July 25, 2024

Legionaries of Christ Diaconate Ordination 2024

Called by Name to be Christ’s Alone

Dcn. John Kenny, LC, was ordained to the transitional deaconate by Cardinal Dinardo on August 17, 2024, at the Co-Cathedral of the Sacred Heart in Houston Texas. He shares his vocation story below.

Legionaries of Christ Diaconate Ordination 2024Howdy y’all, my name is John Kenny! I was born and raised in the mighty metropolis of Houston, Texas. I come from a large Catholic family, two boys and five girls. I am the third in the line up. I grew up playing a lot of sports, but I especially loved swimming and soccer. Family was very important and I think where I got my sensitivity to spiritual things was from my mom and dad. I would observe how they prayed at Mass, and I got the feeling that it really meant something to them. Also, I loved how they combined faith with fun things. My dad would usually take us to baseball games right after Mass, and my mom always knew how to combine faith with her love for the outdoors in the frequent camping trips we took as kids.

I remember that when I was around 13 years old, I would go with my mom and younger sisters to downtown Houston. We would go to this chapel of the Holy Cross Fathers on Main Street every first Friday. My mom would promise us donuts from Krispy Kreme if we went to confession. So of course I went. After doing this several times, I began to really enjoy the experience of receiving God’s mercy. At around the same time, I had gone on a retreat with the Legionaries of Christ. There I had met a young seminarian who was incredible at sports and who also knew how to speak to us on our level. The idea of the priesthood began to germinate in my heart, because at the end of the retreat, I thought to myself, “If I ever become a priest, I want to be like this guy.” So one time I went to confession in this small chapel in downtown Houston, but this time changed the course of my life. I made my confession and was trying to listen to the priest’s advice. But at one point, I felt this interior movement, an intuition, a voice in my heart that said, “John I want you to be my priest.” Called by name and called to be Christ’s alone.

From there I began to try and see where this call was leading me. As I continued to go to weekend camping retreats with the Legionaries of Christ, their dynamic style and deep spiritual life began to pull on me like a strong river current. I visited one of their minor seminaries in New Hampshire and I immediately felt at home. This was my place. So I changed schools, and went up to New Hampshire to finish my high school and live in a place that would be conducive to discernment. After four years there, I saw that God was calling me to enter the novitiate. From there this vocation has taken me all over the world, from Mexico to Italy, from France to Lebanon. God never disappoints and he uses you for things you could never imagine.

After many years of preparation and formation, I realized that I am a weak and poor instrument, but nonetheless chosen by God to carry His message of mercy. What is my great aspiration not only as a future priest but also a religious? To be someone who listens and generously imparts God’s mercy in confession, just as I received it.

I ask for your prayers, and be assured of mine. God bless y’all.

 

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Regnum Christi Spirituality Center Uncle Eddy

St James the Greater

Dear Jim,

So the little urchins are getting on your nerves, eh?  Then now is the perfect time to be like Christ.  Your role as a camp counselor is to help those campers mature, grow, and become better human beings.  And since it’s a Catholic camp, that includes helping them discover the dignity and the glory of their vocation in Christ.  They should finish the summer on fire for Christ and his Kingdom.  If right now they aren’t on fire for anything except setting each other on fire, there’s no need to worry.  If they were already in shape, there would be no need for camps, or counselors.  Since they’re not, you’ve got a job – a very Christlike job too, as today’s saint illustrates.

James the Greater was St John the Evangelist’s older brother, one of the three Apostles to whom Jesus gave special attention.  But he was no saint when Christ called him.  As a matter of fact, Jesus nicknamed him and his brother “Sons of Thunder,” which shows you how meek and self-controlled they were.  One time, when a town in Samaria refused to host Christ and the disciples for the night, the brothers asked permission to call down fire and brimstone to demolish the place – how’s that for gentle, sweet piety! (Christ did not grant them the permission, by the way.)  Later on they even approached the Lord (actually, they sent their mother to approach him for them) to request the second and third ranks in his Kingdom.  How’s that for calm and patient humility!

