| (This is the first in a series of articles personalizing people and
programs that benefit from the Archbishops Annual Appeal, to be held in
the archdiocese on Sunday, March 11.)
By Paula Day
Patrick Kingery, 26, who is studying for the priesthood for this
archdiocese, is a native vocation, the son of Georgians who became Catholic
while at the University of Georgia in Athens.
With these deep roots here, he also represents the New South that is
emerging at the end of this century. Bilingual in Spanish and English, Kingery
says his involvement with the Hispanic culture and the Hispanic peoples
history of struggle has sustained his desire to give his life to the
priesthood.
He is one of 16 seminarians studying, either in the U.S. or Ireland, for the
archdiocesan priesthood. Two candidates, Ron Fuchs and Paul Flood, are to be
ordained as priests this spring.
A first theology student at St. Marys Seminary and University in
Baltimore, Kingery is the son of Bill and Jolaine Kingery of Immaculate Heart
of Mary parish in Atlanta.
When he finished his undergraduate studies at St. John Vianney Seminary
College in Miami in 1986, he wasnt certain about taking the next
stepentering a major seminary. He hadnt ruled out the priesthood,
he says, but he just wasnt sure.
However, his years in Miami had had a major impact on his life. I
became friends with seminarians from Latin America. My exposure to the Spanish
culture helped me see a whole aspect of life Id never known before, a
people whose life experiences had been so different from my own, their
struggles, their poverty, their experiences of social injustice. I wanted to
work with them, he said. You can know about a culture on an
academic level, but when you know people of that culture, that takes on a
deeper meaning.
Kingery returned to Atlanta, searching and praying for direction in his
life. At the time Catholic Social Services needed a bilingual director for its
legalization program, helping immigrants illegally in this county to take
advantage of a one-year amnesty offered by the U.S. Immigration and
Naturalization Service.
The post let him use his linguistic gifts and help a group of people with
whom he empathized. He remembers now his nervousness about the responsibility
and recalls his mother saying, Every day do your best job and trust in
God. The job often demanded coping with emergencies and the eleventh hour
plight of poor people trying to benefit from the law. He was still at the INS
Office at midnight sometimes and he was called by them to help when they were
confronted with crises like a group of migrant workers dumped at the office by
an unscrupulous boss.
During this time Kingery realized he would only be truly happy in giving
himself in service to others, but he struggled with how to do this.
He thought of doing social work but finally admitted, Anything less
than giving my life to the priesthood wouldnt be enough. I wouldnt
feel fulfilled.
Kingery is quick to say he is not implying that priests are the only ones
called to be holy; that is the calling of every baptized person.
But Religious and priests consecrate their lives with an
emphasis on the world beyond. I want my own life to be a witness to Gods
tremendous love.
Others have influenced and inspired Kingery. He mentions Monsignor Michael
Regan, present pastor of Our Lady of Perpetual Help parish in Carrollton, who
baptized him and gave him his First Communion; Father Terry Young, principal at
St. Pius X High School, and Father Jorge Christancho, whose ministry to
Hispanic newcomers in Atlanta was an inspiration to him.
An incident in the spring of 1988 helped finalize his decision to return to
the seminary.
He visited Father Brent Bohan, who served the Hispanic community from
Immaculate Heart of Mary parish, shortly before the 33-year-old priest died.
When are you going to return to the seminary? Father
Bohan asked him. I want you to know Im still praying for you.
He was there dying and he continued to think about the needs of the
Church, Kingery recalls.
Seminarians are in a period of formation for the ministerial priesthood,
Kingery explained. They live in community with other seminarians, develop their
spiritual life and attend regular university-level classes working toward a
masters degree in theology.
St. Marys Seminary has 110 men, ranging in age from 22 to 62, from
dioceses in the East and Midwest. They live together, pray together, eat
together. Their communal prayer life consists of the Liturgy of the Hours in
the morning and evening and daily Mass. A spiritual director and a spiritual
mentor work with them to assess and discern their vocational and spiritual
growth. Kingery and another seminarian from Atlanta, Gregory Goolsby, will be
installed as lectors in Baltimore, Feb. 14, by Archbishop Eugene Marino, SSJ.
Kingery says he dreams about the day when he will minister to and serve the
people of God in north Georgia.
It helps in the study. Someday someone will be asking me to
explain the mysteries of our faith or be with them during a particular struggle
in their life, or more importantly, administer one of the sacraments. Dreaming
about that helps you get through the daily life of the seminary.
This year the Archbishops Annual Appeal designates $132,400 to
support the preparation and education of the 16 seminarians of the archdiocese.
Eleven men are studying in the United States; five in Ireland.
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