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Newly Ordained Biography: Rev. Mr. Justin Kizewski
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Rev. Justin Kizewski
Newly Ordained
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Father Justin Kizewski was born
on November 8, 1980 to James and Brenda Kizewski and was baptized at
Sacred Heart of Jesus parish in Nekoosa, WI and calls his home parish
Sacred Heart in Nekoosa.
After attending Sacred Heart of Jesus elementary school, Father Justin attended
Assumption High School in Wisconsin Rapids. Following his graduation
from high school, Father Justin attended Saint John Vianney College Seminary at
the University of Saint Thomas as well as Theological College at the
Catholic University of America where he received a Bachelor of Arts in
Philosophy as well as a Licentiate in Philosophy (equivalent to a
Master's degree).
Father Justin attended the Pontifical North
American College in Rome and upon graduation in 2008 was awarded a Bachelor of
Sacred Theology degree. Justin was ordained a deacon on October 4,
2007 at the Altar of the Chair in St. Peter's Basilica in Vatican City
by Archbishop John Foley. He
was ordained a priest on the memorial of St. Irenaeus, June 28, 2008, at
the Cathedral of Saint Joseph the Workman in La Crosse, Wisconsin by
Bishop Jerome Listecki.
During the summer as a seminarian, Father Justin spent time at Our Lady Queen of Heaven parish
in Wisconsin Rapids as well as serving as a chaplain for the Boy Scouts
at Camp Decorah for two years.
Father
Justin's ecclesiastical interests include scripture and dogma whereas his
secular interests include movies and tennis.
Father
Justin's favorite books are the Confessions of St. Augustine and the
works of T.S. Eliot. His favorite composer is Sergei Vasilievich
Rachmaninoff.
Seminarian Reflection: The Vocation of a Student
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Father Justin Kizewski delivers his first homily on October 5 in
the chapel of St. Philip Neri in Chiesa Nuova, Rome
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There is no better setting for a seminarian to go about his
intellectual formation than Rome. The first part of this bold
statement involves looking at the intellectual life of a seminarian;
the second part involves looking at the seminarian in Rome .
We
are seminarians studying theology. Theology literally means the
study of God; more particularly, we could say that theology is the
study of what God tells us about Himself. God has communicated
Himself to us, spoken to us, through the Scriptures and through the
tradition of the Church. So when seminarians study what God has
told us about Himself, we have to study the Holy Scriptures and the
tradition of the Church. This means that seminarians, on a daily
basis, take just as seriously something written seventeen hundred
years ago as something written by the current Holy Father as well as
everything in between.
What we are trying to do is form our minds and hearts after the mind
and heart of the Church. We are trying to get to know what God is
trying to tell us so that we can hand it on to our future
parishioners. The Dominicans have a motto in Latin: contemplata
aliis tradere hand on the things which you have contemplated.
In studying deeply the Word of God in the Scriptures and in the
Tradition, we try to put ourselves in contact with Him so that we
can hand that on when it comes time to serve. Because our vocation
later is to hand on what we have learned, our vocation now is to
study. We know that it is only by living out that vocation, in this
particular instance to study that we will become holy. We are
studying for our future parishioners and to become holy.
There are some virtues that one develops in the life of study. The
first I will mention is humility. In studying, we run into truths
that we do not understand. Not only do we not understand the
mysteries that we are contemplating, but also sometimes we do not
understand the people who are trying to explain those mysteries.
When we read them, we meet these people who are smarter than we are;
we do not understand them perfectly and this humbles us in this,
we realize that we cannot outsmart them, nor do we desire to. Aware
of our own limitations, we are left in awe of the great mysteries
and the great minds that have attempted to explain them.
This also gives the student a sense of obedience. There are people
with a greater picture of the way things are. This recognition asks
for obedience a submission to what might not be my own way of
thinking. This submission includes a thinking through of the issue,
an examining, and finally, a submission.
Discipline and perseverance are also included in the life of study.
Studying something in depth is not easy. No matter how smart a
person is, a life committed to study will require discipline and
self-denial.
Finally, a life of study demands that a person desire to do great
things to be excellent. This virtue is called magnanimity, or
great-souledness. We study the mysteries and hope to make progress
in our understanding of the mysteries. To undertake such a venture
such a difficult endeavor one needs a kind of confidence that
the venture will not be in vain. To set out to make progress in the
understanding of the great mysteries of the faith means that I think
that with the help of God this is possible. This is a bold pursuit
of excellence. This is daring. This is great souledness.
So
what difference does studying in Rome make? No matter how much one
learns in the classroom or in books, Rome and the experiences that
Rome offers increase the learning curve exponentially. Suddenly
everything even what seem to many to be abstract ideas becomes
tangibly concrete. History for us in Rome is not a subject that we
study; it is a walk to school. Whether it is praying at the tombs
of the great martyrs, such as St. Peter and St. Paul or witnessing
recent history such as the death and funeral of John Paul II,
history is something that we are able to live, whether the 1st
century or the 21st.
Finally, the most tangible subject that we experience might be
ecclesiology the study of the Church. Through the many Masses in
St. Peters Basilica, we experience firsthand the unity and the
universality of the Church. There are people from all over the
world, but they are praying the one Mass together. By witnessing
the death and funeral of a saintly Holy Father and the election of
another, we saw the holiness of our bridge to Peter and Christ.
These opportunities to study and to learn in THE CITY will form our
hearts and minds after that of the Church and inform our future
ministry. The more we know about the person, the more we can love
him or her. Hopefully, the more we study about God, the more we
fall in love with Him who first loved us.
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