SOUND ADVICE
Saturday, May 20, 2017
Thursday, May 18, 2017
VANCOUVER PRIEST RETREAT - WEEK ONE
"MADE HOLY BY OUR SHARED MINISTRY"
Archdiocese of Vancouver Priest Retreat
Group One
May 15- 19, 2017
Westminster Abbey
A Benedictine Abbey of the Swiss American Congregation - like Saint Meinrad Archabbey.
Westminster Abbey was founded by the monks of Mount Angel Abbey in Oregon
Priests of this Archdiocese are from places like Nigeria, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Philippines,
Portugal, Slovakia, India, Peru, Holland, England, United States, Poland, Mexico and Spain.
Some of the local priests come into the priesthood as widowers, fathers, grandfathers, lawyers, doctors, teachers, engineers and farmers. Some have come in as converts - Mennonites, Anglicans, and several evangelical groups. It makes for a wonderful learning week and very good time. You really feel that the church is becoming more and more "Catholic," more and more universal.
THE STIPENDS FOR THESE RETREATS WILL BE USED IN MY MINISTRY IN THE ISLAND MISSIONS OF THE CARIBBEANS. IT IS PART OF THE NEEDED FUNDS TO SEND A 40' SHIPPING CONTAINER OF SURPLUS MEDICAL SUPPLIES, USED LAPTOPS FOR TWO COMPUTER CAMPS, A DOZEN OFFICE CHAIRS FOR THE DIOCESAN CHANCERY, SIXTY STACKING CHAIRS FOR THE NEW CHAPEL THAT WE ARE BUILDING AND SOME WONDERFUL BRASS LITURGICAL FURNISHINGS FOR THAT NEW CHAPEL.
Archdiocese of Vancouver Priest Retreat
Group One
May 15- 19, 2017
Westminster Abbey
A Benedictine Abbey of the Swiss American Congregation - like Saint Meinrad Archabbey.
Westminster Abbey was founded by the monks of Mount Angel Abbey in Oregon
Priests of this Archdiocese are from places like Nigeria, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Philippines,
Portugal, Slovakia, India, Peru, Holland, England, United States, Poland, Mexico and Spain.
Some of the local priests come into the priesthood as widowers, fathers, grandfathers, lawyers, doctors, teachers, engineers and farmers. Some have come in as converts - Mennonites, Anglicans, and several evangelical groups. It makes for a wonderful learning week and very good time. You really feel that the church is becoming more and more "Catholic," more and more universal.
THE STIPENDS FOR THESE RETREATS WILL BE USED IN MY MINISTRY IN THE ISLAND MISSIONS OF THE CARIBBEANS. IT IS PART OF THE NEEDED FUNDS TO SEND A 40' SHIPPING CONTAINER OF SURPLUS MEDICAL SUPPLIES, USED LAPTOPS FOR TWO COMPUTER CAMPS, A DOZEN OFFICE CHAIRS FOR THE DIOCESAN CHANCERY, SIXTY STACKING CHAIRS FOR THE NEW CHAPEL THAT WE ARE BUILDING AND SOME WONDERFUL BRASS LITURGICAL FURNISHINGS FOR THAT NEW CHAPEL.
It's almost time to begin another conference.
Getting ready for one of the confrences - three times a day.
Meal time.
Meal time.
Daily Mass in the Abbey Church
Evening Prayer and Benediction
Everything is lush and green because it rains in a mist a lot of the time.
Tuesday, May 16, 2017
CELEBRATING FORTY - SEVEN YEARS OF PRIESTING
Copy of my original ordination invitation.
Minutes before the ordination started.
My First Mass
My mother and I after my First Mass wearing the vestment she made for me. I'll take the blame for the design.
Celebrating twenty-five years in 1995. Seems like yesterday!
I am so very grateful for the gift of God that keeps on giving. When I read down all that has happened to me in the last thirty-seven years, I am almost overcome with gratitude. I never could have imagined it when I started this journey.
