“To understand the meaning of the Catholic priesthood we look to Jesus,” he said. “Our priests are part of that same mission, are part of that sending of Jesus.”

“There is a strong missionary element in the identity of the Catholic priest, sent to announce the glad tidings of God’s love,” said Cardinal O’Malley.

He then spoke of the need to “go in search of those who have strayed, those who are lost, those who have become alienated from the Church or are on the periphery.”

“The Church exists to evangelize,” he stressed. “To preach the word of God is to give people dignity and security, meaning and consolation...The message that we preach is an invitation to come home, to live our lives in friendship with God and in the community with Christ’s family -- the Church.”

Calling our society “post-Christian,” the cardinal noted that “the most necessary thing is to help people to find faith, to discover Christ,” but that moral preaching and moralizing “is not enough.”

“What is needed is a Kerygmatic type of preaching that goes right to the heart of the message, proclaiming the Paschal mystery of Christ,” he stated.

The cardinal then spoke of the importance of the sacrament of reconciliation, noting that “one of the greatest joys of the priesthood is to be able to tell people of God’s abundant and inexhaustible mercy.”

“The authority to forgive sins is the Easter gift that Jesus gives to his Church,” the cardinal said, underscoring that “to be able to forgive sin, we must help people find the path of repentance.” he said.

“We must help people to realize how much our God lives us and wants to forgive us, but we must first respond to the call to conversion and repentance,” he continued. “Nowhere is the priest more a messenger of joy than when he says ‘Go in peace. Your sins are forgiven.’”

He stressed that in order to be good confessors, “we must first be good penitents.”

Cardinal O’Malley concluded his homily speaking of the importance of celebrating the Eucharist.

“In the Eucharist we are joined to Christ and to other communities,” he said. “A priest is not a lone ranger, as the liturgy reminds us.”

“When the priest pronounces the words, ‘This is my body,’ he speaks ‘in persona Christi,’ in the person of Christ. It is a call to dedicate our very selves, our very existence to God.”

The cardinal acknowledged that occasionally a priest’s life is filled with challenges, but then stressed that “a priest’s life swims in grace.”

“With Jesus’ help, each of you will become a good shepherd, willing if necessary to lay down your life for the flock,” he said.

“Today as you are anointed with the oil of gladness, may Mary the mother of the Divine Shepherd accompany you and help you to be transformed by God’s grace,” he concluded. “Only in this way is it possible to be an icon of the good shepherd and a messenger of his joy.”

Following the homily, each candidate approached the cardinal seated before the altar and promised obedience to Cardinal O’Malley and his successors.

The Litany of the Saints was then sung by the choir and assembly, as the six men lay prostrate in front of the altar as a sign of humility.

The cardinal then prayed silently over the ordinands as he laid his hands upon their heads. All the priests in the assembly were then invited to do the same.

After the priests had finished, Cardinal O’Malley recited the Prayer of Consecration which recalls the history of the priestly role throughout the Biblical times, and asked God to “grant them the dignity of the priesthood” and the candidates became priests.

Each priest was then vested with a stole and chasuble -- the signs of the office of priesthood.

The cardinal then anointed the new priests’ hands with the oil of chrism, as the cardinal prayed, “The Lord Jesus Christ, whom the Father anointed with the Holy Spirit and power, guard and preserve you, that you may sanctify the Christian people and offer sacrifice to God.”

They were also presented with the paten and chalice -- signs of the gifts of the people -- as Cardinal O’Malley exhorted them to “understand what you do, imitate what you celebrate and conform your life to the mystery of the Lord’s cross.”

After the ordination rite the newly ordained took their places behind the altar to concelebrate the Mass for the first time.

Prior to delivering the final blessing, Cardinal O’Malley thanked the rectors of all the different seminaries and houses of formation. He also urged everyone in the assembly to “commit ourselves” to promoting vocations in our communities.

Following the ceremony, family, friends and well-wishers gathered to congratulate and receive blessings from the new priests.

“I feel really, really happy,” commented Paraic Maher, older brother of Father Seán Maher who flew in from Washington, D.C. for the ordination. “I feel a certain pride as well, I suppose.”

Father Paul Zirimenya, pastor of St. Benedict Parish in San Francisco, CA, where Father Shawn Carey served as interim deacon, was also beaming with pride.

“This is a very important moment for the deaf community to see the Archdiocese of Boston ordaining a deaf man,” he signed. “I am very happy for [Father] Shawn, for the deaf community and for the entire archdiocese.”

Sean Patrick Flanagan, a Framingham resident and member of the deaf community was impressed with the entire liturgy.

“It was beautiful to see how there were so many different communities all together here for the same reason,” he said through a Sign Language interpreter. “It was wonderful.”

Angela Franks, whose husband is a professor of theology at St. John’s Seminary in Brighton, was equally impressed.

“Today was very moving,” she said. “It’s really wonderful to see the spirit moving in the lives of these men.”