Catholic29:
I appreciate your prayers and encouragement. But the educational requirements in 1904 when Fr. Solanus was ordained is a whole different ballgame than in the Church of 2004 where you need at least a BA to even enter a major seminary, which I do not have.
Are you kidding me? Educational standards have actually slipped enormously in this country since 1900. A high school graduate in 1900 was typically far better educated than most people I know who have completed college today. For two examples, they knew how to write well and they knew their history.
If you don’t believe this, take a look at the entrance examination to enter High School in Jersey City, N.J in 1885. Mind you, this is not the exam to graduate, it is the exam to enter.
digitalhistory.uh.edu/quizzes/highschool_test.cfm
(That test certainly doesn’t look anything like the 9th grade proficiency tests they are using today…)
Regarding Fr. Solanus Casey, he entered minor seminary with 13 and 14 year-old boys in 1892, at age 22, because he had never gone to high school. He had a hard time because it was a German-speaking seminary in Milwaukee, and he couldn’t speak German (after all, he was an Irishman)!
So don’t talk yourself into defeat before even starting. When Fr. Solanus was asked to leave the seminary, he didn’t quit. He hit the brick wall, turned right, and kept on moving forward.
Catholic29:
Along with thorough psychological screenings for candidates in the post sex abuse scandal era.
OK, so what? Do you want to abuse young boys? “No!” Great, now get back into moving ahead.
Catholic29:
To add to it all, you have the politics that to this day continue to pervade many parishes and dioceses, including my own. Where aspiring candidates are and have been turned away for their orthodoxy.
Look at what Fr. John Trigilio had to go through before becoming a priest. He had to get accepted to seminary in three different dioceses, because the first two rejected his orthodoxy and dismissed him. That is an obstacle to be overcome, not an excuse for avoiding even starting the process.
Switch dioceses. Find an order if you have to.
Catholic29:
Call it a cop-out, but it is quite difficult to cooperate with the Holy Spirit when the obstacle standing against you is the very Church you want to serve.
It is a cop-out. Get off your rear end and at least try. If you don’t have enough internal strength of character to at least get out there and try, then maybe you aren’t really called to the priesthood.
I am sorry if this sounds uncharitable, but I think back to the times in my life when obstacles seemed hard. I had people who mattered to me reminding me that life is difficult. That I needed to “suck it up and act like a man”. There were times I needed the kick in the rear with the pat on the shoulder.
You can’t quit before you start. Certainly not if you want to live with yourself the rest of your life.