Father Sleman enters the church grounds on the morning of his First Mass.
little sister
24 JunOne of the surprises of the event for me was that Sleman has a 7 years old sister! With a touch of marvel and sadness I remembered that I left for the seminary when my baby sister, Peggy, was 4 years old. Looking back and pondering what I missed of her, I sometimes wonder, “What was I thinking!” Given that Sleiman’s sister was 7 at the time of his ordination, that means that he would have been in the seminary before she even born.
tears
24 JunNot one of best pictures, but one of the best moments: tears in his mother’s eyes. When the man to be ordained a priest lies flat on his face in front of the altar, and we chant the litany of the saints, something instinctively tells us that this is a significant moment. The tissues at his mother’s eyes tell a story.
“Abuna”
24 JunAt the sign of peace that every priest extends to the newly ordained, I noticed that the Arab priests were kissing his hands before they kissed him. By the time I reached him, I had gone to school and learned. As it was mine to stand in front of him, I kissed both of his hands. I looked at him and simply said, “Abuna.” After I kissed both of his cheeks, he looked into my eyes with, “God bless you.” God has.
for this moment and purpose
24 JunOn 20 June 2013 it was my honor to attend the priestly ordination of Deacon Sleiman Hassan in his home parish of Immaculate Conception of Mary in Fuheis, Jordan. Father Sleiman is now a priest for the Latin Patriarchate Jerusalem. During the ceremony I remembered a verse from a card sent to me on my thirty-eighth anniversary a couple weeks ago: “God’s man, in God’s place, at God’s time, for God’s purpose. You make a difference for Him.” It was a delight and a blessing for me to lay hands on him during the ceremony.






