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Robbie's Funeral Arrangements


Matthew Robert Knapp Jr., 23 years, of Sturgeon Bay, died Wednesday, (March 25, 2009) in Milwaukee following a sudden illness.


He was born July 7, 1985, the son of Rev. Matt and Kim Knapp. He is survived by his parents, Rev. Matthew and Kim Knapp; brothers, John, Mark, and Luke Knapp; and his beloved, Kori Feuerstein.


After graduating from Sturgeon Bay High School, Robert went on to attend and graduate from St. Norbert College in 2008. As an incredibly active student leader, Robert deeply touched the lives of many, both on and off the campus. He was a communication and political science major and worked in Admissions, Communications, and Media Services, and was very proud of his time as a public relations intern for the Green Bay Packers. Robert went on to work for Boelter + Lincoln Marketing Communications in Milwaukee following graduation.


A memorial service celebrating his life will be held on Sunday, April 5, 2009 at 3:00 p.m. at Sturgeon Bay Moravian Church.


Friends may call from 4:00 p.m. until 8:00 p.m. on Saturday (April 4, 2009) and on Sunday (April 5, 2009) from 1:00 p.m. until 3:00 p.m. at the Sturgeon Bay Moravian Church.


In lieu of flowers, memorials may be made in Robert's memory to Sturgeon Bay Moravian Church.


Huehns Funeral Home is assisting the family with arrangements.


Sign guest book and offer condolences at

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"GOD'S EYE IS ON THE SPARROW:" Matthew Robert Knapp -- 7 July 1985 - 25 March 2009










REST IN PEACE, LITTLE BUDDY!
Keep "Livin' the Dream!"

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Spring Break is Not Synonymous With Prison Break -- But It's a Start to a Different Life!


OK, my Spring Break is coming to and end, but for 12 inmates at GBCI, it's just beginning. I returned to DePere after having spent the last two days visiting Mom and Dad at my other home. I returned to my DePere home early this evening to take part in a Lenten Retreat at the maximum security facility here in Green Bay -- it's the first we've had since 2003.


GBCI Roman Catholic Chaplain Mike Donovan did a great job not only picking the inmates to partake in the event, but he also was very wise in choosing several great people with ample prison ministry experience to minister to the guys' needs throughout the weekend. I'll be back at the prison by 7:30 AM on Saturday and will join Father Paul DeMuth who will lead the Reconciliation Service for late morning; the two of us will then be available for individual confessions and I will then preside at the Saturday night Mass later in the day.


The beginning of the retreat went very well; again, the speakers were superb, but the inmates also added to the depth of the event by sharing on very deep levels from the get-go. This does not always happen so soon at any retreat setting -- it usually takes a little more time to warm up to the experience. This was not the case tonight at GBCI. I can only wonder how the bar will be raised on Saturday -- time will tell.


Given the sacramental needs at the college parish as well as at the prison, I did not get as much time away as I would have wanted this week -- nevertheless it has been a great week, especially in the midst of the sacred season of Lent. While I will return to work feeling a little renewed, my greater hope is that the guys at GBCI will also feel a renewed since of life, brotherhood and spirituality -- shared together as Church: a Spring Break of a different sort! Hopefully this is the faith that will have lasting effects -- for all involved in the weekend's activities!

"Throw open the gates to a just nation; one that keeps faith!"
Isaiah 26:2

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A Cardinal of a Different Sort!

PHOTO: Fred Walsh


It may sound like a track from The Best of Cheech and Chong, but "On the first day of my Spring Break, I got up!" In this case, it must have been around 5:30 AM at the sound of birds outside my window, the first sounds of the season! Given it was so nice yesterday, I spent most of the day cleaning my priory rooms as well as the trunk of my car -- I've been in a pitching frenzy these days; it makes for great spring cleaning. Open windows would accompany the springtime ritual up to 11 PM; there was no need to close the windows given it was still pretty pleasant outside.

