I was born a poor white child. . .in rural Mississippi.  Sorry, couldn't resist.  Nonetheless, it's true.
Both
 sides of my family are Mississippi delta cotton farmers. Though no one 
farms now, both of my grandfathers planted cotton. My mother and all of 
her sisters "chopped cotton." My dad drove a tractor. All of them went 
to church. My mother's family went to the Baptist Church and my dad's 
family went to the Methodist Church.
My first memory of
 church goes back to the sixth grade when my mom and dad sent me and my 
little brother to Vacation Bible School. Mostly I remember being the 
only kid that week who had not "accepted Jesus into his heart as his 
personal Lord and savior." Come Friday, feeling the pressure, I walked 
the aisle, said the necessary things, and walked back to my pew complete
 with Jesus. It didn't take.
For
 the most part my family back then was not a church-going bunch. We went
 occasionally, but mostly we spent Sundays working in the gardens, the 
yards, doing necessary work around the house and farm. Sometime my 
sophomore year, mom and dad decided to start going to church again. They
 chose a United Methodist Church in the largest town near us. It was the
 local "bankers' and doctors'" church. Lots of old money. Lots of nice 
cars. Lots of snooty glances at the rubes from the woods. I hated it. We
 stopped going after about six months.
That next year I
 went to Mexico with my junior Spanish class. We cut and sold firewood 
from my family's property to pay for the trip. Our teacher, a Catholic 
woman, helped us with the hard labor and with our Spanish. Up until we 
got to the National Cathedral and the Shrine of Our Lady of Guadalupe, 
the trip had been a bust for me. My roommates were jerks. I didn't have 
much money. And my Spanish was rotten. When we arrived at the plaza in 
front of the cathedral, one of a hundred tour buses packed full of 
tourists, I stood up and started to the front of the bus like a robot. 
One more stop, one more site, snap a pic, get back on the cool bus. 
Little did I know. . .
The second I stepped off the 
bus, even before my foot hit the pavement, I notices crowds of older 
women in black on their knees slowly making their way to the shrine. 
They were praying with these necklaces in their hands. I turned to my 
teacher and asked what was going on. While she formulated an answer I 
was horrified to see that these women had bloodied their knees crawling 
on the gravel and pavement. What kind of religion was this?! My teacher 
said something about devotion and praying for sons in the drug world and
 some other things about Mary. I didn't really hear it all.
When
 we got inside the cathedral, I was overwhelmed with a sense of 
familiarity and comfort. Just this energetic boost of being home and 
welcomed. There was a Mass going on. I pestered my teacher for details. 
She explained what she could. She showed me how to make the sign of 
cross using holy water. How to kneel. She told me the names of all the 
fantastical objects in the church--the crucifix, the statues of Mary and
 the saints, the fonts and confessionals and altars. I was overwhelmed. 
It was like someone was reminding me of things I had known all my life.
As
 I look back on that day what I know now is that God trapped me with the
 sacramental imagination. He was showing me His presence in all the 
things of this sacred place. I "recognized" them as holy, as set-aside, 
because without having the words to articulate the feeling, I felt holy 
as well, loved, wanted. With this feeling still rattling around inside, 
we walked over to the newly opened Shrine of Our Lady of Guadalupe. I 
knew nothing about this. Nothing at all. The story, once I heard it, 
didn't impress me all that much. Sounded kinda far-fetched to me. The 
new basilica was ugly. Stark, angular, modern, cold. Nothing like the 
near primitive wonder of the cathedral. We saw the relic. Big deal. Move
 on.
With the vision of the bloody old ladies still in 
my head and the incense still in my nose. And maybe even a bead or two 
of holy water still clinging to my forehead, I got back on the bus and 
started in on my teacher. I pestered her some more about why she was 
Catholic and where I could get more information and could I come to Mass
 at her Church and did her Church have classes for people who wanted to 
be Catholics and on and on and on. . .she good-naturedly answered my 
questions.
We drove over the mountains to a village 
called Taxco. A silver mining town for tourists. Our hotel perched on 
the side of the mountain and my room had a balcony looking out over the 
valley. At midnight the local set off a stream of fireworks. I went to 
the balcony. It was very breezy and cold for a Mexican March night. Just
 standing there alone watching the fireworks I had this sudden sense 
that everything around me was rushing toward me, almost as if I were 
falling standing straight up. For just a few seconds I didn't hear 
anything. Going back to bed, I prayed--something I never did!--and 
simply asked God to tell me what to do.
