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Catholic Diocese of Little Rock
Published: May 15, 2025
Bishop Anthony B. Taylor preached the following homily at the Cathedral of St. Andrew in Little Rock on Thursday, May 15, 2025. It is based on Jeremiah 1:4-9.
Duwan, you are the second of five seminarians who will be ordained to the diaconate over the course of this Marian month of May, and as we all know, you are the source of much pride among African American Catholics of Little Rock.
And it is amazing to me that we are ordaining you just after the election of Pope Leo XIV who is known to have some Louisiana Creole — and thus at least some Catholic African American ancestry.
This is no mere coincidence. And God willing, next year you will be ordained our second African American priest 37 years after our first African American priest, Father Harvey, who has paved the way for you.
Duwan, whether you knew it or not, the Lord has had plans for you from before you were ever born. In that sense he has called you from your mother’s womb, and like Jeremiah, you have said: “yes.”
I know that you will are attending the ordinations of your brother seminarians, so just know that what I share with you today applies also to them — and vice versa. And I am pleased to see that you chose Jeremiah 1:4-9 for the first reading of your ordination ceremony.
This passage begins “Before I formed you in the womb I knew you, before you were born I dedicated you, a prophet to the nations I appointed you.” I would like to comment on this reading today and note that while this is your ordination, Duwan, what I have to say applies to everyone in holy orders.
“Before I formed you in the womb I knew you, before you were born I dedicated you, a prophet to the nations I appointed you.” Here Jeremiah is saying basically two things: 1.) His vocation is at God’s initiative, not his own initiative. It is part of God’s plan and indeed, it was for that very purpose that he was even born; and 2.) Jeremiah’s mission within that plan was to be a “prophet to the nations.” And both of these are true not only for Jeremiah, but also for anyone whom the Lord calls to public ministry in the Church.
1.) Duwan — and all the rest of you who are already ordained or whom I will ordain in the future — holy orders is not a career. It is a vocation. People choose a career but a vocation is chosen for us by God. People choose a career, but God chooses a person. People try to figure out what walk of life best suits them; what they think will promise the most happiness or even the most prosperity.
They may do a cost-benefit analysis or take an aptitude test to help them choose the career that best suits them. But discerning a vocation is not like that. A vocation is a calling. At issue is not what we want, but rather what God wants. God chooses, God calls and like Jeremiah, our only choice is whether to say “yes” or to say “no.”
The initiative is from God and therefore, Duwan, his choice of you for the diaconate and eventually the priesthood had already been made well before you were ever formed in your mother’s womb. Like with Jeremiah, it was for this very purpose that you were even born.
2.) And what specifically was that purpose? To be “a prophet to the nations.” The Lord says: “To whomever I send you, you shall go; whatever I command you, you shall speak.” A prophet is a messenger from God, kind of like an angel, but rooted in the human condition.
Sometimes that message may refer to the future, but usually it is a message that will comfort the afflicted and afflict the comfortable. Bring healing to the broken hearted and call sinners to repentance. And as a deacon you become a minister of God’s word in the Gospel you proclaim, in the homilies you preach, and in the way you live your life.
God’s message in our reading reassures us: “Do not be afraid of them, for I am with you to deliver you.” But that does imply that there are challenges to face in doing God’s will and proclaiming God’s sometimes unpopular truth. Jeremiah reminds us that the only one we really have to please is the Lord.
Duwan, whether you knew it or not, the Lord has had plans for you from before you were ever born. In that sense he has called you from your mother’s womb, and like Jeremiah, you have said: “yes.” This is not your doing, it is the Lord who calls you and forms you and today ordains you a deacon for his service, and God willing, next year as a priest!