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Papal honors call from Archbishop Lori leaves award winners ‘surprised’ and ‘in awe’

At least two of the people who will receive papal honors in the Archdiocese of Baltimore were shocked when they got the call from Archbishop William E. Lori to tell them the news.

Kathleen Mahar, the former president and principal of Archbishop Spalding High School in Severn, is one of 10 who will receive the Cross Pro Ecclesia et Pontifice (“for the church and the pontiff”), an honor conferred directly by the pope.

“I had no idea what the award was, and I had never heard of anyone who received it,” she said about the call she got from the archbishop telling her about the honor. “But I tell you, once I looked it up, I am filled with much humility and grace and don’t really understand why I deserved it.”

Archbishop Spalding High School president Kathleen Mahar, right, has some post graduation fun with Cristian Rodriguez May 27, 2021. Mahar, the former president and principal of Archbishop Spalding, is one of 10 who will receive the Cross Pro Ecclesia et Pontifice (“for the church and the pontiff”), an honor conferred directly by the pope Sept. 23. (Kevin J. Parks/CR Staff)

She said she hopes the award is an affirmation of the motto and mission of Spalding, where she served for 25 years – One in Christ. She said Catholic education has been a priority for her all her life, as a student and an educator, because “It works. Because of the marriage of faith and academics – faith comes first – it works,” she said.

Deacon Siegfried Presbery, director of prison ministry for the archdiocese, said he was also surprised when he got a call from a phone number he didn’t recognize while he was in the supermarket. He let it go to voicemail.

When he listened to the message and then called back Archbishop Lori and heard he was to receive the Cross Pro Ecclesia et Pontifice, he was “full of emotions” and “personally in awe.”

A convert to the Catholic faith and a former correctional officer, Deacon Presberry said that when he started prison ministry, Archbishop Edwin F. O’Brien told him that if the prison ministry was about him, then good things might happen but if it was about God and serving God’s children, great things could happen. 

“People responded. I was just the connection,” he said, noting his gratitude to the parishes and people who support the archdiocesan ministry to people who are incarcerated and their families.

Deacon Presberry was ordained a deacon in June 2001, and retired from working as a corrections officer in November the same year. “I didn’t think I would go back until I was asked to be director of prison ministry.”

Mahar and Deacon Presberry are just two of those upon whom Archbishop Lori will confer the papal honors at a 9:30 a.m. celebration of solemn lauds (morning prayer) Sept. 23 at the Cathedral of Mary Our Queen. The public is invited to join in the celebration. The papal honors, petitioned by Archbishop Lori to the Vatican, will be conferred in the archdiocese for the first time in more than a decade.

“Our honorees for pontifical orders and medals demonstrate through their lives’ work the ways the church is alive in mission and ministry throughout the Archdiocese of Baltimore,” Archbishop Lori said. “These women and men have given of themselves – by nurturing, inspiring and protecting young people, by building vibrant communities of faith and by shepherding a new generation of priests and religious servants.

“The Holy See extends these highly distinguished recognitions in gratitude for their contributions in education, evangelization and service to their brothers and sisters in Christ,” the archbishop said.

Sister Rita Michelle Proctor, superior general of the Baltimore-based Oblate Sisters of Providence, stands in applause as Archbishop William E. Lori announces her religious order’s founder, Mother Mary Elizabeth Lange, was declared “venerable” by Pope Francis during the Seek the City To Come vigil and presentation June 27. She will receive papal honors Sept. 23. (Kevin J. Parks/CR Staff)

The honors are in three categories: the Order of St. Gregory of the Great, which will be given to six lay people (including two married couples); the Cross Pro Ecclesia et Pontifice, to 10 people; and the Benemerenti Medal to one religious sister.

Order of St. Gregory the Great, founded by Pope Gregory XVI in 1831, the honor comes with an eight-pointed, gold-rimmed, red enamel cross with a center medallion in blue enamel with the image of St. Gregory the Great:

Cross Pro Ecclesia et Pontifice, first issued in 1888 by Pope Leo XIII, the medal features a gold Greek cross with the images of apostles Peter and Paul and name of the reigning pope in Latin:

Benemerenti Medal, first bestowed in 1791 by Pope Pius VI and is adorned with an image of Christ on a gold Greek cross, along with a depiction of the tiara, crossed keys and the papal shield:

Editor’s Note: This story was updated at 8:17 p.m. on Sept. 1, 2023, to add the time of the event.

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