The Final Dispatch of Father Hudgins, a Lansing priest who died in a road accident

CNA Staff   By CNA Staff

 

Fr. David Hudgins, a priest of the Diocese of Lansing who died in a car accident Jan. 3, 2022. / Diocese of Lansing

Lansing, Mich., Jan 12, 2022 / 14:41 pm (CNA).

Father David Hudgins, a priest of the Diocese of Lansing, penned an article for publication in his parish bulletin shortly before his death in a road accident on Jan. 3.

Father Hudgins was pastor of Saint Joseph Shrine in Brooklyn, Michigan, and Judicial Vicar of the Lansing diocese.

His Requiem Mass was said Jan. 8, and his body was buried at Saint Joseph Shrine Cemetery.

Father Hudgins’ article for the shrine’s bulletin for the Solemnity of the Baptism of the Lord is reproduced below, with the permission of the Diocese of Lansing.

The Baptism of the Lord and our Baptism: Do You Know Who You Are? by Father David Hudgins

You have been given this grace, a gloriously incomprehensible gift of God beyond all human merit: adoption into the family of God…the Church. You have been configured to Christ’s death and resurrection. You have put on Christ and been renewed in the Holy Spirit. God has given you the grace of justification, gifts of faith, hope and love, and the spiritual power to act with virtue.

You participate in the divine life of the Blessed Trinity. Who God Is, flows through your veins. You belong to Christ. You are a new creation, a child of God, a partaker of the divine nature, a co-heir with Jesus. You share in the common priestly, prophetic and royal “Christ-life” of all believers. You have been sealed with an indelible character: configuration to Christ. 

This is your seal of eternal life. Only sin can warp God’s masterpiece, and even then He can and will restore you, if you wish. If we keep this covenant until the end, remaining faithful to Jesus, we can hope to see God and share in the resurrection and the life of the world to come. As a member of Christ’s Body, your connection to Him and to other Christians runs deeper than culture, gender, race, social status, even blood. The bond of unity you share with other Christians is more profound than any human bond. 

You have been baptized. 

Jesus said, ‘Go therefore and make disciples of all nations baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit.’ (Matthew 28:19) Baptism is an act of Jesus our High Priest through the power of the Holy Spirit by which sons and daughters of Adam become Sons and Daughters of God. 

Thankfully, the sacraments do not rely on human understanding. If we needed perfect understanding for God to work in our lives then He could do nothing with us since all His works are infinite and beyond full human comprehension.

We give good things to our children. Baptism is a divine favor that will transform us for all eternity, therefore we must baptize infants. I was baptized when I was 25 days old. Children don’t have perfect understanding, neither do I. However, Jesus acts in their hearts, in my heart, and in the hearts of us all through this powerful sacrament. Let us give Him thanks and praise for it. 

Very Reverend David Hudgins

Fr. Hudgins’ article appeared earlier at the website of the Diocese of Lansing, and is reprinted at Catholic News Agency with permission.


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1 Comment

  1. May Fr. Hudgins rest in the peace. I remember him when he was at Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, He was a very bright student, and he wrote his M.A. thesis on divinization in the writings of St. John of the Cross. His death is a great loss for the Diocese of Lansing. Let us hope that he is now more fully divinized in the heavenly kingdom. We entrust his soul to God’s mercy and love.

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