It was my intention to wake up to the alarm at 7AM -- just in time for Lauds -- (much later than usual now that we're on break). However, the birds were not sleeping in today; as such, nor was I. So with nothing else to do, I went to the window to peer outside and I saw the most brilliant looking cardinal -- a nice sight to be seen on the lawn of a house of Religious! It seemed to set the day in motion in a pretty stunning way.

So the clean-up continues. This afternoon I'll move into my JMS office to start the pitching there. Through it all I'll be thinking of Chris as I work on the homily for tomorrow's funeral. <-- I just wrote, "Christ" instead of Chris! Perhaps that's no mistake, huh? Connecting the dots between Chris' life and the life of Christ is a great start to the homily, for sure! So the day's beauty will continue.

Enjoy the spring weather!
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SPRING BREAK 2009

Above you see my Spring Break destination later this week -- the balmy sun-stricken shores of the mighty Spring Brook in downtown Antigo! ....Oops, wrong picture....

Nevertheless, I am hoping that I'll be able to get a few days off and away this week for a little business and a little pleasure. My plans have been readjusted given a parish funeral that will take place on campus on Tuesday. As such, I will spend considerable time today, Monday and Tuesday to do a little spring cleaning in my bedroom and college office. That will be a task where I'll literally roll in one of those mini dumpsters to rid myself of so many unnecessary things. I pray for the endurance to not fill up the new-found empty space in closets and drawers. I'll also do some funeral planning and wrap up the time in DePere with a parish Finance Council meeting on Wednesday at 7:50 AM. Then off for a few days.

During the time away, I have several movies that I'll be watching on my 7 inch 'belly-telly'! Most of these have been recommended to me by friends who know of my interest in movies. Take a gander:

































The time away, however, will not be spent solely watching a few flics. There's a book I want to finish, a new one to begin and a third that I've been looking for without success. I'm almost finished with, "A Man of the Beatitudes;" I've been skimming, "An Ordinary Christian;" and for the life of me, I cannot find a book recommended to me at one of my recent talks, "The Shoemaker's Gospel." Therefore, that one might not come my way until closer to Holy Week.

















Besides that entertainment, I'll be working on two final talks for Lent-- one with the fathers and sons of Xavier High School in Appleton and a presentation for Legatus. I also have a few notes to take for next Monday's meeting of Old Saint Joe's, "Dead Theologians Society." It's much better than it sounds! The break will be wrapped up by attending next Sunday's 10:15 Mass at Our Lady of Lourdes to celebrate the burning of the mortgage on the new church -- exactly 10 years to the weekend from the dedication of that sacred space. It promises to be a wonderful conclusion to what I hope will be a great, great week.




PHOTO: Pro-drafting.com

And as always, stay tuned; there's more to come while I make my way around Northeastern Wisconsin!
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AT OLD SAINT JOE'S: "We'll Leave a Light on for Ya!"


Remember all those commercials a few years back for Motel 6 when Tom Burdette claimed, "We'll leave a light on for ya?" Well here at Old Saint Joe's, we're doing the same! Back in October we refurbished our Holy Family grotto area in church. An earlier blog reported that we moved an all-season image of Mary and Joseph to our south exterior entrance to the church. As I have posted here before, people seem to notice the statuary in that new setting much more than they ever noticed in the northwest corner of our church; yet, one never knows what to expect from the students who approach the south lawn imagery! {I'm smiling right now!}

Meanwhile, inside the church, the newly refurbished Marian Chapel has also seen an increase in attention as the liturgical seasons have progressed since November, 2008. The current chapel scenery offers seasonal images of Mary, the Mother of God. In November we added a votive tree which allows devotees an opportunity to light a candle for various intentions, albeit 4.5 hours at a time (given the burning life of the votive candles). Given the number of candles lit, the chapel has proven to be relatively successful.

