Carlos
Suarez
Home
Parish: St. Joseph/ St. Lazarus East Boston
Seminary: St. John's Seminary, Brighton,
Ma.
High-School: Boston Latin
College: Boston University
Hobbies: Music, Trying New Foods, Violin,
Reading, Writing
When was the first time you thought
of priesthood?
I suppose the thought of a priestly vocation
has always been with me. I can certainly
remember thinking about it since I was six
years olf. However, for most of my life
I fought it off, telling God that there
surly must be someone better out there.By
the time I got to college though I realized
that perhaps God did know better after all
and I should further check this out. It
was toward the end of my freshman year of
college that I first seriously began discerning
a priestly vocation. I attended the Cardinal's
retreat that year and soon after I began
meeting with a spiritual director. I also
felt drawn to religious life at the time,
and so I began learning more about several
religious orders. For a long time I discerned
my vocation with the Salesians, but God
also began to make it clear that he was
calling me to serive HIm as a diocesan priest.
What
were major Catholic activities you participated
in prior to the Seminary?
I've attended 3 World Youth Days so far
"00 in Rome, "03 in Toronto and
"05 in Cologne. Each of them were a
different experience. Rome took place after
I had begun seriously discerning my vocation.
I attended it with eight other college students
and we first spent a week in Sicily being
hosted by a family. It was an interesting
experience to see the Church actively lived
out in another part of the world. World
Youth Day itself in Rome was incredible.
It was my second time in Rome, but it had
an entirely different feel from when I first
went as a high school senior. There was
a palpable sense of holiness, and it was
during this time that I had some of my strongest
experience of God's presence in my life.
"03 in Toronto was great for me, I
went with a group from BU's Catholic Center
and we droveup, stopping at the Shrine of
North American Martyrs in New York before
driving to Toronto. There were so many people
in the city and yet I kept running into
people I knew. It brought home the reality
that the Church really is one large family.
As I look back on Toronto its also interesting
to note that several people on the trip
are either discerning a religious vocation
or have actually begun their formation.
Cologne was a fantastic trip as well.The
same year that I went to WYD in Rome I had
also gone on the Cardinal's Discernment
Retreat. I experienced a very strange feeling
the first time I entered St. John’s
seminary grounds of "coming home".
While I wouldn't enter formation for another
few years there was a sense that this is
where God wanted me.
What
is your favorite Scripture passage? Why?
Psalm 130. It expressed to me how difficult
life can be for us at times, and yet how
solid our hope is in the Lord. Matthew 6:33.
So often we want to put the world first
and then squeeze God in where we can fit
Him, but his is a reversal of priorities
which in the end will not only leave us
dissatisfied but worse will leave us without
God. Matthew 7:7-8. Again this shows how
much God is willing to provide for us if
only we trust Him and ask.
What
would people be surprised to know about
you?
That I studed Arabic for almost a year before
entering seminary, and I hope to pick it
back up someday soon.
Please
describe the importance of prayer in your
life?
Prayer is the cornerstone of my life. I've
been attending daily Mass fairly regularly
since I was a sophomore in college, and
I find now that when I miss it, there's
a deep longing, it's not just part of my
routine anymore, it's an essential part
of my life. Additinally, I love praying
the liturgy of the hours, punctuating your
day with psalms and prayers helps to add
a steady rhtythm around which everything
else then becomes anchored, rather than
just livnig a hectic life and then trying
to squeeze in prayer where you can.
Through
the Cardinal, God is calling you personally
to help rebuild his Church. How must the
priest respond to this mandate today?
The priest must respond to this mandate
by approaching people where they're at,
not expecting to find saints off the bat,
but certainly finding ways to encourage
all people to strive for saintliness. It's
important to preach the gospel clearly,
making it understandable toall, but
not watering it down beyond recognition.
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