Jubilarian Mass at Cathedral of St. Andrew

Published: June 23, 2026

Bishop Anthony B. Taylor preached the following homily June 23, 2026, at the Cathedral of St. Andrew for the Jubilarian Mass for priests.


Bishop Taylor

In the Gospel of Matthew, Jesus builds on the image of a "pearl of great price” in a way that speaks to our shared priesthood. 

You remember Jesus' parable that the kingdom of heaven is like a man searching for a fine pearl who, upon finding it, "goes and sells all that he has and buys it?" Well, we priests spent years searching for the pearl that God has chosen for us, discerning our vocation. And upon finding it, we gave up everything to make it our own. This pearl is truly "of great price"  — celibacy is costly, obedience is costly, death to self is costly, which is why it is also so valuable. Thieves steal what is valuable, and so Satan tries to steal our priesthood. 

Hence Jesus' warning in today’s Gospel: "Do not give what is holy to dogs, or throw your pearls before swine, lest they trample them underfoot, and turn and tear you to pieces." Hence the importance of protecting this pearl from all that might put it at risk. It is helpful to notice that a pearl is the product of irritation, which reminds us that faithfulness to our priesthood is not always easy. 

We lay prostrate before the altar during the litany of the saints as a visible sign that through ordination we die to this world so that, like Jesus in whose priesthood we share, we might bring life to others. 

You know how pearls are made: a grain of sand enters the oyster when the shell’s valves are open for feeding and becomes embedded between the shell and the soft skin of the oyster. The oyster then secretes a substance which coats the irritant, forming a pearl. 

Many of us experienced a call to the priesthood that was like that: Jesus wouldn't leave us in peace — especially when our shell was open, and we let down our guard. He kept tugging at our heart. Sometimes this was irritating. But the Lord persisted and began to form a pearl within us. This process began before entering the seminary and has continued since ordination. Jesus turns every new challenge into an opportunity to make our pearl more beautiful. Even our stumbles, once we learn from them. Today we thank God for the opportunities he gives us to grow in holiness — and also for the challenges he uses to form us into the kind of priests he wants us to be. 

This experience equips us to help others search for their "pearl of great price." And also for them, it is precisely amid irritating things — the crosses they bear — that their pearl is to be found. They open their shell to us and let down their guard, sharing very private matters with us. Their trust and vulnerability is not only deeply touching, it also challenges us to serve them with a love that is ever more pure and innocent, and thus our own pearl grows more beautiful.

We priests have the honor of serving the people Jesus entrusts to our care, which is why the Church asks us to die to ourselves as a condition for ordination. That was the great price Jesus paid for us. We lay prostrate before the altar during the litany of the saints as a visible sign that through ordination we die to this world so that, like Jesus in whose priesthood we share, we might bring life to others. 

In baptism we died sacramentally so that we might live. In ordination we die sacramentally so that others might live. And then Jesus sends us out into the world with a mission to redirect people to the narrow path that leads to life, which will only happen if we remain on that narrow path ourselves. As Jesus says in the Gospels, "Enter through the narrow gate; for the gate is wide and the road broad that leads to destruction, and those who enter through it are many. How narrow the gate and constricted the road that leads to life. And those who find it are few."

As we gather today, let us praise the Lord for the priesthood we share, thank him for the faithfulness of our jubilarians and the blessings we have received through our priesthood and pray that the Lord will enable our pearl — the pearl of our shared priesthood — to grow ever more beautiful in the years that lie ahead!