Fr. Craig Spence Ordained
Fr. Craig
Spence, SDB, was ordained a priest on Saturday, July 31, by Abp. Gregory Aymond
of New Orleans. The ordination was celebrated at St. John Bosco Church in
Harvey, La., with 14 priests and 2 deacons concelebrating.
The congregation, including Salesians and members of the local Salesian Family, gave Abp. Aymond a hearty welcome at the beginning of Mass, and the archbishop reciprocated with warm words of appreciation for the Salesians, who have served the New Orleans Archdiocese since 1933 and, with the Salesian Sisters, currently staff two archdiocesan high schools, two parishes, and three parochial elementary schools.
Fr. Craig
joined the Salesian formation program in 2011. He came to know the Salesians
through the Salesian Lay
Missioner program. Serving on the youth ministry team at Don Bosco Tech in
Paterson, N.J., in 2001-2002, he was quickly dubbed “Missionary Craig” by the
students and then by the Salesians too. He showed a talent for youth ministry
and easily won the respect and affection of students and staff.
When the
school was closed at the end of that school year, Craig decided to do a second
volunteer year as a “missionary” and moved to Mary Help of Christians Parish on
E. 12th Street. Together with the Salesians, he developed a thriving youth
ministry program, and at the end of the 2003 pastoral year was hired as the
parish’s full-time youth minister. He remained there until the New York
Archdiocese closed the parish in June 2007.
Fr. Craig was
born to Marsha Bickford and Chuck Spence in 1976 in Jackson, Miss., and raised
in Mobile, Ala. He has a younger sister, Maggie, and a younger brother, Patrick.
Ms. Bickford now lives in Pearl, Miss., and Mr. Spence in Prairieville, La.
After
attending local public schools in Mobile, Craig went to the University of
Southern Mississippi, where he graduated with a B.S. in economic development
and tourism. He moved to Pass Christian, Miss., and belonged to Holy Family
Parish.
Following the
closure of Mary
Help of Christians Parish, Craig spent four years discerning his life’s
course, including the possibility of marrying and starting a family. He
continued parish youth ministry in the Biloxi Diocese.
His
discernment brought him back to the Salesians in Orange, N.J. He did further studies
at Seton Hall University, was admitted to the novitiate in Rosemead, Calif., in
2012, and professed first religious vows on August 16, 2013. Six years later he
was admitted to perpetual vows.
From 2015 to
2017 Bro. Craig did practical training as a religion teacher and campus
minister at Salesian HS in New
Rochelle. Besides teaching, his ministry included midnight run (a program to
provide basic necessities to the homeless while introducing students to the
needs of others), weekly trips to the soup kitchen at Holy Rosary Parish in
Port Chester, and a variety of monthly oratory-types of experiences for the
students.
After practical training, Bro. Craig began
theological studies in Jerusalem in the fall of 2017 at the Ratisbonne Institute—a
branch of the Salesian Pontifical University, Rome. His favorite area of study was
the sacred Scriptures. His pastoral work as a student was mainly among Filipino
immigrants in Jerusalem.
Bro. Craig earned a Bachelor’s degree in theology,
writing a thesis entitled “Shepherding at the Heart of the
Church for the Good of All Humanity.” In June 2020 he was ordained a
deacon in Jerusalem.
Fr. Craig’s first assignment as a
priest is to Don Bosco Cristo Rey HS in
Takoma Park, Md. He’ll teach freshman religion and serve in campus ministry.
During the ordination rite, Deacon
Craig was called forward for priestly ordination by Fr. Steve Ryan, the local
Salesian director; the provincial, Fr. Timothy Zak, asked the archbishop to
ordain him a priest. Fr. Craig’s priestly vestments were presented at the
appropriate time by his parents, and Fr. Mark Hyde, the local pastor and a
longtime mentor of Fr. Craig, assisted him in putting the vestments on.
The archbishop’s 15-minute homily
began with a comparison of our human lives with fingerprints: everyone’s are
unique. Everyone’s call and everyone’s relationships are unique. From
conversation with Deacon Spence, he had learned that there were three main
influences on Craig’s life: his family, seeing and hearing St. John Paul II at World
Youth Day in 1994, and the example of the Salesians he had lived and ministered
with.
Abp. Aymond identified Fr. Craig’s
first calling as the one he received in Baptism. That calling has been lived
out through Salesian life and will be followed further in the priesthood.
According to the archbishop, Fr.
Craig has said he is grateful to many people, beginning with his parents,
extending to his many relatives, and to male and female Salesians. Many people
have supported him and encouraged him for years.
The archbishop observed that at
this ordination we carry on the practices of the early Church described in the
New Testament: the apostles chose men to be their co-workers, prayed over them,
laid hands on them, and invoked the Holy Spirit.
He explained that before the
laying on of hands, Deacon Craig would prostrate himself on the floor,
symbolizing his total self-surrender and self-emptying to God. The congregation
will join him in praying that God accept all that he is.
The archbishop then explained the
threefold ministry of priests: teaching, praying, and shepherding. As a teacher
and preacher he gives direction to people’s lives—inviting, challenging,
convincing them, doing everything possible to reach people’s hearts. He prays
and celebrates the sacraments always in Christ’s name. As a shepherd he seeks
the lost, practicing patience and extending mercy.
Abp. Aymond urged Fr. Craig to
make Christ the center of his life, to seek forgiveness in sacramental
confession so as to be able to offer it to penitents, and to live out his
Salesian vows.
Finally, he encouraged the
congregation to pray that Fr. Craig will be like Jesus in his service to God’s
people, after the example also of St. John Bosco.
Fr. Craig celebrated a Mass of Thanksgiving (his “first Mass”) at Holy Family Church in Pass Christian, Miss., on August 1.
Photo: Fr. Craig elevates the chalice after consecrating the Precious
Blood. Concelebrating priests (l-r) include Fr. Dennis Hartigan; Fr. Mike
Austin, pastor; Fr. Wilgintz Polynice; Fr. Steve Ryan; and Fr. Dieunel Victor.
(Credit: Terrance Dickson/Gulf Pine Catholic)
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