Vocation Discernment
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Vocation Office
Western Dominican Province
5890 Birch Court
Oakland, CA 94618-1626
(510)-596-1821
Our Vocations require a great deal of support, from the first moment they begin their novitiate until the last moments of their retirement. Please do conside visiting our donation page and helping form and sustain the priests and brothers who will serve you in the future, serve you now and have served you in the past.
Saints and Blesseds
The Order of Friars Preachers,
The Dominican Order,
has a beautiful history of learning, service and holiness manifested in its saints and blesseds of every age since its foundation by St. Dominic de Guzman. Do enjoy the periodic postings of such stories as are available from various sources, especially our own archives.
Religious Retirement
Our elderly and infirm friars receive the best care we have available to us, as in any family. We rely heavily on the donations of others for our own existence and thus when one of our own becomes incapable of further ministry due to age or infirmity, those same donations help us support the sometimes necessary special care required by such members of our communities.
We prefer to care for our elderly and infirm in our own houses so that the life of a religious community can be a part of a friars life as long as possible. This is also the most economical in many ways. We strive to use donations wisely. But sometimes a care facility is essential. As we, as a Province, do not benefit from the national collection for retired religious, we ask that you assist us in caring for these friars who have prayed, taught, served and ministered for so many years amomg the people of the Western United States and beyond.
Please, in your kindness, consider assisting us in this work of brotherly love.
Many thanks in advance.
Catholicism
It's just the right thing
Fr. Andrew James Hunt, OP
Fr. Andrew, a convert, was born in Cheyenne, Wyoming to James Shelly Hunt and Mary Leverich and would head farther West to attend college at St. Ignatius in San Francisco. He entered the seminary where he studied philosophy and theology. After his ordination to the priesthood he was assigned to Benicia, California. His second assignment landed him in Portland, Oregon, but within a year he returned to study at the Priory of the Immaculate Conception in Washington, D.C. Within two years and by the year 1910, he received the Lectorate in Sacred Theology. During the academic months of these two years he also studied Sociology, English, and French at the Catholic University of America that is located across the street from the Dominican House of Studies. In the summers, he went to Columbia University to study more Sociology and English.
Fr. Andrew returned to Benicia, California, and there he was given the office of Novice Master. He also taught Humane Letters, History, and Mathematics to the postulants until 1915, when St. Dominic’s in Benicia ceased as postulancy, novitiate, and house of studies for the seminarians. He became the Librarian in 1911 and was re-appointed on March 18, 1914. He also became Sacristan in 1911 and was re-appointed in October 8, 1915. That same year he added to his responsibilities when became Procurator of the convent and was appointed a member of the conventual council on October 6.
On April 16, 1917, Fr. Hunt transferred to St. Dominic Priory in San Francisco, where he then became Sacristan and Procurator. In 1921, he was assigned to St. Thomas Priory in Ross (Kentfield), California and became Procurator there. In 1924, he took on even greater responsibility as he moved to Portland. There he became Sub-Prior and Assistant Pastor. This assignment did not last very long, because in August of the same year he was made Vicar and Pastor of St. Dominic’s in Eagle Rock, Los Angeles. In September, a month after arriving, he was given permission to purchase a Ford, the first automobile for parish use. Fr. E. G. McMullan had begun the plans for the parish school which Fr. Andrew completed in September 1925. Additionally, he planned and built a parish convent for the Dominican Sisters of San Rafael, who came to teach in the parish school. The convent was blessed by Bishop John Joseph Cantwell, of Los Angeles and San Diego. Fr. Andrew died in Los Angeles on January 13, 1929 just before his 53rd birthday.
Photo: Student with musical instrument
|
Date of Birth |
Date of Profession |
Date of Ordination |
Date of Death |
|
February 12, 1876 |
October 10, 1896 |
June 25, 1902 |
January 13, 1929 |
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