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Last fall, the College was honored by a visit from the Most Rev. Robert F. Vasa, Bishop of Baker, Oregon. A native of Lincoln, Nebraska, he was ordained for that Diocese in 1976 and consecrated a bishop in 2000. Bishop Vasa presided over Convocation Day ceremonies and offered the opening Mass of the Holy Spirit. Later that day, he graciously consented to an interview here on our campus, excerpts from which are printed below. Q: How do you see your role as a bishop and, in particular,
your role in the Diocese of Baker? In so many places, Catholicism has been eroded by our culture. I have been exposed in innumerable ways to the meaning, the depth, the beauty, and the wonder of Catholicism. I want to bring that experience to the faithful of Baker. I want them to understand that Catholicism calls us to step out of the secularity of our culture, to be counter-cultural, to be different, and to make a difference, and to somehow be an exception. Q: In your five years as Bishop of Baker, what kinds
of initiatives have you undertaken to help the faithful to
bring about a genuinely Catholic culture? I was very much taken with the late Holy Fathers pastoral letter, Mane Nobiscum Domine, in which he recommended as one project for diocesesand really for every parishfor the Year of the Eucharist that they undertake a thorough study of the General Instruction of the Roman Missal. In fact, when the General Instruction of the Roman Missal had come out four years earlier, I had initiated diocesan-wide projects and regional presentations about it. I had also made the liturgy the subject of my Confirmation homilies, focusing on the need to approach the Mass with reverence, attention, and devotion, and reminding priests and laity that there are liturgical norms and rules that we need to be attentive to. We had seminars on the subject and encouraged people to study the Instruction. I have also encouraged pastors to study and teach the Catechism of the Catholic Church in their parishes. In the parish in the city where I live, I met for an hour and a half every Tuesday for 18 months with a small group of adults from the area. We went through, from the beginning to the end, the whole Catechism of the Catholic Church, paragraph by paragraph. I wanted people to know that the Catechism is a viable, approachable document that they have the capacity to read. I have tried to help them recognize that these are the truths that their Church teaches. Drawing on the General Instruction of the Roman Missal and the Catechism of the Catholic Church, we have put together diocesan liturgical guidelines, a sort of dictionary of various terms. We also laid out rules and regulations about how things are to be done. I have also, to the best of my ability, encouraged and insisted that the priests of the diocese be attentive to the liturgy, that they conduct it in the manner and method that the Church calls us to do. Q: You have recently published two pastoral letters
concerning lay ministry in the Church. What have you hoped
to achieve with these? So, these two documents, Giving Testimony to the Truth and Entrusted with Sacred Duties, do just that. They clarify the teachings of the Church to which those in lay ministry must adhere, and they lay out the standards for who can be assigned to these roles. These two documents, then, serve two purposes: to protect the faithful from error and to instruct the laity, and especially lay ministers, about the core teachings of the Church. Q: How did you discern your vocation? Q. What advice do you have for someone discerning
a vocation? I would reiterate the words of Pope John Paul II, Do not be afraid! If there is a call, a hint, a suggestion, pray it is for real and do not be afraid of casting yourself into the hands of the Lord as wholly and as enthusiastically as possible. The priesthood is a great life, one of the best! At times difficult, certainly. But the blessings and rewards far outweigh any perceived sacrifice.
-- Qtrly Newsletter, Winter 2006 |
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