Bishop Robert Kasun formerly a pastor in Edmonton

Western Catholic Reporter
EDMONTON (CCN)



At a joyful celebration attended by clergy from various parts of Canada as well as the new bishops' former parishioners, Basilian Father Robert Kasun, former pastor at Edmonton's St. Alphonsus and St. Clare Parishes, was ordained an auxiliary bishop of the Toronto archdiocese.

Cardinal Thomas Collins of Toronto, a former Archbishop of Edmonton, was the ordaining bishop Sept. 12. St. Joseph Basilica exploded in applause to congratulate the humble new bishop, who is slowly accepting his call to higher office.

In an interview after his ordination, Bishop Kasun said he "felt the presence of the Holy Spirit during the prostration, during the Litany of the Saints. That was very moving."

However the bishop admitted he still can't get in his head why Pope Francis chose him. "I can't imagine why he phoned me or why he appointed me. I still think they dialed the wrong number."

He said he has begun to accept his call and is more at peace, ready to become the best bishop he can be.

Pope Francis has often said Church leaders should have "the smell of their sheep." Bishop Kasun has that smell. As pastor of St. Alphonsus and St. Clare parishes, Father Kasun worked and lived among the poor in Edmonton's inner city, including immigrants and homeless people.

The new bishop will be welcomed to Toronto after Mass in St. Michael's Cathedral Oct. 6.

As one of four auxiliaries, he will be responsible for the Toronto archdiocese's central zone, "which I am quite happy about because I lived in that region for 12 years a long time ago." The central zone is an area with a high percentage of immigrants and people on low incomes.

In his homily, Cardinal Collins thanked the Congregation of St. Basil and the Edmonton Archdiocese "for offering a priest for service to the universal Church."

A bishop, he said, must serve humbly the greater good by being engaged in servant leadership. "What matters is not what the leader receives in honour or privilege but what the leader gives. Jesus rejects the narcissistic vision of leadership in which the leader's personal gratification determines the agenda. No, we are simply servants."

The diligent servant bishop works tirelessly to build up the community of faith so it may be a vibrant witness of the love of Christ in this world so much in need of that love, Cardinal Collins continued.

"The bishop serves others by fidelity to the apostolic faith. We are simply stewards of the mysteries of faith; it is not ours. The faith we profess is not our own. It's Christ's and we need to be shaped by it, to be challenged by it, be formed by it. So a bishop needs to know the faith in Scripture and tradition."

Failure to exercise episcopal authority in the service of the common good is a failure in servant leadership, he remarked.

"It can sometimes occur precisely because a bishop is thinking too much of self and not of service. And the exercise of authority carries with it the price of unpopularity. The bishop is not his own. He serves Christ in fidelity to the Gospel. He serves the people entrusted to his care."

During the ordination ceremony, the Toronto cardinal imposed his hands on Father Kasun. All the bishops in attendance did the same. Later Cardinal Collins presented Kasun with the ring, the mitre, and the crozier, all symbols of the episcopal office.

As a sign of welcome into the episcopate, the bishops exchanged a sign of peace with their newest brother.

During a reception at the cathedral hall, Bishop Kasun blessed well-wishers and posed for photos with them.

A native of Cudworth, Sask., the new bishop was ordained a Basilian priest in 1978. He taught for a year each at schools in Indiana; Rochester, N.Y.; and Sudbury, Ont. His main teaching stint was at St. Michael's College School in Toronto before moving back west to teach at St. Francis High School in Calgary.

There  he got his first taste of parish work at St. Pius X and St. Thomas More Parishes while serving on the Basilians' general council and the national executive of the Canadian Religious Conference.

After 21 years in Calgary, he moved to Edmonton seven years ago after the Basilians decided to centralize their Western Canadian ministries in the Alberta capital. They asked Archbishop Richard Smith of Edmonton for an inner-city parish they could shepherd and, after examining several, they settled on St. Alphonsus and St. Clare.

Archbishop Richard Smith has said he is delighted with Bishop Kasun's appointment.

"In the service of his people, Father Kasun has demonstrated a true pastor's heart, especially for the needy and neglected," the archbishop said in a recent statement. "The Archdiocese of Toronto is blessed to receive the many gifts that he will bring to the exercise of his episcopal ministry."