry, in youth and young adult ministry, as director of a retreat and spirituality center, as vocation director, and currently in community administration. I have been greatly blessed to have these experiences because what I have learned in each of these ministries has enriched the others.

I currently live with nine other friars who minister in a parish, a retreat setting, a hospital, a nursing home, and a soup kitchen. One is recovering from serious medical issues; another is retired from full-time work but volunteers with the poor and brings the sacraments to cloistered nuns. One was a high school teacher for many years; another spent a long time as a missionary in Africa. All their experiences inform the priest I am.

As a member of a religious congregation, I know friar-priests who have spent their entire lives in parish ministry but never in one diocese or even in one region of the country. Father Wilfred has been a pastor in Chicago and in coastal Georgia. Father Tom has served in parish ministry in Minnesota, New Mexico, and Costa Rica. Experiencing the universal church beyond the boundaries of one diocese or across international borders adds a depth to our service as pastors. It also helps us all be connected to our brothers and sisters in Christ across the country and throughout the world.

Being a member of a religious order that has friars spread around the globe has afforded me opportunities to celebrate the sacraments from Argentina to Zambia, from Italy to India, from Denmark to Poland to Honduras. To hear the gospel proclaimed in so many languages, to give and receive the Body and Blood of Christ in so many lands, certainly gives my priesthood a depth and breadth beyond compare.

To lead is to serve
A third way being in a religious community affects the way I am a priest is the Franciscan approach to governance and authority. Unlike diocesan priests who are accountable to a bishop appointed by the Holy See, Franciscan friars elect their leaders, whether it’s the regional leader or the person who heads the worldwide congregation. Because we live in such a brotherhood, our leaders are pretty well known to us, especially at the regional, or province, level.

Father Jim Kent, O.F.M. Conv. presides at Mass.
FATHER Jim Kent, O.F.M. Conv.
presides at Mass.
That we have a say in who will govern us is important. It opens avenues of dialogue and input. Saint Francis admonished the friars that those in leadership were to be their servants: Thus we call our province leader the “minister provincial.” The vow to obedience comes from the Latin root of that word, which means “to listen.” This listening is a two-way street, first to the one in leadership and ultimately to the individual friar.

The role of leadership is also a gift to the members and one that is time-limited. While a diocesan bishop is ordained a bishop for life, our leaders only serve for a certain length of time. A friar might be elected to serve for one to three terms, but eventually he will leave office and return to the ordinary body of friars.

I am currently the minister provincial of my province and am provincial to those who at one time were my provincials, including Father Wayne, into whose hands I professed my final solemn vows. I believe that deepens our fraternal relationship not simply in a democratic but in a very human way. Being a priest within these kinds of structures that are built upon a foundation of service always points me to the humility and other-centeredness of Christ.

I am a Franciscan and a priest. God’s call for me would have it no other way.

Father Jim Kent, O.F.M., Conv. with Father Bernie Zajdel, O.F.M., Conv.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Father Jim Kent, O.F.M. Conv. is a Conventual Franciscan and currently serves as minister provincial for the Province of Our Lady of Consolation. From 1994-2007 he was the province’s vocation director.

 

2011 © TrueQuest Communications
Tags
Related

Five reasons we need religious communities

Cómo saber cuál es la voluntad de Dios para mí

Sister Dorothy Stang: Her dying shows us how to live

Point and click to pray

Help is at hand: Guidebooks on the way to religious life

Find your Spirituality Type

Give us this day our daily blog

How is your family taking it?

Vocation Match and sisters get good press . . .

How to survive a "quarterlife crisis"

Pray all ways—three ways to begin

Workers in the virtual vineyard

From break dancing to breaking bread

How a 16th-century nun guides me in religious life

Man with a mission

Jesus at the door

Does chastity matter?

Faith and everyday life

No place like home

¿Es importante la castidad?

Rezar de todas las formas—tres maneras de empezar

Cómo una monja del siglo 16 me guía en la vida religiosa

Rezar de todas las formas—tres maneras de empezar

Jesús a la puerta

Un hombre y su misión

¿Es importante la castidad?

Desde el compartir un baile hasta compartir el pan

Cómo una monja del siglo 16 me guía en la vida religiosa

Soeur Dorothy Stang

Soeur Dorothy Stang

How do I know God's will for me?

Comment connaître la volonté de Dieu?

Trabajadores de la viña virtual

More sacred places: Where beauty and grace meet

Serving as the finger of God

Holiness is for everybody

Being a brother is like surfing

The brothers will be my prayer

What being a priest means to me

Teacher first, sister always

Feeding Jesus’ friends

Just take it

In God we trust

Mission to South Africa: Living in joyful hope

Thriving among the generations

Dear Discerner: Notes on love and promises

Servir comme le doigt de Dieu

Nous avons confiance en Dieu

Ce que signifie pour moi le sacerdoce

Dar de Comer a los Amigos de Jesús

La santidad es para todos

Los hermanos serán mi oración

Ser un hermano es como hacer surfing

Misión a Sudáfrica: Vivir en gozosa esperanza

Floreciendo entre generaciones

Maestra primero, hermana siempre

What Catholics believe about Jesus

Religious Life Timeline

Finding the right fit

Trust God and hit the road

Call me sister

Brotherhood made simple

Catholic sisters thriving in a Muslim world

Full of grace: Reclaiming the rosary

Mysterious encounters

Inspired images

More inspired images

A la recherche de la bonne mesure

Encontrar la medida correcta

Appelle-moi soeur

Llámame hermana

La fratrie simplifiée

La Hermandad simplificada

Des soeurs catholiques dans un monde musulman

Hermanas Católicas en un mundo Musulmán

Pleine de grâce: le rosaire retrouvé

Llenos de gracia: Recuperar el rosario

Des rencontres mystérieuses

Encuentros misteriosos

More about the artists . . . .

