By Abby Deatherage
January 20, 2016 — There are few things worse than surgery before Christmas — unless, of course, it is the delivery mechanism for an amazing gift.
On December 21, Edin Barrera, SJ, 34, was admitted to Northwestern Memorial Hospital in Chicago. Barrera, who is studying at Loyola University Chicago to become a Jesuit priest, suffered from a kidney disease for years, and his condition was declining. He needed a Hail Mary pass, and he hoped his brother could donate a new kidney. Instead, a Jesuit brother gave Barrera the most precious gift he has ever received.
The same day
that Barrera was admitted to Northwestern, Ryen Dwyer, SJ, 34, changed into his own hospital gown and received a souvenir wristband. Dwyer, also a student at
Loyola Chicago, is a fellow Jesuit and therefore a brother not
only to Barrera but to thousands of men around the world who comprise the
Catholic Church’s largest religious order. Like any loving brother, Dwyer heard
a call and responded.
Searching for a new kidney is a delicate process. Barrera laughingly recalls, “I’m not the type to go and ask for something like that.” When Barrera’s younger brother was not a match, Fr. Jim Prehn, SJ, the rector of the Ignatius House Jesuit Community at Loyola Chicago, announced to the community that there was a young Jesuit in need of a kidney. “If anyone wants to come forward,” he said, “let me know and we can talk about it.”
Sitting among his brothers, Dwyer “felt a desire to respond right away.” Dwyer himself had only arrived in the community the month before, but he felt strongly that God was guiding him to give his kidney. Throughout the process, Dwyer says, he prayed “that I would continue hearing God’s voice.”
God is very present to these two Jesuits, in good times and in bad. When Barrera was diagnosed with kidney disease in 2003, he felt God was near. “When I was diagnosed, of course it was difficult for me to hear. I was very young and wanted to live,” says Barrera, who loved to run and was physically fit. “But God was there.”
God is very present in the lives of both Edin Barrera (left) and Ryen Dwyer (right).
God was there, too, when Barrera, who was born in Guatemala but raised in Los Angeles, served as a hospital chaplain prior to joining the Jesuits in 2011. Helping those who were ill and struggling with diseases and caring for patients solidified his call to the priesthood.
Far from Los Angeles, Dwyer is a Midwesterner who grew up in West Michigan and lived in Evanston, Ill, for many years before entering the Society. He was attracted to the Jesuits and their unique spirituality because of the Jesuits’ desire to look for God’s voice in every moment and every decision.
Dwyer pronouncing first vows in the Society of Jesus in 2015
Throughout the process — from the moment he volunteered to be a donor through the many tests that followed — Dwyer says he always felt an unusual peace. “I really feel on a deep level that it didn’t come from me.” And the peace Dwyer felt continued, even on the day of the surgery. “It just felt like the most natural thing in the world,” he says.
Within four hours, both surgeries were complete. Father Prehn, who was one of the first people to visit the hospital, recalls telling Dwyer, “You saved Edin’s life.” Dwyer’s simple reply: “God is good.”
Though it can sometimes take days for a kidney to function correctly, Barrera’s new kidney began working immediately. Dwyer left the hospital the next day; Barrera followed a day later, feeling instantly “stronger and healthier.”
Both Jesuits were out of the hospital and back home in time for Christmas. “It’s a gift; Ryen gave me a part of himself,” Barrera says. What Dwyer probably did not anticipate, though, was that the kidney would take on a whole new identity once outside his body.
Barrera (left), with Jesuit scholastic Marcos Gonzales, the night before his surgery. Barrera was back home in time for Christmas.
For fun, some scholastics in the community decided to name Barrera’s new kidney "Janette." Why Janette? No reason. But Barrera had always loved the name Camila so, to compromise, the new kidney was dubbed "Camila Janette."
The entire experience provided a deeper meaning to Dwyer and Barrera's faith. “This whole thing had to do with the body, with flesh, and at Christmas, we have Christ, God being born into the flesh," says Dwyer. "I’ve been able to take the experience at a deeper level, especially with the Eucharist, thinking about our God, who became flesh for us and ultimately gave Himself up for us."
Dwyer (far left) with some of his Jesuit brothers after they pronounced first vows
Both men have also become vocal advocates for organ donation. “I want people to be educated about the importance of organ donation,” Barrera says. “Ryen gave me more life. If it wasn’t for him, I’d be on dialysis. That’s not the life I want.”
“I don’t want to say how easy it is, because I understand that it’s not easy,” Dwyer adds. “But there’s no reason that anybody should die of a disease that can be treated through organ donation when people are available.”
With surgery behind them, Dwyer, Barrera, and Camila Janette are back to their studies at Loyola Chicago, proving that two Jesuit scholastics, a donated kidney, and the Holy Spirit make for an uncommon but extraordinary gift.
Following a successful kidney transplant, Dwyer and Barrera look toward the future of their Jesuit formation.
Do you want to learn more about vocations to the Society of Jesus? Visit www.jesuitvocations.org for more information.