On the Road
to the Priesthood
The north coast
town of Aitape, Papua New Guinea had never experienced a diaconate
ordination of such magnitude. It was October 9, 2002 and native son
Michael Watae had come home to celebrate this next to last stage on
his long and varied road to becoming a priest.
Approximately 4000 people took part in the day long celebrations that
began at 9:00 a.m. with a ceremonial procession of the national flag
and the playing of the national anthem.
Then
came the entrance procession. Dressed in his traditional costume.
Michael sat in a specially built traditional house and was escorted
in by eight people while a 'singsing' group from his own clan danced
around the house. Midway to the sanctuary a tribal elder called
Michael out of the house so that all present could see him.Michael's
parents and a cousin came to meet him, joined by leaders from four
Protestant churches and a Catholic elder. The elders divested him of
his traditional costume and clothed him in his Spiritan robe. When
Michael and his parents arrived at the sanctuary they handed him over
to the parish priest who in turn handed him to the
bishop.Refreshments and traditional 'singsing' followed the
ordination ceremony until 8:00p.m. The last group of people were
transported home at 2:00 a.m.
Michael comes from a family of eight boys and three girls. The three
girls have died and five of the eight boys are married. His mother
believed that since his twin sister had died at the age of three, he
should not become a priest, but get married and have children who
would resemble both him and his twin. So he finished high school and
went to study business at the University. But he left there in his
second year to help his older brothers support their youngest one.
From Papua New Guinea to the Philippines
Canadian Spiritans Colum Corrigan, Pat Doran and Michael Doyle
influenced Michael to become a priest. He lived in the Spiritan House
of Studies and when it was closed he continued living with the
Spiritans for five years while working in the diocese of Aitape.
Sent to Manila, Philippines, to study at the East Asian Pastoral
Institute, he prayed continually, "Lord, if you are able to show
others what they should do, tell me clearly whether I should be a
priest. Is that your plan for me?"
On February 23, 1994 he took a walk after dinner and said his Rosary.
"I said to Mother Mary, 'I'm saying the Rosary to ask your Son
to show me where I'm going." The next morning at 5:00a.m. when
he woke up, two Scripture texts were on his mind. He took them to be
an answer to his prayer of the previous evening.
"Now, my son, do not be negligent any longer, for Yahweh has
chosen you to stand in his presence and serve him by conducting his
worship and offering him incense."
2 Chronicles 29:11
"You will be called priest of Yahweh and be addressed as
minister of our God."
Isaiah 61:6
After two years in Manila he returned home. Pat Doran had only one
question for him. "Have you made up your mind?" Without
hesitation he answered, "Yes." He then went to the seminary
in Arusha, Tanzania where the person who most influenced him was East
African Spiritan, Augustine Shao. Now Bishop of Zanzibar, he will
ordain Michael to the priesthood.
From Tanzania to Trinidad
Three years in Tanzania were followed by Novitiate in Trinidad.
"I never thought I'd come across the world like that. I didn't
even know where Trinidad was. When Fr. Brian Cronin told me that I
was going there I couldn't believe it. I wanted to stay with my classmates."
Fr. Herbert Charles was his Novice master. "Two words remain
with me from that year-responsibility and freedom. He prepared me to
become someone who could stand on my own feet and be faithful to
those who had guided and advised me. Trinidad gave me my philosophy
of life: 'Look at people. Don't just see their weaknesses. People are
good.'" Because of his Spiritan training Michael believes that
his priestly work will always have a missionary component.
"People will see me not as a diocesan priest, not as a
Franciscan, but as a Spiritan- a missionary priest, always a
missionary priest. The true marks of a Spiritan are simplicity,
hospitality and brotherhood. I read these words in the Spiritan Rule
of Life and I saw them lived out in the Spiritans I was with in Papua
New Guinea, East Africa and Trinidad."
I saw the cross and I changed my mind
In Trinidad at Fatima College, Port of Spain, Michael had another
reassuring experience.
"I was sick for a few weeks and I felt very low and forgotten. I
made up my mind to leave Trinidad and come to Canada so that the
Spiritans there might decide what to do with me. I wanted to continue
as a Spiritan, but I didn't want to die! I packed my belongings, said
my night prayers and asked for the grace to be strong enough to tell
the Trinidadian Spiritans I was leaving. It was very painful - my
first experience of Gethsemane. Next morning, February 26, 2001, when
I woke up, the text of Leviticus 20:26 came to me: Be consecrated to
me, for I, Yahweh, am holy; and I shall set you apart from all these
peoples for you to be mine.
"Right outside my door was a big cross. The moment I saw it my
tears fell down and I said, 'If you can suffer for me, then my pain
shall not stop me.' I felt Jesus saying, 'I had my pain. You have
yours. Consecrate your pain to me.' In a period of doubt and
difficulty, I wanted to leave. Then I saw the cross and I changed my mind."
The final significant text came to him in Laval House, Toronto last
summer where Michael spent some weeks before and during World Youth
Day. On June 29 he visited a Trinidadian family and got talking about
his journey to the priesthood. He told them about the texts that
guided him in Manila and Port of Spain. As he opened the Manila text
to copy it for his friends, he found he had written Romans 15:16
nearby. "I heard myself saying, 'Why did I put that text there?
Check it out'. I was given grace to be a minister of Christ Jesus to
his people; dedicated to offer them the gospel of God, so that they
might become an acceptable offering, sanctified by the Holy Spirit.
It seemed to summarize the other three significant texts.
"The fact that the final text came to me in Toronto makes me
very happy," Michael told Spiritan Missionary News, "because
in my heart I believe that what I am undertaking is not my own doing
but is due to the Canadian Spiritans and their support. The Spiritans
I've encountered have been men of prayer, holy men. I hope to show
these qualities to those who come into my life."
Michael Watae was ordained on February 2, 2003 -Libermann Day - the
first Spiritan priest from Papua New Guinea. We look forward to
describing his ordination, Papua New Guinean style, in our May 2003 edition.