June 17, 2016

2016 Ordinations: Ready to serve God’s people

Faith brings Deacon Matthew Tucci to life and a vocation to the priesthood

Transitional Deacon Matthew Tucci proclaims the Gospel during an Aug. 11 Mass at St. Mary Church in New Albany during an annual pilgrimage taken by archdiocesan seminarians. Deacon Tucci is scheduled to be ordained a priest on June 25 at SS. Peter and Paul Cathedral in Indianapolis. (File photo by Sean Gallagher)

Transitional Deacon Matthew Tucci proclaims the Gospel during an Aug. 11 Mass at St. Mary Church in New Albany during an annual pilgrimage taken by archdiocesan seminarians. Deacon Tucci is scheduled to be ordained a priest on June 25 at SS. Peter and Paul Cathedral in Indianapolis. (File photo by Sean Gallagher)

By Sean Gallagher

Michelle Tucci has had a regular message for her children through the years.

“I still tell them that you can’t get through this life without your faith.”

In the case of her son transitional Deacon Matthew Tucci, he wasn’t able to get into this life without it.

He was born on April 6, 1987, at 26 weeks gestation, weighing only 2 pounds, 4 ounces. Michelle had been suffering from a rare disorder during her pregnancy and was experiencing such regular bleeding that she was constantly anxious about the life of her unborn child.

“I couldn’t take it and just prayed, ‘Lord, I can’t do this anymore. It’s in your hands,’ ” Michelle said. “And he was born that night.”

After an emergency cesarean section delivery, Deacon Tucci remained hospitalized for nearly three months as he suffered respiratory and cardiac arrests.

“The first few days, it was like, if everything goes well the first 24 hours, then there’s a chance for 48 hours, then 72 hours,” Michelle recalled.

“We went through some ups and downs,” said Mike Tucci, Deacon Tucci’s father. “But once we got through it, I think we both thought that he survived all of that for a reason.”

The Tuccis now believe that their son’s vocation to the priesthood was at the heart of the reason he survived the difficult circumstances of his birth.

Deacon Tucci and five other transitional deacons are scheduled to be ordained priests for the Church in central and southern Indiana on June 25 at SS. Peter and Paul Cathedral in Indianapolis.

Going away, coming back to the faith

Mike and Michelle Tucci moved several times while raising their family. No matter where they lived, though, they were active in their parish and passed on their faith to their children.

“There were great people in every parish we were in,” said Michelle, who, along with Mike, is currently a member of St. Aloysius Parish in Louisville, Ky. “There was always the opportunity to be involved. You just had to take that step.”

That made an impression on Deacon Tucci.

“We were always around the parish,” he said. “That was something that affected me.”

Father Daniel Atkins, pastor of Holy Family Parish in New Albany, was the Tucci family’s pastor about 20 years ago when they moved to Bloomington and joined the St. Paul Catholic Center there.

As Deacon Tucci grew from childhood into his teenage years, Father Atkins began to think that the youth might have a vocation to the priesthood.

“He was just a good young man,” Father Atkins said. “He was very faithful to the Sunday Eucharist. He always seemed like he was really glad to be there with his mom and dad and brother and sister.”

When Deacon Tucci went to college at Purdue University in West Lafayette, Ind., his faithfulness was put to the test.

“You’re kind of confused,” he said. “You’re opened up to this new world that you’ve never been in before. And I kind of fell away for a little bit. Then I realized, as college was going on, that there was something missing in my life.”

That missing part was not only his faith, but the forgiveness of God he received in the sacrament of penance.

“After I made my first confession after a few years, I kind of realized the length our Lord goes through to show us his love and his mercy,” Deacon Tucci said.

He soon became active in the St. Thomas Aquinas Catholic Center at Purdue.

In the fall of 2008, Deacon Tucci went on a retreat sponsored by the center that ended up being a turning point for him.

“I realized that God was trying to tell me something and pretty strongly,” he said. “That’s when I decided that God may have been calling me to be a sacred minister, to be a priest, to bring the Lord in a sacramental way.”

‘A heart of service’

After graduating from Purdue in the fall of 2009 with a bachelor’s degree in advertising and public relations, Deacon Tucci became an archdiocesan seminarian and lived for a semester at Bishop Simon Bruté College Seminary in Indianapolis while ministering nearby at St. Anthony Parish and the former Holy Trinity Parish.