I woke up the next morning convinced I should be a priest.  After that I started having dreams.
I was vested in red and saying Mass in my high school auditorium.
I was teaching a class and a man called me out of the classroom to say Mass.
I was standing in a sacristy and couldn't find the right vestments.
I was in the middle of saying Mass and the sacramentary was all wrong, misprinted. . .
Eventually,
 I told my grandmother. She gave me a cigar box full of Catholic 
paraphernalia: a rosary, prayer cards, a small crucifix, and a "question
 and answer" catechism, which never left my side. I took it to school 
and embarrassed myself arguing with the Baptists. Even my teachers got 
in on the arguments! The stuff in that box became a tangible link for me
 to the Church.
When my parents found out that I wanted
 to be a priest, they were a little upset. They put up some resistance 
at first but eventually gave way. By this time I had gone off to college
 and joined the Episcopal Church. Why the Episcopal Church and not the 
Catholic? The E.C. in my college town was an old-fashioned brick 
building built in the 1830's. Stained glass. Brass fixtures. Beautiful 
hangings. The priests there wore their clerics. The music was 
thundering, beautifully sung. The services were "churchy." The Catholic 
Church in town was easily confused with a dentist office. Built in the 
late 70's, it was a box with those 7-11 glass doors and the whole 
"stripped bare" vibe. No statues. No tabernacle. No stained glass. No 
nothing that identified this building as a Catholic Church. The services
 were informal to the point of being just slightly more organized than a
 Baptist picnic. The music was folksy guitar, hand-clapping, tambourine 
banging. The priest wore ugly, ugly, ugly vestments. There was 
absolutely nothing solemn, nothing transcendent, nothing attractive 
about any of it. The choice to become Episcopalian was too easy.
I
 was baptized in the E.C. in 1982 and confirmed later that year. I 
immediately went to the rector and told him that I wanted to be an Episcopalian priest. I was 18. He told me to finish my undergrad studies,
 think about getting a masters, and come back when I was around 24 to 
discuss the whole thing again. 24?! That was middle-aged!! Anyway, I 
became very active in my parish. After a few years and well into grad 
school, I had a falling out with the rector. Being a good Protestant, I 
stopped going to church in protest. In the meantime, all sorts of 
ideologies, practices, philosophies, and personalities were drawing my 
attention.
Since the E.C. offered almost nothing in the
 way of solid teaching on moral deliberation or anything in the way of 
substantial intellectual formation, I fell prey to one dubious theology 
after another. Finally, in my last year of PhD studies, I was convinced 
that God did not exist. Despite this, I was convinced by a British prof 
teaching in my department that I should move to the U.K. and become a 
"red priest," that is, an Anglican priest who rejects theism but works 
in the church for "social justice" using Marxist/socialist categories as
 guides.
I decided to take a year out and 
teach English in China. That was a disaster. However, I came back to the States 
rededicated to my vocation to become an Episcopal priest. I started the 
formal discernment process in my diocese--a two year procedural grind 
that worked to discourage many people by its sheer complexity and 
futility. I served as the guinea pig postulant for my parish 
"discernment committee." The whole thing was a farce. At the time, I 
submitted to it out of a sense of wanting to collaborate and a sense 
that the Spirit would work through the committee to help me discern my 
vocation.
The details of the process would be 
book-length so I'll have to summarize: I spent two years meeting nearly 
weekly with nine lay people from the parish who asked the same questions
 over and over again. . .eventually they sent a positive recommendation 
to the vestry of the parish who then met with me to ask me the same 
questions over and over again. On the night of the vestry vote on 
whether or not to send my application to the bishop, every single member
 of the vestry looked me in the eye and told me that I had his/her 
support and vote. I went home confirmed in my vocation and ready to 
start seminary. At around 11.30pm, the rector called to tell me that the
 vestry had rejected my application. The reason: I had the stuff for 
making a good priest but just not yet mature enough. I was 28 at the 
time. The rector could not tell me why those voting against my 
application had lied to me earlier.
This rejection sent
 me into an anti-religious tailspin. It was during this time that I 
pursued my 
interests in the occult and became more and more enamored 
with Marxism. I spent two years finishing up doctoral coursework and 
preparing for comprehensive exams. After passing my orals, the 
prospectus defense, and suffering through several personal traumas, I 
left the academic world for a job in the psychiatric world. Once in 
place in my new home, I began to pursue the priesthood again. This time
 in another diocese with another parish. At the urging of my parish 
priest, a woman from Mississippi, I took on a Catholic spiritual 
director, a Paulist priest in a local parish. Over a year with him I 
found my Catholic vocation again.
