Calling a generation to saintliness

As a pastor and diocesan vocations director, Johnson engages with young Catholics regularly. He is also the chaplain of a ministry for underprivileged, inner-city youth called “Vagabond Missions” and hosts a regular podcast called “Ask Father Josh.”

His message has particularly resonated with youth, especially young African Americans, who he says are not used to seeing Black clergy or religious.

More in US

“Growing up I never saw a Black priest in my life,” he admitted. “I didn’t know there were Black priests.”

“Unfortunately, that is a common experience for Black Catholics, to never see a priest who looks like them,” he said. “So, whenever they come to this conference, they see bishops and priests and sisters and deacons and married couples, radical disciples of Jesus Christ who look like them.”

“That is a help to cultivating vocations,” he explained, “to see, ‘well I can do this, I can be a priest, I can be a nun. I see people who look like me doing this already.’”

His talk on the saints will highlight the lives of six African American Catholics whose causes for canonization are currently being considered by the Vatican.

“It’s encouraging our young people to become saints,” Johnson said. “To look at the example of those holy witnesses and to follow in their footsteps.” 

Hope for the Church

Despite all the turmoil facing the Church and the ongoing downward trend of priests and seminarians in the U.S. and across the West, Johnson said, “I’m very hopeful for the Church.”

(Story continues below)

“Our numbers [of seminarians] are lower, but the quality of guys that are entering seminary formation is really good,” he said. “They’re really healthy, they desire to be holy, there’s a maturity in a lot of our young men who are answering God’s call.”

Citing the words of Pope Benedict XVI, Johnson said that focusing on programs, projects, and plans will fail to produce more vocations, while “helping our young people encounter the love of Jesus Christ in prayer” will bring more authentic and fruitful vocations.

As vocations director for Baton Rouge, Johnson said his focus has been on helping young people cultivate personal relationships with God by spending daily time with God before sacred Scripture and the Blessed Sacrament.

“Because of that,” Johnson said, “I’ve seen a lot more young men who are a lot more open to the call of the priesthood.”

“If we can teach our young people to pray, then we can trust them with their vocations,” he said confidently. “They will be able to hear the voice of God and to respond to the voice of God.”

“Yes, the numbers might be smaller across the nation, but that’s not necessarily a bad thing,” he said. “In the Old Testament, you have the story of Gideon. The army had to shrink for people to realize it was God, it was God who did the work. So sometimes our numbers have to shrink, and we might have fewer men, but if we have healthy, holy, and mature men, then those men will be rooted in the Lord, and the Lord will work through them.”