“That was when I realized that this was really what I was called to do,” he said. “God comes at the most intimate moments of our lives. And the sacraments are involved in that. You see that God comes at [the start of] life, at death, at marriage, when we need forgiveness.”

Father John McCaslin, the pastor of both parishes, was impressed by this fledgling seminarian who had little knowledge of Spanish, yet was fearless in reaching out to the Hispanic community on the near west side of Indianapolis.

“He has a heart of service,” Father McCaslin said. “He was open, attentive and listened well to people. He was fearless in being willing to try things. He had a great openness to the immigrant community and really everybody in the parish.”

Deacon Tucci went on to receive two years of priestly formation at Saint Meinrad Seminary and School of Theology in St. Meinrad and four more at the Pontifical North American College and the Pontifical Gregorian University, both in Rome.

In his first year in Rome, starting in the fall of 2012, Deacon Tucci had some struggles in his discernment, pondering the importance of the family to more than one vocation.

“What kind of family could I have—in both the sense of having a wife or was God calling me to this family of a parish and the people of God?” Deacon Tucci recalled.

Witness to history and his own vocation

In the spring of his first academic year in Rome, Deacon Tucci was a witness to history as Pope Benedict XVI announced his resignation and Pope Francis was elected.

He and fellow seminarians from the North American College were at the front of St. Peter’s Square at the Vatican when Pope Francis came out on the balcony of St. Peter’s Basilica for the first time.

“I can’t describe how much joy there was in the square,” Deacon Tucci said. “There we were—the leader of our Church has just been elected—and we were waiting to get to know him.

“And, boy, have we gotten to know him over the past three years.”

Deacon Tucci has also had the chance to know himself and his vocation better.

Through his formation and opportunities for ministry both in Rome and in his visits back to the archdiocese, he embraced his call to the priesthood and realized it is at the heart of who he is, not simply the things he would be asked to do as a priest.

“It went from function to person,” Deacon Tucci said. “If I can save one person by who I am, if I can bring one person to God just because of who I am, then it’s all worth it.”

He compares his excitement for the priestly life and ministry he’ll begin with his June 25 ordination to the reaction of St. Peter when he was in a boat on the Sea of Galilee, saw the risen Lord on the shore and jumped in the water to get to him as quickly as possible.

“Just like Peter, I’m jumping into that sea, and the Lord is on that beach waiting for me,” Deacon Tucci said. “Whatever the swim there is like and whatever I experience, I know that the Lord is there looking out for me and for the people.”

Deacon Tucci will be with the people of Holy Family Parish in New Albany as he celebrates his Mass of Thanksgiving at 9:30 a.m. on June 26 at the parish’s church. On July 6, he will begin service as associate pastor of St. Christopher Parish and chaplain coordinator for Cardinal Ritter Jr./Sr. High School, both in Indianapolis.

He believes that the priestly vocation he will live out then and into the future was made possible by God’s protection from the earliest moments of his life.

“Our Lord gives us signs of his goodness and love, and my birth is an extraordinary sign of that,” he said. “I would certainly say it has shaped my vocation in that it is a very strong sign of God’s presence in my life, and is something that edifies my faith, which hopefully [I can] communicate to others.”
 

(For more information about a vocation to the priesthood in the Archdiocese of Indianapolis, visit www.HearGodsCall.com.)


More about Deacon Matthew Tucci

  • Age: 29
  • Parents: Mike and Michelle Tucci
  • Home Parish: Holy Family Parish in New Albany
  • College: Purdue University in West Lafayette, Ind., bachelor’s in advertising and public relations
  • Seminary: Saint Meinrad Seminary and School of Theology in St. Meinrad; Pontifical North American College and the Pontifical Gregorian University, both in Rome
  • Favorite Scripture verse: “I am convinced that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor principalities, nor present things, nor future things, nor powers, nor height, nor depth, nor any other creature will be able to separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord” (Rom 8:38-39)
  • Favorite saints: St. Francis de Sales, St. Catherine of Siena and St. Edward the Confessor
  • Favorite prayer or devotion: Visiting St. Catherine of Siena’s tomb under the high altar at the Basilica of Santa Maria sopra Minerva in Rome
  • Favorite movie: Jaws
  • Favorite authors: Fyodor Dostoyevsky and Dashiell Hammett
  • Favorite books: The Brothers Karamozov, The Glass Key, The Long Goodbye
  • Hobbies: drawing, walking, coffee

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