Maryknoll Father Eugene Murray sums up the essence of his 62 years of
missionary priesthood in two simple phrases: being kind to people and
relying on God’s grace.
“I enjoy my mission life. I love the sacramental part of saying Mass, giving communion, helping the people in their relationship with Jesus,” he says. “As you do the missionary work, you try to keep close to our Lord and you ask for his help and his graces.”
His parishioners at Our Lady of China Church are eager to list the ways the priest’s kindness has impacted their community. “He is selfless and has a big, warm smile,” says Wei Ren Jr., who was baptized at the parish and learned about the Bible from Father Murray.
“He shares God’s love in his daily life.” Wang De Lan, a new parishioner, says she is impressed by the priest’s patience. “He never talks about others’ faults,” she says. “I really like his way of guiding us. He is a good shepherd.” In Taiwan, 88-year-old Father Murray is known as Father Dzeng Syan Dau, meaning “one who makes manifest the teaching.” Parishioners explain how he teaches by example.
“I enjoy my mission life. I love the sacramental part of saying Mass, giving communion, helping the people in their relationship with Jesus,” he says. “As you do the missionary work, you try to keep close to our Lord and you ask for his help and his graces.”
His parishioners at Our Lady of China Church are eager to list the ways the priest’s kindness has impacted their community. “He is selfless and has a big, warm smile,” says Wei Ren Jr., who was baptized at the parish and learned about the Bible from Father Murray.
“He shares God’s love in his daily life.” Wang De Lan, a new parishioner, says she is impressed by the priest’s patience. “He never talks about others’ faults,” she says. “I really like his way of guiding us. He is a good shepherd.” In Taiwan, 88-year-old Father Murray is known as Father Dzeng Syan Dau, meaning “one who makes manifest the teaching.” Parishioners explain how he teaches by example.
“He’s found a lot of the lost
sheep,” Wei says through an interpreter. “He cares about the community,
going to the hospitals and the jail.” Father Murray has worked in
several parishes, been director of the Maryknoll Language Center in
Taichung and taught English at a high school and a Catholic university.
He also worked as a prison chaplain for over 20 years, visiting inmates
weekly.
“One of them had his whole family baptized and he joined the
Legion of Mary,” Father Murray says.
Eugene Murray, who grew up
with eight siblings in the Bronx, New York, was inspired to be a priest
while attending Cardinal Hayes High School and hearing Maryknoll Father
Joseph English speak about the missions. “He talked to us about how many
people have not yet heard the name of Jesus, especially in places like
China,” Father Murray recalls. “I was very moved by that.” Then
15-year-old Murray joined the Venard, Maryknoll’s junior seminary in
Clarks Summit, Pennsylvania. Eleven years later, he was ordained a
priest. He was assigned to Taiwan in 1958. “It became my whole life,” he
says.
Transformation of Taiwan:
Recalling
the Taiwan he first encountered, Father Murray says: “It was an
agricultural society,” where people worked in rice fields but had time
between planting and harvesting to listen to priests and catechists.
“Maybe 40 to 50 people would study the doctrine and get baptized
together, and they would form a community.”
Industrialization
transformed Taiwan in the 1960s, he says, prompting young people to move
to the cities to work in factories. Even though the Taichung Diocese
and Maryknoll reached out to Catholics in the cities, he says, the
demands of modern life made it harder for new people to get involved
with the Church. “People are busy all the time, all year round,” the
missioner says. Nowadays, he adds, people’s needs are not
financial but spiritual. In Taiwan, about 1.5 percent of the population
is Catholic.
“People are looking for things that give more meaning to
their lives,” he says. “It is not just making money and producing a lot
of goods that makes you happy. It’s peace of mind coming from God.”
During the three years he spent away from Taiwan, Father Murray’s work
included helping the United States Catholic Conference to resettle
Vietnamese refugees after the Vietnam War. He returned to Taiwan in 1976
and was assigned to Shalu parish, which did not have many practicing
Catholics. Father Murray and the parish catechist visited the Catholics
who were registered to invite them back to the Church.
He
remembers Tio Bi Le, a young factory worker and his first catechumen in
Shalu. Before Tio Bi Le was baptized, her mother told her, “Oh, you are
going to be a hungry ghost,” referring to the custom to put out food for
the dead during big feast days. Father Murray adds, “She told her
mother: ‘No, I won’t be a hungry ghost; I remember listening to the
doctrine very carefully, and for Catholics, there is an everlasting
banquet in heaven.’” She went on to become a catechist, married and
raised Catholic children. “The people who believe and are
baptized are rather faithful,” Father Murray says. “It’s gratifying to
see how much the faith means to them.”
Immersed in Taiwanese Culture:
Since 1985, Father Murray has served in Our Lady of China parish in
Ching Shui, Taichung. “The majority of my Catholics are mainland Chinese
who came over in 1949 with Chiang Kai-shek,” he says. The
nationalist Chinese army of Chiang Kai-shek retreated to Taiwan after
being defeated by the communists under Mao Zedong. Soldiers and their
families were living in military villages that the Taiwanese government
built for them.
Ten years ago, the government reclaimed the land, built
10-story buildings and moved the people into these apartments. The
soldiers and their families — who arrived in their 20s — are now elderly
and often have foreign workers taking care of them. “I visit them often
with the Legion of Mary members,” he says. “We bring them communion and
we anoint them, if necessary.”
“He is just like a father
figure,” says Li A Hau, a parishioner who accompanies Father Murray on
his visits. “When a parishioner needs anything, he tries to fulfill all
the needs of the parishioner. But Father never asks parishioners to do
something for him.” Father Murray officially became a Taiwanese
citizen in 2017 after the government allowed foreigners to have dual
citizenship. “I applied at the encouragement of some of my Catholics,”
he says.
Many parishioners laud his fluency in the Mandarin and
Taiwanese languages. “He is completely immersed in our Taiwanese
culture, tradition, family and societal values,” Wei says. “Except for
his appearance, he is totally Taiwanese.” Father Murray feels
grateful to have been able to share God’s message in Taiwan. “The credit
is to God and God’s grace,” he says. “Everything falls into place.”
Credits : UCA News
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