He was the first Canadian Roman Catholic priest to start a blog.
Now,
at 40, Rev. Thomas Dowd is posting a much loftier achievement: Canada’s
youngest bishop and the second youngest in the world.
On Sept.
10, the capacious, ornate Mary, Queen of the World Cathedral in downtown
Montreal is expected to be packed for Father Dowd’s ordination as
auxiliary bishop of the city, the second-largest diocese in the country.
For Father Dowd – who was busy programming a new
mobile app on his blog on a Sunday afternoon just before agreeing to be
interviewed – the honour of being ordained bishop at such a young age is
an encouraging sign of renewal and vitality in the church, whose pews
have been emptying at an alarming rate over the past decades.
“Perhaps it’s a generational change that is occurring. It’s good to have fresh perspectives on things,” he says.
Globally, the church has also been buffeted by scandals involving pedophile priests and allegations of official cover-ups.
As
a pioneer of social-media use in the church, Father Dowd has been
making his mark, having launched his blog – Waiting in Joyful Hope, at fatherdowd.net
– eight years ago and heading up a project in the 1990s to get the
Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops on the Internet, a global first.
He
noted in a recent blog that the Apostolic Nuncio to Canada, Archbishop
Pedro Lopez Quintana, mentioned his social media work after informing
him two weeks ago at his offices in Ottawa that the Pope was calling him
to the auxiliary bishop’s posting.
“The Nuncio knew about it, and
encouraged me to use my expertise with new media to reach out to people
and try to build community,” Father Dowd wrote.
The Nuncio also humorously touched upon the candidate’s relative youth.
After
the Pope’s representative in Canada asked him if he accepted the offer,
before letting him answer he interjected: “Of course, you are quite
young, but this is a defect that time will take care of on its own.”
Half-dressed
in priestly garb on a sweltering summer’s day – a black short-sleeved
shirt with the trademark collar for the top half, casual slacks and
sandals for the bottom half – Father Dowd holds forth on new media and
other topics in a reception room at the Archbishop’s residence.
“We’re supposed to speak every language. Why not computer language?” he says about the evolving global Church.
“The
Pope is on Twitter,” he notes. “The blog really is a way to build
community,” says Father Dowd, who left a high-flying executive job as
manager of the global integration and verification organization at
telecom giant Ericsson Research Canada to join the priesthood in 1995.
He
went to Ericsson in 1992 after graduating with a bachelor of commerce
degree from Concordia University, where he majored in international
business and minored in finance.
But the “call of God” was too
strong for the long-time practicing Catholic. “I was very fortunate. I
was 24, manager of a global organization. I had my career ahead of me
and I decided I had to change and follow the calling of my heart.”
He characterizes the move as a kind of premature “mid-life crisis.”
In a nod to new media, his ordination will be broadcast over the Web.
Once ordained, one of his tasks will be to further the cause of interfaith understanding.
“The challenge for all faiths is: how do we accomplish pluralism?” he says.
Quebeckers
have been debating so-called reasonable accommodation for years and the
Church can continue contributing to the issue thanks in part to its
rich experience in rapprochement on the interfaith and intra-Christian
faith fronts, he said.
As to Montreal’s flock of about 250,000
English-speaking Catholics, who are currently without a bishop to look
after their interests since Rev. Anthony Mancini left a few years ago to
become Archbishop of Halifax, Father Dowd says Cardinal Jean-Claude
Turcotte,
Archbishop of Montreal, has still not officially confirmed
that he will take on that responsibility.
As to whether he sees
himself one day in the archbishop’s chair, he has no ambitions for
moving up even higher in the church hierarchy.
“No. I’d be very surprised if I were named cardinal,” he says.
“When
I went to business school, part of what you learn is a culture that
rewards ambition. I did a lot to unlearn that when I decided to become a
priest.
“I am ambitious for the higher gifts, as Saint Paul put it – primarily the gift of service.”