Vocation Discernment
Are you being called to become a priest or brother?
Click here, and discover what it means to become a preacher of truth!
Vocation Office
Western Dominican Province
5890 Birch Court
Oakland, CA 94618-1626
(510)-596-1821
Our Vocations require a great deal of support, from the first moment they begin their novitiate until the last moments of their retirement. Please do conside visiting our donation page and helping form and sustain the priests and brothers who will serve you in the future, serve you now and have served you in the past.
Saints and Blesseds
The Order of Friars Preachers,
The Dominican Order,
has a beautiful history of learning, service and holiness manifested in its saints and blesseds of every age since its foundation by St. Dominic de Guzman. Do enjoy the periodic postings of such stories as are available from various sources, especially our own archives.
Religious Retirement
Our elderly and infirm friars receive the best care we have available to us, as in any family. We rely heavily on the donations of others for our own existence and thus when one of our own becomes incapable of further ministry due to age or infirmity, those same donations help us support the sometimes necessary special care required by such members of our communities.
We prefer to care for our elderly and infirm in our own houses so that the life of a religious community can be a part of a friars life as long as possible. This is also the most economical in many ways. We strive to use donations wisely. But sometimes a care facility is essential. As we, as a Province, do not benefit from the national collection for retired religious, we ask that you assist us in caring for these friars who have prayed, taught, served and ministered for so many years amomg the people of the Western United States and beyond.
Please, in your kindness, consider assisting us in this work of brotherly love.
Many thanks in advance.
Catholicism
It's just the right thing
Fr. Stephen Terence Chrysler McCabe, OP
Father Stephen Chrysler McCabe OP died February 26, 2008, at Alaska Regional Hospital. He was a Dominican friar, and had lived in Anchorage, Alaska since 1996, when poor health prompted him to retire from active pastoral duties.
Stephen was born in Belfield, North Dakota on June 1, 1932 to John Michael McCabe and Marion Chrysler McCabe. His family moved to Medford, Oregon in 1940, and he attended Medford schools, graduating from Medford Senior High in 1950.
Throughout life he was burdened with chronic health problems which prompted his transfer from Georgetown University to the University of Oregon, and ultimately to Santa Clara University where he graduated in 1955. In 1956, he responded to a vocation by entering the Dominican Novitiate at Saint Albert's College in Oakland, California, thus commencing the process which culminated in his ordination as a Catholic priest in December, 1962.
After graduate study and initial assignments at Dominican University, and priories in Berkeley and Seattle, a talent for administration resulted in a long tenure at the Provincial offices in Oakland where he served from 1975 to 1981 as Prior, Vicar Provincial, and Prior Provincial (1981-1985). From his very happy collegiate experience at Santa Clara through the conclusion of his term as Elected Prior Provincial of the Western Dominican Province, he was very much rooted in the spiritual, intellectual and cultural life of the Bay area
Blessed with a keen intellect, fierce wit, and prodigious memory for both substance and trivia, Father McCabe had a remarkable talent for forming and maintaining friendships. Some were based on a mutual love and appreciation for classical and operatic music. This was an abiding interest which preoccupied Stephen from early childhood.
However, music was not the only bonding agent, nor does it explain the wide spectrum of friends, rich and poor, intellectual and not, young and old, whom Stephen loved and treasured, and who are deeply saddened by his death. One spoke for many, declaring that he would "give anything for one more chat with Stephen."
His parents preceded him in death. He is survived by his two sisters, Eleanor Cooney of Medford, Oregon, and Sylvia Wade, of Anchorage, Alaska, and five nieces and four nephews.
A requiem Mass will be held at St. Albert's Priory, Oakland, California on Thursday, March 6 at 10:30 a.m. Burial will follow at the Dominican Cemetery, Benicia, California. There will be a memorial Mass in Anchorage at Holy Family Cathedral at 9:00 a.m. on March 14, 2008
Memorial contributions may be made to the Dominican Mission Foundation, P.O. Box 15367, San Francisco, California 94115-0367.
Hugh G. Wade
Brother-in-law
Donate in honor of Fr. McCabe
Lives of the Brethren
The Gospel Story of the Journey to Emmaus is a good starting point for our remembrances of Father Stephen Chrysler McCabe. He would emerge from the kitchen with some wonderful observation about music or literature as he was preparing a meal for us. How very many of us have been the recipients of his hospitality and kindness? In the Emmaus story there are overtones of the feeding of the five thousand and the Last Supper. The disciples are led from disappointment to recognition, as they come to know Jesus in the breaking of the bread. Many of us have spent some of our finer moments feasting with Stephen, and his great love for beauty and the grandeur of music have opened our eyes to unexpected delight.
