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Rev. Peter Sharpe
Rev. Peter Sharpe ('04)

鈥淚n late spring of this year, Fr. Peter Sharpe received a phone call from The Most Reverend John Folda, Bishop of the Fargo Diocese, explaining that Fr. Jerome Hunkler was about to retire and asking if he would be willing to take his place. Leaving a congregation one has come to know and love is never an easy thing, but Fr. Peter answered with a resolute 鈥榶es.鈥欌

So the South Steele Ozone and Kidder County Press about a 黑料不打烊 alumnus, Rev. Peter Sharpe (鈥04), who now serves as pastor at three parishes in the Diocese of Fargo: St. Mary鈥檚, St. Paul鈥檚, and St. Francis de Sales. 鈥淎s a priest, I have found I can鈥檛 fix people, nor is it my job, but the Lord can and does change lives,鈥 Fr. Sharpe tells reporter Maria Wanchic. 鈥淚f we鈥檙e patient enough, we鈥檒l see what good plans God has in store for us.鈥

After graduating from the College in 2004, Fr. Sharpe entered Fargo鈥檚 Diocesan Seminary Program, spending one year at Cardinal Muench Seminary in Fargo and four years at Mt. St. Mary鈥檚 Seminary in Maryland. Before taking on his new, three-parish responsibilities this fall, he served for seven years as a pastor in Velva and Karlsruhe, North Dakota.

In addition to his pastoral duties, Fr. Sharpe wrote an article earlier this year for the diocesan website, 鈥 a topic he later took up in .

鈥淲hen you say 鈥楢men鈥 and receive Communion at Mass, you are publicly declaring that you believe all that the Catholic Church teaches and believes,鈥 Fr. Sharpe explained. 鈥淔urther, you are acknowledging that you are trying to live as the Catholic Church expects. So if you don鈥檛 believe all that the Catholic Church believes or aren鈥檛 living according to her standards, when you receive Communion, it would be like you are publicly saying a lie, which, of course, you wouldn鈥檛 want to do.鈥

The word 鈥渁men,鈥 offered before reception of Holy Communion, is too often underappreciated, he adds, especially by Catholics, who say it so frequently that they can easily lose sight of its import. 鈥淲hen you say that 鈥榓men鈥 to those words, 鈥榯he Body of Christ,鈥 that means something,鈥 Fr. Sharpe implores. 鈥淲ords mean something, and this 鈥榓men鈥 means something.鈥

So, too, do the words mea culpa, mea culpa, mea maxima culpa.

鈥淚 am a sinner, who has already publicly declared that a little earlier in the Mass,鈥 says Fr. Sharpe of the Confiteor. 鈥淏ut I鈥檓 also believing that God鈥檚 power has changed my life, and I want it to continue to change my life.鈥