First of all, I am most sorry that it has taken this long to  offer the  following reflections.  As wonderful as the past days have  been, they  have also been incredibly hectic.  I am writing to you now  from  Chicago, where I am very happy to be.  At a later point, I will   describe my time here in Chicago, but without further ado, I want to   offer some reflections on the vow weekend, both for those who were able  to come and  those were not.   The weekend of vows truly was like  the  proverbial act of trying to "take a sip out of a fire hydrant" (which   is pouring forth grace :).   As I mentioned before, there were some  nerves with the approach of a  commitment of this magnitude.  Those are  natural and to be expected.   However, once guests started appearing for  the barbecue before the  vigil, I was swarmed with people who love me.   They were surrounding me  and encouraging me for the rest of the  weekend.  Of course, there were  many people who I would have loved to  have been in attendance but were  unable to come.  I understand that  these friends and family were no less  supportive from afar, offering up  prayers that no doubt helped calm me  and focus me at this crucial  time.  Thank you all again for your many prayers!  They "worked"!
            From the moment I woke up at 6am on the morning of vows, I  was eager and had a certain peace.  I was able to take about an hour of  prayer, which I wanted to do in preparation for the ceremony.  I felt  called to keep my eyes on Jesus, the One to whom I would soon be making  these vows, in front of the most Holy Eucharist, His true Body.  I also  had a sense of offering this sacrifice in union with His.  The peace was  intensified when I actually got into the church 45 minutes before the  start of Mass.  I was able to greet my guests, and Bob Braveheart, a  Lakota-Christian and the Superintendent of Red Cloud Indian School  (where I served for two years before joining the Jesuits), privately  gave a special blessing to the 4 novices from our class who served on  the reservation.  He spoke appreciatively to us, prayed over us,  "smudging" us with his sacred eagle feather while burning smoke from an  herb that the Lakota use.  Then we all lined up in procession.  From  then forward, I was just carried by the solemn desire to take these  vows.  The music was majestic, the readings profound, and the homily  from my Provincial brought me to tears, as it recalled the continuous  line of tens of thousands of Jesuits who have taken these same vows for  477 years, beginning with the original handful of recruits that St.  Ignatius assembled at the University of Paris.      
          The actual vows take place in the context of the Eucharist.   That is the way that St. Ignatius and his company desired to make this  commitment, before the Blessed Sacrament.  The Jesuits are the only  religious order to do this.  I will surely be reminded of the vows when I  go to Mass each day for the rest of my life.  St. Ignatius was quite  inspired when he chose to link these two sacred moments together.  It  was amazing to see the six men who cam alphabetically before me profess  their vows, suddenly going from novices to vowed Jesuits for life.  Each  man went up from the pew into the sanctuary, knelt down, was handed his  hand-written vow formula by the Novice director, and prayed the vows  directly to the Precious Body and Blood of Jesus that the two  provincials held aloft from the altar.  The vows filled the whole huge  church, and were spoken slowly, deliberately.  Once the man had made his  vows, he went to the House Superior who was waiting for him, and handed  him a vow cross, often passed down from a deceased Jesuit.  
            When it was my turn, I got up, and felt like I was going to  the Cross.  Let us remember that the Cross is not ultimately a bad  thing, but rather is glorious.  If in the photos I do not have my  characteristic grin, there is a reason.  As much joy as there was in the  offering, what I was about to do sobered me immensely.  There was no  turning back (not that I wanted to :).  I had to do this.  Again, I kept  my eyes on Jesus and said the vows to Him.  I felt good during and  after the vows (without many nerves at all), and upon getting off my  knees, I went to receive my vow cross which was the same vow cross that  Fr. Paul Mahowald took in August of 1957, in Oshkosh, Wisconsin.  I had  known Fr. Paul at Creighton University, where he frequently offered  God's mercy through the Sacrament of Reconciliation.  He was a humble,  generous, magnanimous man who suffered much, especially in his later  years due to health problems.  I hope I too can have those virtues.  
           The rest of the day was one of conversation, relaxation, and  celebration.  We had a social following the vows, as well as a nice  dinner hosted by the families of three of us who took vows.  At the  dinner each new Jesuit was able to say a few words.  I spoke especially  of how I wanted to do this for the Church that I love.  Then one of the  Jesuits in attendance, who has a terrific singing voice, offered a toast  and a song for each of the three guys.  The song for me was "Oklahoma!"  and for the last refrain I got up and belted it out right along with  him!  There was clapping and much rejoicing from the those at the dinner  who call Oklahoma home.  Finally, most of my guests went down the  street with me to a great place for ice cream.  It was a perfect day,  and ever since then, I have been happy to be a Jesuit.  I know it will  not always be easy, but I am confident this is for God's greater glory.   
           
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