However, since Ash Wednesday, the chapel has proven to be visited consistently -- perhaps constantly -- given the addition of 8 day votive/vigil candles and a new seasonal image of Our Lady of Sorrows. As we reported in the Sunday bulletin, the image -- a reproduction of Father Stephen McNichol, SJ's "Our Lady of Sorrows" -- is beautiful, indeed. An unexpected number of candles have been lit, replaced and re-lit since Ash Wednesday.


When rationalizing the chapel's new look -- and opportunities -- to the Parish Council, I suggested that especially on a college campus, where all sorts of prayerful intentions dwell, we should allow our students as well as our year-rounders an opportunity to light a candle to couple their prayerful intentions. Given this opportunity was not provided in the college church since its earlier renovation in 1969, I did not know if this custom would automatically 'take off.' To me, that was no problem: if no candles were lit, we could possibly assume that all was well, there were few needs among our college community -- at least few needs that accompanied the lighting of a candle. However, if candles were lit, perhaps we could see in a very real way, that there are needs and prayers out there. Perhaps further, we could try our best to imagine what was in the minds and hearts of our worshippers, and just perhaps we could be vigilant with them in their prayerfulness.



That having been said, the candles continue to pierce the darkness as we have seen a major tracking of votive/vigils being lit and re-lit over the past few weeks of Lent. In fact, I often visit the chapel on my way to Lauds at 7:30 AM. I can see by the depth of the melted wax that some of the candles have been lit in the middle of the night: the beauty of open doors, open hearts!


On Friday, two SNC students seemed to connect the dots! Friday saw the mass exodus on our campus as our students bolted the DePere campus for Spring Break. While it seems as though time has certainly flown since we started up again in late January, it is good timing for the break. Perhaps it's the "Father" in me that worries about our students pulling an 'all-nighter' on the roads in pursuit of warmer climates in Texas, Alabama and Florida. Yet on Friday, several students asked if I'd be willing to say a prayer for them for safe travels. In fact, two of them asked if I'd be willing to light a candle for them "in Mary's room" for safe travels from and to Saint Norbert. It was my privilege to do so!




Doing a Google search on candle lighting in the Catholic Tradition, I found a few entries of significance for you to consider.

"In the lighting of candles we remember and truly live the words of Our Lord: "I am the Light of the World." In the lighting of candles we not only pray, but our prayers become smaller symbols of the One Light of Christ. In burning candles, our prayers rise up to Heaven day and night; prayers for the saint's intercession are also common because of their friendship with God in Heaven. Saints are powerful intercessors. The lighting of candles has been observed since the time of the early martyrs (acatholiclife.blogspot.com)."

And an entry with a little more detail:

"The Sight of burning votive candles is common in most Catholic churches. The candles are usually placed before statues of saints, before Mary or at shrines. But how did this tradition get its start? According to A Handbook of Catholic Sacramentals, by Ann Ball (Our Sunday Visitor Books), the practice of lighting candles in order to obtain some favor probably has its origins in the custom of burning lights at the tombs of the martyrs in the catacombs. The lights burned as a sign of solidarity with Christians still on earth. Because the lights continually burned as a silent vigil, they became known as vigil lights. Vigil Lights (from the Latin vigilia, which means "waiting" or "watching") are traditionally accompanied by prayers of attention or waiting.

Another common type of candle offering is the votive light. Such an offering is indicative of seeking some favor from the Lord or the saint before which the votive is placed. Lighting a candle is a way of extending one's prayer and showing solidarity with the person on whose behalf the prayer is offered (Our Sunday Visitor)."

There's even more interesting accounts should you have the time and energy to do your own search!

As we find in the Sunday assembly, we find in the Marian Chapel at Old Saint Joe's: we're not entirely aware of what brings our worshippers to our churches. They have much to offer; yet they have much to gain as well. The images of Mary in our chapel will change along with the liturgical seasons -- perhaps the prayers will change as time goes on as well. Yet, the need for prayer will remain constant.

