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I’m sorry Chicago…I know how important it is to you…it touches your heart doesn’t it…
God Bless you today…

God Bless you today…


I believe that it touches the Sacred Heart of Jesus (under whose patronage the seminary school was originally founded in 1905). As such, it should touch all Christian, nay, all human hearts.I’m sorry Chicago…I know how important it is to you…it touches your heart doesn’t it…
God Bless you today…
Thank you. I wish the same for all the alumni, families of students present and past, and those who supported Le Petit Seminaire over the years. It has made a real difference in the lives of so many who have been part of it, or those who just encountered the institution and the men it educated. It has nurtured and provided us our priests for over a century, continuing Christ’s presence among us, and enabling Catholic faith to prosper - particularly in this place (as well as so many others): the most august and significant, the second largest Church in the United States: the Archdiocese of Chicago.
Happy Quigley day, Chicago!There’s a very real and genuine ironic Providence about how everything is coming together with the closing. Probably unplanned, certain things are tying together in amazing ways.
I received a message from one of Quigley’s sons who was at the school on this last day. He noted that they had one of the most beautiful Masses he has ever attended. I then turned on EWTN. Where I was reminded that today (Thursday) is the traditional feast of Corpus Christi, so intimately united with the priesthood. Pope Benedict (on tape, I know) just gave Benediction of the Blessed Sacrament… the service then concluded with that all familiar hymn of Quigley (our “fight song” as so many call it), which I naturally sang along with in union with and offering for Quigley and the brotherhood: Salve Regina!
You beat me to it!Happy Quigley day, Chicago!![]()
Thanks.I’ll offer a prayer today, Chicago…![]()
But one day, before we all shall die - and much sooner that that, I am convinced that the minor seminary will rise again in Chicago; if it hasn’t perhaps begun to do so already. For the living ministry of Christ Jesus can not long be kept down in the grave.Don’t it always seem to go
That you don’t know what you’ve got
Till it’s gone
They paved paradise
And put up a parking lot
My sentiments exactly; it’s just such a shame that when the phoenix once again rises from the ashes, it will be in a location not nearly as conducive to the mission as the current Quigley building.But one day, before we all shall die - and much sooner that that, I am convinced that the minor seminary will rise again in Chicago; if it hasn’t perhaps begun to do so already. For the living ministry of Christ Jesus can not long be kept down in the grave.
Long live Quigley!
One never knows now, does one? That possibility may not be quite over yet. Though, clearly, the eventual planned interior destruction of a beautiful building intended to inspire, serving as a seminary school is nothing short of damn sinful.My sentiments exactly; it’s just such a shame that when the phoenix once again rises from the ashes, it will be in a location not nearly as conducive to the mission as the current Quigley building.
Amen to that!Still, the sooner the minor seminary system is reinstalled, the better.
Chicago has been blessed with bishops who have understood the importance of nurturing such, and thereby supporting the minor seminary to an extent that almost every other place has not managed. Even with the closing of Quigley, it is recognized that this commitment must not be abandoned. Such is the stated reason for the implementation of a new discernment program for teenage boys along with a scholarship which is being established. Such is the claimed reason why De La Salle high school has instituted a Quigley program which rougly 50 of the minor seminary’s students will now attend.As long experience shows, a priestly vocation tends to show itself in the preadolescent years or in the earliest years of youth. Even in people who decide to enter the seminary later on it is not infrequent to find that God’s call had been perceived much earlier. The Church’s history gives constant witness of calls which the Lord directs to people of tender age. St. Thomas, for example, explains Jesus’ special love for St. John the Apostle “because of his tender age” and draws the following conclusion: “This explains that God loves in a special way those who give themselves to his service from their earliest youth.”
(con’t)In 1965, the year the Catholic Schools of the Archdiocese of Chicago reached their peak in enrollment, my friend and I had a lot in common. We spent every school day in that eighth grade classroom in the southeast corner of the second floor at St. Veronica School. I was looking forward to high school at Quigley Seminary North; she was looking forward to graduating the first eighth grade class she ever taught. In the years since that graduation, I have changed. I loved going to Quigley. I am a priest today because I went to that school. Anybody tells you a high school kid cannot dream about being a priest, tell him he’s wrong. As Archbishop Quigley Seminary closes its doors in a couple weeks, some insist that adolescence is too young to consider a developing vocation. Those experts don’t know what they are talking about. Eventually I was ordained and have served in five Chicagoland parishes. I taught at the high school seminary, too. Now I am the pastor/rector of Chicago’s Cathedral. That’s long distance from that classroom at St. Veronica.
This particular nuance of Quigley is often overlooked in the assessments and memories of even the most ardent Quigley supporters. I’m glad you brought it up, because it may have been one of the most important lessons I learned in my 4 years there, and I’m sure it’s a lesson I wouldn’t have learned had I attended a different high school.Oh, sure, there are the wild ones, also. But such is the nature of life. And, honestly, it’s a good experience and training ground for future priests to understand that. For, on the journey, people are at all kinds of places, simultaneously together. It’s a little microcosm of the Church, the world. Still, not unlike men at war, the comeraderie and conflict grinds you into something more, something refined.