Priestly ordinations

Deacon Darren Wallace Legionaries of Christ 2024 Priestly Ordinations

Deacon Darren Wallace to be Ordained April 27, 2024

Deacon Darren Wallace, LC, is one of 7 graduates from the LC Novitiate and College in Cheshire, CT to be ordained this year. On April 27, 2024, in Rome at 4 am Eastern time, the seven will be ordained to the priesthood with thirteen of their brothers. Please join us in praying for all our new priests!  The live stream will be transmitted in Spanish and English. Click here. 

A Look at Deacon Darren Wallace, LC

Deacon Darren Wallace to be Ordained April 27, 2024 Read More »

Deacon Kevin Legionaries of Christ Priestly Ordination 2024

Deacon Kevin O’Bryne to be Ordained April 27, 2024

Deacon Kevin O’Bryne, LC, is one of 7 graduates from the LC Novitiate and College in Cheshire, CT to be ordained this year. On April 27, 2024, in Rome at 4 am Eastern time, the seven will be ordained to the priesthood with thirteen of their brothers. Please join us in praying for all our new priests!  The live stream will be transmitted in Spanish and English. Click here. 

My name is Kevin O’Byrne a religious with the Legionaries of Christ. I am from Regina, Saskatchewan, where I grew up on a farm just south of the city with my parents and older sister. I grew up Catholic but was not very practicing and hardly knew anything about the faith. I went through all the sacraments, but after my confirmation, I felt as though I had “graduated” from Church and did not have to come back unless there was some important event like a marriage or a funeral.

 

All this changed, however, when I was 15 years old when a good friend of mine invited me to come to a Conquest boys retreat at the church which two Legionary of Christ brothers was directing. At this time, I was in high school and was trying to figure out what I wanted out of life and what was the point of it all. During the retreat was the first time in my life that I felt challenged to live a virtuous, honest life, to be a good person, against the selfishness taught by the rest of society. It was also the first time in my life that I experienced the depth of the love of Christ for me. Before this my knowledge of the love of God was very child-like from what we had learned in children’s liturgy and in our religion classes at school. But it had never matured into a real encounter with Jesus who loved me so much that he went to the cross in order to save me. Christ was willing to die so that I may be free from sin and have eternal life. The challenged posed to me then was:

“What are you willing to do to love Him in return?”

 

This was the question that gave meaning to my life throughout my high school and my engineering studies at the University of Regina. I could live my life out of love for God. Little by little I learned who God was. For the first time I opened a bible to read and pray. I read parts of the catechism and learned how to pray the rosary. I began to find other Catholic young people and I continued to be involved in the Conquest club and Regnum Christi. All this time I was growing in my relationship with God, trying to overcome my sinful habits that I had developed, spending time in adoration, mass, and confession, with the desire to let myself be formed into an apostle and saint for God. I spent the summer before my last year of university as a missionary with Catholic Christian Outreach where I was surrounded by other young people who wanted to share the love of Christ. This lit a missionary spark in my heart and gave me a confidence that I could be an instrument in the hands of the Lord. So, after my graduation I took a year off to be a full-time missionary with the Regnum Christi Mission Corps where I helped evangelizing high school and university students around Toronto and also in New York.

 

During this year I was really questioning whether God wanted me to be a priest or not. I loved what I was doing as a missionary and felt as though I would be happy doing it my whole life. So I went to the formation center of the Legionaries in Cheshire, CT for a vocational retreat. Immediately I felt at peace, as though this was where I belonged, as though God wanted me there. After many days of prayer and discernment I decided to enter the novitiate in Cornwall, Ontario with the Legionaries in 2011. It was difficult since, around this time, the Legion was going through a great crisis because of the actions of its founder which caused much suffering for many priests and laypeople. But despite this I could not ignore the call that God wanted me to be there. Throughout my time in Cornwall and later in my further studies in Cheshire and Rome I have experienced firsthand the renewal of the Legion with its desire to remain faithful to Christ and His Church through personal conversion, authentic humility, discernment, and prayer. As I grew in my vocation, I realized that a call to follow Christ does not come from our own decision and actions. It is not me who chose Him, but Him who chose me. A vocation is a gift of grace that can be accepted or not. It is the way in which God wants us to love Him and others in the best way possible and is our own personal path to holiness. I was ordained a deacon in Regina, on July 29th 2023. It was an amazing occasion of grace and love from God, my family and the Regnum Christi members from my hometown.