Catholic social teaching: a guide

Likes God

Created in community

Be a saint in your own way

Ten things to know about discerning a vocation

Blessed are we who comfort the mourners

Sisters form a colorful bouquet

Why I love being a brother!

Religious communities offer help in Haiti

Back in God's embrace: <br>How to make a good Confession</br>

Truth in stenciling

A user’s guide on the ways to pray

Sé un santo a tu manera

Sois un saint à ta façon

Diez cosas que debemos saber sobre discernir una vocación

Dix points à connaître sur le discernement d’une vocation

¡Por qué me encanta ser un hermano!

Pourquoi j’aime être frère

Benditos somos los que consolamos a los dolientes

Bénis sommes nous qui réconfortons les affligés

Las hermanas forman un bouquet colorido

Les soeurs: un bouquet multicolore

Soeur Martine: Le HLM est son couvent

For Religious Educators: Vocation Lesson Plans

Why I'm giving religious life a try

Community Life: How the many became one

From my beach front condo

The best decision I ever made

Brotherhood: making all the right connections

Lifestyles of the (spiritually) rich and not so famous

How I see the vows: then and now

Go In Peace

Vocations in the works: why we’re considering life as a priest or brother

Encuentra tu tipo de espiritualidad

You were meant to be a missionary

Missionary adventures in Papua New Guinea

God had a few surprises in store

Portrait of a sister in the making

The power of positive energy

The Uncertainty Principle: my free fall into my vocation

Building the kingdom one step at a time

Thank you, Gregory Peck!

Six myths (and some truth) about the gift of celibate chastity

But what if you fall in love?

My life in a college house of discernment

Spiritual direction for dummies (and other smart people who don’t know where to start)

Other vocations that may be right for you

Community is the key

Stay on the right path

Full circle

Hounded by a relentless God

On the road to priesthood in the company of a faithful God

Testing the waters of my vocation

A searing presence

The orange couch behind the door, or: When good enough is enough

Come and see!

I am a brother to 2,000 college students

Brother behind bars

Holy Toledo! How I wound up in Taiwan

How to stay open to God’s call

And Jesus said, “Feed my lambs.”

My week with the Sisters of St. Joseph of Rochester

Living the vows

What does it mean to be a Carmelite?

A dictionary for discerners

Love calls me to celibacy

Why I love being a priest

What are you afraid of?

Three habits to make you a better disciple

The essential facts about secular institutes

Pray always

An insider view of community

Words for the wise: Defining the vocabulary of religious life

The three essentials in every priest’s life

Confessions of a happy priest

All because of God

Six compelling excuses for not becoming a nun—debunked

Called, and called again

My journey to being a Brother of Mary

The education of Sister Bridget Bearss, R.S.C.J.

Beginning again in Ireland

In search of the missing piece of myself

Why Catholics care about people living in poverty

How I let go of old ideas

Accept the gift of forgiveness

What do Catholics mean by “authority”?

Pilgrims here on earth

Exactly where he should be

Women of Spirit

Taking on new habits

What happens in spiritual direction?

When making life choices, turn to the Eucharist

How I satisfied my hunger to make a difference

Acepta el regalo del perdón

El sofá naranja detrás de la puerta, o: Cuando suficientemente bueno es suficiente

Seis excusas convincentes para no ser monja—refutadas

Vivir los votos

Mi travesía para ser un Hermano de María

Todo se debe a Dios

Peregrinos aquí en la tierra

Empezando de nuevo en Irlanda

Mujeres de Espíritu

Accepter le don du pardon

Pèlerins ici sur terre

Le divan couleur orange derrière la porte, ou: Quand le suffisamment bon suffit

Un nouveau début en Irlande

How to use Vocation Match

Cómo usar el EncuentroVocacional.com

Comment se servir du VocationMatch.com

Tout par la grâce de Dieu

Vivre les vœux

Six raisons impérieuses pour ne pas devenir religieuse–démythifiées

Mon cheminement pour devenir un Brother of Mary

Des femmes de fort caractère

Cómo sobrevivir a una crisis de “un cuarto de vida”

Doctrina social católica: una guía

Hermana Dorothy Stang: su muerte nos enseña cómo vivir

Spinning with the Spirit - VISION music podcasts

PODCAST: Sacred Music

The Creed: A force to be reckoned with

Podcast: Spring Fever

PODCAST: Welcome Back!

PODCAST: Runner's delight

PODCAST: Called to be saints

PODCAST: Tricks and Treats

PODCAST: Thankful Thanksgiving

PODCAST: Christmas Jingles

PODCAST: Cupid Shuffle

Sacred places: Where beauty and grace meet

Podcast: Erin Go Bragh

Most Viewed
Most Emailed
VISION Vocation Network Sponsors
Vocation Network Sponsors
Home | About Us | Contact Us | Become a Sponsor | Religious Life & Vocations | Match | RSS | Feedback | Log In