National Vocations Awareness Week
National Vocations Awareness Week begins January 9, 2012. Resources for parishes and families are available by clicking here. Look for Bishop Burbidge's letter in your church bulletin this Sunday. A...
National Vocations Awareness Week begins January 9, 2012. Resources for parishes and families are available by clicking here. Look for Bishop Burbidge's letter in your church bulletin this Sunday. A...
Four Raleigh Seminarians received their cassocks: Christian Cook and Evan Waniewski at St. Charles Borromeo Seminary and Noe Ramirez and Juan Carlos Garcia at Santa Maria de Guadalupe in Mexico City...
The 2011-2012 Vocation poster has been released by the Diocese of Raleigh Vocations Office. The four-color display features the 22 men in formation for the Priesthood. It includes a quote from Pope ...
The Most Reverend Michael F. Burbidge bestowed the Sacrament of Holy Orders on Father Brendan Joseph Buckler at an Ordination Mass celebrated at Sacred Heart Cathedral in Raleigh, June 4, 2011. T...
Most Reverend Michael F. Burbidge ordained Don Edward Maloney to the Transitional Diaconate in a Rite of Ordination of a Deacon celebrated at Saint Luke the Evangelist Church in Raleigh, Deacon Mal...
Raleigh seminarians Ryan Elder and Nick Cottrill were instituted into the Ministry of Acolytes on May 7, 2011 at St. Charles Borromeo Seminary by the Most Rev. Timothy Senior, Auxiliary Bishop of Ph...
| Priesthood Discernment Group Sat May 19 @09:00AM - 01:00PM |
| Holy Hour for Vocations Fri Jun 01 @07:00PM - 08:00PM |
| Ordination to the Priesthood Sat Jun 02 @10:00AM - 02:00PM |
| Quo Vadis Group meeting Tue Jun 05 @07:00PM - 09:00PM |
| Priesthood Discernment Group Sat Jun 09 @09:00AM - 01:00PM |
| Fr. Romen Acero |
| Written by Richard Reece |
| Tuesday, 22 September 2009 10:33 |
One year after his ordination, Father Romen Acero is serving at St. Thomas More Church in Chapel Hill. He says he is “happier than I have ever been in my life.” His road to the priesthood was not an easy one, but it led him to a deeper appreciation of God’s Providence.Growing up in Bogota, Colombia, “I knew at 14 that God was calling me to be a priest,” Father Acero says. “I had been an altar server, and was very involved in a pastoral group. I saw the ministry of the priests and sisters, and I wanted to participate in that.” His family was poor, though, and counted on his support. So instead of entering the seminary, he became a Catholic high school teacher, teaching Spanish grammar, philosophy and religious education for nine years. “All that time,” he recalls, “I wanted to be a priest. I enjoyed teaching, but I was very frustrated because it seemed like the priesthood wasn’t in God’s plan for me.” At a meeting in Bogota, however, the teacher met Father Fernando Torres, a Colombian native serving in the Diocese of Raleigh. “He invited me to apply for the vocations program in Raleigh. It was unbelievable!” Father Romen says. “Now there are moments every day that bring grace,” he continues. A new discovery for the young priest was ministry for the sick. He is on call at all times for the needs of patients at UNC-Chapel Hill Hospitals. “I began thinking ‘How will I help these people?’ but they are the ones who make me stronger. It is always an incredible experience. One call can change your whole plan for the day, and also bring totally unexpected blessings. I never know how things will turn out, but I always know that I will experience God’s grace. At day’s end I can always say, ‘Thank You, Lord." Father Acero says his “ministry is all about telling people how God loves them, and I can tell them that from experience, because I feel His love every day.” As a priest he strives to “be aware of the current context of people’s needs” and to “connect Jesus’ proclamation to what is going on in the world. His Word can answer any questions people have about the meaning of human existence." reprinted from NC Catholics Magazine, July 2009 |
| Last Updated on Tuesday, 22 September 2009 13:19 |
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