 

After becoming a deacon I was sent to Dallas, TX where I am during my first years of ministry, even after being ordained a priest, working with ECYD boys and at the Highlands School. There I hope to share the love of Christ in the same way that he was shared with me. Please keep me in your prayers as I will be ordained on April 27th, 2024 at the Basilica of St. Paul Outside the Wall in Rome.

Deacon Kevin O’Bryne to be Ordained April 27, 2024 Read More »

Deacon Torrey Legionaries of Christ Priestly Ordinations 2024

Deacon Andrew Torrey, LC, to be Ordained April 27, 2024

Deacon Andrew Torrey, LC, will be ordained to the priesthood on April 27, 2024, in Rome at 4 am Eastern time, with 19 of his LC brothers. Please join us in praying for all our new priests!  The live stream will be transmitted in Spanish and English. Click here. 

 
 

A Look at Deacon Andrew Torrey, LC

 

Deacon Andrew is brothers with Fr. Nathan Torrey, LC, the assistant novice director at the Legionaries of Christ Novitiate & College of Humanities in Cheshire, CT.
 
 

Deacon Andrew Torrey, LC, to be Ordained April 27, 2024 Read More »

Legionaries of Christ 2024 Priestly Ordinations

Deacon Christopher Daniels, LC, to be Ordained April 27, 2024

Deacon Christopher Daniels, LC, is one of 7 graduates from the LC Novitiate and College in Cheshire, CT to be ordained this year. On April 27, 2024, in Rome at 4 am Eastern time, the seven will be ordained to the priesthood with thirteen of their brothers. Please join us in praying for all our new priests!  The live stream will be transmitted in Spanish and English. Click here. 

 


 

I grew up in Atlanta, Georgia, in a great family. My mom showed me the value of the faith, and of cleaning my room, my dad taught me the value work, and how to tell a good story, with plenty of exaggeration, my sister Chelsea pulled me out of the world of books into the world of dancing and friends and my oldest sister, Angela, showed me the importance of laughing and loving life. 

 

My parents sent me to Pinecrest Academy from kindergarten through high school, where I met the Legionaries of Christ and Regnum Christi. I had a blast there, and enjoyed it to the full.  

 

The thought of being a priest crossed my mind several times in high school, but I would always brush it off and explain it away, like, “I just want to give talks in front of people… you can do that in a lot of vocations” or “I could never be a priest because I…(fill in the blank with sin)”. Really, I was scared of the priesthood and did not want to be a priest, even though there was something there. 

 

I didn’t face it until it hit me in my coworker year, now known as Regnum Christi Mission Corps. I was living with the Legionaries in San Jose, California, working with ECYD and living a life of grace I never had before. There was mass every day, time to pray with Jesus for a half hour before mass, confession on-demand (one of the perks when you live with priests)… and things started to happen.  

 

I remember being in the chapel one Friday, praying the stations of the cross by myself, when I came to the 12th station and looked up at the cross. Looking at Jesus, it struck me like it never had before. Christ died for me, he gave up everything for me. Could I do that for him? Could I give up everything for Christ?

 

My heart started pounding, I started hyperventilating, and it was as if a dark cloud was gathering above my head that said PRIESTHOOD. I had heard the whole, “be generous with God” thing on a lot of retreats, in ECYD and Regnum Christi, but it had never sunk in like that. I realized, all in an instant, what that meant: giving up the girlfriend, my friends, my family, even what I wanted to do, and follow Christ. I was terrified. 

 

So, I lied to myself. “Sure, I could give up everything for Christ, no problem…” Then I hightailed it out of that chapel and tried to distract myself, I think I even called the girl I was dating.  

 

I went back and forth for the next year and a half, ended up going out there to give another RCMC year, and at the end realized there was something there that wouldn’t leave me alone, that I had to go check out. So, I went to the candidacy, the summer long come-and-see at the Legion’s seminary in Connecticut. 

 

When I arrived, I was super mad at God. “Why did you stick me in a seminary?? I gave you two years of my life and all I wanted was a good life and a beautiful wife, and I had the wife picked out! This is not what I wanted!” But when people asked me why I was there if I didn’t want to be, it was clear to me that I had to find out what God’s will was. I wanted to know, even if I didn’t like it.  

 

So, I stayed, had a great summer, even amidst tremendous interior struggle. At the end of the summer, there was an eight-day silent retreat. In the middle of it the priest, Fr Jason Smith, pulled me out and asked me how I was doing. I don’t know what it was, but all of the sudden it was like there was a sunrise in my soul. I realized right then that I was at peace. I realized that that peace I felt was what I had been looking for all along, that happiness I had been seeking in my relationship, in my friends, in sin, everywhere else, and it was as if Christ just showed me, “Look, I made your heart for me, here, as a Legionary priest.”   

