Subject: 'austraLasia' # 345
GOOD NEWS: FORMER AUSTRALIAN SENATOR AND AMBASSADOR ORDAINED PRIEST
Peter Carroll sdb
HOBART: 29th May-- Fr Michael Tate, former Australian Ambassador to the Vatican and The Hague was ordained a priest for the Archdiocese of Hobart (taking in all of Tasmania, Australia)on Friday May 19th. In the packed Cathedral were the Governor and Premier of Tasmania, two former Premiers, a former Prime Minister and a retired Governor General of Australia, numerous Justices and Parliamentarians, and priests and friends from Australia, Europe and the United States. Michael commented, "It's a bit like being at your own funeral; seeing your whole life so far sitting there before you!"
All ordinations are, of course, special and each man treads a unique path
to and beyond his ordination. But Michael has been a very public and
influential figure within and beyond Australia for many years.
He was a very bright and capable student, but a horrific car accident in
his undergraduate years, which left him hospitalised for many months in a
knee to chest plaster caste, instead of crippling his enthusiasm for life
made him more resolved to read and study more. Completing his Law degree
with high honours and,as a side interest, reading Theology in England, he
went on to lecture and was soon appointed Dean of the Faculty of Law in the
University of Tasmania.
On an 'outside chance' Michael stood for parliament and was elected into
the Australian Senate and soon was given the Justice portfolio, a post
which enabled him to further exercise his own quest for integrity and
Christian values nation wide. He co-authored the pledge of allegiance which
all new Australian citizens make.
After 14 years in Canberra, Senator Tate became Ambassador Tate, representing Australia at both the Vatican and The Hague. On finishing this appointment, the Holy Father asked Michael what he intended to do next. Ambassador Tate replied, "become a priest." To the Pope's astonished look he replied "It's not so much I have discovered a late vocation. I have long had a calling; it has just taken me a while to take it up!"
That 'while' has now come to fruition, and at a still energetic 54, Fr
Michael, who is still an honorary Professor of Law at the University of
Tasmania, intends to continue the occasional lecturing in International Law
and Justice whilst giving himself to full-time parish ministry in the
diocese.