Today my parish celebrated Fr. Antonio Leon’s golden jubilee as a priest. The church was fairly packed and was also attended by our bishop Victor Galeone and several other priests. One of our choirs along with the Jacksonville Symphony Orchestra use Mozart’s Coronation Mass as the setting. In addition we also had our Spanish choir at intervals. The Agnus Dei was quite beautiful especially as we had a visiting soloist from Tampa Bay as our guest.
I have written about Fr. Leon again and I always enjoy an opportunity to do so once again since this man is truly a faithful and holy priest. Fr. Leon has been serving as the post of Immaculate Conception since June 10th of 1974 and I truly hope that he will continue to do so so long into the foreseeable future. I became a parishioner of Immaculate Conception quite by chance. When my family had first moved to Jacksonville I got lost downtown and drove by this beautifully church and saw that it also had a bookstore. Later we returned to the bookstore as I was still in my searching – but leaning Catholic phase and then had a chance to walk into the church. I instantly fell in love with the architecture and the beautifully high altar and the magnificent panorama of stained glass windows.
As we started to go to Mass there and then my entering RCIA I slowly got to know Fr. Leon. Fr. Leon was born in Cordova, Spain and entered the minor seminary at the age of 12. He was trained by the Jesuits and firmly grounded in the church by both theology, spiritual reading and devotional practices. He said today "Any good I have done as a priest is because I have spent a holy hour each day in front of the Blessed Sacrament." The Jesuits taught him to do this and he has maintained the devotion for the last fifty years. Though I think he spends more than an hour a day in front of the Tabernacle. I have seen him after morning Mass sit before the Blessed Sacrament as he reads his Breviary. Despite his Jesuit training and his respect for them he felt his calling was as a parish priest and he had volunteered for missionary work in Latin America, but ended up with five other priests in his class in Florida.
Immaculate Conception is a downtown parish and I think if it had been put in less able hands it might have been shut down do to the demographic shifts of people away from downtown area. He had to shut down the parish school due to this, but instead converted the building to act as a soup kitchen and for quite a period of time has been able to fund it totally outside of parish donations. The bookstore I mentioned was a later addition and all profits are used for the care of the poor. During the week there are two daily Masses and on Sunday’s he provides a Indult Latin Mass, two normal Masses and then a Spanish Mass. Once a month the noon Mass is said in both Latin and English in the manner that EWTN does and on First Fridays the Alliance of the Two Hears holds a all night vigil that starts with a Mass and ends with Mass the following day. Again despite the fact that this is a downtown church the Masses are fairly well attended
While part of the population at Masses is made up of predominantly elderly people living in downtown apartment buildings there is a also a large influx of younger families. This is due primarily I believe to the work of Fr. Leon. For one Immaculate Conception is a sort of liturgical oasis where you can go to Mass without worrying about liturgical abuses. Another is that confession is held before every Mass and there is often a line. Though the main reason is that both Fr. Leon and Fr. Keene are good and holy priests and holiness always attracts.
I have grown to love Fr. Leon as a confessor, spiritual director, homilist, and speaker. I love the way that when he talks about Jesus during a homily that he frequently points to the Tabernacle where Jesus dwells sacramentally in the Eucharist. I also love his righteous anger in that sometimes when some sinful action has upset him that he raises his voice and slams his fist on the lectern. In the past I had the opportunity to listen to him teach the secular Carmelites on Carmelite spirituality. He was introduced to St. Therese in the seminary and calls her his "girlfriend", though he also loves to teach on St. Teresa of Aviala and St. John of the Cross. He teaches though not as one lecturing on the spiritual life of great saints, but as one who shares the mystical spiritual life and the many stories he tells confirms this. I also love the fact that he takes on part of the penance of those he hears confessions from. Once he told us after being in a serious car wreck that he walked away from without too much injury that he would use those pains a penances. When he tells these stories it is not as the braggart, but as one who wants to instruct by personal example and sees himself as just the Donkey that Christ rode into Jerusalem. He is a man of such great faith and spiritual depth that not only does he lead the Carmelites, but he leads the Franciscans along with being involved in the Cursio movement.
He is the very model of a parish priest. A man who has totally given of himself to others and sees his life as a priest totally as gift and displays the joy that goes with it. Like every parish there are factions and there are those that write nasty letters to the bishop about Fr. Leon. There are misunderstandings and other problems, but nothing that will sour Fr. Leon and his own response is to give more of himself.
Thank you Fr. Leon for your fifty years of service (so far).
8 comments
Thanks for an inspirational story.
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Warm Regards from the Other Side of the Moon.
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God bless Fr. Leon.
By the way, you’re very fortunate not to live in a diocese where priests are moved every six years, the way they are here.
What a wonderful story! May Fr. Leon have many more years in God’s service!
God bless you dearest Father Leon! I can’t imagine how Immaculate Conception would have been like without your tireless dedication to Our Lord and Lady and making sure that Immaculate Conception Catholic Church is truly, truly CATHOLIC unlike, sadly..some other parishes in our fair diocese of St. Augustine. May you live a hundred years!
God bless Fr. Leon; he is a good and holy priest, and our diocese is blessed to have him.
Hey, we sure could use a Jesuit like Fr. Leon here in Los Angeles. I know, I know, Not while HizEminence is running the Taj Mahony. . . or is it the Raj Majal?
Meant to say ’bout Fr. Leon: a “Jesuit-trained” priest. However, sure could use “active” Jesuits like the ones who trained Fr. Leon in LA; not “activist,” Marxist Jesuits like we have now.