 

So, I knew that was where I belonged. That was 13 years ago. Life is a rollercoaster, the clouds and storms come back, there are crisis moments, but I have always had that baseline peace, knowing that this is where God wants me.

Deacon Christopher Daniels, LC, to be Ordained April 27, 2024 Read More »

37 Legionaries of Christ Ordained at the 2019 Priestly Ordinations

Archbishop José Rodríguez Carballo, O.F.M., ordains 37 Legionaries of Christ.

1. The ceremony took place at the Basilica of St. John Lateran, in Rome, on May 4, 2019, at 10:00 a.m (4:00 am EST).

2. Approximately 2,000 people attended the ceremony in person and over 7,000 people tuned in to the livestreams available online, offered in both English and Spanish, on May 4, 2019.

3. Archbishop José Rodriguez Carballo, O.F.M., in speaking to the newly ordained priests, said “the priest, more than any other, must be considered a man of the people, for the people. Neither the lifestyle nor the language that he uses in the service of evangelization can separate him from the people…”

Read the full press release

37 Legionaries of Christ Ordained at the 2019 Priestly Ordinations Read More »

Cardinal Giuseppe Bertello ordains 33 Legionaries of Christ

“With your ministry, you will act in His name. You are called to proclaim to everyone that God has not abandoned man, to bring a message of confidence and brotherhood to all those who face many evils afflicted on society, to be the words of consolation to all those who suffer injustice and grief. You are called to defend them in their rights, and to provide for them through the many works that the Congregation has developed over many years, which are already a fulfillment of the biblical passage we have heard today.”

  1. The ceremony took place in Rome, in the Basilica of Saint Paul Outside the Walls.
  2. More than 3,000 people came out to accompany the new priests.
  3. Cardinal Bertello said, “I would like to start by thanking Father Eduardo for inviting me to preside over the rite of Ordinations of these brothers. I met your congregation many years ago, when I arrived as Papal Nuncio to Mexico and received many examples from your apostolic zeal, depth of your spiritual life, and your love for the Church. These moments make me feel even closer to you and urge me to take you in my prayers.”

Rome, December 16, 2017 – Cardinal Giuseppe Bertello, the President of the Governate of the Vatican City State as well as President of the Pontifical Commission for the Vatican City State, ordained 33 Legionaries of Christ to the priesthood in the Basilica of Saint Paul Outside the Walls. More than three thousand people attended the ceremony, including family members, friends, and companions and formators from the seminary. Father Eduardo Robles-Gil, LC, the General Director of the Legionaries of Christ and the Regnum Christi Movement, presented the candidates for ordination.

In his homily, Cardinal Bertello said, “Dear ordinands, having invoked the intercession of the Virgin Mary and all the Saints, by the laying on of hands, and the ordination prayer you will receive the dignity of the priesthood to celebrate the mysteries of Christ, according to the tradition of the Church, especially in the Eucharistic sacrifice and the sacrament of reconciliation, to the praise of God and the sanctification of the Christian people. You will then be transformed in him and your identification with Christ will reach such a depth that you will become a living tool of his work. Each ministry will be entrusted to you, you must always be a minister of Christ Jesus, as if your person disappears in front of his because he will work in you and through you. Don’t say, maybe the priest is an alter Christus and acts in persona Christi. This is the path to holiness which you must resume daily with humility, obedience and charity in order to make this your ministry, your work corresponds to your being. Brothers and sisters, those whom you will encounter, expect from you this testimony of life. Do not ever let your failings and the challenges of ministry discourage you. If you remain solicitous to the Lord in prayer and persevere in offering the compassion of Christ to your brothers and sisters, then the Lord will certainly fill your hearts with the comforting joy of his Holy Spirit (see Pope Francis, To the Priests and Religious of Bangladesh, O.R.3.12.17).

At the end of the ordination rite, I will give you the paten and the cup and I will tell you: Realize what you do, imitate what you celebrate, conform your life to the mystery of the Cross of Christ. This is the wish, which is transformed into prayer, which I formulate from the heart, in the name of everyone, to each one of you. May the Virgin Mary, Queen of the Apostles, take you by the hand and accompany you in every moment of your life, in your service to Jesus and to his Church.”