These candles, brightening the darkness, is an illuminated reminder that, "God's flock is in your midst; give it a shepherd's care!"
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KOSTEL P. MARIE: Jammin' for the Lamb at 3rd and Deleglise!



Late last semester, I walked into the TV room located on the Priory's 4th floor to find Father John Bostwick watching a new DVD -- seeing the VCR counter indicated that he was less than five minutes into the flick, I decided to stay for a while. John paused the show for just a moment to indicate that he was watching episode one of "October Road;" he also filled me in on the plot -- a guy returns home after having been away for 10 years since his high school graduation. He assumes he can simply and effortlessly fold back into the lives -- including the lives of his best friend as well as his girlfriend -- which he left abruptly in the summer that followed his graduation.

Interesting stories unfold which not only cause the main actor to consider his life 10 years ago, but one major storyline will keep him in town much longer than he had bargained for.

I did not want to hold John's DVD set hostage by borrowing the series, even though I know John would be most accommodating. Further, I had a pretty busy conclusion to last semester; thus, not knowing when my schedule would intersect with John's, I decided to go out to Best Buy and purchase the series -- many of you know that I have a pretty large collection -- watching DVDs is my easy way to relax at the end of the day, often at 1:00 in the morning.

The series is quite wonderful, although the setting is much more recent than my experience in 1984 when I left home after my Antigo High School graduation. Nevertheless, the parallels -- the feelings -- that are made manifest in this series are perhaps general enough that anyone can relate to the joys and the complexities of returning back to one's childhood home to be reunited with friends after a long absence. I found the "product description" to October Road quite mesmerizing when I read the following:


"As much as many adults yearn to "go home again"--to return to the place of their childhood and somehow magically return to a simpler time of close friendships and few responsibilities--the inevitability of change ensures that that homecoming will never be as simple or Utopian as it seems."

Doesn't that ring true for you in as much as it does for me? ....Or the main character in October Road?

This summer I will be returning to Antigo for my 25th high school class reunion. While I am sure that I'll be surprised by all that I learn about my friends as we begin to catch up on our lives since the diaspora -- many of whom I have not seen since my 10th reunion -- I suspect the events of my life might surprise my classmates as well.

Seeing the reunion invitation on the corner of my desk for several weeks now, my mind has been taking a bit of a trip down memory lane. For the most part, I've been thinking about the years spent at Antigo High School -- 1980-1984. While recalling so many events, I find myself cranking the 80's tunes on my ipod -- our Saint Norbert students hear me playing the music in my college office day by day. Many will actually ask for the name of the song or the artist -- even Travis VandenHeuvel, our SGA President, secretly loves the music. He won't admit it, but when he cracks a bit of a smile, you know he's hooked! The music helps the memories of the 80's float to the surface.

But given many of my students actively involved in OSJ parish ministry are currently involved in Praise and Worship sessions at our church, my mind also ventures back to the 70's, which enables me to consider my grade school days at St. Mary's. As a young elementary student, my classmates and I never knew what happened just a few years earlier to our grade school experience. Beginning in 1972 and ending in 1980, our Catholic grade school experience occurred at the conclusion on VATICAN II; we did not and could not appreciate the changes that the Universal and Local Church were going through in those days that "opened the window" of the Church to the world. Back then, our school community gathered for Daily Mass each Monday, Thursday and Friday and once a month on Tuesday. Wednesdays were devoted to the Stations of the Cross or Marian devotion -- depending on the month.

Today my students know that their Praise and Worship sessions employ music that is not necessarily liturgical or congregational -- as such, these sessions take place outside of the Mass. But back in the 70's, the new "contemporary" or "folk" music was introduced to us youngsters during the Mass.

This week I stumbled upon such music!

I was doing a search in the iTunes store, submitting the name "Ray Repp" and can you imagine what I stumbled upon? Here's the hit list that was introduced to us kids by Sr. Peggy and Sr. Celine -- continued by Sr. Mary Michael. You folks who are 40 something from St. Mary's and across America, remember these?:


Allelu!

