Philip Gerard Johnson, a seminarian with cancer, would be glad of your prayers
Philip Johnson (left) joins the Third Order of the Mercedarians
I've nemtioned Damien Thompson on this blog before. He is one of the Religion Reporters for The Telegram out of London. The guy is absolutly 1st rate.
Tuns out he just did an article on a friend of mine. Give it a read. I'm sure you'll find it strengthening.
Philip Gerard Johnson, a seminarian with cancer, would be glad of your prayers By Damian Thompson
I’ve written before about Philip Gerard Johnson, a terrific young man who was serving as a US naval officer when – as he records on his blog – he was diagnosed with inoperable brain cancer in 2008. His response was to enter a seminary, in the hope that he would be allowed the time to fulfil his greatest ambition: to celebrate Mass.
Philip has completed a year at seminary and was due to start a summer placement – but the latest scan shows that his tumour has grown and so he’ll be spending his time recuperating at a parish in North Carolina after gruelling treatment. As he says in his latest post, he’ll be taking “harsh chemotherapy drugs with very unpleasant side effects, and there are significant risks of internal bleeding and blood clots involved when taking them”.
It’s a sad irony: a seminarian who represents the future of the Church, finds his own future threatened by illness. His blog, In Caritate Non Ficta, abounds with a good humour and spiritual serenity that very, very few of us could muster in his circumstances. Actually, given some of the recent comments that have appeared on this blog (and I have to take my full share of blame for this) it seems that even those of us in perfect health can’t manage even a shred of Philip’s charity.
This latest medical setback makes me wonder whether, given the exceptional circumstances, the Church can’t hurry things on a little. (Maybe it’s a silly comparison, but John Henry Newman had been a Catholic for less than 18 months when he was ordained deacon one day and priest the next.) However, that’s really none of my business. What is my business, I think, is to encourage Christian readers of the blog to pray for Philip; and perhaps he will pray for us, too.
PS: I’ve just had a nice message from Philip thanking blog readers for their prayers and assuring us that he’ll pray for us.
Philip Johnson (left) joins the Third Order of the Mercedarians
I've nemtioned Damien Thompson on this blog before. He is one of the Religion Reporters for The Telegram out of London. The guy is absolutly 1st rate.
Tuns out he just did an article on a friend of mine. Give it a read. I'm sure you'll find it strengthening.
I’ve written before about Philip Gerard Johnson, a terrific young man who was serving as a US naval officer when – as he records on his blog – he was diagnosed with inoperable brain cancer in 2008. His response was to enter a seminary, in the hope that he would be allowed the time to fulfil his greatest ambition: to celebrate Mass.
Philip has completed a year at seminary and was due to start a summer placement – but the latest scan shows that his tumour has grown and so he’ll be spending his time recuperating at a parish in North Carolina after gruelling treatment. As he says in his latest post, he’ll be taking “harsh chemotherapy drugs with very unpleasant side effects, and there are significant risks of internal bleeding and blood clots involved when taking them”.
It’s a sad irony: a seminarian who represents the future of the Church, finds his own future threatened by illness. His blog, In Caritate Non Ficta, abounds with a good humour and spiritual serenity that very, very few of us could muster in his circumstances. Actually, given some of the recent comments that have appeared on this blog (and I have to take my full share of blame for this) it seems that even those of us in perfect health can’t manage even a shred of Philip’s charity.
This latest medical setback makes me wonder whether, given the exceptional circumstances, the Church can’t hurry things on a little. (Maybe it’s a silly comparison, but John Henry Newman had been a Catholic for less than 18 months when he was ordained deacon one day and priest the next.) However, that’s really none of my business. What is my business, I think, is to encourage Christian readers of the blog to pray for Philip; and perhaps he will pray for us, too.
PS: I’ve just had a nice message from Philip thanking blog readers for their prayers and assuring us that he’ll pray for us.
1 Comments:
I'm in application to the Mercedarians interestingly enough.
I hope everyone prays for him, and I do agree, that this would be one of those extraordinary circumstances, perhaps he could appeal to the Pope for his ordination
Post a Comment
Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]
<< Home