And yet, it was men like these, impetuous and full of passion, whom Christ chose to be his intimate companions and closest collaborators.  Their love for him and their desire to serve him gave them the strength they needed to build virtue by mastering their natural tendencies (I am sure the Holy Spirit helped out a bit as well).  James ended up as the first Apostle to be martyred, and his dignity and self-control in the face of the trumped-up charges leveled against him during the trial so moved the onlookers that his accuser became a Christian on the spot.  As the two walked to their execution together, the convert asked James to forgive him for turning him in.  The Apostle looked at him, said “Peace be with you,” and embraced him – a far cry from the earlier fire and brimstone.

It was Christ’s love, his truth, and above all his example of all the virtues that won over St James and all the other Apostles.  It was the grace of the Holy Spirit that transformed them.  So be like Christ, and constantly pray for the Holy Spirit to come among your campers, and the rest should take care of itself.

Your loving uncle,

Eddy

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July 25, 2024 – Called to Be Servants

 

 

 

Feast of Saint James, Apostle

 

 

Matthew 20:20-28

The mother of the sons of Zebedee approached Jesus with her sons and did him homage, wishing to ask him for something. He said to her, “What do you wish?” She answered him, “Command that these two sons of mine sit, one at your right and the other at your left, in your Kingdom.” Jesus said in reply, “You do not know what you are asking. Can you drink the chalice that I am going to drink?” They said to him, “We can.” He replied, “My chalice you will indeed drink, but to sit at my right and at my left, this is not mine to give but is for those for whom it has been prepared by my Father.” When the ten heard this, they became indignant at the two brothers. But Jesus summoned them and said, “You know that the rulers of the Gentiles lord it over them, and the great ones make their authority over them felt. But it shall not be so among you. Rather, whoever wishes to be great among you shall be your servant; whoever wishes to be first among you shall be your slave. Just so, the Son of Man did not come to be served but to serve and to give his life as a ransom for many.”

Introductory Prayer: Lord Jesus, in spite of my many failures, I know you continue to call me. Your Spirit continues to guide me. I trust in you, love you, and praise you for all your gifts to me. Amen.

Petition: Lord Jesus, grant me a renewed sensitivity to the deepest needs of others.

1. Called to Serve: In an era of Catholicism in which catchphrases such as “called to serve” have been overused to the point of becoming clichés, we risk forgetting how central service is to the Christian life. The minutes of our lives are consumed in an incessant cascade of apparently important and urgent things to do. Doesn’t it happen, however, that in the midst of all this we actually miss any number of opportunities to serve? Called to serve, yes, but we miss the call! And our service gets sidelined. If service to my brothers and sisters is not an ordinary element of my daily life as a Christian, I can be sure that I have succumbed to self-deception or taken a critically wrong turn somewhere.

2. A Continuation of Christ: We are called to give ourselves unreservedly to others as a continuation of Christ. “A continuation of Christ”: now, wouldn’t that make a wonderful epitaph?! For truly, if our Christian service is not a prolongation, an extension of Jesus’ love, if we are not giving him to others, if those whom we serve are not discovering him in us, then our service is simply not service. It might be philanthropy, it might be empathy, but it falls short of genuine Christian service if those whom we serve do not discover Christ in us. Like John the Baptist, we must become less so that Jesus can become more in us, so that our brothers and sisters are not cheated out of encountering that Christ whom they secretly long to discover in each of us.

3. What Service Means: Here it will be helpful simply to examine ourselves on some of the essentials of Christian service. Is my daily life characterized by a concern for the genuine good of others and by a readiness to do all the good I can for my brothers and sisters? Do I actually engage in daily acts of service, whether big or small? Do I examine myself frequently on the sin of omission? Do I strive, in carrying out the ordinary service required by my state in life, to do so with extraordinary deliberateness and full, conscious self-giving?

Conversation with Christ: Father, you call me to serve, and I know that service also means suffering at times. If suffering is to be a part of your plan for me, give me the grace to collaborate with Christ your Son in the salvation of souls by offering that suffering generously to you. I ask this in the name of Jesus. Amen.

Resolution: Out of love for Christ, present in the least of my brothers and sisters, I will examine myself on what genuine Christian service means to me in practice, and what place it usually has in my daily life.

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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!