Hear, O Lord


How Long, O Lord


I am the Resurrection


Into Your Hands


Of My Hands


Peace, My Friends


Shout From the Highest Mountains


Till all My People are One


Wake Up, My People


and


Take our Bread -- by Joe Wise



I shared this music at Norbertine recreation the other night with Father John, Father Tim Shillcox and Father Al McBride -- one of the best times we've had in a long time -- singing, remembering, cherishing, making fun... ... ... I could only imagine what would happen if I would ask my Old Saint Joe's choir director to consider adding these songs to our repertoire. My current students would think that I've gone over the edge -- quickly! And yet, it was for me not necessarily a trip down October Road, but down 735 Deleglise Street in Antigo. There's the hope that my writing about this here will allow folks like Rory Gilbert and Ann Brehm a similar preparation for our 25th.

And just when life doesn't get better, the unthinkable happened!




Doing a Google search, I found the completely and totally funky "Our Father" that we would sing on high solemnity feasts. I simply typed: "1970's Rock Our Father" and I found it: the Our Father created by Sister Janet Mead which we would sing with the pipe organ [with foot pedals] cranking out the percussion. Remember this?


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eEsAPLa2_9M


I remember us choir folks pleading for the Sisters to allow us to sing this groovin' song during school or weekend Masses. We sang it rather sparingly, if I can remember, but the funky sound seemed to match Father Stencil's techno-color clerical shirts -- back then sporting a contemporary look in yellow, gold, green, light blue, royal blue, purple, white, red or orange -- just about anything but black!


Those were the days! It seemed to fit back then -- certainly met with glee from the kids from St. Mary's -- and similar churches throughout America, I suspect. Actually as young kids, we knew nothing different! Today? A totally different Church -- the experimentation seems to be over, but the Praise and Worship continues -- albeit in a different setting apart from the Mass.


Earlier this week, I posted images of Jody Foster -- an age-mate -- starring in "Dangerous Lives of Altar Boys." Given my age, this seemed like a more realistic and timely trip down Memory Lane which featured growing up in Catholic grade school in the 70's. And yet the description of October Road seems to haunt me as I look forward to the reunion this summer:


"As much as many adults yearn to "go home again"--to return to the place of their childhood and somehow magically return to a simpler time of close friendships and few responsibilities--the inevitability of change ensures that that homecoming will never be as simple or Utopian as it seems."


And yet, Summer 2009 will be wonderful, I suspect, whether or not the music cranked at Nick's or the Northstar includes the playlist offered above. The music is just the backdrop -- what counts, truly, are the relationships that are rekindled after so many years. "There's no place like home:" I trust this summer's events will prove that reality. Until then, John, take note: season 2 of October Road is released on May 5th! ...My treat!

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I Can't Wait to Share the Next Entry With You: STAY TUNED!


Sorry for the delay in writing, folks, but with travel for annual meetings in Indianapolis, work in LaCrosse, getting the church ready for Lent, the celebration of Ash Wednesday Masses... ... it's been easy to be a bit distanced from the computer. The forecast isn't much better, either. Between now and SNC's Spring Break, I have various presentations to give at Saint Mary's in DePere tomorrow night, a presentation at Sacred Hearts in Sun Prairie on Sunday night, one in Appleton next Tuesday night and then another at Saint Anne's in Coleman next Thursday. That's all in addition to the regular stuff that takes place at a parish, in a prison, at a priory and in Packerland. Spring Break will be a welcome sight on Friday the 13th!

Before that day arrives, however, I will definitely find the time to share a bit of an amusing story with you -- at least I find it pretty amusing, which just may concern some of you! It is a story that will bring a smile to the 40 year olds who partake in this blog -- but I'm afraid the story just might frighten my current students.

So please stay tuned as the weekend approaches. The pictures to begin and end this entry -- courtesy of THINKFILM Studios -- might give you an idea of where I'm headed. Get Ready to DANCE... ... ...!

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