The rector of the theological community of the General Directorate, Father Ignacio Sarre, LC, comments: “Ordination is certainly a point of arrival, preceded by many years of formation, journeying and effort. That is why we feel great joy as well as gratitude: to God, from whom all good things come; to those ordained, for their generosity; to their relatives and to all those who have supported them. At the same time, ordination is a point of departure. It is the beginning of what they have prepared for. In that sense, the most important thing is that they continue to foster a continual and growing attitude of love and dedicated service, something we would call ‘ongoing formation.’ That is why I often repeat that they are not preparing ‘for ordination,’ which takes place once and soon passes away, but for a lifetime of dedication to ministry, as Legionaries of Christ.”

Father Eduardo Robles-Gil, LC, the General Director of the Legionaries of Christ and the Regnum Christi Movement, comments: “For the Legion of Christ and Regnum Christi it is an immense joy to be able to offer the Church 33 new priests. Through their priestly ministry they will collaborate to make the merciful love of God present in the hearts of people and in society, that same love that we contemplate next week in the mystery of Bethlehem, born out of love for all humanity.”

About 150 priests concelebrated at the ordination Mass. Archbishop Jorge Carlos Patrón Wong, Secretary for Seminaries of the Congregation for the Clergy, and Bishop Paolino Schiavon, retired Auxiliary Bishop of the Diocese of Rome, assisted in the Rite of the Anointing of Hands and the presentation of the chalice and paten to the newly ordained.

Who are the new priests?

The 33 new priests come from 11 countries: Italy (1), Slovakia (1), Brazil (5), Canada (1), El Salvador (2), Venezuela (3), Spain (1), Colombia (1), Mexico (13), the Philippines (1) and the United States (4). All of them obtained their degrees in philosophy and theology at the Pontifical Athenaeum Regina Apostolorum. The time of study and preparation also included a period of pastoral internship, in the field of education, missions, youth work, family ministry or formation of high school seminarians.

Among the new priests is Father John Klein, LC, from the United States, who studied music production at Middle Tennessee State University and has put out two albums, Love is Brave and Fearless. Father Leonardo Pérez-Castilla, from Venezuela, who studied four years of Economics at the Andrés Bello Catholic University before joining the Legion of Christ.

Father Miguel Subirachs. LC, of Spain, comments: “From the time I was little I wanted to be a missionary. I was particularly struck when volunteers or missionaries came to the school and spoke of their experiences. I dreamed of doing something great for others. The call of Jesus, ‘Come and follow me!’ has resounded down through the centuries and continues to resonate in the lives of many young people. It is a call to live life to the fullest, closer to him and configured with him. Being a priest is not something natural, it is supernatural. We should not try to understand it perfectly because it is a question of Love.”

Father Stefano Panizzolo, LC, an Italian, entered the Legion of Christ after obtaining his degree in architecture in Venice. Father Michael Baggot, from the United States, was an agnostic who was baptized, confirmed and received his First Communion in the Catholic Church in 2003 at the Easter Vigil.

Father Antonio Lemos, LC, originally from Brazil, studied law at the Federal University of Paraná for four years. Father Manuel Cervantes, a Mexican, spent a year as Regnum Christi Mission Corps volunteer in Padua, Italy, before joining the Legion of Christ.

Father Luis Lorenzo, LC, is the first Legionary priest from the Philippines.

The stories of the new priests can be found on the website for the priestly ordinations 2017.

 

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Alex Kucera

Atlanta

Alex Kucera has lived in Atlanta, GA, for the last 46 years. He is one of 9 children, married to his wife Karmen, and has 3 girls, one grandson, and a granddaughter on the way. Alex joined Regnum Christi in 2007. Out of the gate, he joined the Helping Hands Medical Missions apostolate and is still participating today with the Ghana Friendship Mission.

In 2009, Alex was asked to be the Atlanta RC Renewal Coordinator for the Atlanta Locality to help the RC members with the RC renewal process. Alex became a Group Leader in 2012 for four of the Atlanta Men’s Section Teams and continues today. Running in parallel, in 2013, Alex became a Team Leader and shepherded a large team of good men.

Alex was honored to be the Atlanta Mission Coordinator between 2010 to 2022 (12 years), coordinating 5-8 Holy Week Mission teams across Georgia. He also created and coordinated missions at a parish in Athens, GA, for 9 years. Alex continues to coordinate Holy Week Missions, Advent Missions, and Monthly missions at Good Shepherd Catholic Church in Cumming, GA.

From 2016 to 2022, Alex also served as the Men’s Section Assistant in Atlanta. He loved working with the Men’s Section Director, the Legionaries, Consecrated, and Women’s Section leadership teams.

Alex is exceptionally grateful to the Legionaries, Consecrated, and many RC members who he’s journeyed shoulder to shoulder, growing his relationship with Christ and others along the way. He knows that there is only one way, that’s Christ’s Way, with others!