Anthony Taylor (bishop) - Life - Holy Orders

Holy Orders

He attended St. Meinrad Seminary College in Indiana for two years, graduating with a bachelor’s degree in history. From 1976 to 1980 he was trained for the priesthood at the North American College in Rome while studying theology at the Gregorian University, and was ordained a priest at St. Mary Parish in Ponca City, his home parish, on August 2, 1980.

Taylor has been involved with Hispanic ministry from the start of his career. His first assignment was to Sacred Heart Parish, Oklahoma City, and within a month of ordination he had begun to celebrate mass in Spanish twice a month in Clinton and Hinton, Oklahoma. In 1982 he was transferred to western Oklahoma, where he lived at Queen of All Saints mission in Sayre until 1986 and served the Hispanic population in a five-county area, including ongoing ministry in Clinton and Hinton.

In 1984 Archbishop Salatka decided to send Taylor to Fordham University in New York for further studies. He took classes there during the summers of 1984 and 1985, and then full time from 1986 to 1988. During this time he served Holy Rosary Parish in the Bronx. Fordham University awarded Taylor a doctorate in biblical theology in 1989. The title of his dissertation was "The Master-Servant Type Scene in the Parables of Jesus".

Upon his return to Oklahoma, Taylor was named the vicar for ministries of the archdiocese. He was responsible for ministry to priests and, for a number of years, was also responsible for the permanent diaconate program. He had specific responsibility for the orientation and oversight of the international priests serving in Oklahoma, for the newly ordained in their first year of ministry and new pastors in their first year as pastors. He remained the vicar for ministries for 20 years, until being named bishop of Little Rock.

In 1993 Taylor also became the founding pastor of St. Monica Parish in Edmond, Oklahoma, which is a total stewardship parish. During his 10 years at St. Monica, the parish grew rapidly and dedicated a large church in the 2000. In 2003 Taylor returned to Sacred Heart Parish in Oklahoma City as pastor and has overseen the last phase of its transition from predominately Anglophone to predominately Hispanic. The parish is now 95 percent Hispanic, and has nine masses on the weekend, seven in Spanish, one bilingual and one in English.

From 1963 to 2001 the Archdiocese of Oklahoma City sponsored and staffed the parish of Santiago Atitlán, Guatemala. In 1981 Oklahoma priest Father Stanley Rother was killed there, as were many of his catechists and parishioners during the 1980s. In 2001 the parish was returned to the care of the local diocese of Sololá, but the Catholics of Oklahoma continue to be involved in providing assistance to that parish.

Since then Taylor has been in charge of facilitating Oklahoma support for that parish, its parish school, the local hospital and most recently an alcohol abuse treatment center planned for that community. The cause of canonization of Father Rother was opened formally in September 2007, with Taylor heading up the effort as the episcopal delegate for the process. To date he has interviewed 35 of the 112 surviving witnesses to Father Rother's martyrdom or heroic virtue, 23 of these in Guatemala.

At the time he was selected for Little Rock, Taylor was also the chairman of the Presbyteral Council, chairman of the Personnel Board, chairman of the Retirement Board, a member of the Archdiocesan Finance Council and a member of the Mount St. Mary High School Board of Trustees. Mount St. Mary in Oklahoma City is a sister school of Mount St. Mary Academy in Little Rock.

Read more about this topic:  Anthony Taylor (bishop), Life

Famous quotes containing the words holy and/or orders:

    morning, at the brown brink eastward, springs—
    Because the Holy Ghost over the bent
    World broods with warm breast and with ah! bright wings.
    Gerard Manley Hopkins (1844–1889)

    What is all wisdom save a collection of platitudes? Take fifty of our current proverbial sayings—they are so trite, so threadbare, that we can hardly bring our lips to utter them. None the less they embody the concentrated experience of the race and the man who orders his life according to their teaching cannot go far wrong.
    Norman Douglas (1868–1952)