Home » News » Albania: New priests from the Church of martyrs

Albania: New priests from the Church of martyrs

Sometimes the question of what your vocation is – in theory at least – is quickly answered. Mother Teresa put it like this: “As to the origin of it all, it was quite simple: the Good Lord called, and I said yes.” Later, however, this great saint from the little country of Albania struggled with many questions, as she recorded in her private diary. And in the years after her first initial “yes” to God (“Since childhood, the Heart of Jesus was my great love”, she wrote) – she needed time to understand clearly her path with God.

For all of us, our vocation is quite simply a gift, which needs to be discovered and lived out in our lives. The sooner we begin with this, the better. For the seminarians in Shkoder, Albania, great care is taken to ensure that they are able to reaffirm maturely the youthful “yes” they uttered six years earlier at the beginning of their studies. These young men from Albania, Montenegro and Kosovo must be able to remain true to their “first great love” for life. It is not unknown – after the major retreat in which the young theology students give special consideration to the question of the priesthood and seek to discern their own vocation, in intensive prayer – for a seminarian to leave the seminary, still firm in his faith, but called to serve God in other ways.

Albania: New priests from the Church of martyrs.
Albania: New priests from the Church of martyrs.

The 16 seminarians in the current academic year are all looking forward to their pastoral and sacramental duties. This is by no means something to be taken for granted in Albania. Many of the 350,000 or so Catholics in the country (roughly 10% of the population) can still remember the era of the atheist dictatorship under the communists, when every form of religious expression, to say nothing of action, was banned under the constitution and cruelly persecuted. Even before the communists and the successive occupations by foreign powers, this small and grindingly poor country had lived for half a millennium beneath the harsh yoke of Ottoman rule. Only during the past few decades has it once again been possible to study theology and train for the priesthood – in itself a form of resurrection for the martyred Church in Albania.

Last year the seminary celebrated the 20th anniversary of its reopening, with the ordination of two deacons. ACN is supporting the seminary with €900 per seminarian per year. They are undemanding and willing to serve. Or, as Mother Teresa herself put it, “I am willing to accept whatever He gives and give whatever He takes, all with a big smile”.

Don't miss the latest updates!

Christians of Yaroun, southern Lebanon, fear they will never return home

The Christian residents of the south-Lebanese border town of Yaroun…

ACN mourns Syrian archbishop who never abandoned his flock

Archbishop Jeanbart believed that had it not been for the…

Remembering Sudan: A responsibility that we must all bear, not just the governments

A missionary warns that the world has forgotten about Sudan,…

Muslim solidarity is “sign of hope” in Mozambique, says bishop

The statement comes in the wake of a devastating attack…

Islamists reduce historic church to rubble in northern Mozambique

The attack on the parish of St Louis de Montfort…

South Sudan: The bishop who brought his diocese back to life

When Bishop Stephen Nyodho was appointed for the Diocese of…

Statement on desecration of Christian statue in Lebanon

ACN calls on all to pray for the Christian communities…

Equatorial Guinea’s spiritual preparation for historic Papal trip

The local Church hopes that there will be a “before…

Christians of Yaroun, southern Lebanon, fear they will never return home

The Christian residents of the south-Lebanese border town of Yaroun are living in fear that they will never be able to return to the land of their ancestors. Fr Charles...

ACN mourns Syrian archbishop who never abandoned his flock

Archbishop Jeanbart believed that had it not been for the care of God the Christians of Syria would have been wiped out during the civil war. It was with sadness...

Remembering Sudan: A responsibility that we must all bear, not just the governments

A missionary warns that the world has forgotten about Sudan, a country currently experiencing the worst humanitarian crisis in the world due to a three-year-long civil war. In an interview...