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To: NYer
That decision was made by Erie Catholic Bishop Donald W. Trautman, who decides which major seminaries men go to and where they serve after that. James Campbell said the twins embraced the decision to separate them as God's will.

Let's hope these priests set a good example in Trautperson's diocese.

3 posted on 06/28/2006 12:56:59 PM PDT by Pyro7480 ("If you wish to go to extremes, let it be in... patience, humility, & charity." -St. Philip Neri)
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To: Pyro7480
"She and her husband, John Campbell, named their 12th and 13th children for Monsignor James Joseph Gannon."

Wow.

I really do think that good-size families are one big factor in vocations. If you just have, say, one son, some parents wouldn't encourage him to be a priest because they want grandkids to carry on the name.

I don't have the research, but I'd bet you a beeswax candle that a disproportionate number of priests in the past came from families with 3+ kids.

Not all, of course. There are wonderful priests who were "only" children. But it's a factor.

5 posted on 06/28/2006 1:17:21 PM PDT by Mrs. Don-o (Pastores vos dabo.)
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To: Pyro7480; Nihil Obstat; Mrs. Don-o; franky
And still more .......

(CNS) - May 10, 2006 - Deacons James and Joseph Campbell -- twin brothers and the youngest in a family of 13 children -- credit their family life for their priestly vocations.
     "My parents gave us an unwavering witness of selfless, self-sacrificing love and fidelity," said Deacon Joseph. "They inspired us to be holy by the witness of their lives and through their instruction in the faith."
     The 26-year-old twins will be ordained to the priesthood June 23 at St. Peter Cathedral in Erie along with their classmate, Deacon Marc Solomon.
     John and Dolores Campbell, the twins' parents, don't consider the way they reared their 13 children to be anything out of the ordinary.
     "We raised our children the way we were brought up," said John Campbell, who was born in Scotland. That included attending Mass each morning and saying the rosary together each evening.
     "Once the children got involved in sports, sometimes they would have to finish their rosary on the way to practice," Dolores Campbell said in an interview with Faith magazine, a publication of the Erie Diocese. "But we'd start it out together. I think that has really blessed our marriage and family life."
     The entire family lived together under one roof for the first 11 years of the twins' lives.
     "We had seven kids sleeping in one room at one time," Deacon James recalled. "Let's just say we didn't get much sleep during those years." But the close-knit clan wouldn't have had it any other way.
     "Christmas was bedlam, absolute bedlam!" the Campbell patriarch said. "But it was so memorable. The children's friends all wanted to come and be with us on Christmas Eve because the atmosphere was so much fun."
     It was an atmosphere in which guests were a regular part of the dinnertime routine, in which a grandfather was lovingly cared for during the last 10 years of his life and in which a young, single mom unrelated to the family found the help she needed raising her child until she managed to get through high school.
     "When you're cooking for so many, what's an extra person?" Dolores Campbell asked.
     It was also the kind of home in which the children understood and embraced their responsibilities from a young age. For 25 years the Campbell family had a paper route to cover the cost of the children's Catholic high school tuition, with the papers delivered before daily Mass.
     "My older brothers and sisters often took me to confession and Mass with them, which played a huge part in my formation," said Deacon Joseph. "The quality time with them was priceless. They shared their lives with us and allowed us to share our experiences with them."
     Deacons James and Joseph remember becoming aware of their calling to the priesthood at an early age. While they dispute the exact year-- one thinks they were 4 years old, one says they were 5 -- it was while participating in the annual novena at St. Ann Parish in Erie that a Redemptorist priest asked the boys what they wanted to be when they grew up.
     Without ever having discussed it before, the spontaneous and simultaneous answer from both twins was "a priest."
     "Ever since that moment, I've always had it in mind that God was calling me to the priesthood," said Deacon Joseph.
     Even though an ocean has separated the Campbell twins for the last four years -- with Deacon James completing his degree at St. Vincent Seminary in Latrobe, Pa., and Deacon Joseph wrapping up his studies at the Pontifical North American College in Rome -- their comments and reflections in separate interviews were quite similar.
     "What occupies my thoughts and feelings, my prayer, as I approach holy orders, is the immensity of the task to which I have been called and the great need for priests in our world today," said Deacon James.
     Said Deacon Joseph: "There are a lot of big challenges in the world today, and the priest is called to lead the charge against a number of those challenges." He turned to sports to draw an analogy.
     "I suppose the feeling is like that of an athlete preparing for a big game when he knows his team has to play against some notable adversary. You've just got to put on your game face and step out on the field."
     Joining the Campbell twins on the "field" of priesthood this year is another man who is a twin, Deacon Daniel Hendrickson, 35, of San Francisco, who will be ordained a Jesuit priest and whose identical twin also is a Jesuit.
     The ordination class of 2006 also includes men from a variety of professions -- at least three doctors and four attorneys, a U.S. Foreign Service officer, a real estate developer, teachers, a reporter, a parole officer, a casino worker, retired military officers, and government and corporate officials.
     Family relationships influenced some. Deacon David Axtmann, 61, of the Diocese of Sioux Falls, S.D., has a son who is already a priest. Deacon Joseph Pins, of the Diocese of Des Moines, Iowa, found himself called to the priesthood when he attended his father's ordination to the diaconate.

8 posted on 06/28/2006 1:41:50 PM PDT by NYer (Discover the beauty of the Eastern Catholic Churches - freepmail me for more information.)
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To: Pyro7480
Let's hope these priests set a good example in Trautperson's diocese.

LOL. That inclusive language is funny :)

10 posted on 06/28/2006 7:29:26 PM PDT by GinaLolaB
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To: Pyro7480
Trautperson!! BWAHAHAHAHAHA!

Trautperson!!!

13 posted on 06/28/2006 9:08:26 PM PDT by Maeve
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