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If this is your first time reading the archdiocesan Let’s Talk blog, I welcome you on behalf of all. If you visit the blog regularly, welcome back and thank you one and all for your time!

Back in August, I reflected upon my vocational journey using the analogy of a road trip. While the months have quickly passed, I assure you that there is still some road left to travel. Nonetheless, I want to take this opportunity, as we sit at the rest stop, to tell you a little more about what has occurred along the road – a road that has gotten interesting, to say the least. This is almost like that part of the trip where driving too fast is not an option because you want to enjoy the beautiful view that surrounds you. During these months, in particular after my ordination to the transitional diaconate, I have experienced many graces for which I cannot help but be thankful.

Up to this date I have experienced Christ’s presence in the Veteran’s Administration Hospital in New York City, where I worked and lived for the summer months. There I witnessed God’s loving mercy and kindness through the many people who suffered some form of illness. I experienced Christ’s compassion and love for us to a great degree. I also made new friends, particularly in the house where I lived; this constantly reminded me that Christ is truly present through the Holy Spirit in our very midst.

Upon returning to Miami, I was assigned to my home parish, St. Timothy, for my diaconate year. Thus far it has been a beautiful experience to be among the people from which my vocation was born. It has been beautiful to share with them the many moments of joy and challenges that are present in every family. I have been blessed with the gift of baptizing over a dozen infants and witnessing marriages. I was also graced with celebrating the parish’s 50th anniversary and remembering the past while looking forward with great hope toward the future. I also had the opportunity to share with my alma mater, St. John Vianney College Seminary, 50 years of priestly formation - a great celebration, which highlights the important work building the Kingdom of God that takes place on 33 acres in Westchester.

In the midst of all this excitement, that gentle voice of the divine GPS continues to guide me. Balancing the four areas of formation - spiritual, academic, pastoral and human - the seminary continues to serve as that navigational system. The ride here has been very exciting and there have been so many beautiful scenes along the way. The road has gotten very exciting, and at times challenging, with a few scattered showers but nothing to deter me.

As Thanksgiving approaches I have many things to be thankful for. I have many faces which I can say beyond a shadow of a doubt serve as witnesses to Christ by simply holding up a road sign along the way. In the midst of a world where the finances are ever more pressing, the social structures which we are used to are changing and things are no longer the way they used to be, I cannot help but be thankful.

I thank God everyday for the many blessings he has bestowed upon me. I thank him for the gift of priesthood, in this Year for Priests, and for the many good examples he has placed before me. I thank him for St. John Vianney’s 50 years of priestly formation and for my parish family at St. Timothy. I thank him for my vocation to the ministerial priesthood and the many graces received.

What are you thankful for?

Deacon Luis Rivero
Seminarian, St. Vincent de Paul Regional Seminary, Boynton Beach

Comments from readers

Simone Brusa - 11/24/2009 06:07 PM
i liked the "gentle voice of the divine GPS". talk with you soon. bye simo
Jeannette Gallart - 11/24/2009 10:33 AM
Luis, I was so happy that you send me all these reflections the words are beautiful and yes we have to be thankful each and every day for all the beautiful things that Gods give us. I am so happy for you and I will be praying for you to continue in Gods steps. Blessings Jeannette Gallart
GINA JEANPHILIPPE - 11/24/2009 09:30 AM
I thank God for the many blessings that he bestowed upon me and my family. I want to thank God for all the wonderful men who have responded to the call of the priesthood I know it is not an easy road, but with the grace of God you and all the other priests will be successful in working for the Kingdom of God. I am thankful for my wonderful family. I am thankful for having been blessed with good health. I am thankful for having a job and being able to provide for my family.
I love reading your blog, Happy Thanksgiving to all!
Jose P. Redondo - 11/24/2009 01:24 AM
Luis, in your blog I want to give thanks for your generous response to the calling by our Lord to be His priest. The many present challenges notwithstanding, the future is bright for the Church given the many good young men like yourself that are in formation in our seminaries in Florida. As your priestly ordination fast approaches, I can say that it has been a delight to watch you grow in Him and to grow with you. Happy Thanksgiving!
Angie Capo - 11/24/2009 12:18 AM
I too, am thankful for my life! In addition, I am thankful for the health of my family and for the friends that surround me and support me in everything that I do! Thank God for that!

Happy upcoming Thanksgiving!

- Angie C.
Barbara Asfendis - 11/23/2009 05:14 PM
I have much to be thankful for - my family, friends, and faith. They all tie in together - My family raised me in the Catholic faith, my friends that I have made
through my faith have become my family, and my faith is my life! I am truly blessed! I look forward to meeting Deacon Rivero shortly and to have him share his faith journey with us in person! His blog couldn't have come at a better time!

A blessed Thanksgiving to you, Deacon Rivero and to all,
Barbara Asfendis
St. Bernadette Catholic Church




Lenny Gonzalez - 11/23/2009 02:12 PM
I am thankful form my faith. A faith that has sustained my marriage and my family. If I may use Luis' example of the divine GPS. I am always praying for the GPS to guide our marriage. I am thankful for God's graces to be able to fully rely on the divine GPS. Especially when it is guiding the two of us. How many times have we heard the GPS tell us which way to go and we decided to go our own way, only to realize when we get to our destination that the GPS way would have been shorter and less demanding. I am thankful for God's constant will for us to continue to learn and grow in our faith. With this faith all will fall in place and the divine GPS will always steer us in the right direction.

Luis, thank you for your blog post and for the divine GPS, I love it!
Liz Green - 11/23/2009 11:26 AM
It is so nice to read these blog entries and see how God is forming your vocationn. Our family prays for you daily and we look forward to your ordination. What are we thankful for? We are thankful for our family and the blessings God bestows on us. We are also very thankful for you and your vocation and those of all the priests, nuns, brothers, deacons in our parish family, the Archdiocese and the nation. What a beautiful example of God's love at work. Thank you for your "yes" to God and to us, the faith community of the Archdiocese of Miami.
Alex Rodriguez - 11/23/2009 11:24 AM
I am thankful for my life!

My marriage, my family and my faith!

And in this Year of the Priest for all the clergy that has touched my life.
Martha Lorenzo - 11/23/2009 11:20 AM
I thank God for everything he allows me to experience and the people in my life. I particularly thank Him for the priests of my Parrish, St. Timothy, because they are truly an example of what a priest should be. For the Deacons i also have great respect and love for their devotion to their compromise with our Lord.

I thank God for letting me be part of all the greatest things happening in our Church in this 21st Century.

May the Holy Spirit pour all kind of blessings and give us a true efusion of His love so we can change from inside out and then take all that power to others in our lives.

In Jesus and Mary
Martha Lorenzo


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