Father Bergen's first priestly assignment was to work among Chinese students in San Francisco, imbuing them with the faith so that they would serve as catechists when they returned to China. In 1932 he joined the mission band based at Saint Paul the Apostle parish in New York, and in the late 1930's he moved to the Apostolic Mission House in Washington, D.C., becoming its director in 1940. In the mid-1940's he taught at Catholic University and St. Paul's College, and was also Superior of Lake George.
In 1946 Father Bergen was appointed pastor of Good Shepherd parish in New York, but declining health forced him to resign this position in 1949. Reassigned to Boston, he balanced the needs of the Paulist Center on Park Street with the demands of his fragile health. He was confined to a wheel chair much of the final decade of his life. He died in Boston on March 31, 1966, at the age of 61 nearing his 39th anniversary of ordination.
Father Bergen's first priestly assignment was to work among Chinese students in San Francisco, imbuing them with the faith so that they would serve as catechists when they returned to China. In 1932 he joined the mission band based at Saint Paul the Apostle parish in New York, and in the late 1930's he moved to the Apostolic Mission House in Washington, D.C., becoming its director in 1940. In the mid-1940's he taught at Catholic University and St. Paul's College, and was also Superior of Lake George.
In 1946 Father Bergen was appointed pastor of Good Shepherd parish in New York, but declining health forced him to resign this position in 1949. Reassigned to Boston, he balanced the needs of the Paulist Center on Park Street with the demands of his fragile health. He was confined to a wheel chair much of the final decade of his life. He died in Boston on March 31, 1966, at the age of 61 nearing his 39th anniversary of ordination.
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