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Lawyer prepares to become priest (his vocation began with a search for a date)
Ventura County Star ^ | January 10, 2009 | Alicia Doyle

Posted on 01/12/2009 8:54:25 AM PST by NYer

Christopher Fagan was a successful lawyer seeking to settle down and raise a family when he was called to the priesthood.

“I had been practicing law for about 13 years, and I was very much enjoying what I was doing,” recalled Fagan, 56, a student living at St. John’s Seminary in Camarillo who expects to be ordained in May.

While the Catholic faith was always important to him, his only involvement in the church was to go to Sunday Mass.

“I was also trying to meet someone with whom I could settle down and raise a family,” he said.

So he started going to his parish’s Sunday night meetings of its young adult group. But instead of meeting a potential partner, he got more involved in parish activities, including outreach programs for the homeless and social justice programs.

Fagan, who specialized in estate planning, probate and general corporate law after graduating from the University of San Francisco, worked with the parish’s outreach programs for five years. Then the pastor asked him to assume the chair of the liturgy committee, where he spent the next five years preparing and coordinating various Sunday and seasonal liturgies.

“One day, one of the older priests told me that he noticed I was at the parish a lot and he wondered if I might have a vocation,” Fagan said. “I told him that the thought had crossed my mind.”

Still, there was a part of him that fought the idea. “I really did not want to give up my job, my house, my lifestyle.”

And more people noticed his work at the church. “ People would come up to me and ask, ‘Do you think you might have a vocation?’ In fact, I began to think that the pastor was paying people to come up to me and ask me that question.”

He always answered that he had no intention of becoming a priest.

Age not an issue

At the pastor’s suggestion, he began regular spiritual direction, again, with no intent to change careers.

“But the more I prayed and volunteered at my parish, the more joy I felt in doing parish work, and I felt the need to explore why I experienced this joy, a joy that I did not feel in my regular job as an attorney.”

He entered the seminary in the fall semester of 2003.

Fagan is older than most men pursuing a life in the priesthood. But it is not unusual for a man to enter the seminary in his 30s or 40s after having had other careers, said Monsignor Craig Cox, rector and president of St. John’s, a multicultural community of seminarians pursuing advanced degrees leading to ordination and pastoral ministry.

“We have a retired Los Angeles Police Department officer who entered this year at age 50,” Cox said.

The current student body also includes a physician, a second attorney, a respiratory therapist, and people with careers in education and business.

“Their education and experience brings a richness to their studies and to their eventual ministry as priests,” Cox said.

For these men, it is not primarily a search for personal fulfillment that motivates them but rather a sense of being called, he added.

Path to the priesthood

Born in Whittier, Fagan is the youngest of five children. He attended St. Mary of the Assumption School, Whittier Union High School and Pomona College.

“At Pomona College, my undergraduate alma mater, I was fascinated by history, language and science and the different analytical methods and perspectives each has,” Fagan said. “I was also struggling with how to make a difference for the better in the world.”

In his senior year, he decided to go to law school because he could remain a “generalist” and apply the different analytical methods and perspectives he had learned at Pomona to any legal problem.

“As a generalist, I would never lose sight of the larger picture. I might be able to contribute to making the world a better place and I could actually make a living.”

After passing the bar in 1979, he worked at the Goldman and Kagon law firm in Los Angeles, helping people plan their futures and devise ways to care for their families after death.

“I helped them walk those journeys as a legal adviser and, sometimes, just as someone who would listen to them as they grieved and tried to cope with significant life changes,” he said.

When it comes to his priestly vocation, Fagan believes “we are dealing with the mystery of how the Holy Spirit works in a person’s life. I don’t know anyone who can fully answer the basic questions, ‘Why me, Lord? And why now, Lord?’”

Challenges ahead

After his ordination in May, one of his biggest challenges will be maintaining a balanced lifestyle in the midst of a busy parish setting.

Another challenge is living a celibate life as part of his total gift of self.

“My pastoral internship year provided an opportunity to deepen my understanding of what it means to live a celibate life,” he said.

Fagan emphasized that vocations are part of the mystery of how the Holy Spirit works in people’s lives.

“So do I believe that God chose me to be a priest? Absolutely, just as he chooses others to be married and still others to live in the world as single people,” he said.

“Why did it take 30 years and the pursuit of a different career to come to this realization? Because the priest that God wants me to be is the priest that has been formed by that life experience.”


TOPICS: Catholic; Ministry/Outreach; Religion & Culture
KEYWORDS:

1 posted on 01/12/2009 8:54:25 AM PST by NYer
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To: Salvation; narses; SMEDLEYBUTLER; redhead; Notwithstanding; nickcarraway; Romulus; ...
“But the more I prayed and volunteered at my parish, the more joy I felt in doing parish work, and I felt the need to explore why I experienced this joy, a joy that I did not feel in my regular job as an attorney.”
2 posted on 01/12/2009 8:56:57 AM PST by NYer ("Run from places of sin as from a plague." - St. John Climacus)
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To: NYer

“social justice programs” = sadly often code word for leftist slanted programs of a Marxist nature within churches - just check out the NCC.


