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. John Robert Morris, OP

My interest in Religious Life occurred while I was an engineering student at the University of Washington in Seattle. The Dominicans staffed a parish near the University and served as chaplains to the Newman Center, one of the oldest in the United States. There were two attractions in that early experience with the Dominicans that drew me seriously to consider a vocation. The first was their particular life-style. It was very prayerful and it was also familial or community oriented. I remember on many of my visits to Blessed Sacrament Church how the Friars could be heard chanting the office in the choir which was then located behind the altar. It was very inspiring. All of the Friars at the Priory seemed to enjoy their ministries and exhibited a great deal of personal individuality and freedom. As a group they were as contented and happy as one could reasonably expect. They were a powerful magnet to one open to God's invitation to serve. The second attraction, a very powerful one for me personally, was I learned from them that it was possible to communicate the Catholic Tradition on the same intellectual level as my other university studies. For this gift I owe the chaplain, Fr. William Dooley, O.P., a great debt. The power of this Tradition, which included a strong theological component rooted in Scripture, and which supported a very real dimension dedicated to social justice issues, was what I needed to experience in order to make the move from a professional career to Dominican Friar.
Before entering the Order I worked for the Boeing Airplane Company as an aeronautical engineer. My work was in preliminary design, that first stage in design before something is actually considered for manufacture. The work was intellectually stimulating and creative. Yet, before I realized it, I had discovered those attractions mentioned above were greater than a career in engineering, and I was on my way to the novitiate in Kentfield, California. My dream of teaching the Catholic Tradition on the same level as my engineering background actually came to be. Immediately after completing my doctorate in theology at the Graduate Theological Union in Berkeley, I began teaching theology, first at St. Albert's College at the GTU, and later at St. Mary's College in Moraga, and finally at the Pontifical University of St. Thomas in Rome.
Besides teaching, my present interest is to research and write, a task I find challenging but rewarding. The topics of greatest interest to me are Christology, Issues of Catholic Social Justice, Liberation Theology and Scriptural Studies.
My teaching career has been complimented with rich experiences in two parishes, both for extensive periods of time. This pastoral experience has provided a wonderful ministry in which to preach and it has in turn given balance to my theological interests and studies. When my teaching duties come to an end I would like to devote more time to pastoral work especially with the Latinos now resident in such great numbers in California and other places in the Province.