Thursday, March 15, 2018

Leaving Home ... and Finding Another


In 1960 I made the momentous decision to leave home for good.  I was fourteen years old.  This was not a decision that was made lightly.  The idea had been formulated over the course of my short life with the help of my parents, my local priest and of course the good nuns that taught in my parochial school.  The story goes that my mother took me as a new born baby to the convent so that the nuns could see me.  Overwhelmed by my cuteness the nuns carried me into their private chapel and laid me on the altar and formally dedicated me to God.  Having been told that story, when I became older and familiar with the Bible, I saw a distinct parallel to the story of Abraham building an altar of firewood, and then placing his only son Isaac on it so that he could sacrifice him to God.  Of course, I have no memory of that event, but I guess that I should be thankful that nuns don’t carry matches.  The nuns certainly did their part to instill in me a love of God and a desire to work in God’s vineyard as a priest.  They did it so well that after graduating from eighth grade, instead of attending the local high school, I decided to leave home to attend St. John’s Atonement Seminary in Montour Falls, NY.  It was the first step in a thirteen-year journey of becoming a Franciscan Friar. And, it was there at St. John’s that I began to prepare myself to eventually take the three evangelical vows of poverty, chastity and obedience, which were first made in the twelfth century by St. Francis of Assisi and his followers.  

Life at St. John’s was highly regulated, but there was an order and meaning to everything we did.  I believed that I was part of something bigger and there was comfort in that fact.  There was a long list of things we could not do, and we each had our own individual rule that we chaffed under.  For instance, we were not allowed to go off the property for any reason unless we had permission.  This was my cross to bear.  While most of my classmates came up to St. John’s from the New York City and Jersey area, I grew up on a farm about an hour away.  I would look past the seminary’s property line and it looked like home out there.  There were lakes and hills and streams to explore just like where I lived, and where I had freedom to enjoy them at any time.  So, to suddenly have that freedom taken away was difficult for me to accept. 

Yet looking back through the fog of so many intervening years I remember those years as the happiest times of my life.  Despite the rules there was an allotted time to thoroughly enjoy life as well.  There were always enough guys for a pick-up game of softball, or basketball.  In the winter there were tobogganing and skiing to enjoy on some significant hills just behind the school.  There were also quiet places where I could sit and read a book or write a letter home.  There were field trips to places like Corning Glass Works.  We went there every year and I loved it.  I would hurry through the museum of the history of glass, and head directly to a place where I could watch artisans mold and shape molten glass into crystal vases and engraved bowls.  Once a year we would also travel to Binghamton, New York, to attend an opera performed by the Binghamton Opera Company.  It was the first time that most of us had ever attended an opera.  Some were better than others.  I fell in love with the music of Carmen and sat in wonderment at all the special effects that happened before my eyes during Faust.  On our free afternoon, if the weather was nice we could gather into small groups and then get permission to go on a hike to either Havana Glen or Deckertown Falls.  Now I grew up with a glen on our property at home.  It was where my sisters and I would play and hang out during the hot summer days.  There were pools of water that we learned to swim in and waterfalls that we climbed up and around just for the fun of it.  And that was exactly what we did while on our hikes at St. John’s.  Both glens were great for hiking, but Deckertown had the best pool for swimming.


Deckertown Falls

In October 2017, I went to a high school reunion at St. John’s which now serves as a fireman’s academy for the State of New York.  It was my first trip back in more than half a century, and it was great to connect once more with the friends of my youth who I came to think of as brothers.  On Saturday afternoon, a few of us hiked up into our favorite glens to see where we had played and horsed around so many years ago.  I took lots of pictures that weekend especially of the streams and the swimming hole.  It was those pictures from that weekend that inspired me to spend the last couple weeks trying to capture those memories in oils on canvas.  What a wonderful time it has been to ponder those happy days once again.

Havana Glen

As a teenager, I lived the life of a Franciscan seminarian for five years.  I made it to within three months of professing temporary vows of poverty, chastity and obedience.  You can probably guess which one forced me to rethink my vocation at that time in my life.  In hindsight it was more my mother’s dream than a calling from God for me to be a priest.  You see God’s will for me was to first become a husband, a father, and a grandfather, before accepting a call as an ordained Lutheran pastor.  I did have a vocation from God, but God needed to mold and shape me through many years of life in this world before I was ready to stand at another altar where I could offer God himself in bread and wine to all who would come forward to receive that gift. 

Thank you, God, for the gift and joys of my life.