On the national 
scene, the E.C. was committing suicide with one disastrous lurch away 
from the historic faith after another. Finally, in 1995, I had had 
enough and left the E.C. to become a Catholic. I joined the RCC as a 
liberal High Church Episcopalian, meaning I was formally a Catholic but 
my theology and church politics were modernist and my liturgical tastes 
were medieval. I still didn't care for the informal, hippie-dippie 
Catholic liturgy, but the friendliness and community that the RCC had 
compared very favorably the chill I felt in the cliquey country club 
world of the EC.
Once confirmed, I immediately started 
the process for joining the Paulists. I spent two years in discernment 
with these guys. On the advice of the vocations director, I quit my 
excellent job at the hospital and moved home to spend the summer before 
entering seminary with my parents. I got a job in a local psych hospital
 and basically spent my free time getting "caught up" on all things 
Catholic and Paulist. In June of 1998, I came home from work and my mom 
told me that the Fr. John, the Paulist vocations director, has called 
and wanted me to call him back. I did. He told me that the president of 
the Paulists had rejected my application for admission. Fr. John would 
not tell me why. He said, "They're afraid you will sue us." Apparently, 
Fr. John should not have encouraged me to quit my job before the final 
decision about my application was made!
I was 
devastated. My mom wanted me to drop the whole idea of priesthood. I 
agreed. I walked around the house that day, saying over and over again, 
"What am I going to do?" My mom kept crying and telling me to just 
forget the priesthood, get a job, get an apartment, and be happy doing 
that. In the meantime, I was injured at work and got a staph infection 
in the injured site (first lumbar disc). I spent the next seven months 
in agony--both physical and mental, trying to deal with doctors, 
hospitals, insurance people. It was during that period of pain, 
dependence, helplessness, and rebellion that I finally found my niche. Accidentally.
I was browsing an internet site that had an
 alphabetic listing of links to the websites of men's religious orders. 
Most of them I had never heard of. I spotted one that intrigued me 
"Discalced Carmelites." As I went to click on the link, I accidentally 
clicked on the link for "Dominicans." I was taken to the order's main 
webpage and it took me all of three minutes to find the US provinces and
 the southern province. I contacted the vocation director via email and 
the next day he called to chat with me for two hours. About a week later
 he came from New Orleans to my parents' house in Mississippi to 
interview me. We spent six hours together. He offered me an application 
at the end of the meeting.
What was special about this 
discernment? Over the years I've complicated the whole affair into 
something it isn't. For me, the simple truth is this: the Dominicans 
wanted me. The Episcopalians didn't want me. The Paulist rejected me. 
The Dominicans wanted me, and they promised to make use of my gifts. I 
was accepted into the 1999-2000 novitiate class. My acceptance was 
contingent on my finishing the PhD before July 1999. I wrote furiously 
from Feb to July, finishing a first draft by the time my plane left. I 
graduated with the PhD in May of 2000. I was simply professed in 2000; 
solemnly professed in 2003; ordained deacon in 2004 and priest in 2005.
Smooth
 sailing the whole way, you ask. Ohhhhh, no. The novitiate was very 
hard. My studium years were extremely difficult. I made the move from 
being an ideological Marixist with religious pretensions to being an 
orthodox Catholic. The move has not been applauded by all of my brothers
 and sisters in the Order. Sometimes, I get the impression that there is
 some "buyer's remorse" about accepting my application! However, I have 
found many brothers and sisters in the Order (from the whole theological
 spectrum) who share St Dominic's zeal for preaching the gospel and 
witnessing to the power of God's mercy.
Plans? The 
phrase "Dominican plans" is an oxymoron. Of course, we plan. But I've 
rarely seen these plans actually pan out. If I could simply chose my 
path I would continue teaching undergraduate philosophy, theology, and 
literature. I am developing a course that brings all three fields 
together. The University of Dallas is developing a creative writing 
program that I would probably be willing to hurt someone to join. The 
Angelicum has a Templeton Foundation grant for a project called 
"Science, Theology, and the Ontological Quest." The grant brings in 
scientists, philosophers, and theologians to teach and research on the 
intersections of science and faith. I'd love to be a part of this. I am 
also dedicated to adult lay formation at the level of teaching basic 
theological/philosophical methods. However, preaching, as always, 
remains primary and any and all of this stuff I've mentioned here is 
directed solely to the improvement of the preaching. Without that, there
 is no reason at all for me to be here.
Fr. Philip, OP