MOSAIC Winter 2020 | Page 11

ME E T YO UR S E MI N AR I AN S Matthew Kurt has a fire of love for Jesus and wants to share it with the world I first started thinking about the priesthood in eighth grade. I had just gotten confirmed and my grandpa gave me a book, The Life of a Priest. I thought to myself, “Yeah right Grandpa, no way! I’m going to get married.” However, this gift planted a seed in my mind for the priesthood. Throughout high school, my dream was to go to West Point because I wanted to be the president. And, my great-aunt told me that she would never vote for someone who didn’t have military experience. There was no doubt in my mind that I would get into West Point. In my senior year of high school, I went to praise and worship and adoration. I felt Jesus calling me to kneel. He revealed to me and image of him and I in a cabin. He said to me, “Matthew, I want you to be a priest.” I thought to myself, “That was just my imagination. I was just trying to have a cool experience at praise and worship. I’m still Matthew Kurt going to West Point.” Then I thought to myself, “If I don’t Archdiocese get into West Point, I might of Detroit start thinking of the possibility Pre-Theology II of maybe becoming a priest.” About a month later I didn’t get into West Point. I attended Michigan State University on an ROTC scholarship. During my time there, I started going to daily Mass. I also joined a priesthood discernment group and through that group, I started to pray and read the Bible. Then I got an opportunity to go on a discernment trip with the Archdiocse of Detroit vocations office to the Camino de Santiago in Spain. However, one of the requirements to go with the vocations office was you couldn’t be in a relationship. My question then became, “Do I start solely discerning the priesthood right now?” I talked to Fr. Dan Westermann, who was in charge of the priesthood discernment group and he told me, “Matthew, it would say a lot to Jesus if you took a year off from looking for a relationship and start solely discerning the priesthood.” He continued, “Matthew, you probably aren’t called to the priesthood, but spending time in prayer and scripture is only going to make you a better biological father.” I started to discern the priesthood. My intial prayer was, “All right, what do you want from me Lord?” However, God doesn’t usually work like that. One day, on my way to the Shrine of the Little Flower in Royal Oak, I was reading about St. Therese of Lisieux’s life. I read about her child-like heart that was on fire for the Lord, and I said to myself, “I want that!” I started falling head-over-heels in love with Jesus Christ. I now had this fire for the Lord, and I wanted everyone to have it. This is one of the things that attracted me to the priesthood, especially being an Army chaplain. As a chaplain, I could spread this fire around the world. One day I was at Mass and the reading was on the creation of Eve. Father Dan was the presider, and I thought to myself, “This is going to be about marriage. I don’t have to pay attention to this because I’m discerning the priesthood.” As his homily went on, my peripheral vision became blury while Father Dan came more into focus. Then he was staring right at me with that Fr. Dan grin of his and he said, “St. Catherine of Siena said, ‘Be who God meant you to be and you will set the world on fire.’” I broke down weeping in the pew because those words were for me. Since then, I’ve been trying to fall more in love with Jesus because if you’re in love with someone so much, you come to a point where you’re willing to do anything for that person. If there was one piece of advice, I could recommend for any guy discerning, I would say, don’t worry about what you’re called to do in the future. Just worry about loving Jesus today, because He will take care of tomorrow. shms.edu 9