In 2009 the then 19 year old from Donaghmede, Dublin, attended the event.
Like some at yesterday’s open day, he didn’t tell his family. “I didn’t want them to know. It was a very nervous time.”
More than 50 people attended yesterday’s open
day to look at a day in the life of seminarians, listen to testimonials
from priests and ask questions.
Many of the men, aged from early 20s to
late 40s, came alone but a few were accompanied by parents.
Michael says he loved everything about the open
day. “It helped me to decide to say, yes, I’m going to apply,” he
recalls. “I could see myself studying here and being a part of the
community. It just blew me away.”
He is now in his second year in St
Patrick’s College.
“I’m very happy here. It can have its tough days but the better days come more often than the others,” he says.
Happy
“I don’t take anything for granted. I don’t say I’m definitely going to be ordained in a couple of years. But it’s wonderful, waking up every day as a part of the community. It sets a real sense of where God is in your life.”
Celibacy is often cited as a major deterrent to becoming a priest but he says he doesn’t worry about that.
“I worry more about being perfect because we are all called to be perfect and that’s all I try to do.”
Some 61 men are studying in the seminary, nine of whom are first-year students.
Twelve started out last year, compared with 13 in 2011 and 10 in 2010.
The trend is up and down but national vocations co-ordinator Fr Willie Purcell believes change is on the way.
Social media
“There is a turnaround happening and I think that people now are beginning to not just question but also to discern more, in relation to whether they have a vocation or not. There has been a lot of interest shown in social media – particularly Facebook and our own national website [vocations.ie].”
Fr Purcell is also getting inquiries from
people who, many years ago, would have thought about a vocation but put
it to one side to follow other paths. “But that vocation will always
come back and hit you.”
He believes the election of a new pope will
encourage more people to think about their vocations.
After a difficult
decade for the Catholic Church, he is very hopeful for the future.
“In fact I have never been more optimistic in
my life in relation to vocations to the priesthood,” he says. “I’m
really excited about it.”