Seminarian Stephen Rooney yells while competing in a tug of war during the "Messy Olympics" July 12 at the Quo Vadis Camp at Immaculate Conception Seminary in Huntington, N.Y. Seventy-six teenagers from the dioceses of Rockville Centre, N.Y., and Brooklyn, N.Y., attended the camp, which provided an opportunity for participants to have fun and deepen their faith while encouraging them to be open to God's call to the priesthood or religious life. (CNS photo/Gregory A. Shemitz)

‘Joy of Gospel exploding off them,’ priest says about Quo Vadis campers

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HUNTINGTON, N.Y. (CNS) — At the end of a well-fought tug-of-war, 76 mud-caked teenagers jostled one another into a group photo with dozens of soaking wet young priests, shaving cream-spattered seminarians and lay leaders.

Eleven Sisters of Life joined them, their blue and white habits remarkably unscathed. The last two youths made a sliding entrance through the muddy battlefield to the center of the picture. Crosses lashed together from wood and branches and bearing names of saints were held aloft. Laughter rang out over the field and almost drowned out music from two huge speakers.

Commenting on the exuberant scene after he washed a copious amount of goopy oatmeal out of his hair, Father Joseph Fitzgerald said, “The joy of the Gospel is exploding off them!”

Father Fitzgerald, director of vocations for the Diocese of Rockville Centre on Long Island, spoke July 12 after the “Messy Olympics” event that was part of the first Quo Vadis Camp to be held in the diocese. It took place at Immaculate Conception Seminary in Huntington.

“Quo Vadis” is Latin for “Where are you going?” and is the question St. Peter is said to have asked the risen Jesus on the outskirts of Rome. It’s also the name of a camp program developed in the Jubilee Year 2000 in the Archdiocese of Portland in Oregon to invite young Catholic men to learn more about the priesthood, deepen their faith and better discern God’s call in their lives.

The program has been used in other dioceses, including Allentown, Pennsylvania, where Bishop John O. Barres served as bishop from 2009 until he became bishop of Rockville Centre in 2017.

In Rockville Centre, the Quo Vadis camp was a five-day, four-night experience for young men and women ages 14 to 18 from the dioceses of Rockville Centre and neighboring Brooklyn. Staff were drawn from the ranks of seminarians, young priests, lay youth ministers and Sisters of Life.

The program included daily Mass, prayer, devotions, recreation, and talks on topics including the universal call to holiness, trust and leadership; the role of the Holy Spirit in discernment; Mary as mother of missionaries; and the many dimensions of vocation to priestly, religious and married life. Campers also visited residents of a nursing home and cleared trails at the seminary. Most of the activities were done as a group, but young men and young women attended some gender-specific talks.

Bishop Barres told Catholic News Service, “Quo Vadis is really about a rich new harvest of vocations to religious life and priesthood on Long Island. This is a laboratory of how to cultivate vocations.”

“Those two words, ‘quo vadis,’ are a mission statement for young people who are motivated by real truth, real charity and a deep faith. Young people this age are capable of extremely powerful prayer and biblical depth,” he said.

Young women religious, young priests, seminarians and campers experience a culture of encounter and are challenged to holiness and mission, Bishop Barres said. “They encounter the next generation and inspire and are inspired by it. It’s not in the future, but in the here and now,” he said.

“We’re giving them an experience of faith that’s fun and instills tools for them to become disciples in the Catholic Church, such as the rosary, adoration of the Blessed Sacrament and ‘lectio divina,'” Father Fitzgerald said.

The campers are “encountering faith-filled young adult men and women. We’re called to be joyful disciples, not miserable, angry, ornery people. We’re promoting discernment between their hearts and the Sacred Heart of Jesus,” he said.

Father Fitzgerald announced the Quo Vadis camp in bulletins and communications with parishes and youth leaders with whom he has long experience. The event was fully subscribed and had a waiting list, he said. By his estimate, he has conducted or worked at more than 50 camps in the past 20 years, including Life Teen in Atlanta.

At Quo Vadis, he said, the campers “share an openness and faith” although they come from different educational, economic and racial backgrounds. “They have a desire to belong, to be known and loved, and met where they’re at.”

Sister Magnificat Rose, a Sister of Life, said she reminded the campers that God has a plan for them. “We want to help them see, learn and grow in their faith, open their hearts, grow closer to the Lord and follow Him. They have a great love to share with the world and I want to encourage them to prepare for whatever vocation God has for them by doing little things with great love.”

Mary Andrews said she didn’t know what to expect from the camp, but was awed that “every second is filled with faith, love, and God’s presence. It’s been the most unbelievable experience in my life — and I never say that!”

Andrews, who will attend Molloy College in Rockville Centre in September, said the daily concelebrated Masses were “beautiful and unbelievably inspiring. To see nine priests there and have Father Joe tell us they’re here for us — this is not a dwindling church,” she said.

“I have a list of what I want to take home from Camp Quo Vadis,” Andrews said. It includes a moment of silence at grace before meals, the Liturgy of the Hours and eucharistic adoration. “There’s an emphasis on sitting with God, opening your heart and putting your trust in him,” she said.

A.J. Gallego, who will attend Sacred Heart University in Fairfield, Connecticut, said, “Without the distractions, you can hear God better out here.” The detachment from his phone was a nice opportunity to think and clear his mind, he said, although he acknowledged he will probably never go a whole day without his phone. Campers are allowed to use their phones for 30 minutes a day.

Young priests and seminarians provide a good atmosphere, Gallego,said. “It shows you what it’s like if that’s the path you choose.”

Campers competed wholeheartedly under a blazing sun at the Messy Olympics. Teams had patron saints and events included traditional egg and water balloon tosses, Hungry Hippo on a soapy tarp, and not-so-traditional Build the Highest Miter or Veil on a teammate using shaving cream.

The pie-eating contest featured whipped cream and gummy worms, and the targets in the Duck, Duck, Goose chase were marked with a handful of oatmeal. Staff provided cold water, sunscreen and bug spray, and the Sisters of Life kept everyone cool with well-placed shots from Super Soaker water guns.

The mud pit was used for leap frog, wheelbarrow and the tug-of-war before most competitors trooped off to a nearby bay for real and symbolic stain-removal. At the Messy Olympics, as throughout the Quo Vadis program, priests were available for reconciliation whenever it was requested.

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