CURRICULUM VITAE
Rev. J. Ronald Knott is a priest of the Archdiocese of Louisville, "retired" now, he is
the founding director of the Saint Meinrad School of Theology Institute for
Priests and Presbyterates. Father Knott is the author of Intentional Presbyterates:
Claiming Our Common Sense of Purpose,
a book about preparing seminarians to enter presbyterates and about how priests
can mentor them into their presbyterates after ordination, as well as From Seminarian to Diocesan
Priest: Managing a Successful Transition; The Spiritual Leadership of a Parish
Priest: On Being Good and Good At It and Intentional Presbyterates: The Workbook. In late Spring, 2011, A
Bishop and His Priests Together: Resources for Building More Intentional
Presbyterates, was published.
After graduating from the Saint Meinrad School of Theology
with a Master of Divinity Degree, Father Knott was ordained for the Archdiocese
of Louisville in 1970. After ordination, he earned a Doctor of Ministry degree
in the area of parish revitalization from McCormick (Presbyterian) Seminary in
Chicago. He earned this degree while working in the “home mission” of his
diocese. His major project paper was entitled “Strangers in Town: How One Roman
Catholic Mission Church Dealt Assertively with its Environments (anti-Catholic
hostility from the community and weak Catholic identity within the
community). Father Knott used this
degree to establish two Catholic mission churches in an area where Catholics
had never been, to revitalize an inner city cathedral in Louisville (the parish
went from 110 members to well over 2100 members) by specializing in outreach to
fallen-away Catholics and to the interfaith community of downtown
Louisville.
In his present work with presbyterates, Father Knott has
conducted over 100 priest convocations, retreats and study days in the US, Canada,
Ireland, Wales, England, The Bahamas, St. Vincent and the Grenadines, Barbados and Saint Lucia. He has addressed United States Conference of Catholic Bishops in Florida, the Antilles Bishops' Conference in Trinidad, the Canon Law Society of America in Pittsburg, the National Federation of Priest Councils of England and Wales, the National Federation of Priests Councils of Canada and The US National Federation of Priests Councils on his work with presbyterates.
He has conducted over 75 Parish Missions, a work he continues in retirement.
Father Knott has served his diocese as a home missionary,
country pastor, cathedral rector, and vocation director. Besides being the former director of the
Institute for Priests and Presbyterates and a weekend campus minister at
Bellarmine University in Louisville for seventeen years, he has been
writing a weekly column for The
Record for
fifteen years.. He has published
three collections of homilies and fourteen collections of his weekly columns.
He has published articles in America,
Church, Seminary Journal, The Priest, Origins and Pastoral Review. He served two terms on the J. Graham Brown Foundation Board.
He was awarded The Louisville Forum's 1995 Fleur-de-lis Award for
outstanding community service, the National Conference of Christians and Jews
Award 2001 for inter-faith work in Louisville, the National Federation of
Priest Council's Touchstone
Award in 2008, St. Meinrad School of
Theology's Distinguished
Alumnus Award in 2010. He received
the Catholic Education Foundation’s Distinguished
Alumni Award in 2015. Bellarmine University awarded him an honorary
doctorate in 2016.
Officially "retired," he continues many of the
things mentioned above, but on a part-time basis. He recently founded the Catholic Second Wind Guild for retired
priests, bishops and lay professionals to offer assistance to the church in the
Caribbean missions where he volunteers.
Sunday, May 14, 2017
THE RETREAT DIRECTOR HAS ARRIVED!
FROM LOUISVILLE TO DALLAS TO VANCOUVER
Sunday May 14, 2017
I got here a day early so as to be ready Monday Evening without a delay. I was "put up" for the night at the Cathedral of the Holy Rosary Rectory in downtown Vancouver. Even though it was Sunday afternoon, there were a lot of people out and about, especially young people! It has the feel of San Francisco.
Cathedral of the Holy Rosary
Cathedral Rectory Entrance
A sign on the door read, "No Money Handed Out From This Door." I probably should have asked for my airfare and stipend in advance!
Starbucks Coffee shop packed with young people - inside and out!
A huge Brass Bull standing on one street corner. Hopefully, it is a sign that the Stock Market is "bullish," not a comment on my upcoming retreat conferences!
Tomorrow night the retreat begins at 8;00 pm at Westminster Abbey outside Vancouver. Stayed tuned!
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