News and Press

Information and Announcements About The Diocese

By Pamela Seal
Diocese of Lake Charles

The Catholic Church in the United States celebrates National Vocation Awareness Week November 1-7 this year. The annual celebration is a reminder to encourage the faithful to renew their prayerful support for those discerning the call to the priesthood, diaconate, and consecrated life.

The Diocese of Lake Charles recently ordained four men to the priesthood in late June, and another as a transitional deacon. It was the largest number of priests ordained at one time in the 40-year history of the Diocese.

Father Andrew DeRouen and Father Levi Thompson were among the newly ordained priests and share their own experiences of how they recognized God’s call to them, along with advice for those in discernment.

“I would remind the young man discerning a call to the priesthood that the inner voice he hears calling him to become a priest is not his own,” said Father DeRouen, now serving as parochial vicar at St. Theodore Catholic Church in Moss Bluff and St. Pius X Catholic Church in Ragley.

“The idea of priesthood is not something to which man calls himself, but rather it is always God’s initiative. Period. The men you see becoming priests have all cooperated with God’s grace,” DeRouen continued, “meaning that God is not expecting men to make themselves and others holy without Him. God just needs your willingness to let Him work with you and through you.”

If there is a spark of desire of God’s call in your heart, Father Levi Thompson, parochial vicar at Our Lady Queen of Heaven Catholic Church, recommends listening to it.

“There was a small desire in my heart and I slowly knew that it could only be satisfied as a priest of Jesus Christ,” Thompson said. “It felt like a prolonged invitation that was nurtured in the Eucharist. After celebrating my first Mass as a priest, I realized that everything had been worth it. The invitation was real; the call of God was real; and the adventure of priesthood was just beginning.”

One way Father DeRouen knew that God was calling him to be a priest was through his restlessness as an architecture student searching for answers about why people design buildings in different ways throughout history. This led to a curiosity about why people value some things over others, and then why people worship.

“By the time I was knee deep in my own philosophical questions, I realized I would not be satisfied with any answers until I experienced seminary life,” DeRouen said. “I prayed, ‘God, open the doors that need to be opened, close the doors that need to be closed, and help me to pay attention.”

Thompson agrees that prayer is key when discerning God’s call to a particular vocation.

 “Pray and bring that intention to Christ. God’s will for us is always beyond our expectations,” said Thompson.

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If you think God is calling you to the priesthood or consecrated life, contact Father Jeffrey Starkovich, Director of Vocations, at 337-725-3719, or email: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

 

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Diocese of Lake Charles 

LAKE CHARLES — St. Louis Catholic High School celebrated the completion of its temporary modular campus with a ribbon cutting ceremony on October 26, with Bishop Glen John Provost in attendance for a special blessing. 

In recent days there have been postings that the Diocese of Lake Charles has made a decision to not rebuild, not fix, or accommodate the needs of the Roman Catholics encompassing the Catholic Parishes of Saint Eugene in Grand Chenier, Our Lady Star of the Sea in Cameron, Sacred Heart of Jesus in Creole, Saint Patrick Mission in Sweetlake, and Saint Mary of the Lake in Big Lake/Grand Lake. These postings are not true.

The Diocese of Lake Charles celebrated the 100th Anniversary of the Apostleship of the Sea (AOS) on Saturday, October 3, 2020. The day began with the Holy Mass in honor of Our Lady at the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception, celebrated by His Excellency, The Most Reverend Glen John Provost, D.D., M.A., Bishop of Lake Charles. Deacon Patrick LaPoint, Director of Stella Maris Seafarers Center; and Father Rommel Tolentino, Port Chaplain for the Diocese of Lake Charles, assisted at the Mass, along with other clergy of the Diocese. The Mass was followed by a Marian and Eucharistic Procession to the Lake Charles Civic Center Seawall, where Adoration and Benediction took place. It was a beautiful tribute to the Patroness of the Apostleship of the Sea, and Our Lady Star of the Sea (Stella Maris).

(Photography by Morris LeBleu / Diocese of Lake Charles)

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Diocese of Lake Charles 

Two major hurricanes in 6 weeks. More than 50 priests in active ministry throughout 39 church parishes and 7 missions, spread across 5 civil parishes. Add to the mix an ongoing pandemic for most of 2020. No matter how the numbers are calculated, the result is the same: one diocese in full recovery mode. 

The Rev. D.B. Thompson, pastor of both Our Lady Star of the Sea Catholic Church in Cameron, and Sacred Heart of Jesus Catholic Church in Creole, talks about devastation of back-to-back hurricanes in a story featured in the Lafayette Daily Advertiser. Click here to read story and view images of more destruction from Hurricane Delta that came ashore as a Category 2 storm on October 9, just six weeks after Hurricane Laura made landfall on August 27.