3 posted on 01/12/2009 8:59:03 AM PST by Mandingo Conservative (Satan was like the first "community organizer", just ask Eve, the first liberal useful idiot!)
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To: NYer

A wonderful vocation story. I just sent the link to our pastor who had a career in the airline industry before becoming a priest.


4 posted on 01/12/2009 9:06:02 AM PST by Salvation ( †With God all things are possible.†)
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To: Mandingo Conservative

But he also chaired the liturgy committee which is very straightforward and orthodox.


5 posted on 01/12/2009 9:08:37 AM PST by Salvation ( †With God all things are possible.†)
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To: Mandingo Conservative

It’s Marxist if the government enforces it. But if some kind of charitable program — a food bank or a legal clinic or whatever — comes voluntarily from a church, is it Marxist? I’d be interested to hear more about what you are thinking.


6 posted on 01/12/2009 9:08:59 AM PST by hunter75
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To: Mandingo Conservative

It’s Marxist if the government enforces it. But if some kind of charitable program — a food bank or a legal clinic or whatever — comes voluntarily from a church, is it Marxist? I’d be interested to hear more about what you are thinking.


7 posted on 01/12/2009 9:09:23 AM PST by hunter75
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To: Mandingo Conservative

Sometimes a little social justice is needed. It doesn’t necessarily mean it is advocating socialism.


8 posted on 01/12/2009 9:12:38 AM PST by Kirkwood
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To: Mandingo Conservative

I suddenly realized I needed to add something here:

**But he also chaired the liturgy committee which is very straightforward and orthodox.**

Except in diocese where the bishops allows liturgical abuses to run rampant. I can think of one archdiocese quite close to Ventura County, CA.


9 posted on 01/12/2009 9:13:24 AM PST by Salvation ( †With God all things are possible.†)
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To: Salvation
But he also chaired the liturgy committee which is very straightforward and orthodox.

NOT NECESSARILY!!!!

Liturgy Committee can be and often is the breeding ground for all manner of liturgical abuse ... which is neither straightforward nor orthodox. It is, however, very open. One is led to wonder what the Liturgies his committee oversaw looked like.

10 posted on 01/12/2009 9:17:55 AM PST by ArrogantBustard (Western Civilization is Aborting, Buggering, and Contracepting itself out of existence.)
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To: NYer

A soldier of Satan switches to side of God.


11 posted on 01/12/2009 9:18:30 AM PST by FormerACLUmember
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To: NYer

I once served a parish where the Associate Priest was an attorney. We said he accepted the call so that he could make money on Sundays too. :)


12 posted on 01/12/2009 9:25:07 AM PST by Gman (Anglican Priest)
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To: Kirkwood

If they’re equating charity with social justice, I think that advances socialism. Charity then becomes just another transfer of wealth to someone who is simply getting his due.


13 posted on 01/12/2009 9:29:04 AM PST by Varda
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To: NYer

A short article like this cannot fully describe or explain everything about a man’s call to the Priestly ministry. And because words and phrases can be translated by the reader’s own biases and agenda and fears, can we not just interpret the article as one man giving glory to God for the joy he finds in Church ministry as a “late in life” Priest?

There may be people who read this article who have hesitated to accept the Call of God on their lives and who read themselves into the narrative and then make the decision to accept their Call. I never underestimate the Power of God through the written word.


14 posted on 01/12/2009 11:18:05 AM PST by HighlyOpinionated (YOU can get your own Bail Out . . .Dec 18 post at http://auntiecoosa.blogspot.com)
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To: NYer
C. John McCloskey worked on Wall Street for Merrill Lynch and Citbank when he accepted the call.
15 posted on 01/12/2009 5:57:35 PM PST by A.A. Cunningham
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To: FormerACLUmember

Not all of us are followers of the Other


16 posted on 01/12/2009 8:09:10 PM PST by yldstrk (My heros have always been cowboys--Reagan and Bush)
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To: NYer

Jesuit-educated.
Successful attorney.
56 years old and could never get a date.
Liturgy Committee.
One of the worst seminaries in the country.
Mahony’s diocese.

I hope he has a true vocation, and if so, God help the man, he’s going to have to cling tight to it against the odds. Or maybe he’s just another middle-aged Catholic “progressive.” The best thing he could do is cultivate a devotion to the Blessed Mother, that’s his only chance in the mess he’s in and she will protect him.


17 posted on 01/13/2009 1:54:37 AM PST by baa39 (Mater Dei, ora pro nobis.)
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To: baa39
Thank you for the post. I was hoping someone familiar with Ventura county would weigh in on the situation. Let's pray for Mahony's conversion of heart and this priest's vocation.

Here's reason to hope ...

Countdown to Mahony's retirement

18 posted on 01/13/2009 6:12:08 AM PST by NYer ("Run from places of sin as from a plague." - St. John Climacus)
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To: NYer
Non-believers take note: nobody, not even a lawyer is beyond God's grace.
19 posted on 01/13/2009 6:18:53 AM PST by marshmallow ("A country which kills its own children has no future"- Mother Teresa of Calcutta)
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