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The Washington Times Online Edition

Divine cards net $100,000

COLUMBIA, S.C.

A South Carolina priest missed the $1 million top prize in a poker tournament to be televised this weekend, but he won $100,000 for his church, and he hopes his participation gives viewers a “fun twist” on their perceptions of the priesthood.

The Rev. Andrew Trapp said he entered the PokerStars.net Million Dollar Challenge in hopes of putting St. Michael Catholic Church in Murrells Inlet “superclose” to its $5.5 million fundraising goal to build a new facility. He also wanted to strike a public-relations blow for priests.

“At the very least, even if I didn’t win any prize money, I was hoping it would help people to see that priests can have fun and be normal people and hopefully get a little bit of a fun twist on the image of the priesthood,” the assistant pastor said Tuesday.

The top prize went to retired New York Police detective Mike Kosowski. But Father Trapp won $100,000, untaxed, in a semifinal round in October for the coastal church’s building fund, which has amassed $4 million after four years of fundraising.

For the final episode, a camera crew filmed a Sunday Mass at the church, about 10 miles southwest of Myrtle Beach, and taped Father Trapp talking about the need for a new building.

“It’s really old. It’s too small for our needs, and it’s really vulnerable if a hurricane comes,” he says in a segment on PokerStars.net.

He adds, “God gave me a gift of playing cards - that interest, that hobby - and I could put it to use to help build our church. That just was really exciting for me.”

Congregants will gather Sunday afternoon at the church to watch the final televised round on Fox TV.

The 28-year-old Aiken native said he started playing poker in middle school at family gatherings, but it was in seminary in Columbus, Ohio, that he learned Texas Hold ‘Em.

“We just played for fun,” Father Trapp said. “It was just a way to hang out with each other and to enjoy each other’s company.”

Ordained in July 2007, he’s the youngest Catholic priest in the statewide diocese.

“A lot of young people out there, young Catholics, have never seen a young priest,” Father Trapp said, adding that maybe the show will lead others to consider a vocation to the priesthood.

Before playing, Father Trapp got permission from his pastor, who told him to “go for it.” The Charleston bishop later gave Father Trapp permission to be on TV, he said.

Joseph Ohens, executive assistant to the bishop, confirmed that Father Trapp had the bishop’s permission. “He wanted to show the world that priests are human beings like every one of us. … He wanted to demystify priesthood,” Mr. Ohens said.

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