The Superior General of the Society of Jesus, Father Peter Hans
Kolvenbach SJ has appointed Father Michael Holman SJ as the Provincial
of the British Jesuits. He succeeds Father David Smolira SJ. Fr.
Holman took office on the Feast of St. Ignatius Loyola, founder
of the Jesuits, on the 31st July 2005 in London.
Fr Holman, 50, was born and brought up in Wimbledon, south London,
where he was educated by the Jesuits, at Donhead Preparatory School
and at Wimbledon College.
He entered the novitiate of the Society of Jesus in Rainhill,
Liverpool in 1974, and was ordained priest with six other Jesuits
in the Sacred Heart Church, Wimbledon, in 1988 where he also made
his final profession in 1997.
Fr Holman studied at Heythrop College, University of London;
Campion Hall, Oxford; Weston Jesuit School of Theology, Cambridge,
Massachusetts; and Fordham University, New York, and holds degrees
in Philosophy, Theology and Education Administration.
He has worked in Jesuit schools in Glasgow, Sheffield and latterly
at Wimbledon College where he was headmaster for nine years until
July 2004. Fr Holman also has pastoral experience in the field
of Ignatian spirituality and spiritual direction. While completing
his final year of training in 1995, he worked for six months as
a prison and hospital chaplain in Guyana, South America.
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Of his appointment Fr Holman says:
"I look forward to this new opportunity to serve Jesus
Christ and the Church.
Becoming a Jesuit is the best thing that happened in my life.
I am proud of the considerable contribution the British Jesuits
have made and are making to the Church and wider society in
the United Kingdom, Zimbabwe, South Africa and Guyana.
The particular gift we Jesuits bring is our rich tradition
of Ignatian spirituality. This enables men and women from
all walks of life to encounter Jesus Christ right at the centre
of their lives and inspires them to live the Gospel more generously
in response to the love they have experienced.
There is evidence everywhere of a longing for the kind of
purpose and meaning to life that only a close relationship
with Jesus can satisfy. That is why the Jesuit vocation is
as urgent and necessary today as it ever was.” |
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