"Really it was their witness that got me moving," he said. "They helped me to apply to the seminary in Boston, and really to begin my life here."

Smiling, Deacon Santos said, "It has changed my life completely."

"Having been in a seminary before, I really wasn't expecting such support -- support from my fellow seminarians, from the faculty and staff who have always been so helpful, from my friends," he said.

"This has been such a beautiful experience that, now that it is coming to a close, I am sure I will miss it," said Deacon Santos pensively. "This has been my home and I have really felt so much support here."

Looking ahead, Deacon Santos is eager to serve the Church as a priest.

"I would like to work serving people who need to be heard," he said. "People who have been marginalized by society, those who have felt worthless or discriminated against, those who have been left behind -- these are the ones I really feel God is calling me to serve."

He added that he is aware of the challenges ahead of him.

"There is a big challenge to serve the Catholic community and the wider world because we are in a society where God is in the second place, sometimes not even the second place but the last place," he said, adding that "It will be a personal challenge to live the priesthood in a world that is so involved in technology, in politics, in consumerism."

"All these things lead to people becoming indifferent to God -- it's not so much that they don't believe, but that they don't care," he continued. "I want to show them that God does exist, that the Church is relevant to today, that there is an entirely different way to live that leads to being happy."

Deacon Santos noted that he is very much inspired by Blessed Oscar Romero, a Salvadoran archbishop who was assassinated while celebrating Mass in 1980.

"I look up to him -- to his dedication to proclaim the Gospel, giving witness in his life, not just with his words," he said. "He always was defending the poor -- that's the kind of priest I want to be. Someone who isn't afraid to speak up for the poor, who lives the Gospel in the flesh."

"That is what I pray for -- to be a holy priest that will serve the Church in Boston," Deacon Santos said.