Korean
 priests in active service now exceed 5,000, and although we see a drop 
from the recent past, Korea is doing well. Foreign priests according to 
Catholic Bishops' Conference still active in Korea stood at 138, which 
decreased by 20 from the previous year. From the time of the first 
Korean priest St. Andrew Kim, more than 6,000 were ordained; 536 have 
died, and 427  have left the priesthood to return to secular life.
How
 many Koreans in the Diaspora who have immigrated and have become 
priests in their new homelands is difficult to ascertain, but the two 
Catholic Weeklies  had articles  about Christopher Eung jin
 Bae, who was ordained for the priesthood in the Boston Archdiocese in 
May of this year. He will be the fourth Korean  priest for the 
archdiocese. He is assigned as the assistant priest at St. Mary's 
Church, Franklin. On his visit to Korea, he was interviewed by the two 
weeklies.
The
 article mentions he was born in Korea; after graduating from middle 
school the family emigrated to the States. He went on to realize his 
dream. He went to the University of California at Los Angeles, and 
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, graduated and got a good-paying 
job working as an analyst at Accenture, Boston. However, he didn't find 
the joy he expected, and wanted to know why.
He
 mentioned he dreamed of marriage and of owning a Lamborghini but with 
the priesthood, he had to give up this dream. With a group of young 
people from  his Korean parish, he went to Haiti in 2010 to help the 
poor and sick for 10 days. He was looking for the meaning of life. The 
trip filled his head with thoughts he never had before. He considered 
money the requisite for happiness. Here he was with 9 out of ten of what
 he thought was necessary for happiness,  searching for the tenth, and 
unsatisfied. The people  he was working with had barely one and were thankful and happy. 
Returning
 to Boston and speaking to the pastor the topic of a vocation to the 
priesthood was mentioned. Three months later, he entered the seminary 
and took a leave of absence from his work for a year,  just in case.... 
He
 was filled with doubt and uneasiness, but all was reversed. He found 
great joy, the meaning of life and  went on to the priesthood. His 
favorite scriptural phrase--Psalm 86:12, which he took for his 
ordination maxim: "I will give thanks to you, O Lord my God with all  my
 heart, and I will glorify your name forever." 
His road to the priesthood was not just adulation,
 for his mother continually would tell him to think over well what he 
was doing. Even at his ordination his mother cried uncontrollably from 
the sadness she felt.  It was this opposition on his mother's part that 
gave him confidence that his  choice was the right one, and believes his
 mother will one day agree.
In
 his own life, he felt like a chipmunk on an exercise wheel and wants 
to  help  others to find meaning in life, which will depend on his 
keeping the joy and happiness in life he has found.
