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Five new priests, reflecting a diversity of ages, cultural
backgrounds and work experience, will be ordained for the
Archdiocese of Los Angeles June 5 at the Cathedral of Our
Lady of the Angels.
Fathers Robert Patrick Fulton, James Halley, Francis Aytona
Mendoza and Rodolfo Prado -- all of whom have completed their
theologate formation at St. John's Seminary in Camarillo --
will be ordained by Cardinal Roger Mahony at the Cathedral,
along with Father Artur Gruszka who completed his seminary
formation in Michigan.
The new priests will begin their
first assignments as associate pastors on July 1. Following
are brief profiles of the new priests:
Father
Robert Patrick Fulton, 54, is a native of Philadelphia,
the son of Mary and the late Charles Fulton. He attended St.
Mary's Elementary School and Lancaster Catholic High School,
both in Lancaster, Pa.; earned a bachelor of science degree
in accounting from Shippensburg University in Pennsylvania;
and worked for some years as a certified public accountant.
"I am a late vocation," he noted. "In high school I felt
a call to be a priest, but did not follow through." After
much discernment, in his late 30s he joined the Missionary
Brothers of Charity in Los Angeles, where, "although I was
very satisfied being a brother, I felt a 'call within a call.'
I felt I was being called to be a servant/leader to the people
of God, both in celebrating the sacraments and pastorally.
My main desire is to be of service to the people of God."
Father Fulton's home parishes are
Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary Church in Lancaster,
Pa., and Our Lady of Guadalupe Church (Hammel Street) in East
Los Angeles. He served his transitional diaconate at Our Lady
of Guadalupe and St. Genevieve Church in Panorama City, and
has been assigned to Our Lady of the Miraculous Medal Church
in Montebello.
Father
Artur Gruszka, 29, was born Oct. 20, 1974 in Glogow,
Poland, the son of Teresa and Franciszek Gruszka. He attended
public high school in Glogow, and for three years studied
law at the University of Szczecin, Poland.
He then studied philosophy for two years at Metropolitan
Seminary in Wroclaw, Poland; completed his Master of Divinity
at SS. Cyril and Methodius Seminary in Orchard Lake, Michigan;
and earned a Master of Arts in Religious Studies from the
University of Detroit Mercy in Michigan.
"All the reasons for me becoming a priest come down to the
one and fundamental reason --- namely, that I believe God
is calling me to serve Him as a priest," he said. "In my life,
I have met many priests who have inspired me to think about
the priesthood, but it is ultimately the desire to do God's
will, not my own, that makes me follow the path to the sacramental
priesthood."
Father Gruszka served as a transitional
deacon at St. Valentine Church, in Redford, Mich. His first
Mass will be celebrated June 6, 11 a.m. at his adopted home
parish, St. Genevieve in Panorama City. He has been assigned
to St. John Fisher Church in Rancho Palos Verdes.
Father
James Halley, 52, was born in Winthrop, Mass. He
attended St. Mary of the Annunciation Elementary School in
Danvers, St. Peter's High School in Gloucester, and earned
a bachelor of arts in Theology at Regent's College, Albany,
N.Y.
He then earned advanced degrees in Spiritual Theology from
Holy Names University in Oakland, and the Graduate Theological
Foundation in South Bend, Ind. He was ordained a permanent
deacon for the Archdiocese of Los Angeles in 1990, and later
became a member of the Friars of the Sick Poor, a diocesan
religious community within the archdiocese, working with the
sick and poor in hospital ministry.
"The reason for our community," he explained, "is to help
those who suffer, to find that there is redemptive meaning
in it, that the very love of Christ is present in their suffering,
and that Christ's love will help them through their suffering."
He has served as a transitional
deacon at St. Matthew Church, Long Beach. As part of a diocesan
religious community, he will be incardinated in the L.A. Archdiocese
and will serve as a priest chaplain in hospital ministry at
St. Francis Medical Center in Lynwood. He will also assist
with parish ministry on weekends at St. Bernard Church in
Bellflower.
Father
Francis Aytona Mendoza was born March 13, 1975
in Quezon City, Philippines, son of the late Desiderio Mendoza
and Violeta Aytona. He attended Bishop Amat High School in
La Puente, and began his college studies at UC Irvine majoring
in Electrical Engineering.
After two years, he transferred to St. John's Seminary College,
earning a BA in English with a minor in Philosophy, and completed
his theological preparation at St. John's Theologate.
" My relationship with God grew immensely when I served
in Youth for Christ, a youth group attached to the Couples
for Christ movement which started in the Philippines," he
said. "Being involved with youth ministry for about a year
and a half, I found myself being called to the seminary. And
the formation process at St. John's helped me to discover
that my vocation was to priesthood."
Among
the "many inspirational priests" who have inspired him to
pursue a vocation to the priesthood is Msgr. Michael Killeen,
pastor of his home parish, St. Elizabeth Ann Seton in Rowland
Heights, where he has served as a deacon as well as at St.
Margaret Mary Alacoque Church in Lomita, and St. Denis Church
in Diamond Bar. His first assignment will be at St. Andrew
Church in Pasadena.
"My reasons for becoming a priest
simply rests on the reality that this is God's call for me,"
he said. "Everyone has a vocation. In dialoguing and processing
it out with God for the last eight years, I have become convinced
that this is what God is asking me to do with my life. And
I have grown to love God and God's people all the more in
the process."
Father
Rodolfo Prado, 34, is a native of Michoacan, Mexico,
the son of Maria I. Reyes and the late Luis Prado. He attended
Miguel Hidalgo Elementary School in Michoacan, then came to
the U.S. and graduated from Hawthorne High School.
"The pastor at my home parish in Mexico was my inspiration
to think about the priesthood," he noted. "He was a role model
for me and I wanted to be like him."
He earned a degree in philosophy from the seminary of Tijuana,
and a degree in pedagogy from the Superior School of Pedagogy
in Ensenada, before completing his theological preparation
at St. John's. Having served as a transitional deacon at his
home parish, St. Joseph Church in Hawthorne, he has been assigned
to the clustered parishes of St. Columbkille and Nativity
in South Los Angeles.
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