Rev. Richard ’s Story

Site created on August 9, 2018

This website is intended to provide information to those interested in my condition.  On July 21, 2018, I was hospitalized due to symptoms of pain in my chest and back.  Tests revealed a mass the size of a baseball in my chest.  On July 25, I was diagnosed with T-Cell Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia, a rare form of leukemia.  That same day I began my first round of chemotherapy, with in patient care in a Houston hospital.  The first round of treatment has gone very well. I experienced relatively light nausea and lack of energy.  I was discharged from the hospital on August 8, and I am now at home rest as I prepare for a second round of chemotherapy, likely to begin on August 15.  


While I am likely to go into full remission, I am considered high risk of relapsing. Therefore, I will likely undergo a bone marrow transplant in the coming months. Because all of these treatments result in lowering my white blood cell count, I have a weakened immune system and therefore I must avoid exposure to public places and active parish ministry .


As you may expect, all of this has come very quickly and is certainly sober news.  I can assure you all though that I have striven to entrust myself in all this to our Lord so that I might be more perfectly conformed to him and offer my sufferings with his for the reparations of my own sins, those of others, and above all the glorification of the Blessed Trinity.  I have no words for the show of faith, hope, and charity towards me from my family, friends, brother priests, medical staff, parishioners and total strangers during these days.  I join your prayers to mine so that Christ might be glorified in our sufferings and to do so with joy.  I do consider this a privileged time for me and I assure you I feel the Lord and his Blessed Mother and Communion of Saints are close to me and I experience great peace daily, especially as I have the opportunity to offer Holy Mass privately and the Liturgy of the Hours. The Liturgy of the Church, Head and members, is my life line!


That’s it for now. Peace and joy to you all, as you remember me, a sinner.


Fr. Richard

Newest Update

Journal entry by Richard Hinkley

As you can see, it has been now several months since my last update.  Since then I have enjoyed a recovery marked by steady improvement of my stamina as well as the numbers relating to my blood products (red and white blood cells, platelets, etc.)  As of today, I am in full remission from the cancer and the bone marrow transplant has been a complete success.

Over the course of the months of December, January and most of February, my recovery was at home with family.  Since the latter part of February, I have moved back into the priest residence at St. Helen's Catholic Church, the parish to which I have been assigned since July 2016.  On March 20, 2019, yesterday, I was given the "green light" by my medical team to return to active ministry at the parish as well as to engage in public activities again (grocery stores, restaurants, etc.)  Beginning in April, I will gradually be reintroduced into the schedule of public parish activities (e.g. Mass).  Though my immune system is recovered and within normal parameters, I am still prone to fatigue.  At my doctor's recommendation I will be gradually returning to a full schedule of priestly work as my strength allows.  Needless to say, to have the opportunity to return to public ministry is for me a great joy and blessing from God.

These past nine months have certainly been a remarkable chapter in my life.  The chief protagonist of this story though is not Richard Hinkley, but the LORD, God of hosts.  It is a mystery why some people fall ill, some of them recovering while others not.  What I do know is that whether we are healthy or sick, dying or healing, we are for the Lord and his glory (Rm 14:8.)  My hope is that after all these months of treatments and procedures, prayers and petitions, that it is the Lord and his accomplishments that remain the center of our gratitude and our joy. 

This will likely be my last post, and I would like to use this opportunity to thank you who have contributed to my healing, especially if it was "just by prayer alone."  I am so grateful to my mother, father and the rest of my family for their intense support and nurturing of me over these months, at times almost as if it were like a second childhood!  In a very special way, I am so grateful to my only sibling and younger sister, Lisa, and the gift of life - part of her own life, really - which she has shared with me.  I would like to publicly thank my doctors at Methodist: Randhawa and Lulla, as well as all the other doctors, nurses and other medical personnel, without whom I would not have been cured.  I next would like to thank my brother priests for their frequent visits and company to me during my hospital stays, especially when it was to bring me the Sacraments and celebrate Holy Mass.  To my friends, clergy and lay, thank you for your companionship on this road.  Many thanks to all the lay faithful who aided my recovery whether it was to bring me Holy Communion or offer prayers on my behalf.  I am especially indebted to the Hust family for their aid in allowing me to receive prompt medical treatment as well as speedy recovery.

To all of you who have been praying regularly and with determination for my recovery, I thank you.  I especially am indebted to the members of St. Helen, St. Thomas More, St. Joseph, St. Anthony of Padua and St Francis de Sales Catholic Churches, at all of whom I have had pastoral experiences.  There are many others I know I could thank explicitly, but please know that I will never in this life know fully the degree to which I have been the object of the prayers of so many.  None of us knows what lies ahead of us in terms of our health, but however dire our situation may be or however great our cause for joy, to the Lord be glory and honor and power forever.  Our Lady of Good Health, pray for us.
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