

ASCENSION CATHOLIC CHURCH BOWIE MD SERIES
The geocache, Centennial 12, is part of a series of caches in Bowie to celebrate its centennial (2016 was the hundred-year anniversary of the city charter). before the museum opened at 10) we found a geocache near Ascension Church, which we also visited. Mary’s Ryken High School of Leonardtown, Maryland, at Regency Furniture Stadium.As a quick summer outing, we went to the old town area of Bowie which features a visitor's center and the Bowie Railroad Museum. Padres’ first 2019 game is scheduled for May 12, when they will take on St. “Knowing that lots of families and little kids come out and watch and see priests doing something outside of the ordinary, something they’re not used to and something fun, it kind of gives them another impression of the priesthood.” Baseball is fun for all who attend - and the team also makes it a spiritual event. Padres give people a positive view of the priesthood at a time when there is a lot of negativity, Father Wells said. “I know they love God, too, or they wouldn’t be there. “I try to connect with some of them and their own love of sports,” he said. When he’s at a game, Father Wells sometimes gives the “third-inning stretch” talk to youths about the priesthood. “At this time of year when the weather starts getting nice, you can go out on your off day with some other priests and play catch and go to batting cages,” he said. When they can, Father Wells and teammates take advantage of time off to play, but he admitted that they don’t get as much practice as they’d like. “It’s tough to get 12 or 13 priests and seminarians together on a Sunday afternoon.” Padres play two or three games a year, usually in spring and early fall, when seminarians and high school athletes are not on summer break.Īnother reason the team plays only a few games each season is because of the players’ busy schedules, he said. It’s good to have other hobbies, which can be another source of renewal, life and interest.” Positive view of priestsįather Wells and the D.C. “Obviously you’re dealing with life-and-death situations many times and very profound moments. “The priesthood is an intense ministry,” he said. “I love sports, and when someone makes that offer, ‘Hey you want to play twice a year against high school teams in a minor league stadium in front of 500 people?’ that’s always a ‘yes’ for me,” Father Wells said.Īlong with baseball, Father Wells likes golf, basketball and bike riding - all hobbies he said benefit his work.

Padres players, all of whom have played on high school and/or college teams, play not just for fun but also to raise awareness and interest in the priesthood, which they tell their fans about during games. Padres are a team of priests and seminarians from the Archdiocese of Washington who play fast-pitch hardball against local Catholic high school baseball teams at D.C.-area minor league ballparks. Martin of Tours Church in Gaithersburg, Maryland, has played third base for them ever since. Padres baseball team together in 2011, and Father Wells, parochial administrator at St. Father Dave Wells liked throwing a baseball around with other priests, but when his friend, Father Larry Young, had the idea to start a team of priests and seminarians, he wasn’t sure if it would work.įather Young, pastor of Ascension Catholic Church in Bowie, Maryland, brought the D.C.