Once we drove past the house where he was born in Bellfield, North Dakota. We had gone to Montreal to hear Hans Kung speak and we were returning to the west to vacation with Stephen's cousins in Montana. Stephen was a great traveler. Growing up in Medford, we are all fond of the story of the twelve year old Stephen traveling to San Francisco by himself on a Greyhound bus to go to the opera. When he showed up at the YMCA, they called the police thinking he was a runaway, only to have a phone conversation with Marion his mother [to] assure them that he was indeed there to go to the opera. Later he made more friends in the music scene as he attended Santa Clara University. He joined the Dominicans and as fate would have it, he was assigned his place in choir next to me. Stephen always hoped to expand the world of his friends. I recall his taking me to the opera to see Tannhauser. That night "the fat lady" did not sing until very late in the evening. (This is my classical allusion to Yogi Berra, the sort of academic reference Stephen would have preferred.) We were famished, and afterwards went for a hamburger at "New Joe's." We were in our black suits and Roman collars. As we rose to go, we were told that the gentleman in the corner had taken care of the check. We looked up to see a Mafia-like figure raise a hand and say, "Fadder, I used to be an altar boy." It was another era. Ordained in 1962, Stephen finished his studies and taught theology at the Dominican College for seven years. He was involved in a series of leadership positions over the next few years.
Stephen did not fit easily into the pre-Vatican II Church. But he also would not really be comfortable with Vatican II or post-Vatican II religious sensibilities. Stephen was the enemy of "feel good" religion. His interest and keen intelligence sought a broader more classical frame of reference. I loved to send him into a mock rage, by singing the latest folk song that someone had rigged with religious words. Perhaps one of Stephen's greatest gifts was that of being a mentor. He had a great capacity for friendship and would often befriend young persons and help them grow in ways they never would have imagined--all through his encouragement and his ability to see the best in others. "Uncle" Stephen is held in great esteem among family members. Stephen would write all of his sermons and you were in for a treat and some excellent writing as he would read his sermons and hitch up his glasses just so, with the palms of his hands.
His greatest energies were spent in internal ministries: being prior several times and then vicar provincial and provincial in 1981. You will remember that this was a time of great change and strong factions in the church. Stephen tried to encourage the brothers with a certain evenhandedness, and his deepest preference was always for a generous, intelligent Catholic Tradition. My key understanding of Stephen lies in beauty, the great traditions of our culture and learning, and his beloved music.
After being provincial, the political fallout tended to isolate Stephen. he did not have a special ministry that he could fall back on. This was hard for me to understand because in our Dominican life, the best of friends can have vastly different positions on almost every issue. You would expect your brothers in [sic] go in a new or different way. Sometimes the randomness of democracy can be brutal. Perhaps, this is the result of Stephen having given so much to internal ministries. Although he would not indulge in such sentiment, he had given his best to his brothers.
The isolation was [a] source of pain for all of us and many generous gestures were made to bridge this gap. yet even here, Stephen's friendships prevailed. The Anchorage Community was especially present to Stephen and I know he appreciated the concern of his brothers and the loving support of his family. New friends found joy in his encouragement and his love of good music.
I have chosen the Emmaus story because it also reveals a deeper thread in our time with Stephen and the values he cherished. Luke tells the story not just to show us how the disciples "came to know Jesus" in the breaking of the bread. He had a deeper objective in mind. Luke was teaching his community how a full understanding of Jesus needs to be based on Moses and the Law. Jesus is also the fulfillment of prophecy and Torah. Jesus is grounded in life itself. In just this way, Stephen had a concern for the larger picture, one that is blessed by beauty, love, and the very music of creation. And now we of a certain age, wait. We stand at the entrance to the greatest opera house and each of us in our time will see and hear the full splendor of God: A God alive with love for every human being. But don't worry! Stephen has the tickets.
--Fr. Kieran Healy, O.P.
Funeral Mass Slide Show
|
Date of Birth |
Date of Profession |
Date of Ordination |
Date of Death |
|
June 1, 1932 |
September 9, 1957 |
December 22, 1962 |
February 26, 2008 |
Archive Record: ___
Fr. Steven Chrysler McCabe, OP - Funeral
Fr. McCabe's body arrives at the chapel of St. Albert Priory in Oakland, CAFr. Steven Chrysler McCabe, OP - Funeral
The coffin is simple, the Book of the Gospels rests below the Dominican cross of the pall.Fr. Steven Chrysler McCabe, OP - Funeral
Fr. David Geib, OP preaches at the funeral Mass for Fr. McCabe.Fr. Steven Chrysler McCabe, OP - Funeral
Fr. Emmerich Vogt, OP incenses the body during the offering of the gifts.Fr. Steven Chrysler McCabe, OP - Funeral
Many of the brethren from throughout the province gathered to concelebrate this Mass for a former Provincial and dear friend to many.Fr. Steven Chrysler McCabe, OP - Funeral
As is our custom, a death card was made available for those in attendance. Copies may still be available in the Provincial office.Fr. Steven Chrysler McCabe, OP - Funeral
The body is led out of the chapel in procession.Fr. Steven Chrysler McCabe, OP - Funeral
The body is placed in the hearse in preparation for transport to our cemetery in Benicia, California where there will be a graveside followed by the singing of the Salve.