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By Paula Day
Father Ronald G. Fuchs, Jr., was ordained a priest for the
archdiocese June 2 by Bishop Daniel Leo Ryan, ordinary of the diocese of
Springfield, Ill.
Concelebrating the 10:30 a.m. liturgy at the Cathedral of Christ
the King were Father Edward Dillon, vicar general, and Father Isaac McDaniel,
OSB, the new priests spiritual director. Other concelebrants were Father
Edward Thein and Father Don Kenny, past and present vocation directors for the
archdiocese; Father Richard Wise, pastor of Sts. Peter and Paul parish where
Father Fuchs worked as a seminarian; and fellow St. Meinrad alumni, Father
David Talley, Father Fuchs offered his first Mass on Pentecost Sunday, June 3,
at Sts. Peter and Paul Church in Decatur.
Among the more than 50 out-of-town guests at the ordination were
Father Fuchs parents, Faye and Ronald Fuchs, Sr., of Chicago; his
brothers Joe, John, Tom and sister, Lisa.
The candidate was presented to Bishop Ryan by Father Kenny. After
accepting him in the name of the whole church, Bishop Ryan questioned Fuchs
about his readiness to accept the responsibilities of the priesthood. The
candidate then promised obedience to Archbishop Eugene A. Marino, SSJ, and his
successors and prostrated himself before the altar while the gathered priests
and laity prayed for him and changed the Litany of the Saints.
In the age-old sign of the Sacrament of Holy Orders, Bishop Ryan
and the assembled clergy, one by one, placed their hands on the head of the
candidate and prayed silently for him. Bishop Ryan recited a prayer of
consecration; invoking Gods blessing on Father Fuchs.
Father Kenny vested the candidate with the stole and chasuble,
signs of his call to priestly service. Bishop Ryan then anointed the hands of
the newly ordained with chrism.
The chalice and paten Father Fuchs will use in the celebration of
Mass were presented by his parents and Bishop Ryan consecrated them for sacred
use. Before Father Fuchs took his place beside Bishop Ryan to celebrate the
Liturgy of the Eucharist for the first time, Bishop Ryan and the other priests
extended to him the sign of peace.
In addition to those concelebrating the Mass around the altar,
approximately 12 priests participated in the ordination ceremony.
Father Fuchs was born in Huntsville, Ala., the oldest child in
what he describes as a very close family. He lived in Chicago most
of his life, but his fathers work with a pharmaceutical company took the
family to several states. The young Fuchs also lived in Missouri, Ohio,
Indiana, Florida and Georgia. He thinks of the south as his home and always
wanted to make it his permanent residence. For this reason he applied to
Archbishop Thomas Donnellan for acceptance as a candidate for the priesthood in
the Atlanta archdiocese. He earned bachelor and master of divinity degrees from
St. Meinrad Seminary in Indiana.
Father Fuchs recalls that he was going to be a priest ever
since the fourth grade, maybe earlier. Being an altar server was very
important to him as a youngster and he was always close to priests
he knew while growing up. He attended public schools, CCD classes, and was
involved as a teen in parish youth activities. He remembers that any time he
did or said something off color, his peers would rein him in
saying, and youre going to be a priest.
After completing his undergraduate studies, the 22-year-old young
man decided he needed to take time out to consider other vocational choices.
For the next five years he worked first as a salesman and then as a youth
minister in St. Petronille parish in Glen Ellyn, Ill. There he initiated a
successful program involving youth from various parishes for which he was
recognized with a youth ministry award.
In the fall of 1986 he returned to seminary life spending a
semester at St. Vincent de Paul Regional Seminary in Boynton Beach, Fla. The
following semester he enrolled again at St. Meinrad, this time as a seminarian
for the Atlanta archdiocese. He says he hasnt been disappointed in his
choice of diocese, adding, People here are very welcoming, very
warm. During his last two summers as a seminarian, Fuchs returned to
Atlanta to gain ministerial experience, in 1988 at the Veterans Administration
Hospital in Decatur. The only Catholic in the program, he ministered to
patients with AIDS, cancer and serious cardiovascular diseases.
The following summer, in what St. Meinrads calls a
supervised parochial experience, he assisted in the life of Sts.
Peter and Paul parish in Decatur. In addition to regular parish ministry, he
visited the Metro Correctional Institution in DeKalb County. Classified
security prison, the facility ranks between medium and high in security.
Father Fuchs met his ordaining bishop as a teenager when then
Father Ryan was pastor and vicar general for the Joliet, Ill. Diocese. The two
became friends when Fuchs helped out in Father Ryans parish.
Bishop Ryan had planned to be present at his friends
ordination and when Archbishop Marino was overcome with exhaustion and needed
an extended time away from his episcopal duties, the Springfield bishop offered
to be the ordaining prelate.
Its a truly joyful thing to have a friend ordain
me, Fuchs said a few days before the ceremony.
I treasure a long friendship with Ron Fuchs and his
family, Bishop Ryan said when he introduced himself at the ordination
liturgy. I planned to come along for the ride and I found out there was
work to be done, he added, alluding to his role as ordaining prelate.
In his homily, Bishop Ryan said, We support and we pray for
and we thank God today for Ron Fuchs who will forever more be a servant after
the pattern of Jesus Christ.
Jesus promised that his yoke was easy and his burden light, the
bishop said, admitting that when he personally has not found the burden light
it was because he was not following St. Pauls directive: We do not
preach ourselves; it is Christ Jesus we preach.
Of his son, Ron Fuchs Sr., said, He enjoys people and sees
whats important in life. Fuchs pointed out that members of Mrs.
Fuchs family who were deacons in their own church had traveled from out
of town to be present for the ordination. Mrs. Fuchs in a Birmingham, Ala.,
native with a Southern Baptist background.
Father Fuchs has been assigned as parochial vicar at Christ the
King parish, the parish in the archdiocese where he first attended an Easter
Mass. He was uplifted by the beauty of that liturgy and recalls feeling very
proud to be a Catholic. He was particularly impressed with the Cathedral choir.
As a seminarian Fuchs developed a love for classical music,
especially music composed for the organ. Among his favorite composers are the
Frenchmen Charles Marie Widor, Cesar Franck and Marcel Dupre.
Also as a seminarian he became familiar with the Benedictine Lexio
Divina prayer form, a way of praying using Sacred Scripture. He continues to
find this prayer form nourishing.
Father Fuchs says he is concerned about what seems to be a
tendency in the Church today to downgrade freedom of conscience and what the
United States Conference of Catholic Bishops in 1968 described as licit
dissent. In this serious process, the individual studies the teachings of
the Church and makes a personal faith commitment to God.
You cant let others make your faith decisions for
you, he commented. As a priest I will explain the teachings of the
Church, but I wont tell people what to do. Each person is responsible for
his own faith commitment. I hope to enable people to take responsibility for
their own faith.
Father Fuchs sees great value in dialogue between people with
different opinions. The dialogue process is inherent in keeping the faith
above, he pointed out.
He begins his assignment at the Cathedral June. 14.
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